I recently had an edit rejected and am not exactly sure why this happened. I tried not to change the user's question at all, but just provide a clearer representation of the question for future visitors.
In the past, I've made an edit that corrects spelling and grammar, and it has been accepted.
I've referenced the help section for editing and in my opinion, which can very well be wrong, states a case for my edit that was rejected.
To clarify the meaning of the post (without changing that meaning)
I always try my best to not change the meaning when editing so far, but perhaps I did or went too overboard on the edit. The reason given seems a little abstract to me.
This edit was intended to address the author of the post and makes no sense as an edit. It should have been written as a comment or an answer.
I'd very much like not to make the same mistake again and figure out what I did wrong.
Is there an article that explains to newer users, when not to edit? I guess logically it would be if it doesn't fall under the aforementioned reasons, but perhaps an article that goes into details explaining why an edit is bad or good.
.animate()
which you added) which was taken from reading the code. On really close thought, it should've been approved, but I'm not surprised that it was rejected entirely. I wouldn't worry too much about it.