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I ran across a clearly invalid, but approved edit-as-comment by an anonymous user. I can roll it back, obviously; and, given the edit was anonymous, it's not like I could give the original editor-commenter useful rejection feedback in any case. But it feels like there ought to be something stronger than a rollback, possibly dinging the OP for approving the edit.

Not that I really want to pile on the OP, who at least had the grace to let criticism of his answer stand. But if it had been a third-party review approval, it seems like that might deserve a rap on the knuckles.

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    If 3 reviewers had approved it you could potentially flag for bad reviews, not really anything to be done about the OP approving it though; after all they really could appropriately edit that content into their own answer.
    – Servy
    Commented Nov 14, 2015 at 0:58
  • I wouldn't mind knowing why people are downvoting, btw. Commented Nov 16, 2015 at 19:05

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There are a couple of options, the first being to roll it back then add the update as a comment.

However, I'd probably just edit the answer to reword it in such a way that the comment becomes a limitation of the answer, something like 'Note that this solution assumes you don't need to look in subdirectories. If that's needed, you'll have to find another way.'.

I see no issue with answers stating their assumptions and limitations.

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