I have recently been trying to clean up some of the egregious typos on Stack Overflow to help make the information more searchable. For example, if someone uses "Javacript" in the title, instead of "JavaScript", the question and answer, though possibly containing useful information, may not appear in the Stack Overflow search results for "JavaScript" (it may appear way down the results list if the correct spelling appears in the text somewhere).
A search on Stack Overflow for "javacript" reveals 92 pages of results. And there are approximately 19 gazillion others - "matalab", "pyhton", etc. Kind of like the secret auctions on eBay with misspellings of common items.
I realize that the guidelines for editing state that we should make substantial edits, so I have avoided editing posts that only have one or two typos in the body, or low rated or duplicate posts. However, given the high weight given to search keywords in titles, I think fixing typos in question titles is very important, and useful to Stack Overflow. Not everyone seems to agree.
Lately, I've noticed two reviewers that consistently reject my edit suggestions when I try to fix questions with typos in the titles. I try to review the rest of the post and see if there is anything else that needs editing (the suggested guidance here Is just fixing a typo in the title a valid suggested edit?), and sometimes there just isn't. Many of these posts have been edited multiple times and still have egregious typos in the title.
So are we, as a Community going to accept that some of our questions just have bad titles, and will not show up in the intended search results? I've wasted a lot of time trying to fix some of these posts just to have my edits rejected by these same reviewers, so I'd like to get some feedback from the community before I spend more time trying to fix these kinds of posts.
javacript
errors are probably filtering with the realjavascript
tag.javascript
, the posts that rise to the top of a search for "JavaScript" are the ones that contain that word in the title. Furthermore, I expect more of our search traffic comes from Google than anywhere else, and a high percentage of people searching for information are probably pretty new to the site. So I don't think you can say "everyone filters by tags". I presume most people here are proud of the resource that SO has become, and hope to make the site easily accessible to as many as possible.