This is a critic for all meta users that for some reason or other rejects the notion that "code" in answers can be edited to make improvements or small fixes that keeps them up-to-date.
TL;dr: can we be more diligent3 and sensible4 when recommending people to not edit posts
I don't know when it started, but there has been a increasingly preoccupying issue here on meta around edits. They say that any edit shouldn't "change code unless it's a very clear typo", which goes against everything Stack Overflow have said is good for: keeping up-to-date, verifiable, authoritative answers.
Now, while the team is aware that there is a problem around obsolete content, which most people can easily fix right away in the form of editing, an action that is so encouraged that we even give 2 reputation for each accepted edit, and despite all of this is being discouraged by people here, on meta?
Why?
This is the gathering of the most well informed users of all Stack Overflow (or at least that's the impression we want to give), which can solve almost every issue users face on the main site, using our collective knowledge of the sites guidance, written and unwritten rules, debates, etc. yet we cannot allow a single update that can prevent issues in the long term with an answer, making us looks like we don't know what we are doing, dropping our rankings from search engines, keeping the internet from being a little better.
Why?
We, that know how important is keeping information accurate at all times, tend to put OP in a pedestal by not allowing anyone but themselves to edit their content on one side, yet we tell them that their content is not theirs if they want it deleted. Where is the coherence in this?
Why?
Whenever we aren't sure if something is beneficial or not, we are asked to not to take any action whenever we find ourselves in this situation* and allow others that may know to take the issue in their hands since there is no shame in not knowing something, yet we hastily tell people what they should do or don't, even when they had powerful reasons behind their actions, and we actually don't.
Why?
Our actions, our words, our opinions are reflected upon the new users. These users learn from us, and I worry for them. They are growing on an ambiance that tells them that one of the attractive features of the site (editing) is a lie, and even when they get their privileges to edit the content on the site they seldom do so, because they were repeatedly told that "don't edit code", when official guidance says nothing as specific as "code" that couldn't be improved.
Because
While I reckon we have problems about editors approving bad edits, that doesn't mean that good edits shouldn't pass through. I think that the most erudite will say that the only way to know if an edit is good and sufficient without deviating of the intent is knowing said intent and being familiar with it.
Because
The only audits on the system are "known bad audits" (aka audits that introduce nonsense) which makes reviewers reject everything. Even the sensible edit cannot pass through. The purpose of audits were that they should teach reviewers what they should (not) do, a teaching tool. But the teaching is too biased. It doesn't have any positive audit action. This is kind of bad for the reasons I explained before. Having a known good audit has been on the table for some time, maybe is time that we pool together our collective knowledge to get something that works.
Because
We are so scared that suggested edits makes a answer a wrong one that is just beyond amusing and into the terrains of being sad. Every author gets notified of any and every edit on their answer, even if they are not suggested edits. Also, there are just hundred of thousands of users that can see a new activity on any tag and can flag/comment if they see something wrong/suspicious and about a couple thousands that can rollback such edits themselves. Thus, there's no need to be afraid about bad users editing posts into wrong answers, be more afraid about good ones not updating/fixing wrong answers.
In summary, can we be more diligent and sensible when recommending people to not edit posts as this reduce the usefulness of the sites and makes a SO worse for all of us.
* yes, that is a chain of 6 links of Shog9 saying that you should skip. Here are more https://meta.stackoverflow.com/search?q=skip+user%3A811
** Sacralizing gerund: imbue with or treat as having a sacred character or quality.
3: having or showing care and conscientiousness in one's work or duties
4: chosen in accordance with wisdom or prudence; likely to be of benefit.