I am a long-time editor, but have only just recently learned that editing closed questions is discouraged, unless the edit is intended to make the question (more) suitable for re-opening.
I hold the view that closed questions are often not bad enough to warrant deletion, and that their on-hold status is useful in itself, to educate the poster, whilst letting the post (and its answers) potentially assist future readers.
I like the idea also that edits made to (even closed) questions help educate posters as to the kind of care we like to see questions presented with here (edits to posts are notified to users via their inbox, and I'd think that this would improve the posting quality for at least some of them).
Some examples: I sometimes encounter posts that have had their title modified to include [solved]
, even though the answer has been posted and accepted. Sometimes the title is excessively taggy, or the grammar of the body could do with improvement. I think there is value in improving these things even if it has been legitimately closed.
With these things in mind, I wonder if there is a way in which trusted users of a certain reputation could be permitted to make edits that improve the post, with the belief that the post should not be re-opened, without putting it into review? Some of this content will live for years more, and so it would be good to knock it into shape without annoying the folks who help with the review queue. Perhaps it could be a tick-box, defaulting to on, like so:
[x] Add this change to the review queue
I appreciate this feature would be open to misuse, which is why I suggest a minimum reputation for it. Perhaps there could be a "not added to the review queue" feed, so that interested users could keep an eye on the kinds of edits that are being made here.
Alternatively, if that suggestion won't fly, could we create some written guidelines about when it is appropriate to modify a closed question even with the knowledge it might waste reviewer time, or end up being robo-opened incorrectly? There are certainly cases where editing is an overriding good: if a disgruntled poster edits insults into their question, or if they "delete" it by replacing the text with nonsense.