TL;DR Don't. But you could put a TL;DR at the top of your post.
First, your research shows approaches that don't work. That's important information. It saves others from trying the same.
Second, as has been pointed out in the comments, good questions show research effort. If a question does not show research effort, it will be considered one more of the dumps from a lazy user who couldn't be bothered to do their homework before posting. It will get downvotes and maybe even close votes. Lack of research effort is not a reason to close, but people sometimes VTC them all the same. (Whether or not they should is a heated debate).
Third, I've seen editors do this to other people's posts. Making the posts from other people look like effortless dumps. I'm sure these editors had good intentions, but it was still a wrong move. If people remove the shown effort from their own posts, these editors could take the wrong example - thinking such edits, on their own posts or that of others, are the right thing to do.
I'll grant that this is not a big risk, thank goodness, but it's still a risk.
On the other hand... sometimes the shown research isn't that important for future visitors. They want the answer ASAP and don't want to wade through a long article.
So, the best edit is that you try to get the problem across in the first paragraph. The sooner a reader can determine if a question is about the same problem they are facing, the better. Only after they have decided that the post is applicable to their own situation, do the details become relevant.
I somewhat jokingly put a quasi-recursive TL;DR at the top of this post to illustrate it. In reality, using a TL;DR may be a bit too much on Stack Exchange sites, but getting to the point ASAP is key.