In the past, I've had edits rejected because they add too much
information or try to answer the original post, so I've been limiting
myself to edits that add links to resources or samples
Edits should not significantly change the contents of a post without the approval of the author (ask first). They're there mainly for fixing formatting issues, grammar, spelling, general formulation, or re-clarifying unclear points.
When you look at the official guidance on edits from the help center, you'll find this:
Some common reasons to edit are:
- to fix grammatical or spelling mistakes
- to clarify the meaning of a post without changing it
- to correct minor mistakes or add addendums / updates as the post ages
- to add related resources or hyperlinks
These are what you should mainly be doing. That being said, the reviewers in the SE queue can be notoriously fickle about approving links in edits. This often comes from the fact that any given reviewer does not know the substance of the post you're editing, so make it easier for them by writing a descriptive edit summary, like:
Added some links to official ressources closely related to the problem at hand
Also make sure you always fix all of the issues with a post - not just add some links when other issues are present.
In general though, when you see a very clearly off topic question, like a question directly asking for tutorial recommendations, it would be better to vote to close (or flag to close, in your case) that question rather then edit it. Some questions that are closable are salvageable by edits, but some are also not.
I'm close to being able to do edits without review, so should I be
avoiding these kinds of edit entirely? That would be unfortunate, as
I'd like other users to see the links in the answer itself.
Make sure you only add these links if you're confident that they enhance the answer in general, and are closely related to the problem at hand. Sometimes linking to general tutorials doesn't make a lot of sense.