I submitted a change recently to one of the Docs for C# (which as the title implies, was rejected). Perhaps the two people that rejected my change request were right in doing so, and I could have improved what I had already written - but the responses that the two users left me was utterly useless for specifically telling me what was wrong.
Here's what the first and second read:
Rejected by User 1
Contains factually incorrect information. The example is totally useless.
Rejected by User 2
Other: Thanks Captain Obvious!.......
Receiving rejection information like this is borderline meaningless - if the first user had indicated what part was wrong, I would've at least been able to correct whatever it was. The second user's answer arguably isn't even a reason for rejection.
It would be nice if there were either more specific things to select as categories for rejection, or otherwise requiring approval or rejection to actually have some thought put into them. Otherwise, instead of encouraging users like me to improve on what was wrong in our documentation, it tells us not to bother since the community will drop red X's almost arbitrarily.
In short: Rejections miss their ability to be constructive by not including enough information in their categories and by not having users specify what's actually wrong.
discussion
, notfeature-request
so I assumed you were looking for help, not a formal way of doing things. Sounds like you wanted to vent though, which, when it comes to Docs, is wholly justified.