I've just stumbled upon this post here and oh my look at that revision history. An exception stack changes back and forth between text quote and code block format. A piece of code gets beautified and de-beautified to its original form. All this editing isn't really helpful. And the post is 7 years old. Is there a process for preventing bad edits like that?
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You're looking at an edit war.– LaurelCommented Aug 9, 2016 at 14:32
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1@Laurel: Not really. The edits are months apart and by different users every time, and there are only a couple of edits to the error log.– Nisse EngströmCommented Aug 9, 2016 at 15:28
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Sounds like people think the log is too wide. The leading timestamp could be removed (with a note mentioning it was removed) seeing and it's common to every record.– ikegamiCommented Sep 8, 2016 at 17:33
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1 Answer
Normally, there is a process for preventing bad edits. Edits by users with less than 2k reputation are submitted as suggestions that enter a review queue where reviewers would (hopefully) reject such a bad edit.
But in this case, the post you linked to is a community wiki, which are easier to edit. Anyone with at least 100 reputation can edit a community wiki without needing to go through the review queue. This is designed to encourage certain posts to be more collaborative, but it can lead to a few edits like the one you've linked to.