Minor Prologue
When strolling around SO I recently came across a nice proof for a math
question. Once I noticed a gap in the reasoning, I properly wrote a comment to notify the author.
Then I thought to myself: “Why place the burden of editing this in on the author?” Thus I edited the answer myself, closing the gap: https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/13666096
My Problem
Since this edit was rejected, the author just wrote his own version of this edit (only afterwards noticing mine) and the answer is fine now. That is not my problem.
From reading a myriad of other “Why was my edit rejected?” questions here on meta, I reached the conclusion that I should have been more specific in my edit message when suggesting such a significant edit. This is understandable and I will try to do so in the future. That is not my problem either.
However, the edit was rejected as trying to address the author. Which, in my opinion, could be easily seen as not being the case. That is my problem.
Many Questions
Could this actually be mistaken as addressing the author?
- If so, please help seeing me, how.
- If not, why was this reason chosen?
- Is there simply no better fit?
- Am I unaware of some other meaning of this reason which makes it actually a good fit?
Maybe Duplicates
The answer to these questions probably coincides with or at least closely resembles that of a similar question. However, the search for this particular answer is like the one for the needle in the haystack if you needed to think a minute or two about every blade of hay to conclude it is indeed not a needle.
Suggestions to better navigate meta would be very welcome. Usually, searching is something I'm reasonably good at but on meta I fail horribly.