Why can people edit my posts? How does editing work?
All contributions are licensed under Creative Commons, and this site is collaboratively edited, like Wikipedia. If you see something that needs improvement, click edit!
I still have problem warping my head around this kind of rejection.
Edits are expected to be substantial and to leave the post better than you found it. Common reasons for edits include:
- To fix grammar and spelling mistakes
- To clarify the meaning of the post (without changing that meaning)
- To include additional information only found in comments, so all of the information relevant to the post is contained in one place
- To correct minor mistakes or add updates as the post ages
- To add related resources or hyperlinks
You fulfilled at least two common reasons to edit someone post, there's nothing on the help center that says you cannot do this kind of edits. Nothing. This is a wiki! If we cannot edit content to improve it, what makes us any different from what SO was meant to replace?
That seems like a case of putting words in the author's mouth
It wasn't putting words into the author mouth. The author already spoke, but what he said it's not easily understandable. What the edit made was translating what the author said in code into plain english.
That would have been a good example of a situation where you should have just posted your own answer.
So, the answer would be "repeat what it already said elsewhere"? That seems not optimal for two reasons:
- The author can claim that content is copied, heck I would downvote such answers that regurgitate someone code, most of what rejected your edit would do the same too.
- It adds unnecessary overhead. If something change on emacs-lisp, we now have to modify two answers instead of one, which goes against the principle of canonical answers.
- Code only answers are not "good quality", and you improved that to make it "good quality".
Your edit was bogus rejected, and if anything, author should be the one to decide whenever you were putting words on his mouth or improving his answer.