In all review queues, hitting the button that says the post needs no additional improvement (Looks OK, No action needed, Leave open, or Reopen depending on the queue), in terms of audits, always works exactly the same as the button that says the post needs additional improvement (Edit, Edit and reopen, or Requires editing depending on the queue). The reason for this is that, while the post may be good, it can almost always can be made better. There's no reason to penalize the reviewer for improving an already-good post.
It's the same in Triage. It's not all that uncommon for a question in serious need of improvement to gather some upvotes and answers. It's not fair to penalize the reviewer for saying that an already-good post still needs improvement.
In the specific case you mentioned, the post was good as-is and did not need improvement. However, I still sometimes come across audit questions that are okay as-is, but could greatly improve from extensive editing. Sadly, the system just isn't smart enough to know the difference between these, so it passes known-good audits if either "Looks OK" or "Requires Editing" are chosen.
It's also worth noting that spamming the "Requires Editing" button will still fail known-bad audits, which are only passed if "Unsalvageable" is chosen. So this is not another loophole for robo-reviewers to use.
Help and Improvement
, where queue reviewers are then asked to edit it to fix it (the button seems to indicate that the OP will be asked to edit it, which is not the case). It's so unclear that I'm not sure how you could fail any Triage audit by pressing it.It's so unclear that I'm not sure how you could fail any Triage audit by pressing it.
Well you should fail an audit if you say that a post that doesn't need editing, needs editing, or if you say that a post that's unsalvageable should be edited. Sadly this has been broken literally since the queue has been in beta, and SE has known about these problems since before the queues were even finished, and yet we're still here.Mostly OK
(and this audit indicates that). The way the description is written (and is actively used in practice), however, it can also meanMostly Bad
, which almost always overlaps withUnsalvageable
. Since SO refuses to clarify it so people stop using it as the latter, it defies logic that we should have audits that penalize people for using the button in a way SO implicitly condones.