The original code was a complete trainwreck format-wise, so the first edit actually substantially improved it. It was actually a good edit, apart from the introduced bug.
(It baffles me why people can be bothered to spend time indenting code for random people who can't even manage such a simple thing themselves... but someone did so there you go.)
What you could have done here is to "accept and edit", meaning that all the indention changes would be passed on and you can fix the bug introduced by the edit. This means that the editor will get credit and rep for the edit.
If you think it is bad style to introduce bugs while editing other people's posts, you could also "edit and reject"... This means that the editor gets no credit and the reject will count towards a review ban, if they keep doing a bad job. But then you'll have to re-do all the indention and spell fixes yourself...
The advantages of "accept & edit" and "reject & edit" is that these give you absolute power of the fate of the edit. Consensus is no longer needed, but your edit will become the accepted one - because you already have enough rep to be trusted to edit without going through review. This is also a good way to override blind "accept" clicks by robo-reviewers.
If you simply accept/reject, then there needs to be a consensus where 3 reviewers have the same opinion, but during that time the OP may at any point accept the edit, overriding the edit reviews.
The OP will get notified about the edit in any of the cases.
As a side note, upon encountering
#include <iostream>
#include <stdio.h>
using namespace std;
then all manner of warning bells should start ringing, as this is not valid C nor valid C++. The question was tagged C but there is just no way the code will ever compile in C. It would be more correct to re-tag it C++, even though the code is very C-like. But of course #include <stdio.h>
is also obsolete style in C++ since early 1990s or so...
So better yet, prompt the OP and ask them if they have any clue at all about what they are doing, since they don't use anything from iostream in their code and they mix C and C++.
In retrospect this was such a complete crap question that nobody should have spent any time fixing it to begin with. Upon encountering it in its original form, I would just down-vote, close-vote as unclear and move on.