Nonetheless, my point is that even without reading the comment,
looking at the Markdown diff shows that the edit is uncontroversial.
I agree and I'm pretty sure everyone who's commented agrees with that too. I don't think anyone here is arguing that a good reviewer who'd paid attention wouldn't or shouldn't have approved your edit. rene and Sagar V were just suggesting ways you can increase your chances of having your edits accepted. Making it clear you're fixing something, not just changing it, might slow down an otherwise good reviewer who isn't paying as much attention as they should.
But Braiam is also correct that some reviewers will run through the queue accepting or rejecting all edits they come across. Audits are designed to catch the users who accept everything but, as far as I know, it's not currently set up to be able to catch users who reject edits they should approve.
Known-bad audits in Suggested Edits are instead generated from scratch
by simply injecting random changes into an existing post. Obviously
this algorithm cannot be reversed to generate reliable improvements;
if it could, we wouldn't need human editors anymore!
- Nathan Tuggy
(The meta question is gone now but there's a PhD student working on something like this for Stack Overflow.)
It's interesting that of the three users who reviewed your edit, one user rejects most edits they review and one user has never rejected an edit.