I notice that someone has edited the title of my question here: https://stackoverflow.com/posts/3680876/revisions The text "to retrieve direct children" was edited so it now reads "to Retrieve Direct Children". Why was this done?
1 Answer
Sampson's edit, considered overall, massively improves the quality and presentation of the question. So, I have a bit of a problem with the tone and nature of this Meta question, implying that the edit was "silly", pointless, or done merely for selfish reasons.
As has been pointed out, Sampson doesn't benefit in any tangible way from making edits to other people's posts, as he has full edit privileges.
Now, if you really are just asking about why he chose to capitalize the words in the title, that's pretty easy to explain. This is known as title case and is, as the name suggests, a common casing convention for titles in the English language. Some style guides encourage it for titles/headings, while others don't use it. Stack Overflow doesn't have an official policy on this, so no one can really say whether Sampson's stylistic choice was objectively right or wrong.
The argument in favor of title case is basically that it's conventional in the English language and many finer publications. The argument against title case is generally that it harms readability (capital letters being harder to read than lowercase letters). I also understand that title case is not used in many European countries, even in English-language publications, so this format tends to rub wrong our users who hail from these locales.
Note that there wouldn't be an argument about this if titles were written as full sentences—you know, like actual questions. Then, sentence case would obviously be appropriate. This would not only be maximally readable, but it would also provide a better summary of the question.
On balance, though, even if you stylistically disapprove of title case, there is absolutely nothing wrong with this edit. It should not be rolled back, nor should Meta be used as a platform to cast shade upon it.
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does make sense to me. But I don't think anyone else than the editor can answer, commenting under the post and pinging the editor would be a better course of action than raising a Meta for this.