In this question
the questioner confuses a lot of git terms and ultimately is not clear on his real question as a result.
After some back and forths in comments, some answers being posted, and some back and forths on my answer, I finally realized the confusion point, and updated my answer.
But at this point, I feel like the question should be fixed to make it clear what he is asking, so that people looking for an answer don't need to wade through everything before realizing whether this Q&A matches their question or not, etc.
So I made an edit, but I wasn't sure how to edit it without essentially rewriting his question in a way that the comments and answers would make any sense. So I added a section at the end of his question with a note stating this was a clarification of the original answer, and a short explanation (he was not making any changes to the local repo, only wanting the diff between the prior master commit and the new one after pulling).
This seemed like a good compromise, but was it?
A few hours later I rechecked the post, and my edit had been removed/deleted, and a new edit was in place that basically left his question completely intact, and still completely confusing. Is this the correct solution?
How should situations like this be handled when you eventually realize that the intent of the questioner was not clear and he has helped in comments to clarify, but editing directly would really change the core wording, etc. and make the answers and comments look out of place?