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I see a few suggested edits with a comment like 'fix link rot', and I tried navigating to the former URL. It redirected to the new URL. Bearing in mind that "Edits are expected to be substantial"1 enough to warrant a change (and not waste time of the reviewers), should a URL that redirects be updated? I know that eventually the old URL might be disabled.

I did find the related post Should I fix broken links through an edit? which would apply here except that in this case the URL redirects...


1https://stackoverflow.com/help/editing

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    Fwiw, a redirecting link is a way to always link to the docs of the newest version of boost, like boost.org/doc/libs/release/doc/html/hash.html
    – Baum mit Augen Mod
    Oct 4, 2017 at 12:11
  • I think it's an improvement to remove redirect pages if they require the user to manually click to go to the page they actually want (e.g., the MSDN "Content Moved" page). I'm neutral on the cases where the links auto-redirect I guess. Also as a general "is this edit substantial enough" metric, remember that saying a suggested edit is too minor is probably the same as saying "it's alright for the post to stay that way forever" unless somebody gets pinged in chat.
    – jrh
    Oct 5, 2017 at 18:11

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Personally, I don't see the harm in it. The concern is that redirects will eventually break, and if a more permanent resource exists, then the user should be pointed to that.

I would caution you though, if the entire answer hinges on whether or not that link is accessible...that answer may be a good candidate to remove outright. We don't want to be in the business of forcefully maintaining links in that fashion, specifically because of this scenario.

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    Or rather than removing, quoting (some of the) link's content into the answer.
    – JAD
    Oct 6, 2017 at 8:16

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