I recently began participating actively and noticed the rejection of this suggested edit when exploring all the tabs on my profile. Reviewers seem to believe that I changed the intent of the question, but really, I just fixed a bit of formatting and removed some "fluff", including some garbage output dumped by the framework's exception handler—based in part on recommendations[1][2] I read here on meta.
Naturally, I checked here to learn if I could contest or discuss the rejection, and the answers that I found suggest that I need to post on meta. Is it really worth starting a discussion for every instance an edit is mistakenly rejected? I feel like it may be overkill to start a new thread whenever this happens. Assuming rejection of a high-quality edit, are there cases when a meta discussion is more valuable or justifiable than simply ignoring the rejection?
I think I can guess why my edit was rejected—cutting out the unrelated exception text makes it appear as if I changed code relevant to the question when not read closely. I'm interested to know if contesting rejections like this adds value, or if I'm just adding to the noise. For what it's worth, I found the question through a search, so other readers may benefit from the edit. Should I contest rejected edits here in the future when justified? Is there some (probably subjective) threshold I should consider before doing so?
Update
Many thanks to the users who reviewed the rejected edit and offered thoughts and suggestions. Your comments helped me better understand the review process. Although I do seek and appreciate this feedback, I included information about the edit mainly to provide context. I'd like to direct focus to the primary question, rephrased below:
Are there any approximate community-accepted characteristics that qualify a valid-but-rejected edit for discussion on meta?
I'm guessing that some candidates for meta review may be too minor to bother with. Or does the site take the stance that any missed opportunity for improvement and learning is worth revisiting? I want to avoid spamming meta in the future with these, so I'd like to get a feeling for which edits I should consider posting for review. As a frame of reference, where does the suggested edit in this question fall on the scale?