I agree with Servy's comment, that changing contraction isn't is not necessarily an improvement, unless it's an actual grammatical correction for a specific sentence. And is potentially damaging or conflicts with author's intent.
That's possibly the reason it was rejected, and fixing a suggested edit is kinda counterproductive unless it's an easily fix and worthwhile.
The editor who rejected only changed one thing and missed various things - and no excuse as they'd seen them in your suggested edit. Arguably their edit was trivial and ironically would often be liable for being rejected. As a trusted reviewer, their "reject-edit" should have been a decent job, or instead they could have just rejected if they didn't want to edit.
Given the bad grammar present I presume the poster doesn't care about contraction, so I'd have likely "approve and edit" and ignored the contraction changes and fixed the things you missed.
Things missed:
You:
- Lowercase "i" at the end
How do i
User who rejected:
- All lower case "i" and missing "?" at the end
Both of you:
Grammaar/typo: for invidual column
; E.g.for an individual column
Grammar/tense: My first try is to convert the object columns to
float but I get the error message
; E.g. My first attempt was to
convert the object columns to float but I received this error message
Pedantic? Not really, if you're going to edit, might as well do a good job and do the lot - it wasn't much text.
In all I think your edit was fine, and arguably should have been either "approve", or "approve and edit" to add the things you missed. I don't think it was worth rejecting, certainly not to make a much poorer edit.
But meh, it's not like the question is worth the edits, let alone us discussing it here :P