Isn't it a trivial edit which could conflict with the author's intent?
Which is more invasive, the first or the second edit?
Isn't it a trivial edit which could conflict with the author's intent?
Which is more invasive, the first or the second edit?
Here we go...
As I am the editor, I thought I would shed light on my actions, my reasons for editing are twofold:
I tend to do these more "trivial" edits as I have reached the required reputation for it to not clog up the review queue.
Stack Overflow is meant to be a high quality repository of Questions and Answers. Part of that is making posts grammatically correct and easily understandable.
There's already been a precedent for "Too minor" edits, where the community has decided that good edits should always be done no matter how minor, although it is generally preferred that people with enough rep to directly edit without the post going through the review queue do these simple edits because then it doesn't take up reviewers time to approve something everyone would agree is a good edit.
If there's more things to fix in a post, of course the editor should fix everything they can find wrong with the post. In the case of this answer, I don't think there was anything more to change about the post besides the capitalization, though the rephrasing of the statement "here we go..." to "Here you go" does sound a little better. The editor has posted an answer explaining why change the wording, and the reasons are completely valid.
Even if the editor hadn't justified the edit, there's a simple test that you can do to check if an edit should be rolled back. Ask yourself: "Does this edit change the meaning of the post? Does it edit distract from the author's intent? Does this edit otherwise deface the post?" If the answer to these three questions is no, then the edit probably doesn't need to be rolled back. Simply being a small, minor change isn't a reason in and of itself to roll back the edit.
It is an absolutely trivial edit. The text itself is noise, it should have been removed, which would have put into light the need for the answer to link to documentation and explain why use that function.
In both cases, the rollbacks were a bit over the top, both the return to the op's formulation and Script47 here rolling back to their preferred version.