Sometimes, edits go terribly wrong. This isn't too troublesome, as long as your edits are peer-reviewed. Once you earn the Edit Questions and Answers privilege, however, your edits are no longer scrutinized, nor do you get any feedback on their quality.
It so happened, that I came across the following question1:
I am new to win32. In C# it is possible to have a form semi-transparent but not control (using hatch brush). Any guidance, how to achieve this in win-32 window. Thanks in advance.
It was edited (well, butchered) into this:
In C#, is it possible to have a form semi-transparent but not control it using hatch brush in Win32?
That edit was actively harmful, substantially changing the question that was asked2. I rolled back the edit3, but it doesn't appear to be possible to let the user know, that they have done a poor job.
Is there any way to get the information across, before more harm is done? Would it be a good idea to automatically send a message to users, when their edits get rolled back?
1 It's a poor question to begin with. But this post is not about the question quality. It is about the quality of the edit.
2 The edit changed the meaning in the following ways: 1
It turned a statement, meant as an example, into a question ("In C# it is possible..." to "In C#, is it possible...?"). 2
It changed the meaning of "control" from (what I assume to be) a noun to a verb. 3
It simply appended the remainder of the question to its newly invented question, rendering it meaningless ("In C#, is it possible to have ... in Win32?").
3 I wasn't sure how to expand on the initial edit, while retaining the author's intent. I'm not even entirely sure, what the question is asking for. Rolling back the entire edit and giving the OP a chance to clarify appeared to be the only non-destructive option.
@
into the comment field, like it usually would. – IInspectable Jul 26 '18 at 12:23@
-trigger, either through better documentation or a better UI. – IInspectable Jul 26 '18 at 12:36