Not long ago I gained the privilege to review queues and I try to help the community a little by handling issues in the queues.
My issue is with questions with low text-to-body ratio. Often askers who posts such questions doesn't use proper code formatting and ratio isn't met. Other times this question is acceptable but asker adds some not important text (which should be removed) to meet this ratio.
I know that this meta post (What is the best way to deal with posts that leave code out of code blocks to satisfy the code/text ratio requirement) suggests we should not edit such questions but simply close them (accepted answer mentions "vast majority of cases like this...")
But:
What about new users and "be welcoming" policy? If their question is good (or almost good) and can be salvaged by edit, what should I do? If voting to close - which reason is the most appropriate? Example (before edits): hadoop mapreduce why mapper map progress decrease? and why reduce percent 100% when mapper not finished?
When I see question I can improve I try to edit it. It's really irritating when I spend few minutes to fix formatting, typos, rephrase some sentences and when I remove some not essential parts of question then I get message that my edit can't be saved. So my work is in vain and I have to drop the edit. Should I post edits with partial fix and leave the worst parts unedited? (Example: same question linked above)
I'm guessing that there are some users that can edit without text-to-body ratio requirements. Is that correct? What are the privileges needed for that?
EDIT:
I guessed correctly! Today I spotted user that was able to perform edit which clearly must invalid text-to-body ratio. What are the rules here?
https://stackoverflow.com/revisions/52114957/2
Is this edit considered good? According to posted above posts, this question should be closed without editing.
style
or mentioned indentation.