My answer edit at https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/21685710 fixed an objectively broken (misspelled) Qt method call, but was rejected for nonsensical reasons.
"This edit was intended to address the author of the post and makes no sense as an edit." No I was fixing the answer so it compiles.
Do people use the rejection notice:
This edit was intended to address the author of the post and makes no sense as an edit. It should have been written as a comment or an answer.
when they intend to say:
This edit supplies new information not found in the original answer.
? The current rejection message is inappropriate since it's very abstract and doesn't clearly tell editors that adding information is prohibited. (I am confused by the reason given for a rejected edit appears to also believe the current rejection message is poorly worded.)
Drop the current 6 character minimum for broken hyperlink edits suggests making extra edits to avoid the 6-character minimum. That's what I did, and my edit got rejected.
Legitimate edits of less than 6 characters suggests adding a comment instead of fixing the typo... which adds more work for readers of the answer than fixing the typo in the first place. And the author of the answer is inactive and may not fix it.
This is not the first time my edits have been rejected: Edit rejected, for adding extra information beyond single-character typo (then some privileged user performed a 1-character edit... the character minimum and practice of rejecting large edits creates a catch-22 for unprivileged users.)
And this time I didn't introduce new information other than mentioning the language used in the answer (so there is no reason my post should've been rejected).