I attempted to edit the following 'accepted' answer:
... my purpose to editing it, was that as the 'accepted' answer, it's going to be the most viewed answer & as a consequence the fact that it starts with information that's not true (the first line) is not 'accurate/current' (but maybe still valuable for historic reference, hence a strike-through & not a deletion); in addition as a consumer of the answer, the most important part was the update (to now being supported) so I bolded that to make it more accessible
, as well as correct two spelling errors (technically one spelling error the first time & two the second edit.)
I am explaining this in more detail here, because in both attempts to make the edits, apparently my abridged/truncated language wasn't significant to have the edit accepted because of the limited field length of an [Edit Summary]; which was frustrating enough.
The first time I submitted my edit, I was rejected 1 to 2 ... where t3chb0t w 6.5kRep approved; but @Wizhi w 3.3kRep & @silwar w 3.7kRep both rejected with what appeared as a "canned" answer:
This edit does not make the post even a little bit easier to read, easier to find, more accurate or more accessible. Changes are either completely superfluous or actively harm readability.
... really? not even a little bit
... honestly, I don't believe either of them actually took the time to read what I edited nor what I wrote in the [Edit Summary]. I think it would be interesting for the moderators to review @Wizhi & @silwar's edit rejections & see how many times they've used that "canned response". As a new editor who took the time to edit & then try to complete the [Edit Summary] as best as possible, really demoralizing.
I didn't see any way to reply and/or appeal and/or retry, but I certainly wasn't happy with a canned rejection, especially when the canned rejection didn't even seem to apply (especially in hindsight of the two "new" approved edits #5 & #6, discussed below); so I tried again & really tried to explain as best as possible in my new [Edit Summary].
Again, the result was 1 to 2 against. Yaakov Ainspan w 2.5kRep approved; but at least this time I don't believe I received canned answers...
- Nick A w 4.2kRep wrote :: "If it was already rejected, why would you try to suggest it again?" ... maybe he didn't read my updated [Edit Summary] and I wonder why he asked me a question that I can't respond to.?.
- Community (a bot? rotating admin account?) wrote :: "This edit did not correct critical issues with the post - view the revision history to see what should have been changed." ... the first line is factually incorrect, how is that not a critical issue? I did look at the revision history, where is this 'see what should have been changed' you speak of, certainly not the canned response.
- Stephen Kennedy w 3kRep didn't write anything, but instead "Reject and Edited" the answer ... so as new editor, I looked to see what he did (revision #5), & he fixed the two spelling typos. Fixing two spelling typos apparently rises to the standard of ::
This edit does not make the post even a little bit easier to read, easier to find, more accurate or more accessible. Changes are either completely superfluous or actively harm readability. ... yet what I did didn't rise to this standard, huh?
When I saw that I also saw revision #6 by TylerH w 15.3kRep ... this is interesting, it pretty much looks exactly like the changes I made twice that were rejected both times. I mean he did move the word 'Google', capitalized 'Now', and added 2013; but other than that when you combine edits 5 & 6, it pretty much looks like my edit. And had any of the rejectors told me I needed to move the word 'Google', capitalize 'Now', and add 2013 to make my edit not be considered completely superfluous
, I would have done that ... but somehow I missed 'seeing what should have been changed'.
So as a new editor, what's my takeaway?... don't make edits until I have a 15kRep because then you don't have to deal with the limited [Edit Summary] field or have your changes be rejected for no reason.
To the admins I ask, with the above information in mind ::
- Why are new editors discouraged?
- Why are editors not given an opportunity to explain/defend/correct/update their edits?
- Upon rejection, why does the system not show the FAQ on disputing edits
... ironically, I did essentially get my edit, I just didn't get credit for it.