He put an effort to the edit (I approved a previous edit he submitted), and before I reject it I'd be happy to allow him to explain why he thinks it improves my answer. Is there a way for me to contact him and ask him via StackOverflow?
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3If he already made an edit you should be able to ping him in a comment. Not so sure about pending editors though.– André KoolCommented Mar 20, 2019 at 17:36
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3If they have enough reputation to chat you can invite that user to a "private" chat room for you two.– πάντα ῥεῖCommented Mar 20, 2019 at 17:36
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2You can also explain why you think it isn't an improvement in a custom 'causes harm' reject reason and say, "Please explain in a comment/chat if you still disagree".– BSMPCommented Mar 20, 2019 at 18:10
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2One way you can handle it is to accept the edit, ping a message to the author via the comments, and then rollback/edit if you don't come to an agreement.– halferCommented Mar 20, 2019 at 19:25
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But you want to reject it... so the edit is wrong isn't it?– GimbyCommented Mar 21, 2019 at 10:17
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1The issue has already been solved. The edit was accepted by two moderators, and only after it was accepted I saw his original comment which made sense. I then made a small stylistic change. I think the edit page could be improved. The user's comment should be mentioned clearly, and it would be great if there would be an option to discuss a certain edit within the edit page.– Ben CarpCommented Mar 21, 2019 at 15:56
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4Either accept or reject the edit. There us no need to discuss it.– RaedwaldCommented Mar 21, 2019 at 21:08
Add a comment
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1 Answer
You use @<username> <message>
in the comments section under your answer. For example, if you were talking to me...
@JeffC I saw your suggested edit. Why do you think that would improve my answer?
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1Makes much sense. But if he hasn't commented, and his edit wasn't accepted yet, can I trust that he'd get the message? Could I just ping in this manner any StackOverFlow user?– Ben CarpCommented Mar 21, 2019 at 15:58
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1@yivi I know you posted a link that explains all of this but I have received a message through a comment from a question that I have never seen/visited. I'm not sure how that is explained. I helped a user with an answer to question #1. They wrote question #2 and then @ me from the comments under Q2 and I received the message. Granted this was probably a year or two ago so maybe things have changed since then?– JeffCCommented Mar 21, 2019 at 20:18
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1@JeffC: No, that has never been the way @ pings have worked here. You cannot be pinged from question #2 unless you have posted to question #2. It's never been possible to ping a user from a question they have not participated in, and it isn't possible by design to prevent this from becoming a chat group or social networking site. Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 2:22
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3@yivi OP said "I approved a previous edit he submitted", so pinging should work, right? Not because of the pending edit, but the previous approved one.– walenCommented Mar 22, 2019 at 10:50
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1@BenCarp You said "I approved a previous edit he submitted", the prerequisite is fulfilled, pinging should work.– walenCommented Mar 22, 2019 at 10:51
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1@walen I had missed that. Focused on "pinging the author of a pending edit", which is the general case. On this specific case I think you are right.– yiviCommented Mar 22, 2019 at 10:51
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@walen Yes I have, and your solution was relevant for my case. But I also wondered about the more general case. However, after his edit I have tried pinging him. when I tried @ and some characters from his name there was no autoComplete to suggest that a user would be pinged.– Ben CarpCommented Mar 22, 2019 at 13:27
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2@BenCarp That may be because the
StackExchange.comments.tabCompleter
JS function used to show name suggestions only accounts for usernames currently visible in the.question
,.answer
and.comments
sections, which would exclude users that made an edit but not the last edit (as far as I could tell from the JS code). However the ping should work once the comment gets to SO servers and is parsed for user mentions.– walenCommented Mar 22, 2019 at 14:04