To be honest I'd have rejected this edit as well. Putting a edit request with mostly minor grammatical changes is not really a good use of time and review points for those who are working the review queue. It also introduces a couple of new mistakes. Going through the changes one by one:
Old Title
How to using Tensorflow in python?
New Title
How to use Tensorflow in python?
No qualms there, though I would have also made Python start with a capital letter as per their style guide:
Python
The name of our favorite programming language is always capitalized.
Old
there is an error in the module where the tensorflow module does not exist even though I have installed the module from tensorflow
New
there is an error in the module which says tensorflow module does not exist even though I have installed the module from tensorflow
I'd argue the old revision still makes sense, but I'd leave a comment asking OP to copy-and-paste the exact error message and stacktrace if applicable. This error could then be moved into a quote block (or code block in the case of a stacktrace).
As Cerbrus points out in the comments, this paragraph could also do with a bit of punctuation to break it up.
"when running the code there is an error in the module which says tensorflow module does not exist even though I have installed the module from tensorflow." lacks the required punctuation that'd make it readable. The edits in that first paragraph aren't an improvement.
Old:
Can you help me resolve the error?
New:
How to resolve the error?
Leaving aside the fact that the new sentence is grammatically incorrect ("How do I resolve this error?" would be a better way of wording it), this sentence doesn't add anything to the question and should be removed entirely.
Old
there is the code:
New
Here is the code:
Fair enough, but I'd still argue this is too minor a change to put through the review queue. Save it for when you have 2k rep.
One other change I'd have made would be to use bullet points to list the dependency versions like so:
The tensorflow dependences I am using are:
- tensorflow 1.13.1
- tensorflow-estimator 1.13.0
So yes, the reviewers were correct to reject this particular edit in my opinion, but don't let that put you off. Save the more "minor" edits for those who can edit without needing review (>2k rep), but if you can substantially improve a different question then go for it.