Thanks for the Meta question. I am always happy to justify my edits. Your chat invitation was also fine - I saw it, but since it did not contain a question I had nothing to reply to. If you would like to get in touch in the future, do please open a chat request, and put a question down, so I have something to respond to when I next log on.
Why do we edit?
One of the themes I like to cover when talking about editing is what motivates me:
- Stack Overflow has helped me in my career, so I am paying it forward
- There is intrinsic satisfaction in improving the readability of posts for the benefit of future readers
- There is educational value in improving several posts from one contributor, as it gives them a chance to spot editing patterns (and to read edit reason messages), and thus their future material may not need as much editing
I am strongly in favour of view of Stack Overflow as "curated Q&A" rather than "technical discussion forum", and my edits can be seen in that light. As Cody says in his answer, we think of the site as being edited in much the same way as Wikipedia.
The language of asking
The specific edit I made here falls into a category that has a bit of a back story. It's first worth noting that we like succinct, technical writing, so posts may be edited for that reason on its own.
However, I realised a couple of years ago that some forms of informal request on Stack Overflow had an interesting effect on me - I wondered if the language was deferential, to the degree that I (as the reader) was being placed upon a pedestal, exalted in some fashion, or even pleaded with. I found my experience of this phenomena to be interesting enough that I asked a question about it.
I got some interesting answers, but a piece of research in this one was fascinating. It found that, all other things being equal, a nervous request of "please don't downvote" costs questions -0.6 in downvotes over the long run. This is intriguing for that specific case, since it suggests statistical evidence that the phrase is counterproductive on its own terms (as well as violating the requirement for technical writing).
I have developed a hunch that there is a wider set of politenesses - of which your screenshot is an example - that fall into a similar category. They are:
- not technical writing
- rather flowery and excessively polite
- transfer the agency of achieving something from the writer ("how can I") to the reader ("please help me out", "who is willing to rescue a noob?", "any help?")
There are some kinds of egregious pleading that stray into emotionally manipulative territory, though I would not say that applies in your case:
- here the writer may claim to be helpless or to have given up ("I am stuck", "I don't know what to do")
- the author may be willing to render themselves pathetic in order to obtain aid ("I have done my best", "I have been banging my head for hours", "this is so hard for me")
I should say that I am not making moral judgements here - the way people write is cultural and is not something they can change easily. But the trouble for writers is that the way people read is not easy to change either, and if readers experience a negative reaction to fawning (or the appearance of it) then we're doing both sides a favour by making the interaction more succinct. My suspicion is that readers are happier to help people who present as having similar psychological power, and conversely they are put off by writers who are disposed to worship their audience ("halp me, masters").
So, in your case, not only does the edit make it clearer and easier to read, but you might be less likely to acquire downvotes over the long term, especially if this change is replicated across your other questions.
Further reading