On my review page, I read:
Your review on review/25144570 wasn't helpful.
"Requires Editing" should only be used when other community users (like you) are able to edit/format the question into a better shape. If a question is unsalvagable and/or can only be improved by the author, please flag/vote to close or delete instead. For more information, see meta.stackoverflow.com/q/389148.
Come back in 4 days to continue reviewing.
I feel the pain that @b-rian felt because the question was also reviewed 3x Requires Editing, so I felt slightly cheated. Let me elaborate:
In my extremely limited experience with Triage questions, I click Looks OK only sometimes. If I can easily improve on the questions via editing (e.g. formatting) I will.
Clicking Unsalvageable is problematic for me because with my reputation, I can only flag 11 times a day. Once I've reached that count, I can no longer click Unsalvageable.
This leaves Requires editing, which over the course of my reviews have become somewhat of a "default" option (I will flag questions with Unsalvageable if the question is indeed unsalvageable, if I still can). That's because it feels like a catch-all option, even though I know the guide does not say so. Unsalvageable has usage limits, Looks OK is tricky because questions often can be improved upon.
Skip. This is where I messed up. I unfortunately used Skip too little. I failed to understand that Skip should be my default option, instead of Requires editing.
Discussion time:
In my defence, the official Triage guide feels too lengthy for beginners like me to understand.
- Would moderators consider improving triaging guidelines for Skip so that it's more obvious that it should be the default? (For example, by putting the Skip button first, or by making it explicit in the guidelines)?
- Do other reviewers abuse Requires Editing? I don't feel like I am alone in this mistake.