Quite often I find myself rolling back changes where I need to explain why I've done the rollback.
For example,
- someone adds inflammatory remarks to a post after receiving downvotes
- OP adds edits or follow-ups after accepting an answer
- an answer is edited introducing typos or incorrect information
- someone makes a change that conflicts with the author's intent
For these reasons and more, a rollback is definitely what is required, but rolling back without context often leads to rollback wars.
Here would be the default rollback message:
Rollback to Revision 1
Here would be a rollback message with a reason, if the feature is implemented:
Rollback to Revision 1. Reason: edit introduces off-topic comments
I'm not sure on the exact mechanics of how such a field should be shown, but it should probably be done without introducing an extra click if not needed (meaning a user interacts with this field/dialog only if they need to add a reason).
Now existing solutions are to either
- rollback and leave a comment explaining why and hope no one slings mud at you
- copy the revision source and edit the answer yourself with an edit reason "Rolling back to revision #x because blah"
Neither of these options are as simple as leaving a reason while clicking the rollback button. Adding a message would also make your intention clear to moderators or others trying to resolve a dispute.
Thoughts?