Note: this question is not about why the edit queue is frequently full.
In the last few days it's happened a few times that I clicked "edit" on a question, put maybe 5 minutes into significantly improving a question, and pressed "submit", only to get the message:
The edit queue is full at the moment - try again in a few minutes!
But 'a few minutes' were never enough for the edit queue to get smaller again, so that in each case I ended up leaving the page and losing my edit. Which is quite frustrating!
I understand that sometimes, the edit queue just gets too full, and a limit is required to prevent the queue from getting longer and longer over time. I therefore always have understanding when the same message appears before starting the edit, to keep me from starting at all and wasting my time. However, displaying the message after someone has already put significant effort into the edit will only remove motivation to edit at all, or encourage people to edit more hastily.
There are a few ways that this could be improved:
- Allow edits which have already started to be submitted, even if the queue is full. The limit on the queue is not there for technical reasons, so this should be possible. Surely the number of edits in progress at one time is very limited anyway, so this would not cause the queue to fill up massively? Or if this is a problem, maybe the limit on the queue needs to kick in a bit earlier.
- Don't add edits to the queue when it is full, but still offer them to the person who wrote the original post. Many edits don't need to be approved through the queue at all, so why should this method of approval be blocked by a full queue?
- At least make the message appear as a popup or banner while the person is editing, and not only upon pressing
submit
. This should be possible to implement, as a similar thing already happens when two edits are done simultaneously.