11

I recently saw a question that was off-topic. Once I went to the revision history, I could see that the OP had changed the content of the question completely, thus making it off-topic.

In cases like this, what should be done? Should I flag it as "Blatantly off-topic", or should I roll the post back?


Return to FAQ index

0

1 Answer 1

11

You should roll the post back. If you can fix the question, you should, because the question still has a possibility of adding value to the Stack Overflow community.

If the user rolls back your edit, resulting in a rollback war, then flag for a mod and move on. We're all in theory adults here, so let's act like adults.

7
  • 2
    And... your edit resulted in a "rejected edit". Seems someone else perhaps didn't notice your pending rollback or for some reason chose to not approve it. I'm not sure how that makes for an incentive.
    – Scratte
    Commented Sep 16, 2020 at 22:44
  • 1
    @Scratte That's not the case. The rejection reason reads "This item is no longer reviewable." No one actually reviewed it. I think that someone with enough rep edited it. Commented Sep 16, 2020 at 23:37
  • @Scratte: That's my fault. I didn't read GalaxyCat105's (original) answer properly and just read "I rolled it back" (I missed the "edit" part). I then went to the question and saw that it wasn't rolled back, so I simply did that. GalaxyCat105, sorry for the rejected edit!
    – honk
    Commented Sep 17, 2020 at 6:43
  • I mean it's a good answer that I've seen come up dozens of times over the years, but this is not specific to Stack Overflow is it?
    – Gimby
    Commented Sep 17, 2020 at 14:38
  • 1
    @Scratte There are good arguments for a 2k+ user just rolling back a post, rather than approving an edit from a user with <2k which claims to be rolling back the post. Users with >2k rep have an actual "rollback" button, which is available on the revisions page. It records it in the edit history as an actual rollback. In order to review an edit which claims to be rolling back the question, the reviewer would need to carefully verify in the diff-view and other available views that the only change was that the post was actually rolled back. Doing so for a long post is a lot of work.
    – Makyen Mod
    Commented Sep 17, 2020 at 17:01
  • @Scratte I'd much rather see an actual "rollback" in the edit history, because people reading it know exactly what really happened, rather than an edit which shows as a normal edit, but states that it's a rollback. Without a detailed check of the edit (by reviewers, and potentially people who visit the revision page after the edit is applied), you never know that's actually what was done. Yes, this means that my opinion is that rollbacks should be done by users with >2k rep, even if that means invalidating an edit by a <2k user which purports to be rolling back the post.
    – Makyen Mod
    Commented Sep 17, 2020 at 17:08
  • @Makyen That makes perfect sense. I think this Answer should reflect that, so <2K users don't start trying to manually edit posts to a previous identical version, but wait until they are >2K users using the rollback option :)
    – Scratte
    Commented Sep 17, 2020 at 17:21

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .