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In this example, the question was closed because of a typo in the code - no amount of editing will make it "openable".

Still, you can see from the revisions that it was edited after it was already closed. It was then approved and edited by a reviewer from the Suggested Edits queue, with good reason - I would probably accept that edit as well as it clears away some unnecessary comments by the author. But I wouldn't accept it if I knew the question is closed. Accepting this (rather) superfluous edit might move this question to the Re-Open queue with no good reason - as established before, it shouldn't ever be re-opened.

This raises the question shouldn't the suggested edits (on questions) indicate if the question is closed? This might give reviewers a different perspective on the edit - some acceptable edits should be rejected if the question is closed.


I would suggest something as simple as the following:

enter image description here

Assuming "experienced" users are already aware and would not edit closed questions, newcomers still might edit closed questions thinking they are doing good. This is why the "responsibility" passes over to the reviewers to stop this, and this is why they should be aware if the question is closed.


At first I was going to say that edits to closed questions shouldn't even enter the Suggested Edits queue and only OP should be able to edit a closed question, but that might be too limiting as sometimes a question in Need of details or clarity might still be clarified by a "stranger" and the cycle of suggested Edit -> Accept -> Re-Open -> Accept might work in this case.

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  • 5
  • 1
    "But I wouldn't accept it if I knew the question is closed" - ... why not? If the edits are good, they're good. Heck, maybe they make the question good enough to reopen it, but we have a separate queue to decide that. Having to worry about closed status in the edit review queue is just another burden you don't really need.
    – Gimby
    Oct 19, 2020 at 12:08
  • 3
    @Gimby well you raise a good point that's hard to argue with, but the way I see it: Why bother with editing a closed question with minor edits that wouldn't change the meaning of the question just for it to be passed on to the reopen queue to be someone else's burden...
    – Tomerikoo
    Oct 19, 2020 at 12:11
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    @Gimby A Question gets one free ride to the reopen queue with the first edit. If the author at any later point can actually edit it into being OK, their opportunity is lost due to some superficial edit. Not that it matters in this case, but closed Questions should not be edited unless the editor thinks the Question becomes re-open-able :)
    – Scratte
    Oct 19, 2020 at 12:16
  • @Scratte has an excellent point. Also, why should an otherwise good edit go down as rejected and (possibly) penalize the editor just because the question is/ got closed?
    – zcoop98
    Oct 19, 2020 at 16:35
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    @zcoop98 because he shouldn't have edited a closed question in the first-place if the edit is not meaningful...
    – Tomerikoo
    Oct 19, 2020 at 16:36
  • And if the question is closed while an edit is pending?
    – zcoop98
    Oct 19, 2020 at 16:37
  • 2
    @zcoop98 That is an unfortunate case. Often those edits are rejected. It would be preferable if the close voters were to approve the edit before closing the post. That way the editor will not get punished with a rejected edit. But, choose the Questions you edit wisely to avoid such risks. Pick ones that are fine and doesn't have recent activity. "Active today" is not a good choice. Other users are unlikely to begin other actions on such posts. Some will even have your edit rejected to push their own. That gets you a "This edit conflicted with a subsequent edit." reject reason.
    – Scratte
    Oct 19, 2020 at 16:41
  • I say that as more of a hypothetical than something that's happened to me prior, but point taken. Related post: Why is there not an edit-rejection reason to cover cleanups of off-topic questions?
    – zcoop98
    Oct 19, 2020 at 16:48
  • @SecurityHound Yeah sorry for the confusion, the screenshot is actually a mesh-up of a random review with the close message from the question referenced... I agree with what you said with the slight objection that if the question was not closed, I might have approved it. True, it is not VERY meaningful, but it does improve the question (removing comments like plz answer me, almightys) - but doesn't make it openable...
    – Tomerikoo
    Oct 20, 2020 at 11:10

2 Answers 2

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This is a good solution to the wrong problem

Stack Exchange shouldn't spend dev time adapting other features to work around the fact that non-OP edits send posts into the reopen queue. They should simply make it not do that, because it's unintuitive and causes problems like this (and more: plenty of 2k+ users don't know it does this, so they edit closed posts too).

This would be less effort for a larger payoff. The data show that edits can help reopen a post, but that it's unlikely for an edit from someone other than the OP to do so without also having an edit from the OP. If such edits didn't send posts to the reopen queue, it would be easier to improve posts so that they could actually be reopened.

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    I agree with most. I actually wrote this SE answer on the matter (to the question Improving Review Queues) basically saying that only OP edits should sent the post to Re-Open, don't know how much attention that got... I guess I'm just trying to find a solution for the smaller problem, at least until the bigger one is solved (which I have a feeling will take time...)
    – Tomerikoo
    Oct 21, 2020 at 7:06
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    @bad_coder please see merriam-webster.com/dictionary/data#usage-1 for why I've rolled back your edit.
    – Ryan M Mod
    Nov 10, 2020 at 9:29
  • @RyanM: I'm embarrassed to admit that I didn't know that about non-OP edits—nor did I know that a question only gets one chance in the Reopen Votes queue, as mentioned in the comments above. I doubt I've edited too many closed questions, but I'm certain it's happened, and especially if there are edits I can make that will help the author toward a good answer, while combining it with a suggestion for what additional information is still needed. I'll definitely be more aware of that! Dec 26, 2020 at 20:11
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It seems that there is an indication in the review if the question is closed, similar to the indication in a question's title if it is closed - [closed]:

enter image description here

But only if the title was not edited!

The above image shows an example review where indeed the title had [closed]. But I actually just approved an edit myself:

enter image description here

Only to find that the question is already closed... The timeline shows that the question was edited (by Ryan above, funny enough) at 17:46, closed at 17:47 and then had another edit proposed at 17:48. Which means that both by the time of the proposed edit, and by the time of my review the question was already closed. But there was no indication in the review!

This is very frustrating and I believe should be changed. I opened another meta post about this as a bug.


Regardless, I still believe that the current indication is not enough and might get missed. I think having the same closed message as in the question itself, something more in the lines of what I suggested in the question, is both obvious enough and in-line with how the question looks.

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