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:
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.