I understand that when a question is edited, it is (according to some rules) automatically sent to the reopen queue.
I suggest replacing this with doing it manually. Have some button that says "send to reopen queue" or something like that. The reason is that very often questions gets closed for various reasons, and then the user gets advice on how to correct it. More often than not it takes a couple of edits before it's in an ok state. Both because they misunderstand the advice, or don't do it well enough, but also because they often do it incrementally instead of whole edits. So in most of the cases, it's fairly pointless to send it to review after the first edit.
And in a lot of other cases, other users make minor edits to older posts, like indenting code, correcting spelling errors, and such. Also here, it's quite rare that they make enough changes for a reopening. So it's pointless that it gets sent to the queue.
Furthermore, I think this is something that anybody who has the edit privilege should be able to do. Or maybe it should be an ability at a higher privilege level. I also might consider that it could be an idea to allow users to do this multiple times. But I'm not sure about those details, so please look at the bigger picture of this suggestion. Possibly it could require the reopen privilege for everybody except OP.
This should only be possible for an editor after the edit.
And this should be something that's separate from reopen votes. If you want to send it to the reopen queue without an edit, you have to use your reopen vote.
I read this answer and it says that questions enter the queue because of edits in three cases:
- When the author edits it within 70 days of closure
- When another editor edits it within 70 days of closure, provided that the editor has not flagged or close voted the question
- When the question is sufficiently popular according to some magic numbers.
Only the first two are relevant here, and note that questions only enter the queue once per closure because of edits.
This leads to questions entering the queue when they are far from ready, as explained above. So I think that it would be a good idea to allow the users to make edits while explicitly saying that it's not ready, by not pushing the button.
This leads to a very bad scenario. Consider a user asks a question that gets closed. The user makes an edit, it ends up in the review queue, and it doesn't get reopened. Now it does not matter which edits OP is making, and has to wait for a kind person that votes to reopen. And in a vast majority of these cases they don't even know how this works. Many of them are beginners that do not even know that this queue exists. Others have heard that it enters that queue on edits, so they trust that this will happen when they edit. I belonged to the latter category until recently.
When you click the button, you could have a confirm box like this:
Are you sure you want to submit this question to the reopen queue? Don't do it unless ALL issues have been rectified.
Also, for obvious reasons, it's imperative that the UI is very clear that pressing that button is required for reopening.
If tuned correctly, I think we could both increase the amount of questions that get sent to the queue that really get reopened, and fewer questions that don't.
TBH, I have stopped caring about the reopen queue, because there are tons of questions with edits that obviously do not make it ready for reopening.
As an additional thing, currently you can very easily see which questions you have accepted an answer for. You could also do something similar to this, so that you can easily see if a question is in the review queue or not. In the past, you got reminders to accept answers if you had not done so. You could have some reminder like that, that gets sent out after a day or something, for instance
Your question was closed because . You have edited it after that, but you have not sent it to the reopen queue. The question will not be reopened unless it enters the queue. Remember that you should only send it to the queue if you have fixed the question enough to comply with the requirements.
Do you want to send the question for reopening review? (Y/N)
EDIT:
I'd like to add a comment from zcoop98
Re: "And in a vast majority of these cases they don't even know how this works" - Ideas surrounding this topic have been proposed before, and normally one of the arguments made to the contrary is that OP's would just always send their edits to the reopen queue. But... that's exactly what happens now, with the major exception that many OP's inevitably don't realize it's even happening. This lack of instruction leaves room for significant improvement over the current system, IMO. –
And in a lot of other cases, other users make minor edits to older posts, like indenting code, correcting spelling errors, and such.
Any cosmetic edits on old posts which are already closed should be thoroughly discouraged, I suggest flagging the editor's behaviour if they continually bump old posts because their pet hate are comma splices.