It was rejected because you're not supposed to include tags in the title when written in a way that's tag-like. In fact, when a tag is not used as a natural-English part of the title, it should be edited out. The help center, in "How do I ask a good question?" says:
- Don't include tags in the title. The system will automatically prepend the most important tag to your title for search-engine optimization purposes. You don't need to (and shouldn't) do it manually. If you want to include the name of the language/library/framework/tool, do it in regular English, not as a bracketed tag.
If your suggested edit hadn't been rejected, this issue with your edits wouldn't have been brought to your attention. Without it being brought to your attention, you wouldn't have been able to learn that the edits which you've been suggesting should be a bit different in order to be in sync with the standards of the site. Given that you didn't handle this specific issue correctly in 6 of your last 10 suggested edits, it's something that really did need to be brought to your attention.
Unfortunately, at this point, we don't have a way within the edit system to reject a suggested edit using a custom reason, to actually explain such issues, while also applying an edit to the post without having to wait for the review of the suggested edit to be complete. We used to have the capability to reject an edit with a custom reason that very briefly (due to limited characters) explained the actual reason(s) for rejecting the edit and then to apply an edit that could demonstrate what the edit should have been. Personally, I found having that capability quite helpful in communicating to editors what the issues were with the edit (or at least attempting to communicate to the editor, as such reasons are only shown to editors if the editor goes and looks for the information).
?:
. While I find it very annoying when code formatting is used on something that isn't code,?:
is code so it's perfectly OK to format it as such.