Some background to clarify my question: This stems from a recent experience I had on SO where I absolutely made an error in my question statement and inadvertently flipped two terms that I had backward in my head. Luckily, several members of the community caught my error and discussed it in the comments which prompted me to edit my original post, flipping the terms, to correctly ask what I intended.
The problem was, when I made my edit, someone had already given an answer that was true and accurate in response to my initial post, and thus my edit invalidated that answer. It was suggested in the comments that I revert my question and re-ask, which I began to do, but then another user pointed out that because my error was obvious enough that several community members caught it, the edit was valid.
Ultimately, I got the answer I needed, but there was some confusion. So, my question is, how do we decide when an edit is acceptable, or when the question needs to be entirely re-asked? When is it ok for an edit to invalidate accurate answers, if ever? What burden of clarification do folks answering have to ensure they're addressing the spirit of the question? Or, more specifically, is there/what is the precedent for handling these situations?