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I recently suggested this edit. The edit removed some thing that were useless and should be removed (ex.I'm a newbie, thank you, Edited:), fixed capitatlization and punctuation, and cleaned up the English. It also removed a second question which was added by the OP after they got an answer to their first.

It was rejected by 2 reviewers for very different reasons. The first one said that "This edit deviates from the original intent of the post. Even edits that must make drastic changes should strive to preserve the goals of the post's owner." and the second one said that "This edit was intended to address the author of the post and makes no sense as an edit. It should have been written as a comment or an answer."

I don't understand how this edit "deviate from the original intent of the post". I suppose that removing the second question did deviate from the OP's intent (but not their original intent, it was added later), but OPs shouldn't add more questions to the same post once their question gets answered. I guess the OP also did intend to put in things like "thank you", but those are supposed to not be added to posts, and besides the purpose of the post is obviously to get an answer to their question, not to include a salutation. And I have to assume that the reviewer does not seriously think that the OP intended to use incorrect English, punctuation, and grammar.

I certainly don't see how "this edit was intended to address the author of the post", "makes no sense as an edit", and it definitely shouldn't "have been written as a comment or an answer". If I posted my revised version as an answer or a comment, it would certainly be (rightfully) deleted. I don't understand how someone could possibly think this edit was meant to reply to the OP.

So, am I missing something here? Was this edit correctly declined?

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    @chivracq here's an image of the review and this is the question Commented Nov 18 at 17:07
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    "This seems like robo-reviewing to me. Somehow, though, they are passing review audits" The suggested edits queue only has negative audits, it's completely possible to robo-review by rejecting everything (which isn't what they're doing, 281 approved / 714 rejected). || I personally would have improved your edit (which counts as an approval) to fix the code formatting and random empty blockquote. It's possible that you just got unlucky with your reviewers, both are relatively new to the queues. Commented Nov 18 at 17:09
  • @ipodtouch0218 more than 4.5k reviews isn't what I'd call new to the queues. I consider myself to be experienced with review queues and I barely have more than 500 reviews netowork wide. Commented Nov 18 at 18:57
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    Even after the edit, I can't understand how the provided code or error message are supposed to relate to the question (which appears to be purely a how-to question). Commented Nov 18 at 19:14
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    @KarlKnechtel - That would suggest there is an underlying problem with the question, but that isn't a reason, to reject to the edit which was a substantial improvement to the current revision. It appears after being rejected, a different user with more reputation, ended up applying the same edits. Commented Nov 18 at 22:47
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    Why leave the glaring formatting problems with the first code block? I wouldn't have rejected the edit for that reason, but still... Commented Nov 19 at 0:51
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    @PresidentJamesK.Polk Honestly because I didn't notice I was really editing for the english/second question Commented Nov 19 at 0:53
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    Yeah I have no words. The rejection reasons are senseless and the fact that an edit suggestion which needed only a few more tweaks was rejected rather than edited also is very unproductive. Bad luck, I hope.
    – Gimby
    Commented Nov 20 at 12:40

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