I wanted to modify elements in a list today, but not use a Python list comprehension because the modifications were more complex than I was comfortable coding with a list comprehension. I also did not want to create a new list as my list will have several hundred thousand objects and I have lots of other pieces in memory. Thus I Googled for 'python list replace element' and came across this closed question.
I was intrigued by the close reason (closed as not a real question). I thought the question should not be closed so I edited it to at least add an example.
I did this because I can't vote to reopen and it seems from asking this question the only way I can get a question considered to be reopened is to edit the question.
So now I am curious as to what happens to a closed question when it is edited? I looked at the list of all the "Questions that may already have your answer" and the only one I found was What happens to close flags after an edit has occurred. That question was about a specific case - the OP put a close flag on a question and then the question was edited before enough close flags had accumulated.
Let me be clear - I want to know exactly - what queue does it enter and what has to happen for the question to be considered for reopening? I did poke around the review queues that I can access and it does not seem likely that the question will show up there. Based on the answers I received on the question I asked a couple of weeks ago - the question should get reviewed by somebody.
I am curious because if the question goes through the review process and remains closed I would then like to learn how to challenge that result.
There is a dup flag on my question - my question is not a duplicate of Which edits push closed questions to the reopen review queue? for one reason - the question I edited was not pushed to the review queue based on this answer
I think the correct answer to my question is that my edit did not cause the question to be entered into any review queue. I am still not sure though so I am waiting.