Focusing strictly on code edits, I think the following are unequivocally OK:

 * fixing formatting / indentation / brace usage (especially for new users that end posting triple-spaced quadruple-indented code, or for people that have bizarre brace styles)
 * fixing obvious typos that in no way affect the question (i.e. the typo is not the problem, just prevents it from being a true MCVE)

I'm not sure anybody would really argue against those. Where there seems to be some issue is regarding edits of the kind that make the question *better* by making it more of an MCVE. This category includes anything from:

 * adding missing `#includes` (for questions unrelated to undefined symbols) 
 * removing dozens to hundreds of lines of code to reproduce the problem more minimally
 * making obvious fixes of ill-formed/undefined behavior code that aren't related to the actual problem OP is asking about (e.g. `void main()`, or OP not having allocated a pointer before dereferencing it - where said pointer dereference is not related to the issue, etc.)

These all fall under the same umbrella and I think they're OK if you're **sure** you maintained the invariant of OP's original problem... and you're sure because you've **verified** by compiling/running the code and getting the identical compile error/runtime behavior. But I think they're only actually worth doing if they improve the quality of the question. 

Turning a 400 line not-quite compiling, clearly-not-minimal example into a 15 line MCVE with all the right `#include`s and everything? Hell yea, edit! That significantly increases the upvote-worthiness of a question and makes it more likely that (a) the OP understands OP's own question better and (b) OP gets better, more focused answers. I love these edits and wish I could upvote them. 

Turning a 25 line non-compiling example with `void main()` into a 24 line still-non-compiling example with `int main()`? I think the edit's fine and non-objectionable (the problem here has absolutely nothing to do with the return type of `main()` - invariant maintained), but it just isn't particularly significant. I still wouldn't upvote this question. May as well spend the time to actually make the code compile, or leave a comment about the invalidity of `void main()`, or pass. Probably worth it to have left a comment in the edit as to why that edit was made for OP's sake.