> What is our policy on editing questions vs asking an OP to edit?

[When should I edit posts?](https://stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/edit) directly answers what one should edit.  I would add a higher rep user deserves more time before someone else edits.  And during that time, a comment is the way to go.

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Making a good questions can be _hard_.

Should it be a missing `#include<>`, spelllling error, or a minor coding infraction, small defects in a post all serve to obscure its central meaning.

That particular post I saw unfold with the usual initial comments from the [usual suspects](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vtSmfws0_To).

Although I did not concur with the comments' finer points of the [post](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/35761268/is-it-well-defined-behavior-to-address-a-32-bit-int-using-a-bitfield-inside-a?noredirect=1#comment59196968_35761268), I can understand why they are there.  Also I understand OP's feeling about their tangential nature.  OP was not impolite, but was a little edgy.

> Yes I think OP should have promptly edited per concerns or _politely_ invited the commentators to self-edit.  If anything for a matter of expediency.

> Was OP's request "asked the commentators to make the edits" reasonable - yes.

Yet take all with a grain of salt.  Neither commentator has posted many questions (I count 2 questions combined on SO) and together have 27 months SO experience - certainly not a high question/experience ratio.

Disclosure: I posted the [accepted answer](https://stackoverflow.com/a/35762400/2410359).