**Completely agree**

1. SO is intended to be a top-quality Q&A site.

2. Spelling and grammar mistakes, even small ones, make posts more difficult to read, and negatively reflect on their quality as a whole.

3. SO has access to a very large community, who read and re-read many questions multiple times a day.

Together, these reasons are compelling for allowing edits, even small ones.

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**Rejection of @Servy's reasons**

1. "It consumes a lot of reviewer time." This is fixable. Minor edits could require only one reviewer. They are easy to understand, easy to check, and almost any reviewer can determine their correctness. These edits will not stay in the queue long.

2. "It locks the post from editing until the post is reviewed, inhibiting the ability of other users to make more substantial edits." True, though I have very rarely (actually, never) encountered this with any edit.

3. "It draws reviewer time away from other suggested edits, causing them to lock up the posts for longer, and prevent other more substantial edits from being applied sooner." This seems like a repetition of #1 and #2, smashed together.

4. "It bumps the post on the front page, drawing attention to it and consuming the time of readers without much benefit." I'm not sure what "without much benefit" means. If you want to look at new questions (not questions that have been edited recently), look at Unanswered newest.

Addtionally, there seems to be a common logical fallacy that someone who corrects a spelling mistake turns to other, more significant edits if minor changes are disallowed. I don't think this happens: "Oh, I can't edit the typo in this question I'm reading...I should go search SO for a worse question."

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We should allow people to correct grammar and spelling mistakes. We don't have to be obsessive about it, but if someone is willing to spend the time for that kind of edit, let them.