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Given that the Stack Overflow trilogy is to be a resource for googlers, I usually try to go back over my questions/answers and improve them in whatever way that I can. However, I feel this may be inappropriate if there is already an accepted answer because edits bump the (already answered) question to the front page I am wondering if I should refrain from this habit.

Is there any way that I can edit my posts without bumping them? If there isn't, I really think there should be a way to do this (hence the 'feature-request' tag).

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5 Answers 5

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Well, first off, no, there's no way to prevent your edit from bumping the question. Which isn't to say that any edit will necessarily cause the question to appear on the front page - but you're better off not trying to put it into a scenario where it absolutely won't appear there.

I feel this may be inappropriate if there is already an accepted answer.

What? Why?

Someone might have a better answer. They might read your question and post that better answer. Then you could accept it.

Or someone might take the time to edit the existing answer, and improve it.

Or the Q&A might just catch someone's eye, draw them in, and teach them something they didn't know but now appreciate.

Don't knock the bumps. The bumps are good!

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  • 1
    Agreed, going to need a much clearer justification for implementing this. Sep 24, 2009 at 1:29
  • 2
    uh huh huh, he said "knock the bumps"
    – Ether
    Nov 8, 2009 at 5:01
  • 8
    Perhaps a "this is a minor edit" checkbox which will cause it not to bump?
    – hexium
    Nov 8, 2009 at 5:58
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    @hexium How would that checkbox not be open to abuse?
    – random
    Nov 8, 2009 at 6:02
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    @random What abuse? If I understood correctly, you wanted a way to edit posts without bumping them to the front page. By default, it'll be unchecked, and the behavior will be the same as now. However, you'll be able to do what you want.
    – hexium
    Nov 8, 2009 at 6:06
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    @random oh did you mean people sneakily changing answers without anyone noticing? That's still a possibility I guess. But that would happen no matter what mechanism is used for not bumping a thread to top.
    – hexium
    Nov 8, 2009 at 6:07
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    Yup. That's why bumping is good - it forces you to assume that whenever you edit something, your changes will be seen.
    – Shog9
    Nov 8, 2009 at 17:13
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    @hexium. I agree even if it were a "major edit" w/o bumping. As far as other people editing your posts, the original authors get notices of edits, don't they? Feb 2, 2010 at 20:44
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    @molecules: there's an indication of it on the "recent activity" page, but no guarantee the author is still around much less actively watching SO.
    – Shog9
    Feb 2, 2010 at 23:08
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    Which isn't to say that any edit will necessarily cause the question to appear on the front page - it means that there are cases when it's not bumpeD? Which?
    – genesis
    Aug 22, 2011 at 14:59
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    @genesis: they're always bumped - but there are a finite number of questions that can appear on the front page at any given time.
    – Shog9
    Aug 22, 2011 at 15:18
  • @Shog9 If we are fixing simple errors (like typos that may cause confusion to readers), why does it deserve a bump to the front page?
    – Pacerier
    Sep 14, 2011 at 9:57
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    and who decides what is a "simple error", @pacerier? Please see my comment on razlebe's answer.
    – Shog9
    Sep 15, 2011 at 3:58
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    @Pacerier: So I can now re-write an entire post, fill an answer with profanity, or sneak in links to my website, confident that so long as I check the "simple error" box I've got a pretty good shot at not being noticed... Sounds like a pretty bad idea. BTW: you should be aware that commentators don't get notified of edits, authors often don't return to old posts, and mods/admins have better things to do than review every single edit.
    – Shog9
    Sep 15, 2011 at 16:00
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    How about a moderator or sufficiently privileged user, can unbump the edited answer? the editor could request to unbump when they submit an edit, and a moderator or highly privileged user could satisfy that request and unbump
    – barlop
    May 4, 2020 at 15:43
30

I think there could be a case for not bumping some edits.

I agree with @shog9's answer that bumps are generally good things, but I'd rather see questions that are being hotly debated and edited/have substantially changed/have no answers bumped and getting the limelight ahead of those that are being tweaked for comparatively minor housekeeping reasons.

For example, how about not bumping where the body text edit is < 10 characters? This edit of this question is a good example of an edit that I think should not trigger a bump: a minor grammar and capitalization edit, which bumped an almost year-old question to the front page (and triggered this discussion on Meta).

To firm up my suggestion:

Let's keep bumping for

  • A title edit - re-titling a poorly-titled question can quickly bring clarity and attract new answerers who may before have passed on a question previously

  • Re-tagging - question tags are key to attracting knowledgeable answerers, so any tag change deserves the publicity. Especially given that we have our lists interesting and non-interesting tags

  • Substantial edits - Say, of 10 characters or more (I'm open-minded on what the right threshold should be)

Let's NOT bump for

  • Minor edits - Again, say of less than 10 characters

I'm in two minds about

  • Not bumping for formatting edits - controversial, perhaps: a good formatting change can work wonders for clarity. But does e.g. highlighting a variable name and clicking the format-as-code button really deserve giving that question headline status again?

  • Building some notion of "edit rep" into the bump rules - Could we/should we consider relaxing some of the rules above for Copy Editors?

Any thoughts?

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  • Am I now supposed to edit swear-words into your answer or mess it completely up by changing less then 10 characters or something? I agree with @Shog9, bumping is a good thing, even for small edits. Aug 22, 2011 at 13:26
  • @Shog9 Would particularly welcome your feedback, good or bad.
    – razlebe
    Aug 22, 2011 at 13:27
  • @Straitjacket No, that wouldn't be great. But it'd get spotted sooner or later (if the question is of any value at all, someone will read it) at which point the reader can avail themselves of their ability to edit, propose an edit, or flag your action to a mod. Either way, I'd challenge whether you should get front-page billing for such an edit.
    – razlebe
    Aug 22, 2011 at 13:28
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    @razlebe: Two points: 1. editing <10 characters can have a heavy impact, 2. 10 successive edits of <10 characters can completely change the post. Aug 22, 2011 at 13:29
  • @Hendrik Thanks for the feedback. RE: 1., I agree, it's not impossible - but my suspicion is that for most small edits that's not the case. Do you have a good example? 2. That's a great point, and would need to be addressed.
    – razlebe
    Aug 22, 2011 at 13:32
  • @razlebe: I completely agree, #1 should be rare. I don't have a real-life example, but I can well imagine that a few people with malicious intent will do it when they learn that minor edits don't cause bumps anymore. Aug 22, 2011 at 13:35
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    there is zero way to do this that doesn't involve hidden abuse and sweeping changes under the rug. The answer is right in front of you: click "Questions" instead of browsing the home page, if you know you want to avoid recent changes. In other words, YOU need to opt out of viewing changes for YOU, rather than dictating it for all other users. Aug 22, 2011 at 13:54
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    @Jeff I for one had no idea that there was that difference between those two pages. I have no issue working around this and am not trying to dictate anything for anyone - merely posting an alternative point of view.
    – razlebe
    Aug 22, 2011 at 14:07
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    The problem with all of these suggestions is that they can't be reliably implemented without some sort of human review. And human review is the whole point of bumping. So we'd be implementing one system to replace an existing one, with the primary motivation being that some folks are doing annoying things with the existing one... The better solution is simply to coordinate mass-editing - talk about it on a meta site, get folks together, agreeing with each other over what needs to be done, and then go out and do it. In other words... There's no technical solution to a social problem.
    – Shog9
    Aug 22, 2011 at 17:20
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    Maybe we could say something like "no bump for formatting edits for questions with already accepted answers"? Aug 22, 2011 at 21:51
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    I've been editing tags, in particular [white] and [space] where it should have been [whitespace] instead of referring to "white" the UI automation framework and "space" the character. But doing that "bumps" the questions and I've been told it's annoying. I'm not interested in cleaning anymore.
    – Theraot
    Jan 25, 2013 at 2:55
  • I say that it is ok to bump when adding a tag, because it means that it is now relevant to a different public. On the other removing an tag shouldn't... but, since if I only remove a tag it may degrade the quality of the post, then it should become a review task (similar to suggested edits).
    – Theraot
    Jan 25, 2013 at 3:06
  • I really like this suggestion. May 10, 2013 at 17:30
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    @Shog9 - The "no human review" argument is completely illogical. Just whom, exactly, is malicious content going to bother if nobody ever reads the post again? It is a self-defeating argument that simultaneously undermines its own premise. When you weigh it against the lunacy of punishing post owners with CW status, as a clumsy counterbalance to bump-gaming, for editing and improving their own posts it should be even more clear. SE sites want to encourage editing and improving but arguments like this make it all backfire - it's worrying about bogeymen that don't exist.
    – J...
    Jun 9, 2013 at 11:06
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    @JeffAtwood -- How are WE supposed to know about and understand YOUR different menu functions?
    – Martin F
    Dec 31, 2013 at 19:25
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No criterion exists that will work in all circumstances here. Even one-character edit may be disastrous.

This is ultimately a question of trust. At the most we can make such option available for "trusted users" - if we (the community here) indeed trust them not to abuse this option.

I too have edited once or twice just to add emphasis to a key phrase, in one instance - to just two words in a long post IIRC. I too felt uneasy about making that edit, knowing it will get bumped and people might think (legitimately) that I did it for some ulterior motives.

Nothing to do about it really.

Except, this suggestion (have just thought of it) - allow everyone (or maybe just "trusted" users above certain rep level) to mark their edit as "minor, don't bump", - and give everyone who reads the main page an option to ignore minor edits which would be turned off, by default. A backwards compatible solution.

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There should be a checkbox when you edit, that will keep the post from being bumped, but only from that edit. In other words, everytime you edit you'd have to choose not to bump. This would help substantially with doing a lot of retagging. I'm always having to restrict myself to half a dozen at a time so I don't flood the front page.

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    I agree that we need that, but probably only for high-reps and mods. We don't want spammers or cranks to be able to hide their doings.
    – Raphael
    Feb 7, 2014 at 9:26
  • I agree with Lance suggestion. Please read my comment posted on this answer: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/37168/… Jul 9, 2015 at 18:42
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Sometimes, there might need to be lots of edits to get things done without changing any contents.

Like a retaging initiative to filter out items that were mistagged a lot.

At other times there is a consistent problem with accessibility stemming from format.

For such, it would be nice to be able to not bump a lot of questions and spam the front page.

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  • This is really a comment, not an answer.
    – Elliott
    Jun 14, 2022 at 13:05

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