422

Update, April 2014: I fully support Shog9's proposal of adding the message where it belongs—in the actual editing form. This is less intrusive than displaying it as a notification, but it serves the same purpose. Can has?


Background

When you suggest an edit, the outcome of whether it was approved or rejected is buried deep within your profile. You have to navigate to Profile » Activity » Suggestions to find a list of your recent edits, but even those do not say anything about the outcome:

waffles♦ introduced this to "facilitate learning", but what can I learn from this page? I have to manually click through the edits to see whether they were rejected or not. This is time-consuming or inefficient at best. There's also no learning involved at all, since there is no active feedback.


Feature request #1

If an edit was rejected, there should be a notification message displayed, linking to the page of the suggested edit (which states the reject reason).

This kind of feedback would improve the editing behavior, since otherwise, inappropriate suggestions might just continue.


Feature request #2

If the above is too intrusive, the messages in the profile's Activity section should be clearer, for example like this (compare against the first screenshot in the question):

This is similar to: Improving how suggested edits are displayed in your activity history


Here's some more explanation:

Let's assume the case of a user suggesting lots of edits that are in some way harmful. Maybe they were too minor, like only changing keyboard shortcuts to use kbd markup instead of boldface.

Yes, we've already had this on Super User. Since it only takes one user to approve / reject there, some of these edits might even have been wrongfully accepted, others rejected. While this is a problem of its own, the user suggesting these edits will have a hard time even getting any kind of feedback.

They would never see the rejection messages because they're buried somewhere, unless they critically checked each suggestion in their profile. I doubt anybody would do this. Even more so, they might only look at their steadily climbing reputation, not really noticing a rejected edit.

Another case is users learning how to edit. How are we going to guide them if they're not told what they did wrong? They will just continue suggesting edits until somebody actually pings them in chat or comments somewhere.

Here's an example of a user who was completely unaware that he could see feedback somewhere in a dark corner of his profile, until he was banned from editing because he'd repeated the same mistake over and over.

13
  • 9
    ... especially given the time span between suggesting and having it accepted. On smaller sites than SO, this can be a while. Even on SU, I have seen suggested edits for 1+ hours in the queue. Jan 29, 2012 at 14:43
  • 13
    I'm not sure how related this is, but I'd also be keen to get feedback on which of my suggested edit votes were overruled (I guess this is a unique problem for Stack Overflow as all(?) the other sites only require 1 vote, where as SO requires 2). Feedback on both sides lets a) the reviewers how to vote correctly, and b) the editors how to edit correctly.
    – Matt
    Jan 29, 2012 at 14:58
  • @DanielBeck Last time I checked there was one sitting for 13 hours waiting to be accepted or rejected.
    – slhck
    Jan 29, 2012 at 15:17
  • 48
    If this gets implemented, the same needs to be done for declined flags. Jan 29, 2012 at 18:59
  • @BoltClock'saUnicorn Now that you say it, that actually make sense and add to some consistency.
    – slhck
    Jan 29, 2012 at 19:05
  • 9
    Do we already have some sort of protection against repeated identical suggested edits? That's the one thing I fear, users will try to do their same edits repeatedly until they get accepted, and then they're in. So if this were introduced, making everybody immediately aware of rejected edits (and possibly flags as suggested by @BoltClock'saUnicorn), we probably should get some sort of "suggested edit spam filter". Jan 29, 2012 at 21:09
  • 2
    @Daniel: Well, they're suggested edit still exists, just declined. Maybe they could set it up so that new suggested edit != old suggested edit. There's not really a great way of countering this because they could just change a couple spaces that were not changed before to fool it, and we don't want to use substantial difference criterion because it could potentially forbid them from submitting a further suggested edit.
    – animuson StaffMod
    Feb 8, 2012 at 16:57
  • 1
    Maximum number of edits and Tag editing limits - Give us a chance seem to indicate that this would be a useful feature
    – Flexo
    Jun 20, 2012 at 16:01
  • 1
    Could you mock up "Your edits on [topic] and three others were reviewed, click here to learn more", "Your edit on [topic] was approved, click here to learn more" notifications? Maybe we should just add all of them, both approval and rejections... Jun 24, 2012 at 10:36
  • @Dan I could do that.. However, my primary concern is users who have really done something wrong. It would of course make sense to show both accepted and rejected, I wonder though why nobody's brought that up before..
    – slhck
    Jun 24, 2012 at 12:41
  • How do I upvote this original question, but not the update? The update is really just a link to an answer with a different resolution than the post was requesting? This should have been handled via a comment on that answer and not an update to the original question, since the original question was already considered by so many people.
    – mattgately
    Dec 2, 2016 at 16:30
  • As "edit was rejected" notification message was not implemented (despite to "status-completed"), the new "Add global notifications for rejected edits (No, I don't mean the edit warning prompt)" feature request is available for vote(it is not a duplicate) Apr 7, 2019 at 10:59
  • [...] unless they critically checked each suggestion in their profile. I doubt anybody would do this Speak for yourself. - I do this frequently! And I sometimes do it even if my suggested edit was accepted. Mar 9, 2021 at 14:39

10 Answers 10

128
+350

Kevin implemented this as described below. One rejected edit will produce the following warning:

Attention! Your last edit was rejected

That links back to the last edit that was rejected. If the editor never gets any edits approved, they'll see this every time they go to edit, until they're banned. If some are approved but many are rejected (see details below), they'll get a more noticeable warning:

Warning! Some of your previous edits were rejected

...Which links to /users/current?tab=activity&sort=suggestions. We're not currently indicating whether these have been approved or rejected on that page. UPDATE (December 10, 2014): We now show suggested edit outcomes on that page (pending, approved, or rejected).

Finally, there's an in-between warning that'll appear for folks who get most of their edits approved but have a few declines (see below for details):

Attention! Some of your previous edits were rejected

Again, this links to the viewer's suggested edit history, and should allow conscientious editors to find past edits even when their most recent edit was approved.


I like this idea, but I also agree with Jeff's concerns that this is the wrong way to be using notifications. In particular, if we're notifying you of stuff that doesn't encourage you and that you can't do anything about, it's unlikely to have a positive effect.

I think the right way to expose these rejections is to put them where they matter most: on the edit form itself, the next time you go to make an edit!

Proposal: edit form warnings

Here's the default message that a low-rep user sees when suggesting an edit:

Your edit will be placed in a queue until it is peer reviewed

There's a constant within the system that determines a minimum number of edits that must be made in a week before editors are eligible for a ban due to rejected edits. We'll refer to it here as RejectionsTillBanned (note that approved edits effectively increase this somewhat, but let's ignore that for now).

When # of edits by the current editor in the past week is less than RejectionsTillBanned

...then the system looks only at the last edit reviewed when determining whether or not to warn.

  • If that edit was approved, no warning is given - the default message is shown.

  • If that edit was rejected, the following message is appended to the default:

    Attention! Your last edit was rejected. While reasonable edits may be rejected for many reasons outside of your control, you should review the reasons given for rejecting it before continuing.

When # of edits by the current editor in the past week is >= to RejectionsTillBanned

...then the system will calculate the following value, considering all edits suggested and reviewed in the past week except for those rejected by Community: Rejected - Approved/3

  • If the result is >= 1 then the following message is appended to the default:

    Attention! Some of your previous edits were rejected. While reasonable edits may be rejected for many reasons outside of your control, you should review your recently-rejected edits before continuing.

  • If the result is >= 3 then the following message is appended to the default:

    Warning! Some of your previous edits were rejected. Please review your recently-rejected edits before continuing. Too many rejected edits may cause your editing privileges to be suspended.

Displaying the outcome of the edit on the activity list

UPDATE (December 10, 2014): We now show suggested edit outcomes in the activity list. Original text follows:

In order for this proposal to be effective for prolific editors, it's essential that they're able to quickly identify which edits have been rejected. slhck's second suggestion is a good one, but his mockup breaks the ability to quickly scan the list when not filtering. So I'm proposing a slight variation on that:

Pretty easy to pick out the outliers there now, eh?

Expectations

For users whose last edit (or edits) have been rejected, they get that warning and a link to information on why. But not in their inbox, not as a notification, not as an interruption to something else they might have been doing - as a context-sensitive warning that they're about to do something they've been unsuccessful at in the past. If there's something they can learn from the rejection reasons, this is the time for them to learn it.

20
  • 2
    Oh, see, I haven't been thinking about this at all. That makes a lot of sense when put into context! It would probably make sense to add a similar message to the flagging dialog if $number of flags have been declined.
    – slhck
    Jun 22, 2012 at 20:31
  • 3
    @slhck: yeah, that's where this occurred to me actually. Aside: tired of running into users who make dozens of bad edits / leave dozens of bad flags and only realize too late that they've done anything wrong; banning (and in particular hell-banning) is the wrong way to deal with users who honestly do want to learn.
    – Shog9
    Jun 22, 2012 at 20:35
  • 5
    +1 I like this. But they still have the problem of being routed to their suggested edit feed, and not been able to see, at a glance, which of their edits were approved/ rejected. (e.g.) Can this also considered as been shown when their rejection rate reaches X% ("WARNING: A large percentage of your reject edits have been rejected"), to catch the people who get a/r/a/r/a/r/a/r...
    – Matt
    Jun 22, 2012 at 20:43
  • Agreed with @Matt — Shog9, the initial suggestion by the currently top voted answer (namely showing exactly which edits were accepted or rejected) is not orthogonal to your approach, but would be a useful addendum for those who actually check their profile.
    – slhck
    Jun 22, 2012 at 20:49
  • 1
    @Matt / slhck - sure, that's a fine suggestion. But it is, as you say, somewhat orthogonal to this feature-request.
    – Shog9
    Jun 22, 2012 at 21:01
  • @Shog9: I'd prefer to describe it as "the icing on the cake" ;).
    – Matt
    Jun 22, 2012 at 21:08
  • 3
    I disagree that notifications are inappropriate, but as long as the information reaches the user (as opposed to being hidden deep inside their profile, undiscoverable and difficult to reach even if you know where to look), I'm happy. I would prefer to see “you had N edits rejected recently:”, followed a list of the edits that the user hadn't yet been notified about. (@Matt Not a percentage, that's useless. And each rejection must be shown, not just when there are very many of tehm, otherwise you stop improvement after users have gone beyond mediocre.) Jun 22, 2012 at 22:43
  • 1
    I also like this solution better because the message is displayed on the site where the problem edit occurred. Why tell me my Project Management SE edits suck when I'm making SO edits for which I have a great track record. +1
    – jmort253
    Jun 23, 2012 at 3:03
  • 4
    I agree with this, although to be fair, Jeff's response was when you'd get Ol' Orange Slidy for a notification...which was pretty significant harassment. I hardly notice Lil' Blue Circly to begin with, so the negative impact that comes with an in-your-face taunt is probably a little less. A context sensitive warning makes far more sense either way though, to the point where I'd also recommend it for the edge case where someone has a few recent edits rejected and then hits 2000 reputation, since they'd still potentially need to brush up on what makes a good edit.
    – Tim Stone
    Jun 23, 2012 at 13:50
  • What will "rejected" link to? Will it be easy to see what edits have been recently rejected, and what the reasons have been? Perhaps this warning should include the most common rejection reason for recent rejected edits, rather than just a paraphrase of the minor edit rejection reason.
    – Servy
    Oct 16, 2012 at 20:35
  • Well, what if you COULD so something about your rejected edit? Nov 5, 2012 at 0:00
  • 1
    BUT there is something you can do about it! examine your behavior and change it or revisit it before yuo are banned.. Also like @DanDascalescu idea.
    – UpAndAdam
    May 1, 2013 at 19:43
  • 1
    @shog9 This still seems like a super relevant feature request - any update on whether this is planned?
    – razlebe
    Nov 13, 2013 at 12:41
  • 2
    See edit, @mhlester. This is based on the flag warning thing, but with some variations due to the nature of the system.
    – Shog9
    Apr 11, 2014 at 15:49
  • 1
    @boltClock, nothing wrong with burning the candle at both ends though, right? Less crap gets robo-approved if there's less crap submitted
    – mhlester
    Apr 11, 2014 at 19:12
66
+250

I don't agree with a banner appearing every time one of your edits is rejected, but I could get behind one of the following alternatives.

  1. Update Profile » Activity » Suggestions to show which edits were accepted and which were rejected without forcing the user to manually click on each one. I prefer this solution because it is unobtrusive and makes the Suggestions tab more useful, in my opinion.

  2. Show a new message in the user's inbox for each rejected edit. I don't really like this solution because it is a bit intrusive, but it's definitely better than a banner.

In general, I agree with Jeff that positive feedback is better than negative feedback. That being said, any feedback at all is better than none.

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  • 2
    I like approach no. 1, maybe it could be combined with a positive/neutral indicator of recent changes, like "You have X new edit decisions" or something. I also added a screenshot to show what it could look like.
    – slhck
    Feb 25, 2012 at 17:12
  • @slhck Thanks for the mockup! That's pretty much exactly what I had in mind. Feb 26, 2012 at 7:54
  • 2
    Approach #2 does seem a bit intrusive, but perhaps it could be improved by only delivering a message after N consecutive rejections, where N=5 or something like that. May 7, 2012 at 22:36
  • 9
    Strongly disagree that they need an inbox notification for every rejected edit. However, for edits rejected with a custom message this would be appropriate.
    – Shog9
    May 15, 2012 at 14:53
  • 3
    Approach #1 would not work, because that's what it looks like when a user actually does that action on a suggested edit. When viewing it in the [all] tab, it would look like the user actually voted to approve the suggested edit, not that it was their suggested edit which was approved. Related: Improving how suggested edits are displayed in your activity history
    – animuson StaffMod
    May 29, 2012 at 1:27
  • @Shog9 Any thoughts about at least implementing change #1 from Chris Frederick's answer?
    – slhck
    Jun 22, 2012 at 18:53
  • 2
    Now that we have the new notifications system, this is somewhat moot; the notifications system is designed exactly for things like this.
    – eykanal
    Jun 22, 2012 at 20:24
  • 1
    @slhck: see my answer here - rather than a passive irritation, this feedback should be presented to the user in the context where it matters most.
    – Shog9
    Jun 22, 2012 at 20:30
  • @Shog9 Since you haven't directly answered my question: Any chances that #1 from Chris' suggestions gets implemented? There's no harm done from that, it's just terribly useful information to have right where it's needed the most. (See also: Users who want to find their rejected edits)
    – slhck
    Jul 17, 2012 at 15:39
  • 1
    Well I was just banned from editing posts, as I did not know that I was rejected some suggestions. So having the banner appear is a good idea.
    – Kevdog777
    Jul 24, 2012 at 9:49
  • 2
    Approach #1 has officially been implemented.
    – Stevoisiak
    Apr 16, 2017 at 4:47
44

Why is everyone saying that bad things can't appear in notifications?

I'll give you two scenarios:

  1. I am a vandal. I make spam edits on a load of tag wikis. The edits get rejected and I get told why. I would ignore them. This scenario is null. Nothing would change either way.

  2. (This recently happened to me) I am a good faith editor. I edit, but do something wrong (provide too simple info or something). I get told what is wrong, so I change my behavior and all is good. This is the real thing. Without the warnings, the editor would get blocked, because he does not know what he is doing wrong, and would naïvely carry on. With the warnings, he can become a better editor.

How can these notifications do any harm? All they will do is stop users like me getting blocked when they were editing in good faith.

6
  • 10
    Precisely my point. Thank you. Users edit because they want to do something good to the site – and you need some kind of feedback when you're on the way.
    – slhck
    Jun 22, 2012 at 20:17
  • 5
    Totally. I recently got blocked when I didn't know what I was doing wrong, and all that block has done is mean that some of my knowledge and willingness-to-help is not transferred to the site.
    – ACarter
    Jun 22, 2012 at 20:18
  • Another alternative would be changing the edit limit for tag wikis
    – ACarter
    Jun 23, 2012 at 10:23
  • ACarter - See this answer and this answer. This feature can definitely be implemented without using notifications, which have been designed to be for positive, "atta-boy" type information. I especially like Shog9's answer because he addresses the problem when it matters most, right before the editor attempts to make another potentially bad edit. In both of those scenarios, the editor would not get blocked. And if that person doesn't read the information, notifications won't matter either.
    – jmort253
    Jun 25, 2012 at 14:16
  • 2
    @jmort, If I had got the notifications, I would not have been blocked. Having the notice above the editor is probably a better idea, but as long as the editor finds out and does not get blocked, it doesn't matter a great deal. (I have also upvoted both those answers.)
    – ACarter
    Jun 25, 2012 at 16:38
  • 1
    We need for a notification. Any time I make an edit, answer, etc. it is for the purpose of providing useful information for everyone, not for myself. If it is rejected, I need to know it happened in order to correct the information so I can repost it in a better way. Simply losing the info forever with no notification is ridiculous. No responsible contributor would be okay with simply losing their info they provided without having the immediate opportunity to fix their edit, i.e., notification. Such people could optionally turn off a notification I guess.
    – mattgately
    Dec 2, 2016 at 16:25
33

I asked a similar question - see Also show rejection vote reasons for accepted suggested edits - that has been closed as a duplicate of this one.

It was not en exact duplicate: what happened to me was that my edit was actually accepted, but there was one reject vote with a useful comment. I think that in such a case the chances of missing the comment are even higher that if the edit was actually rejected: I had no reason to go and dig up the comment.

My vote would be to have a notification in the inbox with the comment.

There are ways to criticize something without saying 'you suck' - altough probably as techies we are not very good at that.

1
  • 1
    Now that we have notifications in general put in the tab next to this one, this is now the best option.
    – Mark Hurd
    May 29, 2012 at 2:23
30

I understand the desire to educate, but there's something deeply wrong about the proposed design.

The net effect is the user seeing this broadcast in their face in the most obtrusive way we can:

You've done something wrong. Click here to learn why you suck.

You should only send the user obtrusive 'in-your-face' messages about how awesome they are.

Messages about non-awesomeness should always be delivered quietly, via a backchannel, in a way that minimizes their impact. Otherwise, we're slapping them in the face.

18
  • 21
    Given that how few rejected edits there are, would this really be a problem? Isn't downvoting and closing the same? How else can users know they did something wrong?
    – slhck
    Feb 24, 2012 at 18:17
  • 1
    @slhck While most edits are approved I think 29,000 rejected edits is still a lot Feb 24, 2012 at 18:32
  • 2
    Exactly. People who care have access to the information to learn from the outcome of their suggestions (though maybe that should be made more readily available), but shoving it in their face at every turn will just punish them for (usually) trying to help. Not to mention the fact that any proposal that causes that annoying bar to appear more often is inherently evil.
    – Tim Stone
    Feb 24, 2012 at 19:36
  • 9
    Look, man, you're going to be gone in a week anyways. Now is the perfect time to pull this sort of stunt. Next week, waffles can just shrug and say "Look, that was all Jeff, and we don't know where he put the keys, so we can't undo it right now... we'll get back to you."
    – Pops
    Feb 24, 2012 at 19:36
  • 1
    @slhck I am not objecting to the desire to educate, merely the mechanism that was proposed. Feb 24, 2012 at 20:00
  • 2
    I can understand that notifications shouldn't be too much "in your face", but maybe edit decisions could be summarized, like the "You have X favorite changes" notification bar, and the tab in the profile could say "accepted" or "rejected" instead of "suggested", including the blue highlighted number in the tab name.
    – slhck
    Feb 24, 2012 at 21:06
  • 32
    Okay, for a serious comment: I can get on board with the philosophy here, but the problem is that the current system doesn't match the "quietly, via a backchannel" setup. Edit suggestors aren't being notified at all of what happens to their work, and it's not even easy for the ones who have initiative to hunt that information down.
    – Pops
    May 4, 2012 at 18:52
  • 18
    I disagree. If you have a rejected edit, you need to know that it has been rejected so that in the future, you can make better edits.
    – daviesgeek
    May 29, 2012 at 16:07
  • 2
    No need for the banner anymore. The new notifications are much less obtrusive. Besides, it's not much different from post edit announcements: "What you posted was wrong or incomplete. Fortunately, someone else fixed it for you." Jun 10, 2012 at 12:16
  • 6
    Jeff, that is a cultural thing. In some countries/cultures, it is expected you say your critique straight up, not hide it behind pleasantries. In this instance, I think the need for "training" outweighs the need for "don't tell me I'm doing something wrong".
    – Raphael
    Jun 17, 2012 at 10:17
  • 12
    This user is a perfect example for someone who wants to be told what the review results of his edits are. He was banned from editing for a week because he never noticed his edits got rejected, so he had no (accessible) way to actually learn what a good edit is. Jun 24, 2012 at 10:35
  • 3
    As for "in your face": another oblivious user, who's feeling a bit embarrassed not knowing they were doing things wrong, and then being explained in public when asking about the disabled edit link...
    – Arjan
    Jul 25, 2012 at 11:26
  • 10
    @Jeff right now people wonder where their edit disappeared - I am sure it happens to great many they just don't bother to go asking in Meta. So we do need some mechanism to tell the user what happened to his/her suggested edit, don't you think? Aug 14, 2012 at 12:47
  • 4
    I would also like to be notified when my edits are rejected. Make it an option then, if you think it's rude or whatever to notify everyone. Nov 5, 2012 at 0:01
  • 5
    Don't agree (respectfully). A "silent rejection" as I have experienced recently is more of a slap-in-the-face.
    – Sabuncu
    Jul 22, 2013 at 10:19
25

The new notification system has successfully reduced the amount of noise from items that are not actionable, such as privilege changes, badge awards, and so forth. These notifications appear in the top left menu, not just for one site, but for every site on the network. As a result, notifications are less noisy but more visible, since Stack Exchange can push notifications to me for Site A even though I am on Site B.

Problems with using notifications:

Adding suggested edit results to this notification box creates two problems:

  • It significantly increases the amount of noise based on the number of rejected edits.
  • It doesn't match Jeff's goal of not saying "YOU SUCK" in the notification section.

While we definitely want to help people improve their edits, we don't want to change the positive tone of the notifications system. Right now, Stack Exchange only sends positive reinforcing messages that are intended to increase the frequency of a specific set of behaviors, and we should ensure that it stays that way.

In other words, even though these notifications aren't as "loud", we still don't want them to have negative connotations.

Use "Helpful Flags" as a template:

With that said, let's use the helpful flags statistics as a template for how to approach this problem. When I flag a post, I'm never told how much I suck because I flagged a post incorrectly. However, at a glance, my profile does show how helpful I've been. If I click on the helpful flag value, I see a list of all of my flags, as well as the detailed results.

If a flag is declined. I see the message from the moderator explaining why. Again, this information is never pushed and is something I must explicitly look for.

If we take this same approach with suggested edits, we have something similar to what appears in this User Profile mockup. See the "Stats" section at the bottom of the User Information section:

User Profile Helpful Edits:

User Profile with Suggested Edit stats

In this example, there are 19 helpful edits which the community approved. Again, the information is positive and reinforcing.

If I click on the helpful edit value, I'm taken to a helpful edits detail page. This page resembles the helpful flag detail page. On this page, I see every edit I've made, in chronological order, and the results of each suggested edit. See attached mockup for a visual representation of what this feature would look like:

Proposed Helpful Edits Detail Page:

Helplful Edits Detail Page

In this detail page, I can review my suggested edits and take action in my next set of edits to ensure they're most helpful. In this example, one of my edits was rejected because I only tried editing the tags and nothing else. It was rejected for being too minor and because there is an "edit tags" link that I can use to change the tag, assuming I have enough reputation to do so.

In summary, this solution balances positive, reinforcing messages with low notification noise while still making it easy for a user to review his or her suggested edit history.

3
  • This is not a bad idea. The problem though is that flags and edits are conceptually different. While flags are being handled by moderators, edits can be approved by (almost) anyone, or at least a vast number of people who don't know what they're doing. Plus, the "helpful" edit count can never rise once you reach 2k (or 20k for tag wikis). Whether this is a real argument against your solution, I don't know. Anyway, if there's really no change in the "We don't want negative messages" mentality, then this would be a viable option.
    – slhck
    Jun 18, 2012 at 7:19
  • 2
    The shoe will still fit, it's just going to be a different kind of shoe, one that SE would be comfortable wearing because of the positive/negative argument. I think you have a point that after 2k rep helpful edits are approved right away, but there are lots of things that change as we progress. For instance, after achieving the Deputy badge or the Copy Editor badge, the review section will no longer show your progress towards these goals. You also touched on another point that I feel needs to be addressed: The edit approvers need coaching too.
    – jmort253
    Jun 18, 2012 at 14:41
  • As a user, I expect notifications to include ALL messages, even if some of them are not positive. Notifications inform users about changes in reputation and comments, even if they may be negative, and no one complain about it. Apr 7, 2019 at 10:19
13

I think it's important to show this feedback not only to users who are suggesting edits, but also to reviewers who are approving and rejecting them.

At the same time, I agree with Jeff that the banner system is for "wow, you're awesome" messages only.

In regards to the feedback, if I were spending my valuable time suggesting edits, only to find out weeks or months later that they all were rejected because I was doing something wrong that I actually thought was helpful, I would surely want to know. While I agree with Jeff in that we don't want to flash banners, there should in fact be a very easy-to-get-to method of seeing the results of suggested edits and reviews, similar to how I can see why a flag may have been declined by a moderator.

Not making this information easily available shows disrespect to the people trying to help in assuming that we'll be offended by being shown or guided into doing it the right way.

Perhaps a modified version of Chris Frederick's suggestion where I click a "suggested edit results" section, similar to the "review" section. This wouldn't be mixed in with my normal question, answer, comment activity, but it would be available for me to review should I feel the need to.

As for reviewers, when I first started reviewing edits, I was approving tag edits, not realizing users without full edit privileges could simply click a "retag" link that disappears once you get full edit permissions at 2000 reputation. I later learned in a meta post that this was incorrect and that I should have rejected those edits. Meanwhile, I thought the people rejecting those edits were being ridiculous because I had no way to tell why they chose to reject.

Today, I see some rejections for edits that should not be rejected, perhaps due to the same ignorance now experienced by another new reviewer.

With the current system, it's not possible to help guide these users, both the ones making the edits and the ones approving and rejecting. I am for giving the feedback to those users who are interested and simply making it available for the ones who simply make suggestions without caring about the result.

3
  • 2
    I think part of the problem is also that the criteria for what should and shouldn't be approved is very ambiguous. We have "too minor" as a reject option, but then we've also heard that "any improvement is a good improvement". Not sure how we rectify that, though, either.
    – Rob Hruska
    May 8, 2012 at 0:51
  • 2
    I think if there isn't much to improve, then a minor edit is ok. I typically accept minor edits unless I see a whole bunch of other typos, mispellings, grammar issues and formatting issues. If I have to edit the post myself for more than just a few missed items, I don't mark the suggested edit as helpful. I'm not sure if that's the right approach, but it is one that makes sense to me.
    – jmort253
    May 8, 2012 at 0:57
  • That's exactly my approach. At least there are two of us being consistent about it. :)
    – Rob Hruska
    May 8, 2012 at 1:36
6

I think a notification (in addition to the suggestions view showing the approval status) would be helpful. But not one for every edit, but more a summary à la

Of your 17 recent suggested edits, 12 were approved

There may still be the unpleasant experience of "none were accepted", but if that really happens often said user should really consider their editing skills. In that case a helpful link to a "What is a good edit?" post might be helpful.

1
  • "A helpful link [...] might be helpful". Indeed m-/ Jul 11, 2013 at 8:05
1

In the mean-time, it is just about possible to get a list of your rejected edits (more easily than clicking through Every. Single. Edit. on one's profile to check, that is) using StackExchange data explorer and a query something like this:

SELECT 
   *
FROM SuggestedEdits WHERE RejectionDate is not null AND OwnerUserId = MY_ID

(where MY_ID is your SO user ID).

An example showing my rejected edit.

2
  • 5
    Only problem is that the SEDE data is always outdated.
    – slhck
    Aug 20, 2012 at 8:47
  • @slhck by how much? I only discovered it yesterday.
    – supervacuo
    Aug 20, 2012 at 13:49
-9

Yes... no.

Admittedly, it is inefficient. However, in the end, edits aren't all that relevant. They don't benefit you a whole lot, they just benefit the community.

Here's the main problem however: if this was implemented, there would be hordes of people who would say things like what BoltClocks suggested. Although I'm not against the idea itself, it (at least seems like it) would lead to useless notification ideas like:

  • Let's notify people when someone replies the comment replying to their comment!
  • Let's notify people when someone posts another answer on a question they also answered!
  • Let's notify people so that they know stack overflow is broken!
  • etc, etc.

Although I myself would like this, it would contribute to the notification spam that I'm always getting. So please, please, Keep it simple, (not so) stupid.

3
  • 8
    Of course you have a point. I've always liked the fact that you don't get notifications for everything, but an edit being rejected just vanishes somewhere in the profile. It's not like you could even easily research this yourself. Users that suggest invalid and harmful edits will never receive any feedback about how "bad" they acted. The other cases you mention are always "positive" notifications (except for a "broken SO account", I don't know what you mean by that).
    – slhck
    Feb 7, 2012 at 21:53
  • 1
    But the hordes of people can be asked to make their suggestions in other meta questions. Then the bad suggestions (useless notification ideas) can be downvoted with an explanation like this and won't be implemented.
    – MarkJ
    Feb 8, 2012 at 12:49
  • 4
    Uh, flags are a whole different matter altogether. Users need to know what we moderators tell them about their flags, I'd even say more so than what the community tells them about their edit suggestions. Feb 8, 2012 at 13:52

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