I don't think that it is really what you are looking for---Dr. Edgar already has plenty of XP, and I don't see anyone else answering as well as he did, but it is a good question.
I am sure that this question is a duplicate. I found a question that seems to be a pretty close match, but it isn't quite perfect. I flagged it as a dupe, but if someone can find a better target, I'd appreciate it.
In any event, @amWhy @paulplusx @user21820 @Holo @anyoneelese, the question should probably be dealt with.
@amWhy@ArnaudD.@CarlMummert@Did@Holo@JoséCarlosSantos@JyrkiLahtonen@MartinR@paulplusx@RushabhMehta@SimplyBeautifulArt@TheSimpliFire@user21820@XanderHenderson A few more votes for closure: Κ1, Κ2, Κ3
@AlexFrancisco I think you're exaggerating the situation. "Mods are exempt from the be-nice policy" is totally contrary to the purposes of being a mod. IMO I do not think that @quid has said anything "un-nice" or "readily intimidating". If we take a step back, what is the point of mentioning users many people know are like that already? It does not come as a surprise that they chose to reopen questions to their own favour. What would be more efficient would be to discuss why they do this
and of course, if they don't compromise, as you may have experienced, would require mod intervention. The purposes of CRUDE do not include discussion of specific users.
@paulplusx And like I predicted before(although we now have new sets of eyes reopening the question), we have an open/close war for this question. I wish the mod understood that this might happen and kept an eye on it instead of declining my flag.
@AlexFrancisco I did not threaten you, I informed you about the nature of my earlier remark, as a rule that will be enforced. You had ignored my first remark to that extent. When a second moderator reiterated it your response was also not such that it was clear to me that you intended to follow it. You questioned it without making clear that you still intended to follow it (at least that's how I read it).
The comment is arguably very direct, maybe overly so. I did not intend to be rude. Sorry, if it seemed like this. I wanted to make sure that it is clear to you that you must not keep doing that, since apparently from my first comment it was not clear.
@AlexFrancisco thank you. As said in the other room, I had unfortunately overlooked a comment of yours, which had made clear you intend to follow it. Given that I can see how my comment looks like unnecessary piling on. Sorry for that, too.
@quid I agree, and I would not have rolled back the edit, but I am not sure that I see how Bill Dubuque's edits reflect the intent of the original asker. Would it not be more appropriate to leave a comment with suggestions for edits which could be made?
@XanderHenderson it's rather close to the string of comments on the accepted answer; I do not say it will make in into an math.se "best practice" manual. But just undoing the edit is not ideal either. (I have no problem if it is reclosed, redeleted, whatever.) I also did not vote to reopen (only undelete).
I have a question, when editing a post for fixing mathjax or grammer, is it necessary to add the reason @quid ? It seems to me that there is no point at those cases
@Holo the point is always to explain what happened in the edit. You don't have to be super-detailed of-course. I sometimes write "minor clean-up" for small tweaks.
@quid: from my position, I find it odd to make edits using "my", "I" etc as if the OP wrote the edits. We don't encourage the OP to improve the post by improving it for them. Of course, if we're just talking about one post by a given person, it could be instructive about how to write a better post. But I would prefer to encourage the OP to make the edits themselves. If the OP cares little enough not to improve the question, then we shouldn't feel bad about deleting it.
@CarlMummert that's a matter of style, on which one can have differing opinions. (The "I" part.) On the rest, I do not disagree. But it sometimes also can be useful to do the edit, to show what should be done, especially for new users. I have no intent to defend that question specifically. I don't care if it gets deleted. The reason I intervened is that: first, it got selected for deletion because the edit was unclear. Then this was fixed, only for the edit to be undone entirely.
Further @Carl regarding the OP, they at least posted their own answer in the process. I'd say they did show some investment in the thread. That they did not proceed about it in an ideal way is also true. But it's not a case where OP did nothing.
Just stumbled upon this nice data query that searches for questions answered by a specified user where the question is of low enough quality that it is at risk of deletion. I've got two: 1 and 2.
This one has a question shows how the push to "include effort" leads to bizarre results: the OP claims to have a solution, when there is actually none c4