• deejjjaaaahelp_outline
    260 posts
    2 years ago

    absolutely - there are some FAQ-styled topics that NEED to be edited (top posts) !

  • Rafalpanorama_fish_eye
    66 posts
    2 years ago

    Click or tap on β€žX edits” note next to posts timestamp. This will open post’s edits history and will let you see what was changed in it over time, and by who.

  • Dannyhelp_outline
    435 posts
    2 years ago

    That is how it should be IMO as well. It stops people from changing the original text to suit themselves after someone has replied.

  • DanHasLeftForumhelp_outline
    4254 posts
    2 years ago

    Yes, totally agree and that is the way I would prefer it as well..........but........here on dprevived we can see all the edits the post author has made by clicking the "edited N times" link near the center top of a post. I can live with that in the unlikely event a dispute arises over what was/wasn't said.

    On another related point. What I didn't like on dpreview, and it's the same here, is that people can edit posts after the post has been 'Liked'. Posts can be edited to something the member who 'liked' the post now doesn't like πŸ€”

    In any case, if we all play nicely together the editing of posts should not be an issue 😊

  • shermlevinepanorama_fish_eye
    142 posts
    2 years ago

    Thanks for pointing out the location of the edit history link. That's a big help figuring out what went on if people can edit after a response.

  • DanHasLeftForumhelp_outline
    4254 posts
    2 years ago

    No problem but it was actually the Misago software developer, Rafal, who originally pointed it out in his earlier post this thread.

    I am also hoping the enabling of CSS styles in the currently available '[img]' BBcode tags is on his to-do list but that was brought up in another thread πŸ™‚

  • GreatBustardpanorama_fish_eye
    703 posts
    2 years ago

    Just make only the likes since the last edit visible.

  • shermlevinepanorama_fish_eye
    142 posts
    2 years ago

    Hmm... Should I edit my article to make it better, and cause all the likes to disappear, or should I just leave it as it is. Tough choice :-)

  • jabergpanorama_fish_eye
    535 posts
    2 years ago

    Oh my. 🫒

    Is a like really so valuable, or is the cost to the liker so great, that it's worth bothering over (hypothetical) occasional and minor inconsistencies? Bad actors will be recognized through their misdeeds. If not, does it matter? Is an accurate scoreboard more important than an accurate post?

  • GreatBustardpanorama_fish_eye
    703 posts
    2 years ago

    "Likes are life." : )

    We can solve that dilemma by disabling edits not only after a reply has been made, but after a like has been cast. Then you can just retype your post again to correct the spelling errors that people liked. : )

  • JohnSheehyRevpanorama_fish_eye
    549 posts
    2 years ago

    I was thinking more along the lines of using such an approach in lieu of prohibiting editing at all after some period of time, not as a way that all posts are edited.

  • JohnSheehyRevpanorama_fish_eye
    549 posts
    2 years ago

    If we want to get really fancy, any post that one has "liked" could cause an optional notification to the "liker" so they can re-read and re-evaluate their "like". I've always thought that maybe "read" posts should become "unread" when they are edited. That way, anyone subscribed would read all the edits. I just don't know how much extra reading that might cause, though.

  • JohnVickerspanorama_fish_eye
    128 posts
    2 years ago

    Well, on DPReview, posts could be edited after other people replied. Just not by the original author - unless they were a moderator.

    It was possible for a moderator to silently - at least from the user side - gaslight users by changing their posts.

    I had a problem with this on the Studio & Lighting forum, with Ellis Vener. Now Ellis Vener is knowledgeable, and generally helpful, but he's rather partisan about a flash trigger (Raven) apparently made by some mates of his. And apparently sometimes he edited comments to make these comments - in his opinion - read better, or make more sense.

    He made some false - physically impossible - claims about a new version of this Raven trigger, which I briefly contradicted. As it happens, the Raven thing sounds quite good to me, but I don't need what it does.

    Two people replied to my post: Ellis Vener, and a UK-based photography journalist. Evidently at nearly the same time.

    In Vener's reply, I was surprised to see a quote of my post slightly different from what I had written. He generally agreed with my comments. I checked my post, and found that it did not match what I thought I had written. Which I found quite disturbing.

    However, in a post that appeared a moment later, a second post quoted my post without modification.

    Here's what I posted, on DPReview (quoted): www.dpreview.com/forums/post/66710572

    Here's Ellis Vener's reply to my post (with edited quote): www.dpreview.com/forums/post/66710433

    Here's my post (edited by Ellis Vener): www.dpreview.com/forums/post/66710209

    Now, in this case, Vener's editing is trivial, if a bit petty.

    But in another case, if I said that I didn't write what was in a post with my name on it, most folk would call me a liar.

    So:

    I believe it is essential that the last editor of a post be publicly visible, including in the case that the editor was a moderator.

    Some forum software allows a reason for edit to be entered, and displayed below a post.

    If edits by moderators are allowed, they need to be logged, and the moderators of the moderators should review them - such edits should be very infrequent.

  • jabergpanorama_fish_eye
    535 posts
    2 years ago

    In the case of those subscribed to one of my posts… a lot. Particularly if you read them shortly after the initial posting. I fiddle with language. (And I just did here.)

    I think the concerns about misuse and likes are much ado. I’m at risk of beating a dead horse here, so I’m stepping back. Alan has already provided assurances that my preference for unlimited edits isn’t at risk.

  • JohnVickerspanorama_fish_eye
    128 posts
    2 years ago

    Is this a real problem, or a theoretical problem?

  • UnclePhillypanorama_fish_eye
    71 posts
    2 years ago

    To me, the totally transparent edit history feature is enough to invalidate any argument for restricting edits. When this forum does attract the occasional bad actor who changes their posts after the fact in a manipulative fashion, the receipts will be auto-generated and fully public. Under these rules, I don't see how it could ever come to such utterly catastrophic forum drama where restricting the freedom of anyone posting with no ill intent would be the lesser evil.

  • magnushelp_outline
    26 posts
    2 years ago

    I totally agree. There is also another practical advantage. As long as "Edit" works we have a way of copying and reusing links to our pictures if we want to put the same picture in two different threads, rather than uploading the same image twice.

  • AlanShpanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago
  • jabergpanorama_fish_eye
    535 posts
    2 years ago

    The pedant in me would edit that to another practical advantage. πŸ˜‰

  • magnushelp_outline
    26 posts
    2 years ago

    Done.