Only for suggestion then.Currently, posts can be edited forever.
Could this be changed to allow editing only for the first 1 hour, or 24 hours, or 48 hours, after creation?
I've just seen a suggestion OP changed after 2 weeks and 20+ likes.
FYI if you hover over your rating you get a pop up screen that will let you change your rating. 'Funny' is standing in for a negative rating as they were removed from the forums to reduce flame-wars.I've just seen a suggestion OP changed after 2 weeks and 20+ likes.
Yes, I know.FYI if you hover over your rating you get a pop up screen that will let you change your rating. 'Funny' is standing in for a negative rating as they were removed from the forums to reduce flame-wars.
Is this happening often enough that it's an issue?Currently, posts can be edited forever.
Could this be changed to allow editing only for the first 1 hour, or 24 hours, or 48 hours, after creation?
I've just seen a suggestion OP changed after 2 weeks and 20+ likes.
If I change a suggestion, I write an edit note about what was changed and when. I think that's common courtesy. Including that in the forum rules and call any violaters' attention to it might already be sufficient. A history changelog would of course be cool, though.I fully support the suggestion's intention, but I'd prefer a history changelog, as there is in wikis. That way you could see any changes made at any time, not only the latest, and still don't need to restrict editability.
Maybe an indicator how many times the post has been edited would be helpful too, in combination with a history of at what time ratings were given; they're already listed chronologically.
Part of the problem though is the ratings received will persist, even if you edit your post to say the opposite; it will also not be clear to others whether I "agreed" before or after the change. Unless I regularly revisit your post, I have no way of knowing whether it still says what I "liked" or "agreed". One way to help with that would be a notification sent out to all people who left a rating, advising them to reevaluate their ratings; another way might be to simply wipe the ratings up to the time of the latest edit and start from scratch.If I change a suggestion, I write an edit note about what was changed and when. I think that's common courtesy. Including that in the forum rules and call any violaters' attention to it might already be sufficient. A history changelog would of course be cool, though.
Isn't this what "last edited @" and "edit history" are for?Yes, I know.
That doesn't allow for accurate ratings if OP's are changed after they gather likes. No-one is going to keep tabs on an OP to see if it changes so they can update their like.
You end up with suggestions whose like levels are no longer of any value, because they can't be trusted to be for what is currently written.
How often do you think it would have to happen to be considered an issue?Is this happening often enough that it's an issue?
This is good practice, of course, but doesn't addres the issue at hand. The time of edits, and matching them to the time of likes isn't captured by this.If I change a suggestion, I write an edit note about what was changed and when. I think that's common courtesy. Including that in the forum rules and call any violaters' attention to it might already be sufficient. A history changelog would of course be cool, though.
As above, it doesn't record when likes were made w.r.t. edits, or which version of the OP was actually liked.Isn't this what "last edited @" and "edit history" are for?
Doesn't record, or just doesn't display to non-mod/admin users? I've only admin'd VB and a custom SQL forum myself, so I can't say for sure about XenForo, but with VB there was the option for higher-ranked users to see histories and changes exactly as you describe.As above, it doesn't record when likes were made w.r.t. edits, or which version of the OP was actually liked.
There's no difference from the perspective of a non-admin.Doesn't record, or just doesn't display to non-mod/admin users? I've only admin'd VB and a custom SQL forum myself, so I can't say for sure about XenForo, but with VB there was the option for higher-ranked users to see histories and changes exactly as you describe.
Suppose-so. i would think the difference matters quite a bit if this "problem" was to actually be looked at though. I recomend you go hunt through XF's documentation and se if there is a ready-written module or option to "fix" this problem.There's no difference from the perspective of a non-admin.
Or...rather than delete the previous ratings: archive them at the time of a significant edit and continue to collect new ratings for the edited version of the OP.One way to help with that would be a notification sent out to all people who left a rating, advising them to reevaluate their ratings; another way might be to simply wipe the ratings up to the time of the latest edit and start from scratch.