https://bugzilla.wikimedia.org/show_bug.cgi?id=29730

--- Comment #2 from Jason Quinn <jason_qu...@yahoo.com> 2011-07-07 03:20:18 UTC 
---
To my thinking, my proposed search seems more worthwhile than the one already
present. After all, if I'm the top editor, in theory, I already know what the
present state of the article is. Why would I want to see those? It's only those
pages which have been edited by others that leave me in the dark about their
present state.

My rational is that editors who edit an article develop at least a temporary
interest in that article. It may not be strong or lasting enough for them to
include in their watchlist but it's an interest nonetheless. I find myself, out
of curiosity, following up on pages that I've recently edited that somebody
also else also edited. Did they "mess up" my changes? Remove them? etc. Did I
make a mistake that somebody else fix? There are many reasons that make
following up on your own edits worthwhile. When you have many "top" edits, it
can be frustrating to find the non-top ones.

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