Hammer wrote:I've seen people edit their posts nine times and still have foot-in-mouth syndrome. You have to wonder if they should have just stayed with version 1.

While I don't edit my posts indiscriminately, I have a tendency to write and re-write things
ad nauseum, before hitting "submit". So here's a little story as an example:
Years ago, when I still did criminal defense, I represented a kid on a drug distribution charge in Rawlins, WY. The investigators had done a truly lousy job, trammeling all over the kid's constitutional rights in many ways--details are unimportant here. We lost at trial, and lost again on an appeal to the Wyoming Supreme Court. But he and his parents insisted on attempting to get the US Supreme Court to overrule the Wyoming courts.
It's extraordinarily rare for any attorney to have the opportunity to argue a case at the US Supreme Court. Part of the reason is that to get there, the Supreme Court has to issue a Writ of Certiorari, which is essentially their permission to file the case. So the first step in most cases is to file a Motion for Writ of Certiorari. Out of thousands of cases in which such a motion is filed, only about 4000 are granted certiorari annually. So it's essential that the brief accompanying the Motion for Writ of Certiorari is well written, cogent, states an important constitutional issue, etc.
So you can bet that I wrote and re-wrote that brief, let it sit, had others read it, rewrote it again some more, so that I could be sure that it was absolutely perfect before having it printed (which incidentally is done by only two printers in the whole US, who have to follow very strict Court requirements when they do it). The printing is expensive, and it results in an attractive booklet in paperback form, which the printers send in multiple copies to the Supreme Court, the attorneys for both sides, and the lower courts.
When I got my copy of the booklet, of course I had to read it, to see what I'd actually sent to the Supreme Court. To my horror, I found at least half a dozen glaring errors, in spite of all my efforts. I sorely wanted to blame the printer, but when I looked at the drafts I'd sent them, all those errors were there. Ack! And some of those errors were not in the original draft I'd done several weeks earlier!
So yeah, sometimes the first go at it is best, although a little clean-up will benefit a lot of posts which have little resemblance to the grammar and punctuation that the posters were taught in grade school.
Cary