I mentioned this on another thread somewhere, but basically, I have .... zero to no editing time.
I did a lot of essays in college /and late HS, and will mindfully practice things I struggle on by doing shorts/prompts/ect. This results in my actual workflow being:
Write for 10min to several hours until the section or segment I want is done
Leave to go snack or eat, or sleep, or work, whatever.
Fall asleep thinking about the dialogue I left off on, and think about the expressions of characters, movement and begin to build the next section. Yes. As I fall asleep. Sometimes days. Sometimes a few weeks.
Come back and skim up to refresh myself on the last page or so to make sure my memory is what I thought. If needed write out a quick note of what to do (ie: crow makes quiche, they go to see king, argument about flowers) in the exact order I want it to happen - remember I've been thinking about this next segment for a while.
Write the actual segment until it's done.
Then, as I've said in another thread, leave it alone and do no edits for 6months+
Now, as I mentioned in the start of this post, I wrote a lot in college and practice often, and so forth. This gives my mind a.... uhm.... A really good "immediate" editor of sorts. I notice if I start too many sentences or paragraphs with the same word, or if they're all about the same length, or if it should break sooner or later than I have already. So the actual "sit down and write" portion has a decent amount of edits done to it. It's only on scenes/sections/segments (determined by my mind's length of breaking point lol hard to describe) that I know will need work, that I resolve myself to working on them in my editing process months or a year or more later.
My biggest tip for satisfying that editor's bug is either teach it to shut the F up, or let it edit a certain amount so you can actually progress. For example, I have learned to let the word "shifted" go. It will be edited later, either in a few minutes when I can think of my exact verbage, or in several months.
Crow shifted his weight until he was eye level with Will.
--> Crow knelt down -> kneeled -> Crow adjusted his weight to his haunches -> Crow eased his left knee down until
That kind of progression happens both in my mind and on the paper long after I've resigned to writing the word "shifted" down on the page. I know what I mean in my mind, very clearly. But I can't word it in that exact moment. If I take the time to try and word it the PERFECT EXACT WAY I want, I will never get to the next part of the sentence, let alone the next sentence and the next paragraph.