@cigien Also note that none of the other answers is "accepted" - so, maybe that one was accepted and its poster wanted to delete it. In that case, the only way would be to ask a mod to do it, as you can't delete your own answers that are accepted. cc @wim
@wim No. I think that the "accept" information is removed when a post is deleted. It's not on the timeline. But one can check the reputation page of the user.
There is no "accept event." The green tick is no longer displayed if it is deleted but, I remember Jon Clements telling us that the information is still there. So, if it is later undeleted, the green tick will come back.
@cigien The information is not there in the timeline at all. Even for an open, un-deleted Question with an accepted Answer. I just checked a "normal" post.
Interesting, didn't know that. So the current theory is that the answer was accepted, and a person most likely the answerer themselves flagged it for deletion
I think that will be OK, as the information is kept/refreshed even for deleted posts. And the "accept" info is likely recorded in the question database entry, so no problem.
@wim I think you'll need to ask Samuel that :) I defaults to not show all the votes lines, but.. asking it to "Show All" still doesn't show the tick :(
@tripleee Ok. It wasn't a useful question, that's true. But if I remember correctly, I mentioned it because your close reason said Needs Details, and that wasn't correct.
Fair enough. I don't remember the post exactly, but it had seemed clear to me. No big deal, I've just recently started trying to be as particular as I can with close reasons, hence all the follow ups.
@desertnaut this is actually a good question:"How do I keep data pre-loaded in memory in between runs" (obvious answer: keep it in a separate process.) I think a good duplicate target would be better (although the phrasing is broad, the problem statement is actually accurate.)
^^ If a Java SME would care to find a "keep separate process running" canonical.
@Braiam there are about 10 - 12 that actually know what they are talking about but then there are between 20 - 50 questions being asked most of which are dups, typos or just too broad.
@wim To be sure, you'd have to ask Bhargav, however some mods (especially him) do have a history of deleting bad answers when they see them. I've seen him doing it for a long time now, so it isn't a new occurrence.
It's perhaps an outlier that this answer was highly-scored, but otherwise nothing out of the ordinary, I think.
@HovercraftFullOfEels Apologies if I already asked you, but I can't remember right now. Can you please review stackoverflow.com/questions/64730223/… as a duplicate of the "What is a raw type" canonical? You could also say it's "not repro"...
@SamuelLiew You have previously reopened this, presumably because they added an edit, but that edit does not make the issue they described reproducible. I think it should remain closed.
@Vickel Long time ago the equivalent of those endings in English would be " 's ". So, "Ivanov", for example, was actually the same as "Ivan's" (son is implied).
@Dharman As long as errors are being checked, I don't see an issue. Even if you turn on automatic checking you still have to catch errors and do something with them, so whether you use a try-catch or an if-else does it really matter that much? I don't think you should attempt to force people to change their coding style.
Catching errors for no purpose is just bad programming
Unless you can handle the errors better than PHP can just leave them alone. Besides you would not have a try-catch around every line but around the whole application.
Now that PDO also has automatic error reporting switched on by default, there is absolutely no reason to tell people to check for mysqli errors manually
That's a separate topic. We are talking about checking each mysqli function call separately
Even Stack Overflow displays 500 error page from time to time
As long as your software doesn't break too often then a simple 500 page should do the job
I think we need to agree that we have a philosophical difference here. I personally use PDO with automatic error reporting (that I then catch so I don't have to return a 500) but I don't think it's up to me to tell other people how they should code.
Our job on Stack Overflow is to teach the best practice. The best practice is to enable automatic error reporting instead of cluttering code with something that PHP has built-in.
If MySQL server is down then there would be other problems than just that particular query failing
I assume you display a different error and you hide the 500 code in the background
Either, way you have to show them an error page rather than a blank white page
Any exception encountered by the software should be logged and a friendly error page displayed to the user informing them how to report it or ensuring them that everything is ok.
@RyanM assuming the error is non-recoverable you would display an error message of some type. The key is not to display a white screen of death or a 500 page