So whenever you flag something that initially contained the text you wrote and then OP removes it, you are punished with a decline?
The edit log clearly shows what OP was writing, telling me to f off. Do mods not look at the edits? Am I suppose to sit and watch the post and check if it's edited? I think a dispute would've been more appropriate.
@Cow I agree that that flag should not have been declined. In some (even many) cases, edits to questions that contain 'generally' rude stuff (i.e. not targeted) can just be rolled back. However, if such an edit is aiming personal abuse at you (or any other user who made a comment or other contribution), then a rude/abusive flag is appropriate. Some might argue that a custom mod flag would be better - and so it may be - but "rude or abusive" quite clearly covers personal insults.
(As a side note, the comma before "but" in the declined flag message is abusive to the English language!) ;-P
I didn't decline it. When a rude edit is made, it should be rolled back by mods. You need to use a custom flag instead of R/A. The R/A flag means that the whole post is rude and needs to be removed with a penalty applied to the account. When the post is ok but it has some rude remarks, they should be edited out not the whole post deleted.
@aynber I edited it to make it a bit more clear, but also cast a close vote for what I think is a canonical duplicate (best guess as a non PHP SME). I'm not sure whether it's worth closing as a duplicate now that it's got a much more descriptive title and body
I closed as a duplicate and deleted it. It would have been a good duplicate if OP actually made sure that they had the right MCVE. Without it the answers were rubbish except for zerkms'.
@Cow While mods should look at edits a bit more, expecting us to check edits for every flag, or even every flag we would decline is expecting a bit much effort for the volume of flags that are handled on SO. In the flag dashboard, there is an indicator that the post has been edited after the flag was raised, but it's very easy to miss, due to styling that doesn't make it all that visible. We've requested that SE change the styling such that it's easily visible, but there's been no change, so far.
Given that there was legitimate, although poor, content in that post, I agree that an "in need of moderator intervention" flag, along with editing out the offensive content, would have been the way to go.
@TylerH Yes, but that doesn't change the volume of new flags. It does mean that the required action volume be higher than the new flag volume in order to bring the queue down further.
@TylerH I don't recall where it was requested. It could have been on MSO, MSE, or the Mod Team, potentially even chat. Given SE's extremely low rate of fixing such things, even when trivial, I just fixed it in my personal adjustments.
@TylerH You could quite accurately say: SO gets more flags in a day, perhaps in an hour, than the vast majority of SE sites have seen in their entire existence.
@Makyen Yeah I understood after Dharman replied. I guess I need to think more next time. I wasn't expecting OP to edit it out and I was surprised that it was declined. I just hope, that if this happens again, that my potential mod flag doesn't turn out declined like I've also tried a few times. I feel like there's sometimes a big difference in the way mods handle different flags.
@Cow Yes, you included a screenshot. Clearly, a mod that looked at the question after that felt the R/A flags should be disputed. I was going to do that, but someone did it prior to me looking at it.
@TylerH When I wrote that comment, I was under the impression that the bug that the asker was experiencing was for such an old version that we couldn't even reproduce it with existing online sandboxes. However, with one user saying that they could not reproduce it with the exact cited version, the page is appropriately deleted.
@mickmackusa well, to be fair just because an online sandbox doesn't have the version doesn't mean it's not reproducible
There are probably still some installations running PHP 5.3 out there in the wild in production
(Bear in mind that the "Not reproducible" close reason doesn't mean "I can't currently reproduce this with what I have handy in my toolbox", it means "I've tried with the same tools and setup as you have, but can't reproduce the issue".)
But as mentioned already, if there are users saying they can't reproduce it given the same version, that indicates a likely (valid) no repro scenario. Though it did also have answers saying it was a known and acknowledged bug, so... not exactly sure it was no repro. I think the more accurate explanation was it was lacking an MCVE/MRE, which is what Dharman hinted as the reason for it not being worth keeping around