The question I am referring to: How to “escape” a comma in a PHP argument value so it doesn't separate them into multiple arguments
Using the information given by OP, the problem definitely can't be reproduced. This is a problem I see quite often (as it can be difficult for beginners to create a Minimal/Complete/Verifiable example), and I'm not sure how it should be handled.
I almost always comment on the post with a link to an example that proves OP code valid and ask for an update. Occasionally, I will use the close reason "off-topic because..."
Questions seeking debugging help ("why isn't this code working?") must include the desired behavior, a specific problem or error and the shortest code necessary to reproduce it in the question itself. Questions without a clear problem statement are not useful to other readers. See: How to create a Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable example.
However, that seems a little harsh sometimes since I wouldn't necessarily say the question is "off-topic"..the user just may need to update their question after seeing my comment and realizing that the issue is different from what they though (or should they be closing and re-opening?).
In this question, however, someone (quite reputable) posted an answer with example code and said "I can't reproduce that". I immediately flagged the answer as "It is not an answer" and commented:
I was just about to post the same thing, however probably is better as a comment.
I then did my typical comment to OP about the code not being reproducible and elected to put in my close vote for the above reason.
After seeing the 201k reputation from the person who answered "I can't reproduce that", I kind of shoved my foot in my mouth. Should I not have flagged his answer? Should I be posting my examples of valid code on questions that aren't reproducible? And finally, is this the right time to use the close reason "off-topic"?