How on earth did this happen,
The title of the question is "convert bytes to GB in php". When searching for that particular task, this question may come up. Regardless of the topic of the question or strangeness of the answer, the answer does describe how to convert bytes to GB. Those searching for a way to do this likely found the answer helpful.
and how should this be handled?
By:
- Leaving a well-written (e.g. not bold or all caps...) comment asking for clarification.
- Down-voting the answer if you feel it is truly not helpful.
Not by:
- Calling it out on meta, which generally leads to unfortunate bandwagoning, which at 161k you should know.
Other ways to handle dubious answers, which do not necessarily apply to your specific example:
- Flagging as NAA if you truly believe the answer is not an answer, which this one does not qualify as, since it does attempt to answer the question.
- If you are unsure how to handle an answer you find questionable, search meta first for related discussions. For example, for more information on what to do with wrong answers, you may also be interested in this discussion.
There are many answers on SO that are less-than-great. We have the voting and comment system to take care of these. Use them. Meta is not the place to deal with these types of answers†.
† My thoughts on Patrick's comment below:
... bringing this discussion to meta is exactly what he should do. This is about answers that are not salvageable and should be deleted, but the high upvote count prevents that. It is a totally legit question.
Valid points; but there are two things that, in my opinion, should be considered:
More research into existing topics (e.g. I found How to handle historical, highly upvoted but completely incorrect answers) on this matter could have been done to find existing discussions. This is expected of any question, including ones on meta.
This question, which is generally legit (re: non-salvageable answers that cannot be deleted due to upvotes) could have been asked without a specific example to jump on.
At first I was not sure why this question received so many down-votes. After I thought about it more, I liked it a bit less, for the given reasons. In the end I gave it no-vote.
(1024 * 1024 * 1024)
produces a large integer and thus large integer / large integer gives correct results? There is more than meets the eye here and perhaps the answer is correct, and you wrong.float / int
is treated asfloat / float = float
, so either way you would have the float issues.