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I was just answering a question on SO about a JDBC related question,

Perfect! I wrote up a nice long example with comments and details on Docs.. now just to find it..

I have gone through all of my personal history, and contributions on my profile -

This post that I know I wrote, can not be found - even searching through Documentation, I can not find it.

I remember my post had been written in Java, I believe the Topic was JDBC, which no longer seems to exist for the language.

It now appears as if there is a whole Category for jdbc, however my post is not their either.

Was my article deleted? Was it moved or renamed? Should I have gotten a notification?

And why does it no longer appear in my personal history.

1 Answer 1

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The topic was deleted.

Because the topic doesn't exist, the only thing still showing on your profile is the change you made:

User profile

Going to the topic (title is linked in the change above), gives an option to view the last revision prior to deletion:

Deleted topic

If you want to move some of the content to the jdbc docs, as that's related to the deletion reason.


So, the content is still in your profile - just it's rather convoluted to get to... I'll ping the team about options to surface this a little more clearly (probably on contributions).

As to notifications: right now, no you shouldn't get a notification when something is deleted. The Discussion feature under development will introduce some new notification options, though we're still debating whether a change will opt you in to future notifications on the modified topic.


Update

As of the latest build, there's another way to get at any deleted topic or example you've made significant contributions to.

Show deleted

This list does not include trivial (less than 20 non-formatting, non-whitespace, characters changed) changes.

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  • related: meta.stackoverflow.com/q/330049/248058
    – Knu
    Dec 21, 2016 at 15:58
  • @knu (ugly) screenshot from my local build Dec 21, 2016 at 16:06
  • Where's my status-planned?
    – Knu
    Dec 21, 2016 at 17:26
  • 7
    Silently nuking people's carefully-crafted and useful content. Awesome! I'm sure Matt is just thrilled about how his work has been treated here... Dec 23, 2016 at 0:44
  • @LightnessRacesinOrbit, I don't see the problem of silently nuking content. It's already this way with Q&A. You may put a lot of effort to write an answer and you won't be notified if it is deleted. The only exception is if there is a rep change, which the same applies for documentation, I guess.
    – Zanon
    Dec 23, 2016 at 0:59
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    @Zanon: "It's already this way with Q&A" Not really; it's a lot harder to delete good, on-topic content in Q&A, so if your content has actually been removed then it was probably remove-worthy. That's not the case here. Dec 23, 2016 at 1:04
  • As far as I recall, when I approved that deletion, I either moved the content, or checked if equivalent content already existed under JDBC. But then again, I started not caring about documentation a few days later, so I don't know what happened afterwards. Dec 23, 2016 at 8:18
  • @LightnessRacesinOrbit here's a counter example IMO: stackoverflow.com/q/39150814/248058. Was it "remove-worthy"? I think this is one of my favourite answers and probably one that would be quite useful for the community, but still it has been deleted.
    – Knu
    Dec 27, 2016 at 13:56
  • @Knu: It's completely off-topic. This is not the proper format for "list" questions. Daniel's answer there was deleted because, being an answer to a blatantly off-topic question, it shouldn't have existed in the first place! I admit there are some current exceptions for severely needed canonical resources, such as the C++ book guide. Dec 27, 2016 at 13:58

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