I'm talking about this question. So, the string is:
> SEND OK HTTP/1.1 200 OK
> Access-Control-Allow- l-Allow-Methods: GET,POST,DELETE
> Access-Control-Allow-Headers: X-Requested-With,
> Phant-Private-Key Content-Type: text/plain X-Rate-Limit-Limit: 300
> X-Rate-Limit-Remaining: 297
> X-Rate-Limit-Reset: 1452931335.777
> Date: Sat, 16 Jan 2016 07:50:17 GMT
> Set-Cookie: SERVERID=; Expires=Thu, 01-Jan-197 0 00:00:01 GMT; path=/ Cache-control: private
> Transfer-Encoding: chunked
But actually, those >
do not really exist, they are just the result of a format error.
Are these
>
really exist or just a format issue?
And OP answered:
@Kevin It was a format issue. Thanks I have corrected
Then OP edited their question and removed those >
.
But the problem is, the existing answers are all about the first version. So an answerer rollbacked the edit, and said:
I've rolled back your question to its original form, before you made two substantive changes that invalidated existing answers. If you like, feel free to accept an answer that answers this question as it stands. If you have a substantively different question, create a new question for it.
I know that if OP "edited their question to ask another question", then we should rollback. But what about this case?
So, actually, OP doesn't need the answers. Also I think this isn't OP's fault, just because they're new here and don't know how to format code correctly.
Is this rollback correct?
>
to\n
) and let them become validated again. And the problem is, after rollback, they'll all be invalidated (again). So instead of rollback all the things, I think just move on is better.