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I have asked a question 6 months ago, not long after questioning, I tried a completely different alternative, which worked perfectly, thus making the question irrelevant.

I don't have the source code for the question, so I don't know if the answer given is correct, how should I proceed?

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    The older question is not suddenly irrelevant because you have opted for another way - some people could still prefer/need the first one. I say don't delete. If you can't judge the quality of the answer, then just don't. Other users will vote accordingly.
    – Eric Aya
    Nov 3, 2016 at 12:24
  • @EricAya nice answer ;)
    – Gimby
    Nov 3, 2016 at 12:55
  • @EricAya ^ That Nov 3, 2016 at 13:16
  • Is there a way to give up the right to decide if the answer is the correct one or not? Since I can't judge it, I shouldn't be the one to decide that
    – Guedez
    Nov 3, 2016 at 14:14
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    @Guedez Then don't accept an answer, it's that easy.
    – Servy
    Nov 3, 2016 at 14:15
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    Sounds to me that you actually have an answer to that question. "Don't do it that way, do it this way instead" is a perfectly good answer. You are not the first SO user that tried to solve a problem the wrong way. Just about all of them do :) So you should post that answer of course. And accept it as the answer to close your question. Nov 3, 2016 at 15:14
  • It's not about the right or wrong way to do it, I just didn't want to bother with learning something so complicated as that, it was faster to do by hand in Netty. Same way I didn't bother learning how to enable websocket https on netty because it seemed complicated to get the certificates running, so I just implemented it by hand with forgejs (not even https, just some asymmetric handshake to share a symmetric key to encrypt everything that comes after). The question was stackoverflow.com/questions/35480731. "Use netty instead" is not an answer to that
    – Guedez
    Nov 4, 2016 at 10:31
  • @Guedez: I'm asking myself the very same question at the moment. My question doesn't have any answers, yet, and it is unlikely that it will. I've gone a different way altogether and used a different DB engine, which got me out of trouble.
    – 4ndy
    Feb 18, 2020 at 0:33

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