If you look more closely at that post you'll see that the informative part already is available elsewhere on the internet: the answer is copied verbatim from https://www.thegeekstuff.com/2012/03/linux-nm-command/
The author of the answer copied the text from that link, and added an extra link to Wikipedia. Later on they added some example output linked to a gist page they had made. Nothing in that post actually addresses the question asked; the part in that linked post that would have answered the stated question was not copied, ironically.
I deleted the answer because it was not their own work, it was plagiarised. I usually leave a quick comment on such posts with the reason why I deleted it, but as I had a large number to process I didn't in this case.
It can only be un-deleted if the author replaced the content with original text, written by themselves, and at most quotes from external sources to support their own work. Copying small sections of external resources is fine, if you properly attribute those sections and mark them up clearly, and if it doesn't form the whole of the answer.