If your child is from the marriage, and there's plenty of financial traffic in your joint accounts you should be fine. But as others have noted, there's never any way of knowing with USCIS...
All blank, same with children etc. I did a fair bit of research on this and my consensus was generally it doesn't matter, but about 55/45 in favor of blank vs N/A - it seems like the crazy "your form was rejected for not writing N/A" was a short lived Trump administration thing.
I'll be in another state for just over a month later this year, and I don't think I'm going to change my address (as I'm still permanently residing at my primary address, just moving for that once month).
No - you will still be in status when your 24 month extension expires, you just can't travel until you receive the new 48 month letter. Some folks who get the ADIT stamp have their green card taken away, so if I was you my preference would be to wait for the 48 month letter and keep your expired GC.
When is your 5 year permanent resident date?
It might be worth waiting to apply under the 5yr rule just to save yourself some printing/application hassle.
From going through other Potomac timelines it looks like filing N400 does “unstick” I-751s. Obviously your decision, but I plan to apply for N400 as soon as I’m eligible (also a YSC filer).
Saw this on Reddit:
Of particular note "It will likely take USCIS several weeks to reissue receipt notices with the extended validity period". This is taken from the USCIS Ombudsman's email updates. Trying to see where that can be signed up for now...
What service center was your I-751 handled by? (it's denoted by the first three letters of your case number - i.e. MSC, SRC, YSC etc.) It seems like for almost all service centers now, filing N400 can unstick your I-751.
I'm not sure what you mean here Mike - as far as I can tell, NOBODY who received an initial I-1797 extension letter (in this case the OP's was for 24 months) has received a follow up 48 month extension letter.