Thanks for your reply sir one more question if I stay for 2 years in Canada without leaving and then apply for pr card renewal can they find out about not meet the RO. Thanks.
Once you are in compliance with the PR Residency Obligation, any past breach of it is cured. Thus, as
@Bs65 observed, "
if you successfully enter the country without being reported and stay for 2 years without leaving then you will have reset the residency obligation."
What matters when you apply for the PR card (or arrive at a PoE from abroad) is that you are, as of that date, in compliance.
Previously being in breach may invite some elevated scrutiny BUT so long as the PR is currently meeting the PR RO, the PR is NOT in breach, and will NOT lose PR status.
Thus, once you have in fact stayed two straight years, there is NO PR RO problem . . . of course you may have to actually prove your presence in Canada these two years.
Which leads to . . . .
Sir thanks for reply as per your advice I looked at the form for pr card renewal imm5444e and was wondering what people who spent more than 3 years outside canada write in question no 19,20,21,22 regarding address history, work history, travel history and still get their pr card renewed without any issue.
There are no generic answers for these. ONLY the TRUTHFUL facts. The PR needs to report work history, address history, and travel history ACCURATELY. These are all specific to the individual.
To do otherwise will itself create a potentially serious issue (rather than help to avoid issues).
Actual case example: PR reported residing at an address in Canada and being unemployed for a period of time and CIC (before it became IRCC) came across a Business Conference brochure which listed the PR as a contributing participant as a representative for a foreign company the PR did not disclose as an employer, the conference taking place in Europe on a date during the period of time the PR reported to be unemployed and in Canada.
Did not end well. (Many others have been tripped up by information CIC or IRCC discovered in open sources like LinkedIn, Canada411, social media, and so on.)
A PRC application soon after coming into compliance (soon after being in Canada two years) may involve increased scrutiny, perhaps Secondary Review, or otherwise incur some delays in processing. BUT as long as you can readily document the two years in Canada, PR status itself should be secure.