'thanks for the details' is correct and usable in written English. You can use it when someone has been helpful in providing you with information, especially complex details. For example, "Thank you for taking the time to explain the details of your product. I really appreciate it - thanks for the details!".
The company has a strict "no stuffing" policy, the article reports (thanks for that detail), and says it's trying to recruit models that straight male customers can actually relate to rather than bronzed, super-chiselled hunks.
But I also owe Fr Fessio a special word of thanks for disclosing details of the discussions that were not in any of the other three reports and were never intended for a wider public.
Many thanks for explaining in detail the photograph of the Queen marching into parliament with her entire troupe watched by a bunch of very well-heeled onlookers in their finery (The big picture, 21 May).
And thanks for the questions!
Also, thanks for the congrats.
Marvin, thanks for the memory.
thanks for the sharing.
thanks for the post.
Aw, thanks for the wank praise.
Goodnight all and thanks for the support".
So thanks for the good experience!
Ludwig does not simply clarify my doubts with English writing, it enlightens my writing with new possibilities
Simone Ivan Conte
Software Engineer at Adobe, UK