A question I asked on SO was closed and voted for deletion. I couldn't understand why, and the downvoters / voters for closing told me to take it to Meta, so here I am.
The question is very specific. It asks about solving a specific question in a specific environment (JavaScript provided by PyQt, as used in Anki). I couldn't find an answer on the web. People I asked who are familiar with writing plug-ins for Anki found the question worthy, but unfortunately they didn't know the answer, which is why I took it to SO, with the hope that someone with enough PyQt expertise would see it and tell me either it can't be done or how it can be done.
My guess is the question was not clear enough to some people - who, I presume, have nothing to do with PyQt and/or with writing plug-ins for Anki - who mistook it for being too vast, and so downvoted it, voted it for closure, and then for deletion. I can understand how this may seem the case to someone not dealing with plug-ins for Anki, but it's not the case. And I can't understand their relentless actions, even following my explanations in the comments. If the question is re-upvoted and reopened then someone with the relevant knowledge might just be able to notice it and answer it.
In addition to my hope that my questions will get the justice it deserves, I think there's something wrong in the process if a question that is specifically tagged for a specific environment gets closed because it is not properly understood by users not familiar with that environment. (It's perfectly alright that they don't understand the question, but shouldn't they give others, who are more suitable to answer it, the chance?)
What do you think?