There are multiple sides to this.
First, the issue is that they're asking for an off-site resource. Admittedly, a few hits on Google pull up exactly what they are looking for, so there's very little effort in this question. That certainly doesn't help the "research" aspect of the question.
The lettering of the rule that this was closed under, emphasis mine, states that this isn't permissible here.
Questions asking us to recommend or find a book, tool, software library, tutorial or other off-site resource are off-topic for Stack Overflow as they tend to attract opinionated answers and spam.
Now, to the second point here. I feel like I actually gained knowledge from this question, since I wasn't even aware that an ePub version of the Spring documentation even existed. I'll be adding that to my library soon.
The main reason that the rule above exists is so that we don't get a whole bunch of, "Plz recommend tutorial" or "Plz recommend book" sort of questions here. In this case, it's a, "Where can I find an offline copy of a programming API that I use?"
The question seems fair to me because:
- It's a specific framework's documentation (Spring)
- It's looking for a specific thing (offline version)
- It's definitely useful for others (not everyone wants to pay for WiFi on a plane/train)
Of course, because they include the getting started guides in this, that makes it an easy close target. If that were edited out, I wouldn't have that many problems with this question.
All in all, I'm hoping that this gives you a bit more clairvoyance into why it was closed. My hope is that it could be a question that can be accepted - perhaps after judicious editing and a wiki lock.