As a learner in search of answers I am frequently frustrated when I find my exact question on StackExchange but it only contains outdated or incomplete answers because someone(usually outside the specific tagged community) closed it as off topic.
I refer specifically to this old closed but still very relevant question https://stackoverflow.com/questions/9643950/alternative-editors-ides-for-arduino
This is a prototypical question asked by any arduino beginner advancing to intermediate skill and beyond. "What are my options?" The answers are the best I've seen anywhere on the internet, but they are becoming stale as new options emerge. Of course someone can ask a new similar question to get the current answers, but then the info gets diluted. If it were open, the relevant new answers would float to the top, noise wouldn't have a chance against the existing upvotes.
It is a popular question, with popular well crafted answers. It needs new well crafted answers.
It has not started a religious war, though it looks like the sort that could.
What good purpose was suited by its closure?
I cannot fault the closer according to the letter of his reason. But this reason too often stifles good information in developing fields that require a little discussion to discover the correct answer. An answer that may not have been known anywhere prior to the parties coming together here.
Fields that target beginners are disproportionately targeted for closure by outsiders because the questions that beginners most need answered often look similar in form to "tabs vs. spaces" type wars, but they still need to be answered.
A question edit would not help the referenced question because it is already clear. While it does ask to find a tool, the question is not off topic. The answers are not off topic, the question just fits a predetermined profile targeted for closure.
The purpose of this question is to discuss whether the voting system is sufficient to filter appearance of certain potentially troublesome 'off topic' Q's and A's vs. active closure. And whether emerging fields, and beginner targeted fields should be given a little bit more latitude in the direction of 'discussion'.