Despite its high score and thousands of views, this personally strikes me as a pretty awful question with pretty awful answers: Learning garbage collection theory
The question is awful because it's vague and opinion-based and outside our normal scope. Note that the question asks what the prerequisites are for learning about garbage collection, and how to do so.
Such a question difficult to answer in the first place. Are we allowed to assume minimal programming skills? Unclear. What exactly are the boundaries on "garbage collection theory", as the OP defines it? The notion of "prerequisites" works well for concrete books or lecture courses but not so well for vaguely-defined subject areas: anything that one person argues is a prerequisite, another could just as well argue is part of "garbage collection theory".
The answers, too, all strike me as unhelpful in their own ways:
- The accepted answer is the most incredible instance of a link-only answer I've ever see - it contains no meaningful content itself but instead links to a page of links to paywalled papers that together costs hundreds of dollars. It also doesn't even attempt to address the question of prerequisites.
- The next answer lists multiple resources but again has no real content of its own, and again makes no attempt to address what the "prerequisites" are.
- The next answer is link-heavy again but undeniably has some useful content in the answer itself. It's, to my mind, the only slightly redeeming thing on the page.
- Next we have what is basically another link-only answer.
- And a paper-only answer
- And another
- And a book recommendation.
This... all seems a bit rubbish. Even if the question as worded is not quite a resource recommendation request, that's how it has in fact been interpreted.
I'm in favour of a mod just deleting the whole lot. It's basically just a big collection of links, many of them paywalled, and I don't think that's a helpful thing to keep around.
Does anyone disagree? Other courses of action I can imagine people supporting are:
- Historical lock
- Deleting all the link-only or paper-only answers and keeping around only Jon Harrop's
"Despite its high score"
I was expecting like, 1k+ scores :P