I don't think I've ever seen a case where an inappropriate question stuck around for more than a few hours, much less days, and I've seen plenty of low-quality but valid questions closed or even deleted.
A question simply being on-topic and asked in good faith - what people seem to mean when they describe a question as "valid" - is not even remotely sufficient reason to keep it around. For that matter, "good faith" isn't a requirement in the first place - which is to say, you don't need to actually require an answer in order to ask. You are even explicitly encouraged to ask things you're perfectly capable of answering yourself.
It's really striking to me, incidentally, the way that people who expect those qualities to be sufficient in a question, seem to have universally settled on the term "valid" to describe such questions. All the "Stack Overflow critique" videos that get turned up on YouTube keep using that very specific term, and not other possible words. So, when I chose the title for that question linked above (which is, of course, a rhetorical faq-proposed question and not something I actually wondered), the choice of the word "valid" was very deliberate.
But all of you are missing the point.
In short: the close reasons are well considered and exist for a reason. Despite the wrong-headed existence of an "accepted answer" marker, the purpose of questions here is not to "help" the OP. The purpose is to frame answers and provide an anchor for them, so that they can be found with a search engine and recognized by those doing the search.
[Why are there so many Meta questions] aimed at removal of content deemed bad to the person posting the [Meta] question rather than the creation of useful content or the improvement of naturally-arising low-quality content?
In short: because the content that the person is posting about actually is bad despite your apparent objection; the content you wish to see created is nowhere near as useful as you think; and "naturally-arising low-quality content" usually, fundamentally, cannot be improved while following policy and without completely replacing it.
Ten years later, when I look at Stack Overflow, it's a complete mess, and that's largely because of the attitude you espouse here.
The existing content is bad, and new content wouldn't be useful, for already discussed reasons. The questions can't be improved because it isn't just a matter of editing to fix formatting or grammar or noise issues; it's a matter of the question lacking a proper [mre] or specification, or other information that only the OP has. The answers can't be improved because they're wrong, and editing them would change the author's intent.
I want to give a couple of examples of how things have deteriorated in the nearly ten years since this Meta question.
First, about Python's import system. There are only a handful of actually distinct questions that are commonly asked about how this works - and the actual answers are fairly simple if you don't have complex needs. However, that handful of questions maps to many times more old popular questions that might look "canonical". But that mapping is many-to-many (well, few-to-many); you can hardly ever choose one that is a correct fit. Even if you do choose one, it's terrible despite the score - there are dozens of redundant answers for no good reason, and the answers are full of blatantly incorrect ideas and cargo-cult programming without proper explanation. People who read these Q&As will be taught to commit atrocities in their code bases and come away with a completely unjustified prejudice against Python for "complicating" something that is only being complicated by others who don't understand it.
Second: the mass of questions about IndentationError
issues in Python. There are only a few conceptually distinct ways to get one (or a TabError
, which is a subtype), and the lion's share of them boil down to either not understanding the purpose of indentation, not understanding the consistency requirements for indentation, or making a typo. An honest typo is of course outside of what Stack Overflow is about, and the other two are two sides of the same coin, covered by a new canonical written in 2017.1 But throughout 2023, a search query like this one would have shown you literally hundreds of unclosed, blatant duplicates. (There could be thousands more.) It doesn't now (it shows only a handful of questions that are mostly typos and idiosyncratic issues, e.g. trying to use Python 2.x code in 3.x in places where it would work except for the mixed spaces and tabs, trying to deal with idiosyncratic environments that are corrupting the code, etc.) That's because I put in the work to fix it, myself.
You're welcome.
1The fringe cases are things like "I'm having difficulty inputting code at the REPL" (or specifically with IPython - a corresponding version for VSCode would be appreciated!); "I want a block of code to be empty"; "I had a try:
block without a matching except:
block; the next line is supposed to be less-indented than the try; and I'm using Python 3.9 or older", "I'm trying to dynamically compile indented code from a docstring" (but there should be a better version of this); "a buggy third-party library is trying to dynamically recompile my code"; and "my generated code is nested 100 or more levels deep". There's also "my else
lined up with a for
or while
instead of the intended if
, so I didn't get an error but the result is wrong".