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replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
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There is this questionthis question on the site, which is off topic, locked, and obsolete which apparently can cause problems. Should we just delete it?

Lets asses the value of the post from a quantitative point of view:

First of all, it doesn't have all the options: JsonCpp twice, JSON Spirit twice, Boost's property_tree (not a dedicated library, but whatever), Jansson, UniversalContainer class (?), yajl (not strictly C++ but C, shrugs). 6 solutions in total. The official JSON page includes 17 libraries, all of the above already included. Obviously, json.org has the most complete list. So, the internet isn't losing anything in terms of "amount of solutions available".

From a qualitative point of view:

I know it has a note that says that "these kind of questions are not good fit for the site, blablabla" (paraphrased) but, if it's not-a-good-fit, isn't it more desirable that we just get rid of it, specially if a most complete set is available elsewhere?

Anyone wants to share their views about what's more beneficial for Stack Overflow and the internet in this specific aspect?

There is this question on the site, which is off topic, locked, and obsolete which apparently can cause problems. Should we just delete it?

Lets asses the value of the post from a quantitative point of view:

First of all, it doesn't have all the options: JsonCpp twice, JSON Spirit twice, Boost's property_tree (not a dedicated library, but whatever), Jansson, UniversalContainer class (?), yajl (not strictly C++ but C, shrugs). 6 solutions in total. The official JSON page includes 17 libraries, all of the above already included. Obviously, json.org has the most complete list. So, the internet isn't losing anything in terms of "amount of solutions available".

From a qualitative point of view:

I know it has a note that says that "these kind of questions are not good fit for the site, blablabla" (paraphrased) but, if it's not-a-good-fit, isn't it more desirable that we just get rid of it, specially if a most complete set is available elsewhere?

Anyone wants to share their views about what's more beneficial for Stack Overflow and the internet in this specific aspect?

There is this question on the site, which is off topic, locked, and obsolete which apparently can cause problems. Should we just delete it?

Lets asses the value of the post from a quantitative point of view:

First of all, it doesn't have all the options: JsonCpp twice, JSON Spirit twice, Boost's property_tree (not a dedicated library, but whatever), Jansson, UniversalContainer class (?), yajl (not strictly C++ but C, shrugs). 6 solutions in total. The official JSON page includes 17 libraries, all of the above already included. Obviously, json.org has the most complete list. So, the internet isn't losing anything in terms of "amount of solutions available".

From a qualitative point of view:

I know it has a note that says that "these kind of questions are not good fit for the site, blablabla" (paraphrased) but, if it's not-a-good-fit, isn't it more desirable that we just get rid of it, specially if a most complete set is available elsewhere?

Anyone wants to share their views about what's more beneficial for Stack Overflow and the internet in this specific aspect?

replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
Source Link

There is this question on the site, which is off topic, locked, and obsolete which apparently can cause problemscan cause problems. Should we just delete it?

Lets asses the value of the post from a quantitative point of view:

First of all, it doesn't have all the options: JsonCpp twice, JSON Spirit twice, Boost's property_tree (not a dedicated library, but whatever), Jansson, UniversalContainer class (?), yajl (not strictly C++ but C, shrugs). 6 solutions in total. The official JSON page includes 17 libraries, all of the above already included. Obviously, json.org has the most complete list. So, the internet isn't losing anything in terms of "amount of solutions available".

From a qualitative point of view:

I know it has a note that says that "these kind of questions are not good fit for the site, blablabla" (paraphrased) but, if it's not-a-good-fit, isn't it more desirable that we just get rid of it, specially if a most complete set is available elsewhere?

Anyone wants to share their views about what's more beneficial for Stack Overflow and the internet in this specific aspect?

There is this question on the site, which is off topic, locked, and obsolete which apparently can cause problems. Should we just delete it?

Lets asses the value of the post from a quantitative point of view:

First of all, it doesn't have all the options: JsonCpp twice, JSON Spirit twice, Boost's property_tree (not a dedicated library, but whatever), Jansson, UniversalContainer class (?), yajl (not strictly C++ but C, shrugs). 6 solutions in total. The official JSON page includes 17 libraries, all of the above already included. Obviously, json.org has the most complete list. So, the internet isn't losing anything in terms of "amount of solutions available".

From a qualitative point of view:

I know it has a note that says that "these kind of questions are not good fit for the site, blablabla" (paraphrased) but, if it's not-a-good-fit, isn't it more desirable that we just get rid of it, specially if a most complete set is available elsewhere?

Anyone wants to share their views about what's more beneficial for Stack Overflow and the internet in this specific aspect?

There is this question on the site, which is off topic, locked, and obsolete which apparently can cause problems. Should we just delete it?

Lets asses the value of the post from a quantitative point of view:

First of all, it doesn't have all the options: JsonCpp twice, JSON Spirit twice, Boost's property_tree (not a dedicated library, but whatever), Jansson, UniversalContainer class (?), yajl (not strictly C++ but C, shrugs). 6 solutions in total. The official JSON page includes 17 libraries, all of the above already included. Obviously, json.org has the most complete list. So, the internet isn't losing anything in terms of "amount of solutions available".

From a qualitative point of view:

I know it has a note that says that "these kind of questions are not good fit for the site, blablabla" (paraphrased) but, if it's not-a-good-fit, isn't it more desirable that we just get rid of it, specially if a most complete set is available elsewhere?

Anyone wants to share their views about what's more beneficial for Stack Overflow and the internet in this specific aspect?

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