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Post Closed as "Duplicate" by gnat, Glorfindel discussion
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Related: How to Handle Flags on Very Old Posts

Consider as an example a positive-score question with an accepted, positive-score answer, and several other upvoted answers. Now suppose that the question is later closed. (This isn't theoretical, I've seen it happen before). My understanding is that this question wouldn't be automatically deleted, and questions like that aren't necessarily manually deleted either.

If a question already has multiple high-quality answers (including one that fixed the OP's problem) and is unlikely to be deleted, what's the point of closing it?

One major reason for putting questions on hold is to give the OP an incentive to improve the post and to remove low-quality questions that distract from better questions; however, this really doesn't apply in this case, so why would the OP have any incentive to improve the question now (given that they already got their information and the question's unlikely to be deleted anyway)?

Related: How to Handle Flags on Very Old Posts

Consider as an example a positive-score question with an accepted, positive-score answer, and several other upvoted answers. Now suppose that the question is later closed. (This isn't theoretical, I've seen it happen before). My understanding is that this question wouldn't be automatically deleted, and questions like that aren't necessarily manually deleted either.

If a question already has multiple high-quality answers (including one that fixed the OP's problem) and is unlikely to be deleted, what's the point of closing it?

Related: How to Handle Flags on Very Old Posts

Consider as an example a positive-score question with an accepted, positive-score answer, and several other upvoted answers. Now suppose that the question is later closed. (This isn't theoretical, I've seen it happen before). My understanding is that this question wouldn't be automatically deleted, and questions like that aren't necessarily manually deleted either.

If a question already has multiple high-quality answers (including one that fixed the OP's problem) and is unlikely to be deleted, what's the point of closing it?

One major reason for putting questions on hold is to give the OP an incentive to improve the post and to remove low-quality questions that distract from better questions; however, this really doesn't apply in this case, so why would the OP have any incentive to improve the question now (given that they already got their information and the question's unlikely to be deleted anyway)?

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What's the point of closing old questions that are unlikely to be deleted?

Related: How to Handle Flags on Very Old Posts

Consider as an example a positive-score question with an accepted, positive-score answer, and several other upvoted answers. Now suppose that the question is later closed. (This isn't theoretical, I've seen it happen before). My understanding is that this question wouldn't be automatically deleted, and questions like that aren't necessarily manually deleted either.

If a question already has multiple high-quality answers (including one that fixed the OP's problem) and is unlikely to be deleted, what's the point of closing it?