I've seen many questions on Stack Overflow that are closed as off-topic, saying that it's based on opinion, but there are tons of upvotes and WE LEARN stuff.
For example, this one:
Maybe it's time to reconsider this off-topic issue?
I've seen many questions on Stack Overflow that are closed as off-topic, saying that it's based on opinion, but there are tons of upvotes and WE LEARN stuff.
For example, this one:
Maybe it's time to reconsider this off-topic issue?
Closing and post score are orthogonal systems - the former is intended to block activity that would be wasted on questions that cannot or should not be answered, while the latter is intended to help folks find useful questions or avoid not-useful questions. Consider a ridiculously off-topic question such as, "how do I tighten chains on my automobile tires" - this could be a very useful and answerable question, yet still shouldn't be allowed here.
That's the general purpose answer. Now, your specific example doesn't quite fit that. Yes, Docker is a valid systems topic - but there's no evidence that's what the question here was concerned with, and it's every bit as likely that the asker was setting up a development environment on Windows. As Docker is also a tool commonly used by programmers, the question is on-topic and should be reopened - if there's another reason for it to be closed, then that reason should be documented if it is re-closed.
I've reopened it.
The number of upvotes on a question is only an indicator of the question's popularity, and isn't necessarily related to the question's scope.
For the example you provided, one can easily imagine that many people run into the same issue and find it helpful, which explains its very high popularity, specifically considering that it has a working solution. That's not a reason to say the question is on-topic on SO.
Another common case would be site's scope's changing. Software/library/framework recommendation used to be on-topic on SO, at which time a lot of such questions came up, among which a few went popular and therefore got many upvotes (some are still getting upvotes because people still find them useful). When the site's scope began to narrow, those questions were no longer on-topic and got closed gradually, but the votes didn't expire (and never will).
I wonder if this is a "Poor Man's Historical Lock" in effect on the question.
The amount of extra chatter in the answers indicates that perhaps the highest upvoted answer may not be all that great, or may not have stood the test of time.
It could also indicate that the Docker ecosystem has evolved enough that only certain Dockerfiles built in a certain way or running on a certain Docker version - none of which are in the actual question - could cause this problem.
Granted, the answer provided and upvoted may have been useful back then, but there's nothing empirical that can be related to today for users who also have to deal with this same Docker + Windows issue.