Oddly enough, I'm the moderator that closed your question (I happened upon it because I was doing Python work at the time).
Your question was closed because it's not a good fit for Stack Overflow. This has nothing to do with whether or not it's a popular or good question. A question being open indicates it's a good fit for Stack Overflow, a question having votes indicates it's a popular (or good) question. Those two states are orthogonal to each other.
It's a great question. Let's get that out of the way.
But, what would the end state to such a question look like? How would we determine an objectively correct answer?
You could potentially have dozens of answers, each with a different advantage and disadvantage. Which answer would be objectively correct?
Stack Overflow doesn't do well when the answers are based on "In my Opinion", nor does it do well when there's just a list of things. Part of the utility in a Stack Overflow question is that it is easily googleable, and that it solves a problem the googler has. In this case, "Advantages and Disadvantages" are not a problem. "I can't get Nose to run because X" is a problem.
Also, the question doesn't really have a good answer. It had two years to collect some good content, but it failed to do so in two years. That also means that there's not much to lose if the question is deleted.
If you want the question to stay around, put some effort in making the answer good enough that we wouldn't want the question deleted. As it stands, there's not really a reason to keep the question around.
To answer the rest of your rather bold questions:
Given the unique factual rather than discussional answer, would most people consider the question not to be constructive?
It's opinion based; and a point in time view of each library from one user's perspective. While parts of the answer are factually correct; other parts are that user's opinion.
What is the point of deleting questions versus closing them?
It's not really a 'vs' thing. It's closing can lead to deletion (not always, though).
We close questions because they are not a good fit for Stack Overflow (for a multitude of reasons).
We delete questions because they are not a good fit and they do not contain any content that we should keep around. Content that expands the useful repository of programmer knowledge.
Even if it's not what's happening, deleting comes across as eliminating a magnet for moderator criticism. How can that image be prevented?
Moderators delete questions. If we do something you think is incorrect, bring it up on Meta. In this case, although I could have deleted your question, I chose not to. I chose to leave that option to the community, because I don't think it's crystal clear that it should be deleted. In this case, I'm deferring to the community. Sometimes I don't, because of established practice. In this case I did.
That's normal for a community-elected moderator. We were elected to use our best judgement in carrying out moderator duties across Stack Overflow. We really are glorified janitors.
Should there be a requirement to explain why a particular question is voted to be closed or deleted if the question has a given number of upvotes?
I try really hard to leave comments when I close a question unilaterily. I try to go above and beyond. I don't always do this, and I haven't always done it. In this case, I chose not to, but I was also a 'young' moderator then. As far as a requirement, no there shouldn't. As I explained earlier, a questions votes have no bearing on whether it belongs on Stack Overflow.