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Discussion, one-of-many, or open-ended questions are usually a bad fit for this format and openly discouraged, although there are a few in the archives from several years ago.
Always read the hold message
I'm sure you saw this:
put on hold as primarily opinion-based by Elias Van Ootegem, Maerlyn,
Raul Rene, DaImTo, legoscia 20 hours ago
Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert
experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost
entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific
expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the
help center, please edit the question or leave a comment.
Let's look at this first:
The question is put on hold, suspending answers but not comments. It is still there. It can still eventually get reopened and answered if you make edits, or even if never answered some of the comments or links people send could be useful.
It shows which users put it on hold. A question is usually put on hold by 5 users who have enough points to have earned the privilege to vote on posts in this way, to help create or influence site standards.
It asks you to rephrase your question so that it is not an opinion question.
You can ask here, or ask the voters
One thing you can do, though it doesn't always work, is to message a single voting user about this by putting @ in from of their name in comments or an appropriate chat room, and politely ask like this:
@someone What could I do to ask a better question?
Just keep in mind that the voters are volunteers and fellow site visitors just like you and equally busy or perhaps more so (and certainly not employees that you or Stack Exchange Inc. has paid to answer). The answer to a direct message could sometimes be something like "that is off topic here" or "read the help and edit your question" This is not to be rude, though it seems that way when trying to get something answered. Often, though, people will offer helpful hints.
Why this is an opinion question
I can guess why a question like this might be closed, but I don't know why these 5 users wanted it closed. So what I have to say next may or may not be useful.
Is "Which is the standard method of email verification?" an "opinion" question?
Yes.
"Which?" implies a one-of-many choice. And "standard" often subjectively means "best".
If you have used a bunch of different internet sites, you will know that even on high value e-commerce sites, like banks, paypal, and stock brokers, there is some variation in how they do email verification and lost password from the variations in the emails received and the questions asked in the user interfaces. Not a lot, but there is some. So it would appear, there is not a single standard.
Since there is not a single standard, you are asking an opinion.
Other strong potential reasons for a "on hold" vote
These may not strictly apply to the question that was asked, but are mentioned to help avoid common issues that often occur with similar questions from new users.
"Questions asking us to find a favorite tool, library, or off site resource are off-topic...". That could happen for asking for a PHP library to do email validation.
"Unclear what you are asking". "Which is the standard method of Email Verification?" is a little unclear because the title suggests we are going to see at least 2 ways of doing something, or be asked about a best way, but the body asks about a single example of specific code. Be careful that the title reflects what is asked in the body. If the problem is just in the title, the title should be edited by you, or anyone else, to better match the body.
"Duplicate of ..." This doesn't mean exact duplicates. It means that the issue the OP has is answered already and there isn't really anything "new" in the new question.
Search before asking. There are 152 previous questions and answers for the search "[php][mysql] email validation"
When searching, you might have to think about how the other question and answer pertains to your situation, change variable names, or "run the code in your head" and that is effort and includes a possibility of error. The upside is you can get an answer this way without waiting.
We all want human interaction and personalization to our specific concerns, but SO isn't always the best place to seek that.
A pretty good duplicate for your general question (from the title) is Easiest way for PHP email verification link. Although that question and answer received several upvotes, you can also see in comments that some users found the question initially controversial, e.g. "SO isn't meant for building things for you; the community is for helping when you have a problem."
Since these "on-hold" or close votes are cast by experienced users who see a question, there is variability from human interpretation and preferences. Not all questions that one person thinks violate the guidelines are put on hold, and some questions are put on hold that one person will think should not be on hold.
As a check and balance, there is a "reopen" vote, which, as you have noticed, can lead to oscillation.