Today I was mentally grumbling at a link-only Google Code answer that wasn't very clear, when it occurred to me that very soon, almost all Google Code related answers are going to break, because Google Code is shutting down.
We have until the end of the year (roughly) before Google Code goes completely poof. Fixing things while google code is still up will probably make it easier to follow things up, like where the new repos might be living (if anywhere).
There are a few different categories of questions that may "break", though. I propose the following:
- Link-only answers: like this one should probably be deleted regardless of the fact that google code is dying.
- Links to GC repos in legit questions: These are questions that could survive without links to a repo, and all relevant code is in the question or answer, but are enhanced by having the link. To handle these, it's probably best to attempt to link to the new github/whatever repo if it can be found. This would be loads of work, but would make sure the answers were still good quality.
- Questions about using Google Code: Like this or this. I assume there is probably a policy for handling completely defunct questions, but I'm not sure what it is.
Only problem? An SO search for code.google.com comes up with ~50,000 results >120,000 questions. The results of leaving it unfixed will be pretty drastic, but it's a mind boggling amount of work to fix and I can't imagine how to automate it.
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Quick update: Stephane's answer below looks like a good way to handle most of the legit questions. Does anyone know if there's a policy for handling obsolete questions, like in category 3 above?