Just out of curiosity, I took a look at the official description of what's on-topic at SO, and... funnily, I can't seem to find anything there that would make this question off-topic.
Let's take a look at what that page actually says is on-topic at Stack Overflow:
Stack Overflow is for professional and enthusiast programmers, people who write code because they love it. We feel the best Stack Overflow questions have a bit of source code in them, but if your question generally covers…
- a specific programming problem, or
- a software algorithm, or
- software tools commonly used by programmers; and is
- a practical, answerable problem that is unique to software development
… then you’re in the right place to ask your question!
Anaconda, Python, IDLE, etc. are clearly "software tools commonly used by programmers", and figuring out how they differ from and relate to each other is clearly "a practical, answerable problem that is unique to software development".
So, great, it looks like SO is the right place for questions like this! Admittedly, there's no source code in this question, but that's not actually mandatory, just recommended. Nor does this paragraph say anything about "showing effort" being required, either.
But wait! There's a bunch of exceptions further down the page. Surely there's something there that says you have to show your research effort?
Well, the closest thing there is, is this (emphasis original):
- Questions asking for homework help must include a summary of the work you've done so far to solve the problem, and a description of the difficulty you are having solving it.
But this clearly isn't a homework question! It's also not "seeking debugging help", it's not "about a problem that can no longer be reproduced", nor is it about "professional server, networking, or related infrastructure administration". It is asking about off-site software tools, but it's not asking for recommendations for them, and the tools it asks about are clearly "used primarily for programming". So it looks like none of the six numbered exceptions apply, either.
It's of course possible that this question has already been asked before, but if so, it should've been closed as a duplicate, not as off-topic. And so far nobody's suggested any duplicate for it. It's also pretty evidently not eligible for closing as "unclear", "too broad" or "primarily opinion-based", since it's asking a clearly scoped factual question that can be answered in a few sentences.
So, at this point, I can see only two possible conclusions:
- this question is, in fact, on-topic at SO according to official policy, and should be reopened; or
- the official policy documented in the help center is outdated, and needs to be updated to match the actual current scope of SO, whatever that may be.
Personally, I'm hoping that the answer isn't #2. I'm aware that there seems to be a sizable and growing contingent of SO users who seem to view this site as "Debugging Stack Exchange", and who will vote to close as off-topic any question that is not a homework or debugging question (with source code and a list of the OP's prior solving efforts included, of course). But personally, I'd like to hope that there's still room on SO for questions about things like algorithms and development tools. And, yes, for simple clearly asked questions about common newbie problems that are not bloated down by a gratuitous code dump or a list of attempted dead ends.
That's because I still believe that the goal of SO is to "make the Internet a better place" by creating a searchable repository of comprehensive, correct and clearly written answers to common programming problems. And while "show your effort" may be a useful barrier to keep the volume of redundant questions down (not that it seems to be working very well), the people who find the question and its answers on Google don't care how much or how little effort the person who originally asked it had spent on it. All they care about is actually finding a good answer to the question.
So, yes, I think the question should be undeleted. Not because there's anything particularly good or bad about the question itself, but because it has a useful and well written answer, and because there's no way to undelete the answer without undeleting the question, too.
Or, if the new consensus on SO really is so dead set against "rewarding a low-effort question" by leaving it open and eligible for upvotes (which such a simple and common question surely would collect over time from people with the same problem stumbling across it), perhaps we should encourage the author of the answer to repost it as a self-answer on a new question of their own. Unless, of course, the community would just close that one too because the question still "showed no effort".
Or perhaps we should just stop fighting the trend and create yet another new SE site for questions about programming tools, just like Computer Science was created because people asking algorithm questions no longer felt welcome on SO. Maybe call it "Software Development Stack Exchange" or something. Then we could finally dedicate SO to nothing but debugging and homework questions and let it slowly sink to the bottom of the Google rankings where it belongs.