The question you referenced shows exactly the problem why these type of questions are off-topic.
A decent looking question with some code that asks: What's the best alternative library to gettimeofday() in C++ where several answers offer altenatives, some get dismissed by the OP because they have requirements that they didn't bother to mention in the question.
In the end it turns out their problem didn't even need a library.
This is how you might ask for a replacement of a library:
I current call Foo from DoomedLib to FrobTheBaz. As DoomedLib is deprecated I switched to PromisingLib as that allows me the FrobTheBaz as well. However calling Fuz doesn't FrobTheBaz instead it barks at me. How can I FrobTheBaz with PromisingLib? I'm not committed to PromisingLib. If there are other options that achieves the same, I'm happy to consider those.
That last sentence is basically your invite for an off-site recommendation. Note that you have to do some upfront work to find at least one reasonable alternative that brings you close to meet your requirement. From there you can offload the short-list creation and/or solving of the issue at hand to the community.
It can be tempting to ask on Software Recommendations but remember that they also expect you to do work before hand. Their Help says:
Good software recommendation requests have two components:
- A purpose — a task to accomplish, a user story
- Some objective requirements — a minimum set of features
Specially that last bit is often overlooked. So much that they have meta post about it: https://softwarerecs.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/336