Recently some well-known Delphi bloggers posted copies of high-voted Delphi questions that were being flagged for deletion in order to save the material for the community. Thankfully, since then there seem to have been enough reopen votes cast to keep two of those three questions alive for the time being.
These were questions in the "Hidden features of..." series that are generally closed but not deleted, where even that response is highly debated. Consensus seems to be that this series of questions are outside the original Stack Overflow scope, but are often useful questions, and that questions in general should only be deleted "as a last resort or for really bad posts".
(This change in SO from religious deletion to being more open about the rules for useful resources is a great thing, and I think a sign of the growing maturity of SO as a site. It's something I'm very grateful for.)
However, the third question I linked to seems to have been deleted anyway, some time ago, before these bloggers noticed and made backups. I don't know of its quality, because it's deleted.
I do know that similar questions related to the same language and the same question about other environments had some very interesting replies, so it's likely this question either did, or would have, useful answers were it open.
Is it possible to undelete it, please?
Update: It turns out that the question had been reopened, but not undeleted - possibly a bug. But it's also clear that (a) this question is lower-quality than similar questions (something invisible to me when I asked), and (b) there's still disagreement about the value of "Hidden Features of..." posts at all. (I linked to some of the discussions above, showing they were now accepted, but some commenters below think differently. Ie, there is no community agreement.)
Re (a), it is clear from similar questions that this question has the potential to have high-quality answers. I have asked for input from the Delphi community. Would you leave the question open long enough for this to have an effect, please? I genuinely think there is potential in this question.
Re (b), I don't personally understand the combination of "not acceptable answers" yet "being kept around for their value". It's a paradox. @animuson phrases it that it's about the question not the answers: "[the community] think the answers are useful and have value, even though the question does not meet our standards" - again something I find a paradox. If a question produces good answers, it is a good question. If something producing good results does not meet the standards, the standards need to be examined to accommodate something that produces good results. After all, Stack Overflow is meant to be a resource - a useful body of knowledge. We should not delete the knowledge just because whatever prompted that knowledge to be written down was "bad".
Thankyou to @Shog for undeleting. If in a while the question is still bad quality, I will support closing (not deleting) it again. Please give it a little time for us to improve it though.
Update 2: This question has been locked, so neither I nor anyone else can make some of the improvements we want to. (It was locked by @animuson, a mod who has read this thread and is aware I am trying to improve the question and its answers. A well as providing answers from material new in the past few years - requiring adding new answers - I would like edit the question to follow suggestions made by @Josh Caswell (thanks) in a comment below. Both these have been prevented. I am not sure this is in the spirit of SO.)
Moreover, since I asked this question,
- a related question got deleted
- another related question is on hold
- and another question I mentioned as a good example is now locked.
I am very much afraid that in trying to get a reopened question undeleted and then improving it, I have inadvertently done great damage to other useful questions.
I should point out that the deletions here are inconsistent with treatment of other questions in the same series.
We are supposed to be collaboratively improving things here.