The question was down-voted. Among other things, I was told that "You cant ask people... if something exists."
Is this true? It sounds like a strange rule.
The question was down-voted. Among other things, I was told that "You cant ask people... if something exists."
Is this true? It sounds like a strange rule.
Yes. Asking the question "Is there a library that does X" is an open-ended question. People create software libraries all the time, and this type of question would invite users to keep posting answers for every library in existence and every library that is created in the future forever.
Such questions invite the same kind of answers as explicit recommendation questions.
The close reason on your question says the following:
"Questions asking us to recommend or find a tool, library or favorite off-site resource are off-topic for Stack Overflow as they tend to attract opinionated answers and spam. Instead, describe the problem and what has been done so far to solve it."
According to Pekka's answer to Why are "shopping list" questions bad? (bold emphasis mine):
The main arguments against "shopping list questions" are:
They are open-ended; there is never one perfect answer to them.
They outdate incredibly quickly. This was what turned me against shopping list questions: if you look around on Stack Overflow, you will find plenty of 2010 "what's the best xyz" questions whose answers are hideously outdated now.
They tend to attract a lot of spam and/or link only answers
Your question (bold emphasis mine)
Is There A JavaScript Library That Offers OS-Dependent Browser Upgrade Options?
I am looking for a JavaScript library that helps users update their browser. I would ideally like something that looks at the user's operating system and suggests a compatible browser. For example, if the user is running Windows XP, you can't get them to update to a modern version of IE.
is clearly asking for a recommendation for a library, and is thus off-topic, according to Stack Overflow's guidelines.
In the comments to your question, you gave examples of other questions and asked "why those are different?":
The answer is, they're not. They're bad examples, and I've just voted to close them for the same reason.
"Questions asking us to recommend or find a tool, library or favorite off-site resource are off-topic for Stack Overflow as they tend to attract opinionated answers and spam. Instead, describe the problem and what has been done so far to solve it."
You should describe the problem and ask for ideas on it... I know that it looks the same, but it is not.