I came across a question on SO that's about six years old with over 460 upvotes which asks for opinions, recommendations, and best practices (part of the question has the text, "My question is: what is the current commonly accepted best practice way to organize your actual code? ").
I'm pretty sure that when it was originally asked, that the:
Primarily opinion-based - Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise.
close reason didn't exist yet. The question has over a dozen answers and was protected back in 2011. The question itself is well-written and clear, however there's no actual code involved, and the entire point of it appears to be to solicit opinions on "best practices".
Let me be clear in saying that I'm not campaigning that the question be closed. My goal here is to find out how close reasons should be applied, since they do change from time to time. I am asking if now, since it appears to fit the above close reason which may not have existed when it was written, should the question be closed regardless of the length of time it's been around and the number of answers and votes that it received?
Again I don't believe the age of the question is a reason to close it. But should what appears to be a popular question be closed now, since the close reasons have changed from when it was first written, or does it receive a pardon?
For those interested, this is the question in question: Commonly accepted best practices around code organization in JavaScript