That question was deleted because, instead of focusing on a specific problem, the author formulated a broad request for library recommendations. These have repeatedly demonstrated themselves to be problematic, and this question was no exception:
One answer recommended the very library the asker was already trying (without success) to use, including no advice on actually solving the asker's problems.
Three answers consisted of recommendations with no example code or other indication that they would actually solve the asker's problems.
One answer described how to use the library the asker was trying to use successfully, only to run into an additional requirement that hadn't been explicitly noted in the question.
The last answer (posted a full year after the question was asked!) recommended a different library that would satisfy all requirements, and included example code.
So, 4 out of 6 answers were completely worthless, and history has shown these questions to be magnets for such cruft. Thus the reason for closing and deleting.
That said, there is another option: editing! If such a question has managed to attract good answers in spite of itself, it is possible for anyone to go in and re-write it to reflect the underlying problem, dropping the broad resource-request and discouraging or invalidating lousy answers in the process.
So I did this. The question is now undeleted, with only two answers remaining...
Note that the close reason used recommends exactly this:
Questions asking us to recommend or find a book, tool, software library, tutorial or other 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.
(emphasis mine)
So, next time you run across a question requesting library recommendations where someone has taken the time to look past the superficial question and address the actual problem faced by the author, use this technique to salvage it.