Consider Why does IntelliJ IDEA compile Scala so slowly?, which until its deletion was the most accurate and readable insight into Scala compiler performance on the entire Internet.
Or consider https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1332574/common-programming-mistakes-for-scala-developers-to-avoid, which until its deletion garnered hundreds of upvotes, and dozens of popular and laboriously detailed answers.
I'm not disputing that these don't fit the scope of Stack Overflow as it is currently defined.
But I can't help but feel that deleting these questions and answers is throwing away a massive amount of user time and valuable information.
Though these questions aren't currently the purpose of Stack Overflow, the posts that already exist have value, and huge numbers of people have said they were well-researched and useful.
It's impossible to tell how often such popular answers disappear from the site, since they are no longer indexed, and cease to exist. I noticed these two only because they are linked elsewhere, and I refer to them frequently as my favorite resources on these topics.
We don't want people creating off-topic questions and answers, but "closed" is a great way of indicating that question not a good example for future questions, while not throwing away the significant value it adds.
Let's delete questions and answers only when they are poor quality (not merely off-topic), as in "This is not useful, it reflects poorly on Stack Overflow, and isn't worth the bytes it was written with."
Hidden Features of C++? is clearly off-topic as defined by the Help Center. But it is useful and interesting enough that is has been closed and locked, not deleted.
Rather than calling everything trash and refactoring (deleting) every time we find a question that doesn't meet the latest and greatest criteria, let's consider the value a closed and read-only version would still provide.
I doubt very, very few questions with, say, 20 or more votes, are terrible enough that we all would be better off if they just disappeared from human history.