A few months/years back I answered a question about the comparison of AngularJS and Dojo (two JavaScript frameworks). At that time I wasn't familiar with the rules so I still attempted to answer it instead of voting to close.
Recently the question got deleted for reasons of moderation, and though I agree that it should be closed (like it was), I'm not sure if deleting the question is actually helpful or not.
As far as I know only questions that are extremely off topic/low quality and are unlikely to help any other people are deleted, so I wonder why the question got deleted. (https://stackoverflow.com/questions/16463059/angularjs-over-dojo/16473255#16473255)
Looking at the amount of views (I can't see it anymore though), should give a view of how many people actually found the question and thought it was helpful (though it's a gorilla vs shark question).
And right now, we're a few weeks ahead and I'm noticing that the same question is being asked again: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/29790291/angularjs-and-dojo-comparison#29790291 This question should probably be closed, but if the original question/answer was still there, that question might not have been asked and the OP might have been helped (sounds like a win to me).
Can I improve the original question/answer to make it ontopic so it can be undeleted, or is it simply a waste of time?
And more generally, isn't it a better idea to have these questions (even closed)? While the question/answer may not be the best quality, it (kinda) prevents that the same question pops up again.