Over the past few weeks I've posted three questions that I've ended up answering myself. Having read the advice in this question about "What do I do with my unanswered questions once I solve it by myself?", in particular the second answer, I was wondering what metrics to use to decide when to delete the questions?
I spent several days searching for the answers, experimenting, interpreting documentation, examining MAP files, running tests, and so forth, and it pains me to delete them if someone may find them useful at some time in the future. (If I'd posted a few lines of source with a question about how to copy a string from an array of structs, I'd have had three answers in ten minutes, none of which would have been read again.)
It would appear that the subjects of my questions have a very small number of followers (possibly just me). Would this make the rare solutions gems worth treasuring by the few? Or would it mean they are less valuable because they don't help many people?
Note
I don't want to invoke the meta-effect, so no links to the questions here, but for background information they pertained to using GCC linker scripts to organise C variables and an interpretation of a couple of objects in the CANopen communication specification. Neither of which has a particularly broad audience (apparently).