One week ago, my (now deleted) question had 45 upvotes, no downvotes, 26 stars, 9k views and 6 helpful answers. It was in the top 15 questions of the Guava tag, and people regularly updated the various answers to keep them correct. In short, it was a helpful question with appropriate activity for over six years. Okay, granted, my 6 years-old wording wasn't the best, but no one ever corrected that, despite fixing some tags. When I Google for "guava documentation" (without the quotes), I get this link on the first page, right after the official Javadoc, the official Github page and the Wikipedia page. I don't think there's even 1% of 6 year old question that have these stats (if I'm wrong, just tell, don't come down on me like predators). I've asked more viewed, more upvoted questions, I don't think they come close to being as important as this one.
In one week, this question was closed, downvoted several times and then deleted today.
The most probable answer will be that "hey, now we have SO docs so your question is much badder than all we'll be able to put on SO docs". Well I'm still waiting for it to happen on Guava. Guava is a complex tool and I've already pondered for a serious amount of time how I'd put all the samples needed to it in a few documentation topics, limited to 13 examples each. Well, it's just not possible: Guava is just too complex for that. So SO docs is not appropriate for documenting Guava, bar from giving exact answers or links to documentation.
The second most probable answer is "linkz only, dood, iz bad". Well, yep, you got me. All answers are basically link-only answers. Yet, they have a decent amount of upvotes, meaning that they are helpful for various people. Again, despite being "link-only", it reached the first page of Google for "guava documentation" and is was helpful to many.
In six years, lots have changed on SO, asking for resources has become banned. I get it for new questions. But why target this old question at all? SO has more than 10 million questions. What made it so outstanding and so needed for deletion after all this time? While there are new "where can I find a tutorial for XXX?" everyday that aren't closed (despite my calls for close). From what I see from SO's actions, it's like one guy shooting himself in the foot: less visibility from question with higher traction.
No, I just don't get why this question is closed (and even less why it's deleted). I would really love some enlightenment.
Also, it's super bad that I wasn't notified my question got 1. closed and 2. deleted. I kind of just wondered where I got a non-multiple-of-5 rep difference today, since I didn't downvote anthing.
P.S. I don't care about the rep. I think I didn't lose any point (yet) bar the two downvotes. I'll probably lose 350+ rep, when UTC's day++, but that's OK, it's not like I need them. It's just that I think that historic questions shouldn't be treated like that if they were OK at the time of posting.