While reading Mark Seeman's book, "Dependency Injection in .NET", I discovered he'd quoted a question from Stack Overflow that related to explaining DI to a person in very simple terms, and he'd cited the question as a reference:
How to explain dependency injection to a five-year-old
I looked up the question, and I was surprised to find that the question was closed, and -- earlier this year, even -- deleted.
I understand that there may be valid reasons to close and delete the question, but is there any precedent where a question remains open and undeletable when it's referenced in a published work, for historical purposes? If not, then should there be? I can't think of any other type of citable reference that has the ability to be "deleted". This outcome has become possible with the advent of the internet, web 2.0, etc.
P.S. -- I think maybe this question belongs on SE meta, but I figured I'd start here since the referenced question is on SO.