The closure of this question was invalid, at least for the reason given. What happened is, Burhan voted to close the question for the following reason:
If your code is working fine, but you just need ideas to improve it - the best place to ask is http://codereview.stackexchange.com
The only place to leave a custom comment when you vote to close a question is under the "off-topic" category, and when you do this, the system automatically posts your custom close reason as a comment to the question. There is no other way that the custom close reason shows up—it does not appear in the yellow "closed" box; that simply says "closed as off-topic".
Presumably, the other 4 close-voters all agreed with Burhan that this question would be a better fit over on Code Review (and reasonably so). They therefore followed his example and voted to close the question for the custom reason that Burhan gave, which, confusingly, does appear directly in the close-vote dialog for them to select.
Broadly speaking, I see three things that went wrong here:
- The fact that all custom closure reasons appear under the "off topic" category created confusion, because you looked at the question and said: "Wait a minute! This is clearly not off-topic; it is about a practical programming problem and even includes the relevant code!" You were correct; the closure system is confusing in how its options are categorized. This question is not obviously off-topic, and you were right to question that assessment.
- The fact that a question would be a better fit on a different site does not make it off-topic on the original site. There are, for example, bunches of questions on Super User that would probably be a better fit on either Ask Different or Unix/Linux, but that doesn't make them off-topic for Super User. As an active member of a particular community, when you see a question that you think would make a great fit for that community, you are free to recommend that the person ask it there, instead. However, you should not vote to close the question as off-topic unless it is actually off-topic for the site on which it was originally asked. The topic area of Code Review is a natural subset of what is on-topic for Stack Overflow (with a few exceptions—see below).
- That said, this question probably should have been closed on Stack Overflow, but for a different reason than the one that was actually picked. Rather than being "off topic", it is actually "too broad" because it asks too many different things, many of which are nebulous and primarily opinion-based.
If it were me, I'd have voted to close the question as "too broad" and left a comment similar to the one that Burhan left. That would ensure that the question got closed for an ostensibly valid reason, but still provide guidance to the asker that their question didn't totally suck and that there is another place where they could get an answer.