TL;DR - a request to avoid pedantic door-slamming on documentation- related questions, specific in this case: re. TensorFlow.
More of a comment than a question. I try not to use Stack Overflow since it has changed into what it is now, but I felt I had to comment on the fellow who asked about how to get access to TensorFlow documentation - and the question was closed as being inappropriate. Query was "How can you download TensorFlow API documentation". Of all all the questions ever asked on Stack Overflow, that might be one of the most useful I have ever seen - yet it was shut down. Most annoying, and nothing I can do.
Look, the folks at TensorFlow have made it clear they are using SO for interaction with their user-community, so that is just how it is. I have been looking for any written-down technical or user-doc for TF, and all I ever get is referrals to youtube videos or tutorials that target folks trying to do image processing. The MNIST tutorial is interesting, but not what I am involved with, or focused on. It is astonishingly frustrating, but such is life, eh? It's "open source", and you take what you can get, such as it is.
But the OP's question about TF Documentation is a critical and important one. Heck, at least for me it was. I've done Google and DDG searches,and they often lead to SO posts. And SO posts are sometimes an excellent source of undocumented, critically important information. So, perhaps before we slam the door on a question, perhaps we might think about basic purpose first? Much of the internet has become a shill-shack full of hype, fraud and dis-info, but this question re. documentation was rather important.
I've been unable to find any proper written documentation on TensorFlow. It is very frustrating, so I clicked thru to this Stack Overflow query with some relief - only to find a user group had slammed the door on it.
So, my modest proposal: When an open-source collective has made the decision to rely on Stack Overflow as its primary bug-track and user-contact/support tool, perhaps we might be a little more tolerant of folks who - by necessity - are trying to use this vector to engage in some sort of communication.