Recently most questions that have been most useful to me (mostly regarding javascript) have been closed as off-topic for "Questions asking us to recommend or find a book, tool, software library, tutorial or other off-site resource are off-topic for Stack Overflow as they tend to attract opinionated answers and spam."
What is the best way to scale back the use of "closing" these questions?
Many of these are not questions such as "which is better: mac, windows or linux". They are legitimate questions asking for advice about how to integrate multiple components/libraries to perform a task, and most of the recent ones that I have seen have legitimately helpful answers describing various combinations of libraries, etc. that can be combined to perform a specific function.
A typical example might be "what is the best way to stringify an object in NodeJS and then compress it, and reverse the process in the client side browser after sending it over a websocket?". Obviously, the content of the question should describe that the specific issue is compressing/decompressing the JSON (since compression libraries typically want a stream but JSON.stringify and JSON.parse aren't streaming functions), and the goal is to do it efficiently as a stream.
Because this can involve up to five libraries, there are literally thousands of permutations, and typically, a complete solution comes from partial answers by various people. One person may have a solution to the server stringification/compression (which is complicated by the need to stream the JSON string into a compression function), while another answer may have a different solution for how to do this in the browser. Obviously, some people may reference existing answered questions (ie. about the websocket part). But ultimately, a complete answer can be formed.
In other words, some of the questions most likely to be closed as "off-topic" for this reason are also some of the questions that would benefit the community most from the collaborative stack overflow approach.
Or, putting it another way, the current stack overflow standard seems to be that if there is only one way to do something then it is okay to ask about it, but if there are multiple ways, it will be closed as off-topic because people may provide opinionated answers. But it is when there are lots of multiple ways to do something that I want people's actual experience most of all to quickly get to the most tried and true approach.
To summarize; how to get people to be more judicious and scale back the annoying practice of closing legitimate questions as off-topic for "Questions asking us to recommend or find a book, tool, software library, tutorial or other off-site resource are off-topic for Stack Overflow as they tend to attract opinionated answers and spam."?
This is not about asking generic questions. My contrived example specifically asks how to pipeline, on a server, stringifying an object, then compressing it, then sending it over a websocket, and then doing the reverse on the client side. The key issues are how to do this in a streaming pipeline and ensure that the server compression is compatible with the client decompression (since not all tools are available for both the server and client different libraries may be required, but they must be compatible). Had this been a real question instead of an example, the body of the question would have specifically noted that the object may be very large so it would be preferable to not have to use two full size buffers for the uncompressed and compressed data (ie. use streams).
Note that this question is not about actually answering the technical question. It is about not getting questions "closed out" when other people are actually commenting and responding to them (ie. at least some people are finding them useful and valid).
"What is the best way to scale back the use of "closing" these questions?"
-- your question is being asked backwards. The closings look to be appropriate, and your question should in fact be, "how can I learn to best use this site so that my questions are considered on-topic". The site will not change its rules just for you (or me), and so you (and I) need to learn to adapt our expectations and our site usage to match the site requirements.