I want to view my old questions that are not present in my questions history. I don't remember whether they were deleted by myself or by the community. I want to use that question's logic in my new project, but that question exists nowhere.
1 Answer
If you have at least 10k reputation, you can use the search operator deleted:1
to view your deleted posts.
If you have less than 10k reputation and your question was deleted less than 60 days ago, you can go to "Activity -> questions -> deleted recent questions".
If you have less than 10k reputation, and your questions was deleted more than 60 days ago, there's no direct way to find it. If you have a good reason to see it again, you can submit a custom moderator flag on one of your posts. A moderator will then review it and give you the link if necessary.
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Do reputation entries for deleted posts remain in your reputation tab on your profile? Not a reliable method by any means but if the answer is yes then it remains a possible method, though time-consuming.– TylerHCommented Jan 7, 2019 at 17:23
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@TylerH no. If the post is less than 60 days old when it's deleted, any reputation changes from the post are lost. If it is older than 60 days, I suppose you can use that method. It would be very inefficient though, so I wouldn't recommend it. Commented Jan 7, 2019 at 17:25
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Sure, I hadn't thought about the reversion of reputation; that's a good point. That kicks in if the question had less than 3 upvotes (or is it a total score of less than 3?) and is less than 6 months old when deleted.– TylerHCommented Jan 7, 2019 at 17:26
deleted.stackoverflow.com
that was easily searchable; I know SO curates content and deletes posts by design, but I wish I could "opt in" to searching deleted content as well as active content. The way the Roomba works even one downvote or the view equation can delete an unanswered question; sometimes the stuff I search for is so obscure and poorly documented that I'd take something even barely comprehensible over nothing, it'd probably still be better than forums.