Traversing the View Hierarchy on the iPhone is the 11th-highest-upvoted question on the site to be closed with no answers but not deleted. It's a guide to traversing the view hierarchy in an iOS application, posted as a question. It is, very obviously, not a real question, and was closed as such years ago under the old "not a real question" close reason. And in normal circumstances, I'd happily say "yep, that's the correct outcome", and maybe throw a delete vote its way to try and nudge it a little closer to oblivion.
Except that it looks like a well-written guide, and has 5000 views and 43 upvotes. Clearly, a lot of users saw value in this content, even though it's blatantly in violation of our rules.
Can we, and should we, find a way to save this post? Its author has logged in in the last 24 hours, and so there's hope that we can enlist their help. All we'd need to do is edit the question body to be a question to which the guide is a valid answer, then vote to reopen the question, then have the original author post their guide as an answer. Then the content would have a stable home without violating any rules.
I raised a mod flag suggesting roughly this approach, and proposed a question body:
Given how highly voted this not-really-a-question is, I guess it's been useful over the years; it'd be nice to preserve it and get it into a state where it's actually a Q&A. Luckily, the author is still active. Could you perhaps suggest to the author that a) you edit the question to just read "How can I traverse the view hierarchy of an iOS app?" and then b) you reopen the question and then c) he copies the current content of the "question" and pastes it as an answer?
However, a mod rejected this suggestion (reasonably, I think) on the basis that the resulting question would be too broad:
The question as such would be too broad, therefore it wouldn't be of much help. Feel free to add your suggestion as a comment on the post. The OP can flag the post to be reopened, if they fix it.
So I'd like to hand off the question of what to do with this post to Meta - and especially to people who know more about iOS stuff than me. These are the things I can't tell:
Is the post genuinely good? Does its existence make the internet better, by helping surface information that isn't easily findable elsewhere? And is it still relevant in 2019, or has it become obsolete after a decade of being closed?
What good, on-topic question can we pose to which that guide is a valid answer?
If some iOS experts can opine on these points, then hopefully, a decade later, we can decide on a way to bring that post out of the limbo of closure - by either deleting it, or reopening it in a form that complies with the rules.