The question is pretty terse; it discusses APIs, then a lack of an API, then asks how to do something broad in a language. OK, this may be better closed as Too Broad at this point, but we didn't catch it then (or at least, I didn't).
When I saw the question, 49 answers had been added, all of which are library recommendations. To their credit, one or two give some explanation. Unfortunately, neither of the two answers that provide some explanation on how to do what OP asked were accepted. The answer that was accepted is a library recommendation.
This is a pretty clear indication by a number of means that this question should be closed:
- OP asked a question that's too broad and/or arguably about getting a library/API recommendation
- OP accepted an answer that is recommending a library/resource (and nothing else), indicating to us that OP was probably only interested in a library to begin with
- People continue to post answers that do nothing but recommend libraries, which is the kind of content we don't really want on Stack Overflow
It's important to keep in mind that we do have a practice of not reopening questions just to close them for a different/better reason, if the question is in fact one that should be closed (unless you're a moderator and can do it yourself with two clicks).
So if you ever come across a question that is closed, and you're thinking "huh, that close reason doesn't make much sense", the question you should ask yourself is "should this question be reopened", not "how is this close reason accurate? I don't think it is, therefore it should be reopened".
The exception to this is if a question is closed as a duplicate and you don't feel the duplicate is accurate or that there might be a better question to serve as a dupe target. That's a scenario where we want to remedy the signpost to be as correct as possible.