The "Opinion-based" close reason is often misused, as it was (IMHO) in this case1.
There are many thousands of excellent questions on Stack Overflow with multiple answers offering a variety of possible solutions that use very different code. Such answers are not "citations" and, technically-speaking, neither are they "fact-based."
However, I also see many questions, during review, that are opinion-based (like, "Why does C have a do...while
loop but not a repeat...until
loop?"). It seems, to me, that many reviewers spot certain key words/phrases (like "best way to...") and automatically assume that makes the question (primarily) opinion-based. For example, something like, "What's the best way to determine the 5th-root of a number using only integer arithmetic?" Is that opinion-based, if it elicits multiple answers?
Perhaps the text given for this close reason could be improved, to allow for multiple, different answers that aren't implicitly opinions. Or should we only accept questions that can only possibly have one, unique solution?
1 Just prior to posting this answer, I cast the third reopen vote on the question under discussion. In this case, a 'simple' (but good) edit like that made after the question was raised here on Meta would have saved 3 close votes and 3 reopen votes.