I'm curious as to how folks handle questions with good answers that get closed.
Recently, I was looking for where to find the downloadable Javadoc for a specific instance of Java, the other day (many other days), and I looked on Stack Overflow for it. The questions was closed as being off-topic, but the answer was a lifesaver and perfectly answered:
Where can I find the JDK documentation, and how can I read it offline?
It was a super clear question with a super clear answer. I have seen others, with thousands of upvotes, but someone has closed the question. It seems to hamper an open dialog (of Q&A) and has the unintended side effect of potentially suppressing good information.
As a long-time user, I have noticed a trend toward shutting down more of these kinds of questions (or downvoting them) that to my eyes has accelerated in recent years.
I have considered upvoting questions like this on principle, but I can't really justify doing so without discernment. Still I have taken to upvoting any that are relevant and on point... regardless of who thinks they're duplicative of some vaguely similar question or out of scope.
So, how do you handle great closed questions? Do you just let them go to the dustbin of history, do you upvote in protest, do you add comments bemoaning the offense, chat it on on the never referenced meta, or what?