What is the way to protest question closure in case I don't want to alter it?
By posting here about the specific question. Beware that this is likely to invoke Meta effect.
That said: please keep in mind that Stack Overflow is a collaboratively edited library. "I don't want to alter it" expresses a mindset of ownership, but the question no longer belongs to you. By posting, you grant a Creative Commons BY-SA license to your work.
The question is well formed
You are not the one who gets to judge this.
and even answered.
This is not relevant. The purpose of question closure is to prevent future answers from coming in, until the question is in a state where it meets the site standards and should, per policy, receive answers. The fact that someone, or even multiple people answer despite that the question does not meet the standards described in How to Ask, does not obviate those standards. Instead, it puts the answerers in the wrong - as described in How to Answer.
Of course, the standards admit subjectivity, and generally need to be assessed by community members. That's why I don't say "rule" in this discussion, and why we don't directly punish people for getting it wrong.
Some people marked the answer as useful, so question could help others. What is the reason answered with useful answer question could be closed?
Because "answered with a useful answer" is not the standard.
The standard is that the question shall be all of:
on topic;
objective (not soliciting opinion like "the best way" to do something, nor soliciting a recommendation for something third-party);
understandable (including: written in English);
a single, specific question that can reasonably be answered in a single post;
straightforwardly about the thing it claims to be about, and not about the "X" of an XY;
for how-to questions, explained with clear, specific, understandable requirements;
for debugging questions, accompanied by a proper MRE;
not a duplicate;
regarding a problem others could plausibly encounter or wish to solve (i.e. is "reproducible") caused by something that is not idiosyncratic to your own code but which others could commonly get wrong in the same way (i.e. is not "caused by a typo")
My personal assessment is that the question you appear to be talking about (I assume you mean your own) fails the points in italics.
It does not logically follow that a question "answered with a useful answer", "could help others" in the sense that we are concerned with. Useful questions that are usefully part of a Q&A library, need to be clear, focused and searchable. They need to not reflect XY problems from the asker.
Well, if some expert can't get it while the community can, what is the way to correct him?
First: "some expert" did not close your question. Only moderators can act unilaterally to close a question for the reason that it is unclear; "experts" (formally defined: people with a gold tag badge in one of the original tags on the question) can only unilaterally close the question as a duplicate.
Second: now it seems that we have gone from disputing an action, to assuming that you are in the right and that others are in the wrong and should be "corrected". This is not the way to sway opinion in your favour on Meta.
Third: just as we don't directly punish people for asking unclear questions, we certainly are not going to directly punish people for incorrectly assessing questions as unclear. We're far more democratic than that.
Just as a note: there are 27 moderators for all of Stack Overflow. That compares to more than 20 million users. (User IDs run a bit higher than that, I guess mainly because of destroyed spammer accounts and manual account deletions.) The moderators deserve to be cut some slack.