I endorse the moderator decision to close and lock the post. This is exactly the kind of content that is better dealt with via a historical lock than by trying to get it deleted. But it blatantly does not meet site standards, would not have for many years, and could not feasibly be fixed (whether or not GitHub had actually implemented a preview feature).
Clearly off-topic
People have repeatedly argued with me in the comments and been supported for it, despite the fact that we've had this discussion before. I'm going to spell it out as clearly as I know how.
but if your question generally covers…
- a specific programming problem, or
- a software algorithm, or
- software tools commonly used by programmers; and is
- a practical, answerable problem that is unique to software development
I set the important parts in bold. An on-topic question needs to meet at least one of the first three criteria and must also meet the fourth criterion of being unique to software development. That is, we don't care about the motivation of the person asking the question. We care about the non-existence of an ordinary motivation that is outside of software development.
"How do I preview Markdown?" clearly fails this test. The document itself is not software, and Markdown text clearly is written for reasons that have nothing to do with software - for example, to use on a personal blog, or to post on Reddit, or to ask or answer a question on a non-programming related Stack Exchange site.
Yes, GitHub has its own "flavour" of Markdown. This does not rescue the question, any more than "what image editors support XYZ format?" becomes a programming question because ABC framework requires images in that format. The term "Markdown" is commonly known to describe a family of slight variants on a basic idea, and anyone would naturally expect a Markdown document previewer to be able to handle several such variants (and perhaps even have some kind of extension/plugin mechanism for more) - unless it were built specifically for purpose, such as a preview built right in to a website.
Clearly a recommendation question
At the time the question was asked, there was apparently no preview built in to GitHub. It would be absurd to ask the question if there had been.
Given the absence of such a preview, the question can only reasonably be interpreted as a request to identify a tool that could preview the document.
It can't have been intended as "how do I use Markdown viewer X to view a Markdown document?" because a) it would again be absurd without identifying a specific problem and b) it would have to identify a specific Markdown viewer to make sense. But even then, it would still fundamentally be a question about the ordinary use of a program that can be used by non-programmers, and the fact that the OP intended to publish something on GitHub would not actually matter to the question.
The interpretation as "how do I create a Markdown viewer?" is unreasonable given how the question was answered. If people had understood it that way, then it would have been blatantly too broad ("Needs More Focus" today).
Clearly does not have enduring value
As noted, the site has a preview function now, and has apparently had one at least since that one answer was written - which was close to 10 years ago. Yet, other answers recommending an external tool got added after that one, and some even became more popular - apparently because people are treating it as a generic "recommend me a Markdown viewer" question. One of those was added all the way in 2017, and even explicitly says that the recommended tool does not support GitHub-flavoured Markdown! Granted, it appears this context was added by someone who had written one of the other answers - but that answer is also recommending using the Markdown view support built into a different IDE. So that just makes it even clearer that everyone ended up treating the question as a place to make competing proposals for Markdown viewing tools based on whatever arbitrary criteria of the answerers' choosing.
So not only is that an off-topic recommendation question; it's showcasing the exact problems that are why we disallow such questions by policy.