> where can I find a description of what the meta does? I guess you mean something like "where can I read about Meta Stack Overflow to understand how it works?" That is in the Help Center: [What is "meta"? How does it work?](https://stackoverflow.com/help/whats-meta) If you mean something else, you will need to explain it more clearly. ---- > why was the question deleted if it didn't ask for recommendations? In general, questions are deleted [because they cannot be fixed](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/426214) - meaning, any change that would make the question meet standards, would turn it into a different question. Otherwise, a problematic question is [closed](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/417476), and you [are expected to fix it](https://stackoverflow.com/help/closed-questions) so it can be reopened. In the original version of your question, you asked: > Or should I look at another variants *[sic]*? If yes, which? That is very clearly asking for recommendations. Even without this, the question is still clearly primarily opinion based. Whether a given UI toolkit is "suitable for" specific subtypes of GUI programs (such as "games") is a) highly subjective and b) nowhere near specific enough to be answerable. ---- Further, most of what you're asking [doesn't make any sense](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/291362): > If I understood correctly there is an ability to download OpenGl, SDL2 to Qt, so why is it unpopular decision? As a native English speaker, I can't make any sense out of that. I assume you meant > If I understood correctly, it is possible to download OpenGL and SDL2 to Qt; but why is this unpopular? but I can't understand what you think it means to "download" one library "to" another. If you meant, for example, "use OpenGL and SDL2 in a Qt application", you should say that instead. Most importantly: please understand that Stack Overflow is **not a discussion forum**. Do not post to ask people to help you make a decision. Instead, post to ask about something you don't understand, so that you can understand it. In almost every case, this is either: 1. Something in your code doesn't work; you find the specific problem and the code *needed* to cause it *directly*; you explain what you think the code should do instead, and why you think it should work that way; and you ask why it does something else instead. 1. You are stuck writing the code because there is one specific thing that you don't know how to do; so you ask how to do it. Notice especially that this means asking **one** question per post.