I generally against deleting things that provide good info, as long as they remain currently useful. If they're outdated (there are...or were...plenty of questions about the best Java ORM is 2010, which are obviously no longer relevant as things have changed since then), then I'll delete them, but otherwise I generally lean toward leaving them around, based on "Closed questions that are of no lasting value whatsoever should be deleted."
@blackgreen Also, notably, it doesn't look like someone actually tried to reopen it: it looks like it was automatically put into the queue based on score/popularity.
I've published the Delete/Undelete button rename script to Github. This makes it more obvious that you've voted to delete/undelete at the post view level and the confirmation prompt level. (Link to install: Install)
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I'll consider posting a PR to SOUP for this later.
As a note, I've only been able to test this on Meta SE as it's the only site where I can vote to delete on (and even then, only on questions), but this should function for answers as well.
If anyone wants to make adjustments to it feel free to submit a PR or just fork it. I'm also not great at JS so... Take my code with a grain of salt. Happy deleting! :)
What's the proper close reason for a question whose premise makes no sense? I'd say that they lack minimal understanding, but that's not a standard close reason anymore. Just close as unclear?
@Braiam It's off-topic, has 267k views, been through a number of close/delete/reopen cycles. It seems the community does not want it deleted (or closed), so locking seems like a reasonable compromise.
@Adriaan I tried to clarify this based on reading the answer that managed to figure it out. If you assume that they're asking for code that works in both MATLAB and Octave, is it clear now?
@Dharman much appreciation for the help getting rid of the zillions of these questions in the android tag <3
A specification is used in the implementation of the language. Let's say I want to create a compiler Python to PHP, I need to look at the specification to understand how the language is constructed
@Dharman It appears to be a constraint on the twice referenced answer (both in the question and answer). To only include 90 degree rotations instead of all possible rotations and find the quaternions of those rotations as well.