Grandpa finds a Stack Overflow question in the basement, and the kid's excited to show it off. But plot twist: it's been closed for not meeting the guidelines and isn't accepting answers anymore. Closed 4 days ago. The kid's face says it all.
Stack Overflow's moderation is... let's say "enthusiastic." You find the EXACT question you need, with 47 upvotes and clearly helping thousands of developers, but some moderator decided it's "too broad" or "opinion-based" and nuked it. Meanwhile, "How do I print hello world in Python?" has 500 answers and remains open forever.
The real kicker? The notification suggests you can "improve this question" or "update the question on its archive." Yeah, because nothing says "helpful community" like telling someone to improve a question that's already locked. It's like being handed a sealed envelope and told to edit what's inside.
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