Should answers be downvoted even though it is correct, but (should?) not have been posted or "given" away free?! (especially to new users)
Question in question: html tag transfer it up or down use jquery and ajax when click
Should answers be downvoted even though it is correct, but (should?) not have been posted or "given" away free?! (especially to new users)
Question in question: html tag transfer it up or down use jquery and ajax when click
Answering bad, lazy questions encourages the asker (and everyone else) to ask more bad, lazy questions.
So yes, while you surely answered out of the best of motivations, the argument can be made it's a valid reason for downvoting. I'm pretty sure not many people do this, though.
I personally don't just upvote all the answers that happen to be technically correct as though SO was some sort of trivia game.
If I believe that an answer, which is technically correct, is not actually helpful to anyone like this answer, or if the answer is otherwise unnecessarily low in quality, I'll downvote it.
No... the answer might deserve up/down votes, but what the question is should have no bearing. If it was "Dude, don't do their homework!!" the answerer should be reprimanded, true. If it was a question showing no work, vote it down, or even (if homework problem) it probably screams for closing as "too localized". But whether the answer is good (or bad) is another problem. Don't mix up things.
If you feel that an answer is helpful, you should upvote it. If you feel an answer is unhelpful you should downvote it. Different people have widely different beliefs as to what is and isn't helpful, and that is okay.
A person might decide that an answer is unhelpful because it makes a statement that is wrong, provides code that doesn't work, or even because they make statements that are misleading or likely to be misunderstood, even if correct. Some people may even determine that an answer is unhelpful if it provides a coded solution with no explanation of that code or the underlying concepts used to derive that solution. Still others may decide that an answer that explains how to derive a solution without providing one, or an answer that leaves a portion of the solution undone (as an exercise for the reader) isn't helpful.
If you feel that an answer is helpful (or at least not unhelpful) despite taking any of these actions, that's fine. It's not intended for there to be complete consensus by the community for every single answer. Disagreement on what is helpful can be very beneficial. There is no right or wrong way to vote. With the exception of voting fraud, there is nobody that can ever tell you that the way that you voted was wrong. If you feel that an answer is not helpful for any reason(s) you can possibly think of then it is your privilege to be able to downvote that post. The same reasoning applies to upvoting. As with so many things, just be sure not to take it personally, it's just a vote after all, the world won't end regardless of how someone (or even some group of people) vote on a post.