Case in point, I recently answered this question. The question does show quite poor understanding of programming and/or the language in question, but we've all been there at some point. I don't think the question is badly asked -- it is clear, to the point, the asker shows some degree of exertion in trying to understand the question himself and is pointing out exactly where he's stuck, and the language/formatting is not bad.
Yet, the question is receiving downvotes. Although not in this particular case, I've often been across similar questions that also receive close votes (often for being "too broad", even though it clearly isn't). This behavior bugs me, and I'm not sure what to do about it. In this case, I even upvoted it to compensate, even though I know I shouldn't. While not bad, it's not such a stellar question that I'd normally upvote it. At times, I've pointed out in the comments that I don't think the question deserves to be downvoted/closed, but that obviously doesn't help as the downvoters have already moved on and won't be looking at the question again.
I do realize there may be a point to be made that the question isn't particularly good, though, in that it's extremely specific to the asker's case and unlikely to be useful to anyone else. But you never know.
What should I do in cases like these? Am I in the wrong for not thinking questions of this kind should be downvoted? If I'm in the right, is there anything I can do about it?