Should a post be locked to be voted down (or up) after it gets closed? All the intention is to make the OP(usually newbies) realize the basics and methodology of questioning ..
When a question gets closed and by the comments entered by fellow members OP realizes it! Then why not lock that question for vote-up or vote-down?
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No. Voting is part of the process of improving a closed question (even though practically it very rarely happens). If a closed question is edited to be improved, it should be voted on to reflect its new state. Voting a question is unrelated to its closed/opened state. A question is voted down if it isn't clear, or if no research effort is visible. Closing is done when the question is either unanswerable, or not worth answering. Often, these go hand to hand, and they partially have the sting effect we want for new "offensive" users. They ask a crap question, they get closed and mass downvoted in 2 minutes, then they (hopefully) learn that their question was lousy. |
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Closure and voting are orthogonal:
I don't see a good argument to couple these concerns. Preventing people from doing something will not teach them anything, and in general there's nothing wrong with the current system (in that it works on the large numbers which is the whole point of voting). |
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punish? to discourage newbies?? stackoverflow is to help each other we are not on war!!!!!!!!! – InfantPro'Aravind' Dec 8 '12 at 10:29punishthe guy..! – InfantPro'Aravind' Dec 8 '12 at 10:33