Am I not supposed to up-vote a locked question? Why?
I can understand that high amount of off-topic comments can be a big mess. But why is up-voting restricted?
Am I not supposed to up-vote a locked question? Why?
I can understand that high amount of off-topic comments can be a big mess. But why is up-voting restricted?
A locked question is locked because it has historical significance and would be closed if asked today.
It also may be locked if it attracts a lot of attention and off-topic comments. There's no use in having new answers pop up on an old question each month, pushing it back to the top of the front page.
Either way, if you're upvoting a locked question, you're probably misusing voting.
From Why is voting important?:
[Voting] on questions and answers is the primary mechanism through which the community governs the site on a day to day basis.
That is, if a question asked three years ago has 400 upvotes, it doesn't do you much good to add another one, particularly if it is locked.
Voting is meant to govern the site on a day-to-day basis.
Of course, there will be those who disagree because it is easy to coast on the reputation gained from old questions and answers that resolve common issues and come up often in Google searches.
I agree that some old questions and answers are just so well-phrased or interesting that they deserve an upvote despite their age, but most really don't
The hover text says:
This question shows research effort; it is useful and clear.
That is of course timeless, but it neglects the purpose of voting in the first place.
It's locked for a reason, though: if you're going to lock something, you might as well lock the whole thing. There's no use in locking just the comments and allowing voting to continue.
I was just about to ask this question myself. My own take on this is that we should be able to vote on any question. Some topics do not get less important with age, and the fact that it is found presumably indicates that it is useful/relevant/interesting to our programming lives.
Furthermore, it seems unfair to the original poster, who could otherwise gain reputation (and possibly privileges, badges, etc.) from the up votes.