From site guidelines (vote-down page):
*When should I vote down?
Use your downvotes whenever you encounter an egregiously sloppy, no-effort-expended post, or an answer that is clearly and perhaps dangerously incorrect.
I wrote an answer to a question, that while not perfect, (first submission) was a valid algorithm.
Yes, I had a bug in my code, but the algorithm described is, I believe, an optimal one for the question posted.
Following that first post I edited it to improve it, but in the meantime, it was down-voted with no reason left.
As it stands now, I think it is a good answer, but that that down-vote pushed it to the bottom of the answer page, where, lets me honest, no-one really looks. This wan't helped by other (not so good) answers being posted and then deleted during the 'active' time of the question - i.e. when it was high in the "newest questions" list.
It remains, at this time, the only (remaining) answer that includes code to demonstrate an algorithm that solves the Question, the two answers with positive votes.
Now, ideally, it should be read and if it is good, voted up. But how often are answers with a negative voting score actually looked at? I feel that it is more likely that it will be dismissed as an incorrect answer because of the score, without being read and understood (and then unlikely to be up-voted if it is good).
How should this be handled?
Just leave it? I do realise that I could delete it and post it as a new answer, but this doesn't seem to be in-keeping with the ethos of the site, or particularly 'honest'
-7
(or worse) answer there I guess it's like a morbid fascination in what dire answers there could be. I do think that most people would tend to read the top couple of answers, at least as far as the quality starts to go down, and ignore the rest.