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Should we as users expect a minimum level of quality before a question "deserves" an upvote, or is a question that conforms to the site rules, and asks a clear and meaningful question, "by default" get an upvote? I would expect the site directions to provide a clear answer, but I am confused by the directions on the site.

According to this: https://stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/vote-up:

Whenever you encounter a question, answer or comment that you feel is especially useful, vote it up! You have a limited number of votes per day, so use them wisely.

But the advice given in the "Review | Triage" queue, where if a post "Looks OK," you are prompted to upvote it; this seems like a clear contrast to "Especially Useful".

I would assume one of the two should have a different message, but perhaps I'm over-thinking things.

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    You're not alone with this, many people are under the impression that the Triage upvote button should not be there. Please make sure to not upvote things that are just above being closeable; as the privilege guidance says upvotes should be used for content that you genuinely feel is useful.
    – l4mpi
    Dec 26, 2014 at 20:50
  • 11
    I agree; there is still a significant gap between "Especially useful" and "Just above Closeable" (Which should be "needs improvement" in the queue, not "Looks OK"). I could interpret "Especially" simply as one of the twenty best posts I expect to see today. Alternatively, it could be something I personally find useful (relatively rare), or as something that I think others are likely to find, and will think is useful (still fairly rare). Dec 26, 2014 at 21:06
  • 7
    To upvote, I take a look at a question which may interest me. If it is clear and fairly well written, and I don't know the answer, I try to google it. I try 2 or 3 different search queries, and if I can't find the answer in the first 10 results of either of them, I upvote it. This is about 0.1% of the questions I vote on (rough estimate).
    – GolezTrol
    Dec 27, 2014 at 10:53
  • 9
    The tooltip of the upvote button says: "This question shows research effort; it is useful and clear". Questions can satisfy all the guidelines of the site and not be useful for you, and as such you shouldn't upvote them (which doesn't imply that you should downvote them!). I don't think that you should be totally impartial and start thinking if there exist one circumstance where someone could find it useful and hence upvote it. You should decide if it is useful for yourself. If everybody does this the number of votes will reflect how many people a question/answer can help.
    – Bakuriu
    Dec 27, 2014 at 11:02
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    This isn't the same question as yours exactly, but it might be on the same sort of wavelength. Could offer some insight, perhaps. meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/280074/…
    – Augusta
    Dec 27, 2014 at 21:05
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    There's still a gap, IMO, between "Looks OK" at the low end and "deserves upvote". There are a fair number of questions that are OK, but not amazing: they can't meaningfully be improved (without enormous effort and reimagining the question), but are merely acceptable, not anything like the higher-quality questions upvotes are for. Dec 28, 2014 at 1:44
  • @Augusta - it's on the same wavelength, but disappointingly, there seems to be little in the way of answers there either. Dec 28, 2014 at 4:16
  • @Bakuriu, I think most people who've been around a bit get a sense of what sorts of questions are "useful", whether or not they personally will have use for an answer.
    – dfeuer
    Dec 29, 2014 at 4:15
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    I find this question to be especially useful. Dec 29, 2014 at 6:01
  • @DavidManheim "Which should be 'needs improvement' in the queue, not 'Looks OK')" You want to replace "Looks Ok" with "Needs Improvement"? The three options are a logical and natural range of choices - "Is ok", "Needs attention", and "Can't be fixed".
    – James
    Mar 13, 2015 at 11:07

2 Answers 2

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There's some controversy over that upvote prompt in the Triage queue, and a lot of people feel that it is out of place. That queue, by the way, is still in its trial period, so things can certainly change before it's a complete review queue.

In general, voting is the most subjective thing we do here, and no one can really tell you how to use your own votes; use them however you'd like. (And now I'm going to tell you how you should use them even though I said that no one can really tell you how to use your own votes.)

You should vote up questions that are helpful to you in some way or those which you deem worthy of any kind of praise. You should vote down questions that lack research, are not helpful (not just to you, but to anyone), and those which are devoid of any effort whatsoever.

There is a rift between "Looks OK" and upvote-worthy, in my opinion (which of course is my own because I choose how to use my own votes). In fact, in other queues, "Looks OK" used to be "Looks Good" and was changed to the former for the very same reason, so I presume that this measure in the Triage queue is an experiment to try to get people to vote more.

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    I'll just note that somewhere in the calculus of deciding what to upvote is that there are things worth upvoting because they will be useful to others, not just those that happen to help you. This means that findable, clear questions that have basic answers, or useful tips on what to do to diagnose an error you are not having might be worth an upvote - even if you find them useless. Dec 29, 2014 at 0:46
  • @DavidManheim Agreed (I tried to imply that in the downvote section, but I was a bit vague).
    – AstroCB
    Dec 29, 2014 at 1:14
-1

We don't vote enough

Too many users are keen to downvote "poor" questions, but don't have the same "passion" to upvote their opposites - "not-poor" questions.

I think the problem is we (community) only upvote good ones. We're not correctly defining all the ones in the middle with even a couple of votes, to more consistently signify either:
"meh, not really ok" -1
or
"meh, is ok". +1

So those "meh" questions are all sat at 0 votes and so voting is defining them as equal, when they are really not.

Look at the listing page, so many are sat at 0 votes!

Most of us don't upvote based on the question quality being "not poor", but we should do really, even if just to net 2 votes.
Which leads me to...

"Just above closable"

l4mpi stated:

Please make sure to not upvote things that are just above being closeable;

41 of you voted to agree, however, "just above being closable" is still an "acceptable" question, otherwise we'd downvote and/or close it.

Let me quote the reverse of that, and see what you think:

Please make sure to not downvote things that are only just "closable";

Do you agree with that?
Or do you want to downvote that question because it was "closable" - no matter how closable it was, regardless of if it was "only just" closable, you want to downvote it?

A question is either closable or it is not, and no matter how far into that margin it is, it is still in that defined margin.
Which means if closable, we can downvote, if not closable, we can upvote.

So, back on topic

AstroCB hit the nail on the head with:

That queue, by the way, is still in its trial period, so things can certainly change before it's a complete review queue.

So I agree with Stack trying to remind or promote upvoting on new user questions, whever they can, as if they're worthy of an upvote we should be upvoting.

I think it's the wording which is what has us a little excited:

"Remember to upvote" is a bit too close to sounding like upvoting is some obligation, or duty of some kind. Rather than entirely up to us whether we even upvote at all, let alone based on some criteria.

There is no criteria to define when to vote, guidelines yes.

The sentence should be changed to only sound like a reminder that voting is good for the site.

Please remember that upvoting clear, useful, well-researched questions encourages the author and others to ask good questions

"Looks ok"

You might think the question is amazing, perfect in every way, you'd upvote 20 times if you could, however you will still be stating "Looks ok".

"Looks ok" is not your actual opinion on the question, it's just a system title to map a certain outcome of the review.

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    Disagree with your premise. There is so much crap being upvoted, there are counter-upvotes to percieved "unjust" downvotes, upvotes because "OP is new", etc, etc. See also the recent question quality discussions. I'd rather say we don't downvote enough. And no, reversing my comment is a fallacy - with a few exceptions (e.g. a good question, but posted in the wrong community) it's a quality scale; questions that are closeable due to being unclear/too broad definitely fall into the "not useful" category, and the "unclear" even has an overlap with the DV reason.
    – l4mpi
    Mar 13, 2015 at 11:05
  • "So much crap being upvoted" .. is nothing to do with my answer. The same is true that too many "ok" questions are being downvoted, and often to a mad degree (like -6). There are all sorts of happenings and parameters, but their existence doesn't change my argument above.
    – James
    Mar 13, 2015 at 11:19
  • "questions that are closeable due to being unclear/too broad definitely fall into the "not useful" category" - Not always, that's why we have the "locked" questions. They are closable based on site requirements/criteria, and often questions which bring great information or useful answers are closed, and sometimes deleted, due to daft close reasons. Also, questions "just above closable" can be very useful. Again, the site has generic rules which don't always work in the favour of providing information which would be useful to "someone" or a number of people.
    – James
    Mar 13, 2015 at 11:23
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    Your answer starts with "We don't upvote enough", which is what I address with my comment. I'd say people upvote more than enough crap already. You might be correct that they don't upvote enough things that actually deserve it, but in general I disagree with that statement. And while I do like your version of the "voting reminder" way better than what is currently in place, I don't yet agree that it should be there at all.
    – l4mpi
    Mar 13, 2015 at 11:24
  • And yes, there are always exceptions to the rules and the closing guidances; but my point is that most questions that are just above being closeable are still pretty bad; e.g. show no research, answerable but not especially clear, provides code to reproduce the error but it's a huge code dump and there's no attempt at reducing it to a minimal example, etc. Those should definitely be downvoted.
    – l4mpi
    Mar 13, 2015 at 11:26
  • So people upvote "too much" because they upvote incorrectly? That's not right, accurately they "upvote incorrectly". And that does not stop my argument being correct that people do not upvote "ok" questions as much as they downvote "only just not ok" ones.
    – James
    Mar 13, 2015 at 11:29
  • You say people do not upvote "ok" questions as much as they downvote "only just not ok" ones - well, why should they? Things should be upvoted if they are useful, and downvoted if they are not. "just not ok" equals "barely downvoteable", but "ok" does not equal "useful". There is a middle ground where a question can just exist without being voted upon, and I see nothing wrong with that. I'd argue "barely useful" questions are upvoted all the time.
    – l4mpi
    Mar 13, 2015 at 11:37
  • Yes some questions don't necessarily require any vote at all, but as I said in my answer, go see the question listing. "Most" questions are 0 votes (net, of course). That cannot be right, especially as you are arguing that "most questions just above being closed should be downvoted." - so, as I said in my answer, we are not voting enough...(I'll change the heading from not upvoting enough, as my answer is not actually only about lack of upvote)
    – James
    Mar 13, 2015 at 11:42
  • My feeling is that 0 votes is a bit like a "C" on a letter grading scale of A, B, C, D, F. It is adequate and meets the minimum requirements. If you want a B (a small number of UV), you'll need to work for it. The question should be clear and useful to a number of people in the tags specified. If you want an A (100+ UV), it should be an exceptional question. If you don't put effort into the question, it's unclear or missing stuff, you might pass with a D (small number of DV), but it's not so good. Likewise, an F (more than 10 DV?) you're likely to get booted from the class :). Mar 13, 2015 at 19:29
  • @MikeMcCaughan I see the similarity you mention, they are two different things entirely, and in some ways the two don't marry up. Some of the questions are probs correct to have 0 votes, but given the total number of question on any list page at 0 votes, there are many which should not be 0. If this is not because "we're not voting enough" then what is it?
    – James
    Mar 14, 2015 at 7:01
  • Seems to be a following of users agreeing with I4mpi, however I don't understand how there is an argument stating "many just above closable should be downvoted" yet at the same time many are at 0 votes, but people don't agree "we don't vote enough". If more should have been downvoted, then why haven't they? And it is not just too many not being downvoted enough. I think most people's standards for an "upvote" is Way too high!
    – James
    Mar 14, 2015 at 7:03
  • @l4mpi - Do you think this should be upvoted: stackoverflow.com/questions/29050624/… ? This is the sort of question I meant when I said we don't upvote enough "not-poor" questions. Even though it likely offers no use to anyone other than the OP's localised issue, it's easy to read, well laid out, "intro" "code" "problem" "what want to happen". I'm not debating btw, just wondering what you think.
    – James
    Mar 14, 2015 at 15:35
  • That's exactly the type of question that is IMO upvoted too often (although it's not total crap, unlike many other questions that make me want to ban the upvoters). OP forgot or didn't know to add {} to the while. That is a beginner mistake which is simply not useful to duplicate a thousand times on SO, and I'd bet multiple variants of it are asked daily across PHP, Java, C etc. +3 is already more than enough IMO, I could understand DVs as research didn't happen or failed miserably - reading any decent tutorial, looking at example code, or experimenting would all have solved the issue.
    – l4mpi
    Mar 14, 2015 at 17:12
  • I agree, it's not useful to anyone else, but while Stack is supposed to be a resource for everyone, it also a "ask a question get some help" site too. And I agree it is a beginner / noob question, but they do not annoy me so much when they have at least spent their time making the question easy to answer. And is why I say give an upvote, because they asked a well written, concise question on a "Q&A" site.. It is pointless, and they could have probs found their answer by reading more, but how do you define what level of knowledge or understanding is acceptable to be able to ask a question?
    – James
    Mar 14, 2015 at 17:21
  • Which leads me to, if it's acceptable, and albeit noob it is "noob-but-well-asked", so why not an upvote or two to separate it from the "noob-but-poorly-asked-lazy" ones? Otherwise we have no separation, and end up, as we do have right now, a load of questions at 0 votes. I still stand by the fact the we don't vote enough - up or down, but mostly up. And the lack of up votes is because people think as you do (nothing wrong with that, we're both entitled to our views). I think "good" questions worthy of an upvote or 2 is not only defined by "useful to others" and "higher level of PHP". (imo)
    – James
    Mar 14, 2015 at 17:25

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