You've run into a problem some new users who leap before they look run into:
You've asked a question that you couldn't possibly keep the spirit of and make it fit on Stack Overflow.
So what do you do?
If you delete it, then wherever it's at now, it's there. It'll count against you with negative votes and not hurt you with positive or no votes.
If you keep it as is, you're going to continue to get downvotes.
So, the only practical thing you can do is edit it so it will reflect an actual problem you have. In this case, it means fundamentally changing the nature of the question, something we generally frown upon, but in certain cases, makes sense.
In this case, you should do the following.
- read through the Help Center. All of it.
- Take a look at questions that have more than zero votes. Emulate those questions. That means: Use good punctuation, spelling, and have a well-defined question that's on topic.
- Continue to research your questions before posting them on Stack Overflow. We're probably not your first or second 'go to' to get your question answered. We can't be, not until you understand what questions we accept.
- Once you've done that, edit your question (or delete it) and ask new questions that fit our guidelines.
To address the comment you pose under your question:
I am asking a relevant, direct question that has been beneficial to me and surely will for others who have just started asking questions. How can I improve it so I won't get down-votes?
That's a common question from users who ask the same sorts of questions you asked: "But this question is useful for others, and I want to know the answer!"
It's not as simple as that. If it were, we wouldn't need Stack Overflow. Forums do this already. Ask anything you want, and you (may) get an answer.
Stack Overflow exists to be a repository of useful, objective programming knowledge. Or put simply, a cookbook for programming problems. If you need to frob a widget, we can tell you that, so long as the widget and frobbing technique are well-defined.
Questions that ask "What should I learn next?" are anything but well-defined. Even if they are well defined, they run into the next issue; will that knowledge help others?
Even if the answer is yes; then we have to ask:
Is this knowledge being shared? Or opinion? I can tell you what I think you should do, but it's probably different from what another person would tell you, and so on. Our format doesn't do that well, by design.
We focus on providing objective answers to actionable programming questions. If you need something else answered that is programming related, but doesn't fit that criteria, then it doesn't belong here.