4

I'm sure this situation didn't happen just to me so first I'll describe whole scenario:

  • Person A ask question with wrong description.
  • Person B then post a good answer which solves (wrong) problem.
  • Person A realizes that he wrote a wrong question (based on answer which doesn't solve his original problem), he down-vote answer of person B no matter that it is correct answer to his "first posted question" and then person A edit his original question to a real one

So person B gets down-voted for posting a good answer to a bad question.

Is there any way to prevent this? Something like if owner of question edited his question, then all down-votes reset for that particular question from owner?

3
  • 13
    Therefore, one should never answer bad questions - downvote, vote to close or comment instead.
    – Glorfindel
    Oct 14, 2015 at 13:09
  • 5
    I'm skeptical that this is actually a problem. Most of the people who edit to completely change their question don't have enough rep to downvote.
    – resueman
    Oct 14, 2015 at 13:09
  • @resueman - I've seen users with 10K+ rep post blatant recommendation requests. It happens.
    – BSMP
    Oct 14, 2015 at 16:24

1 Answer 1

11

There are two possible situations here:

  1. The answerer misunderstood what the question was asking, possibly because the question was unclear, vague and open to multiple interpretations, was lacking sufficient information to be completely confident of the problem, etc. In such a case, clarifying the question is absolutely correct, and downvoting the answer is also entirely appropriate. If you come across such a situation, you should also downvote the incorrect answer, or if it's yours edit it to correct its problems or simply delete it.

  2. The original question was a complete, clear, unambiguous question, that was correctly answered. The OP realizes, after posting the question, that they mistakenly asked a different question than they intended to. They should ask a new question. If you see an edit that is completely changing the question from one to another, you should roll the edit back and inform the author that they can ask a new question if they have a different problem. If an edit war starts, flag for a mod rather than continuing to edit the post.

    If your answer in such a situation gets downvoted, there simply isn't anything that can be done about it; such is the nature of voting. There's just no real way to distinguish someone downvoting a post because they know that it's not a correct answer versus someone dowvoting for another reason.

Your description of the problem seems to line up with the second case, but just be careful and look closely. Questions that are unclear, lacking sufficient information, etc. can often look, to you, like they're very clearly asking X, when the question is actually vague enough that it could just as easily be asking about Y or Z unless it's clarified. You should be very careful in how you handle the situation to make sure that you're not actually in the first situation.

1
  • As an addition, as long as you don't have full edit-privileges (2K) and thus cannot roll back, you can try asking in an appropriate chatroom for help (be sure to read a bit so you know what's acceptable). Be brief but complete and clear about what you want and why. Oct 14, 2015 at 13:55

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