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This meta question is inspired from this community response.

In this particular example, I may have asked how to do something stated very clearly what I was trying to accomplish. Based on feedback I have recieved, it is clear that what I wanted to do has not yet been done, and not advisable. I now have gotten back up to 0 in voting, but at one point was highly negative. To be clear - I am happy about the comments I recieved which helped me get more context on the problem, and frustrated with the downvotes.

I guess my real question is -> Is reputation on a question supposed to be related to why I want to do something, or even if doing something is a good idea, if I was very clear about what I asked to begin with?

For example if I ask the following clear question:

"When doing stacksort in python how do I pass my list to the web form?"

I would get a large amount of voting backlash for trying to do stacksort because it is slow, and unreliable, and likely would be a very bad idea.

If I want to dig my own grave too deep, I feel it would be great if the stack overflow community could hand me an efficient shovel at the same time as warning me that I am going to get stuck and die.

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    "...do stacksort in python for my startup?" is not the problematic part of that question. Asking for library recommendations is explicitly off-topic. Nov 24, 2015 at 2:18
  • @BilltheLizard -> You are correct :) I modified and tried to ask a more well phrased ridiculous example question
    – D A
    Nov 24, 2015 at 2:23
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    I agree that this is a duplicate - but propose the words in my question title are more google-able.
    – D A
    Nov 24, 2015 at 20:55
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    Definitely no contest there. Anyone searching will now find the link to the original, so thank you for clearing a path. Nov 24, 2015 at 20:59

1 Answer 1

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Is reputation on a question supposed to be related to why I want to do something, or even if doing something is a good idea, if I was very clear about what I asked to begin with?

Votes are there to, among other things, indicate how useful the content is. Asking how to shoot yourself in the foot isn't a useful question, no matter how clearly you ask it or how on topic it is, and the votes are going to indicate that.

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  • I suppose this is why the Reversal badge exists: to reward answers that school questions on just how ridiculous they are. Case in point.
    – BoltClock
    Nov 24, 2015 at 4:19

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