I've read the FAQs on SO and meta SO, and still am not fully clear on what deserves upvotes and downvotes.
Could someone point to a guide for these things? Here are some examples of questions and concerns I've had that I haven't been able to find good help for:
Example 1:
Some answers on a question (not mine) are correct, but leave out something critical such as "but if you do this without proper locks, high concurrency will cause race conditions that break the code." I chose to downvote some posts because of this, but someone was dismayed that I had done so. So now what? I shouldn't downvote? One person did update his answer to add the missing info, so I removed the downvote on that answer. But one person also downvoted my answer (in the same question), pointing out a defect, but didn't remove it after I fixed that defect.
So what gives? I realize that tactical downvoting when answers are equally good is probably frowned on, but is it really purely tactical downvoting if the answer downvoted, while correct as far as it goes, could be misleading or poor practice?
Example 2:
It seems pretty obvious what upvotes for answers mean: it was useful, helpful, and so on. And downvotes for questions seem obvious to me: the question was off-topic, impossible to understand, offensive, and so on.
But what do upvotes on questions mean? I can think of a dozen "good" questions in my area of expertise, but I wouldn't ask them because I already know the answer. Unless, is that an accepted way of using SO? Should I ask questions that people might want to know the answer to, then go ahead and answer them myself? --interjection: yes, I finally saw that the FAQ says "It's also perfectly fine to ask and answer your own question"--
Are there some guidelines for what makes a good question? Why do people vote up questions in the first place?
Example 3:
What is the point of clicking the favorite icon on a question? Do people use these to easily find questions again (implying it's something they also need help with), or simply to express that the question is one they liked (and for what reasons)?
I'm very competitive, but I want to use the site properly, with no one important having any quibbles with my upvoting and downvoting practices. (I say "important" because an individual may mind very much that I downvoted him, even though the majority culture of the site might be in favor of my action.)
That competitiveness also changes what I consider nice. I don't mind someone downvoting my answer if they say why, and will bother to remove the downvote if I fix the problem. So I was feeling no qualms about doing something similar for others' answers, until someone complained. So what do I do?
Update 1:
I've read a couple of answers and some more posts (see comments below and also generating reputation through downvotes and the answer to tactical downvoting problem, which were interesting).
But what I was hoping for (at least about downvotes) was less of a philosophical/metaphysical discussion and more of a concrete one, ala "Here's the purpose, here's how it should be done". I realize that may not be possible.
In the meantime, I think the choices "this answer is useful" and "this answer is not useful" leave out some middle ground, something like: "this answer is useful IF {major caveat}, otherwise it's not useful." So I'm still left wondering if I'm going to end up downvoting things that others would criticize me for (and wondering if I ought to even care about that kind of criticism).
I guess one helpful thing I read was the idea of using votes to try to make the best answers float to the top, and otherwise pretty much leaving them alone (thinking in terms of relative global value rather than absolute global value or any kind of personal value). Of course, this runs smack into tactical downvoting.
Update 2: Take a look at this question on SO. I downvoted an answer and clearly explained why. Now my answer has a downvote without a comment. Sigh.