This morning I asked a question with a good explanation which I wrote after a long time of thinking. A user has downvoted my question. I really wondered what could be the reason because I know what I asked for and that too was a critical question. And then I deleted that, but still I want to know what could be the reason. Aren't we here to ask questions? Can't the user vote to delete instead of downvote? I ask for a suggestion...
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Your question According to Yahoo recommendations, script links should be placed in the end of the page:
I'd say:
I'm sure you've given the above a lot of thought too. But I'd say the (duplicate) question would be a one-liner:
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Don't take down votes to personally. One vote could have been an accident. He/she might have thought they clicked the up vote. I would have left your question up in the hope that if there truly was a problem that someone else would add a comment explaining why there was a problem with it. |
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I've noticed in your questions that you often format your question with one paragraph per sentence. Maybe downvoters don't even bother reading it and assume just from the formatting that it is a bad question. I don't approve of that, I'm just saying that if this happens or has happened more than this one time you might try to trust word wrapping a bit more or use bullets/numbering to outline important points. I'm the first one not to care about formatting. But it would be a shame to see a perfectly good question ignored or downvoted because it "didn't look pretty". EDIT: There is more than one level of formatting quality:
Now, in my last sentence before edit I when I said "pretty" I meant "that which falls in category 3". Post being pretty in this sense is a very useful thing. |
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