It would be great if there is a time delay for comments/up votes/down votes after a question/answer is posted. By this I mean once someone posts an question/answer, others can comment/up vote/down vote only after say 2-3 mins. The reason is I usually post half baked question/answer first and then edit it. Today, this happened to me on math.stackexchange here and by the time I edited it (in less than a minute) there were two down votes and couple of comments.

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You know... You could just finish writing your answer before posting it. That's the risk of going for FGITW after all - getting dinged for a mistake that you didn't see in your hurry to be first. – Shog9 Jan 24 '11 at 17:33
A similar version of this, albeit much more complicated with a lot more bells and whistles, can be seen here. – Grace Note Jan 24 '11 at 17:35
@Shog9: Well thats what I used to do write long and detailed answers only for them to lie unread. Anyways, I have realized now that it is pointless to post questions on metastackoverflow. Thanks – Marvis Jan 24 '11 at 17:45
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it's your choice. You can try to be fast and risk missing something important and getting down-voted for it, or you can slow down and risk someone else beating you to the punch. Them's the breaks... Finding a happy medium is the best option IMHO, but what that means is up to you. – Shog9 Jan 24 '11 at 17:54
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2 Answers

It seems to me that the problem isn't quick votes and comments, it's that you posted a "half baked" (your words) question in the first place. Can you explain why your process is "post something and then immediately edit" instead of "compose slowly and carefully, then post"? I can't imagine a good use case for that on my own, especially for questions.

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It's the FGITW syndrome‌​. – Chichiray Jan 24 '11 at 17:34
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Unfortunately that would result in people posting many, many more answers to questions in the hopes of capturing the few upvotes that will ultimately be given, and then a rush of people trying to delete their answers to avoid the downvotes. It would be a waste of effort and work.

In other words, it would actually exacerbate the fastest gun in the west problem.

The real issue here is that you are getting downvoted for a poor/inadequate/incomplete/wrong answer, and it's not fun having that happen. But downvotes are not the end of the world, and once you establish your own answer pacing and style, then you'll eventually ignore downvotes as typical site noise. It exists, it doesn't really mean anything, and it can be safely ignored.

If you are going to try posting quickly, then updating your answer later, I strongly suggest your first post be short, simple, and understandable to experts. No more than a sentence or two. Be absolutely sure it cannot be misunderstood, and that it's correct. This will show others that the correct solution is already present, and many people will not try to answer beyond that. Then immediately begin working on the expanded post with examples, etc, but DO NOT post it until you are certain it is picture perfect.

You only have a short window to publish the expanded post, though, so do work quickly.

But make sure the first post is perfect in terms of having the correct answer, and being short and unassailable.

If this style isn't working as well as you'd like, then I humbly suggest you post the full answer at one go, and give up the few votes you would have received for beating everyone else. It's not a glamorous life, but these posts will turn out to be one of your better investments over time, especially considering that math.se is relatively new, and the questions are relatively simple and common. Google will be bringing people to these questions for years, and I've always found that the best answer rises up over time, and are often better long term earners than fast answers. There have been months where I've earned over 1k rep without any new posts to SO, due to my early involvement there, and the extensive time I'd spend on posts where I'd already been 'beaten'.

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