I've read these 2 feature requests:

Allow to Change Vote When Question Has Been Edited Inside 5 Minute Window

Add an indication that a post has been edited in the 5 minutes grace period

...which I think might on to something.

This question especially applies to bad answers and downvotes on active posts, so I will stick with that context.

I usually downvote bad answers immediately, but then within moments the author realizes he's given a terrible or wrong answer and fixes it before the revision history kicks in. Then I can take it back IF I'm paying close attention. Maybe the downvote itself is the alarm to the author that something is wrong. Often a good post ends up with a downvote and no one can tell why because they didn't see the original.

The result is often a decent or even good answer sitting there with 3-4 downvotes, and everyone who came late to the party asking "Why was this downvoted??".

It's not often that a post actually gets worse, and I know how people like to "be first" by providing a half-assed answer then expanding on it later, so:

Should downvoting be saved for after the 5 minute editing period has ended, so that other users can see exactly WHY the answer deserved a downvote?

OR

Should the post just get voted on immediately, as soon as it appears?

This also somewhat begs the question: Is there value in a bad answer? I feel like it's a good way for folks to learn what NOT to do in the given medium (whatever language or context the question is in), and how NOT to answer a question (if the answer itself is OK but poorly communicated). No one can pick up on this if the revision history is unavailable.

EDIT: Just to clarify: This is NOT a feature request, but a question about best practices. I'm assuming that's where the downvotes on this are coming from. I edited title to express this better.

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+1 Since your clarification - no offense, but I would just rewrite the question, it's still a little confusing. It sounds like the main idea you are getting at is, "Is it bad to downvote too quickly?" – NickC Apr 29 '11 at 23:04
Thanks for the advice @Renesis, I'm going to change the title to exactly that! I don't know how to clarify the question itself much though, It's pretty much the way I'm thinking about it. – Wesley Murch Apr 29 '11 at 23:07
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1 Answer

up vote 7 down vote accepted

One of the major features of Stack Exchange is the instant community feedback. How will a user know their question is bad if no one can downvote it?

Further, on Stack Overflow, after 5 minutes the question is off the page. People already don't vote enough - by removing the ability to vote on things on the front page and for the first few minutes of the question's life you would only decrease the amount of voting.

Voting is the only method of ranking answers and giving feedback on question appropriateness, so it's critically important, and shouldn't be artificially.

Lastly, when you press submit you are committing your post to the masses. If you suspect you may need to edit it within the first 5 minutes, you should probably edit it before you submit it in the first place.

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What I'm concerned with is when answers change from terrible to fair within the grace period, after downvotes. Then we have a decent or even good answer sitting there with 3-4 downvotes, and anyone who wasn't there to witness the original is scratching their heads (Why was this downvoted?). I'm picking on answers exclusively because people don't post hasty, incomplete questions in the same fashion as they do with answers. Do you know about this, or is it really not as common as I am seeing? – Wesley Murch Apr 29 '11 at 20:38
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My theory: if they want to be first so badly that they post a bad answer, it deserves two down votes, even after it is fixed. If they were honestly wrong or didn't communicate well, then the down votes will tell them that people feel that way. +1 – ughoavgfhw Apr 29 '11 at 21:02
I agree with you should probably edit it before you submit it in the first place, but it doesn't cover answers that are pointed out to be wrong by the community, then later changed within the grace period. – Wesley Murch Apr 29 '11 at 21:10
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