Sometimes you vote to close something and the OP then changes it to fix the issue or issues. You can't take a close vote back though. It would be nice if you could.

Jeff, any chance you changed your mind?

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25% accept rate
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+1 this happens quite often for me. – Zifre Jun 30 '09 at 0:58
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this is a good idea. sometimes you see a great question with downvotes, and then see that the downvotes were for the original (bad) question. – Mark Harrison Jun 30 '09 at 2:30
Sort of related to meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/125/… – ChrisF Jul 5 '09 at 15:11
@Mark: This suggestion is about close votes. Not down votes. – GEOCHET Jul 23 '09 at 21:59
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I think this needs more consideration.. voting to reopen is not the same as rescinding your close vote. Even just for consistency; I can undo most everything else I do, why not close votes? – Ryan Emerle Mar 1 '10 at 14:20
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I can't believe I've never upvoted this -- an unfortunate situation which has now been remedied. – mmyers Mar 23 '10 at 21:00
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I think Jeff's answer should be marked as the official "answer" as it's actually what's been done so it gets sorted to the top. (Although I'm in support of this) – Simon P Stevens Nov 9 '10 at 12:53
@SimonPStevens for the lazy, here's the link – CharlesB Jun 14 '11 at 12:58
Example of a question where the close voter wanted to undo the vote: stackoverflow.com/questions/7920627/… – Eric J. Oct 27 '11 at 19:05
No, you should think for yourself when you cast a close vote. If the edit of the OP was worthy, then other people wouldn't cast more close votes. Rescinding close votes just means you didn't think enough about it, you probably shouldn't be closing questions at all in that case... – Tom Wijsman Nov 4 '11 at 17:34
I concur; it makes no sense to leave a close vote hanging if, say, why it isn't a dupe is explained to me, or I clicked it by accident (which has happened), etc. – Dave Newton Nov 15 '11 at 3:53
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14 Answers

up vote 124 down vote accepted

If this is implemented, perhaps a useful addition would be a notification appearing whenever a question I vote for closing is edited, so I can review the new (hopefully better) question!

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Edits bump to the frontpage, so this is an unnecessary feature. You can also favorite or track the question... – Tom Wijsman Nov 4 '11 at 17:36
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I don't think it's unnecessary. If someone edits something on SO, when I'm on SQA or Programmers, I won't see the SO front page to rescind my close vote... – corsiKa Nov 21 '11 at 3:43
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Agree. Close votes should work basically the same way as up/downvotes in this respect. There should be some definite period during which the vote can be changed. For a close vote the most reasonable period is until the question is actually closed. Once it's closed, you'll have to vote to reopen if you want to change your mind.

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interesting that you said "yes" in this question but said "no" when i asked the same question ;-) Perhaps you changed your mind? – Steven A. Lowe Sep 16 '09 at 3:05
I was a little tired last night so I don't remember exactly what I wrote, but I think I was trying to say that it wasn't very important. My preference would be that all voting works the same. Since it doesn't though, I'm not too fussed about it in the case of voting to close since it takes 5 people to do it. In that case a simple mistake isn't too damaging and more consideration before casting the vote is probably as or more effective than being able to undo the vote. – tvanfosson Sep 16 '09 at 11:45
Closing should be really thought about and not depend on your momentarily thoughts about the post. There is also a problem with the fifth voter, he will not able to rescind his vote. – Tom Wijsman Nov 4 '11 at 18:12
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@TomWijsman often the post is modified after the close vote is cast and the close vote may no longer be appropriate. I still think they ought to work the same way, some amount of time to reconsider, then only change it if the post has been edited. – tvanfosson Nov 4 '11 at 19:30
@tvanfosson: Close votes automatically run out for that reason. – Tom Wijsman Nov 4 '11 at 19:32
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++ I've wished for this many, many times... and not just for the cases where a question no longer deserves it. Fat fingers and a laptop touchpad often lead me to choose a reason other than that which i originally intended!

See also: Ability to change close reason before it gets closed

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Similar - I just spotted a dupe, but having found the original I switched to the wrong tab without noticing, and voted to close an unrelated question by mistake – Perpetual Motion Goat Aug 6 '09 at 19:03
This is a case of right position, wrong reason. The fat finger + touchpad situation sounds exactly like the kind of thing that would happen to me, but it's still your(/my) responsibility to make sure the right box is ticked before clicking the Submit button, not Jeff's. – Popular Demand Jun 10 '10 at 1:34
@Popular Demand: pretty sure I wrote this back before there was a "submit" button... It's less of a problem these days. – Shog9 Jun 10 '10 at 4:36
Retracted, then. These outdated comments could be a real problem a few years from now.... – Popular Demand Jun 10 '10 at 14:08
Since the close dialog is at least a two step process, this post is a joke. – Tom Wijsman Nov 4 '11 at 18:14
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I just learned that a 'closing' is intended to encourage the OP to edit his question. This would only make sense, if I was able to rescind a closing vote - and even after the question has been closed.

Otherwise you might realise, that you really encouraged the author to improve the question but then you'd be in the need to encourage 4 more people to help reopening the question.

That doesn't make sense. And more than once, I really wanted to withdraw my closing vote, mainly after there was an edit or I learned from good answers and upvotes on the question that my judgment was totally wrong.

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Editing should result in no further close votes, rescinding isn't necessary. – Tom Wijsman Nov 4 '11 at 18:18
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I actually consider this a bug. I've just clicked the wrong reason by accident, and I can't change it. It wouldn't be a stretch to imagine accidental votes get cast too. It's also pretty bad UI design since it seems like you can change your reason until you try.

I can't see any downside to allowing a minute or two to undo the mistake.

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I've hit "Not programming related" accidentally many times, when reaching for "Exact duplicate". Annoying... – Shog9 Jul 23 '09 at 19:30
The majority will select the right option, so this doesn't really matter. – Tom Wijsman Nov 4 '11 at 18:20
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I am bumping this question in a (probably futile) attempt for reconsideration.

Yesterday, I casted a close vote on this question: Fundamental book on Java VM , as an exact duplicate of this other one: Best Java book you have read so far . A comment made me realize that I misread the question (books about java VM is not the same as books about java programming language). I immediately acknowledged my mistake and removed the automatically generated comment, but I could not remove the close vote.

The question did not get closed (luckily), but I still feel that the question could have been closed, in part because of my mistake. This is an example of a situation in which cancelling a close vote would be the right thing to do. It's not about reopening a question after it improved, but about fixing a mistake made by the voter (in this case, myself).

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If the question does get closed you can a) cast a re-open vote and b) flag the post for moderator attention to speed the process along. Don't worry about it. – ChrisF May 26 '11 at 22:01
@Chris this particular one won't get closed now. I'm not worried anymore for this case (I was yesterday), but it does not make sense to me not to have the possibility to cancel the action in such events. Maybe if I could understand the rationale for this... – Aleadam May 26 '11 at 22:04
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I should add that I sometimes wish I could take back a close vote too - but I've learned to live with the current situation. – ChrisF May 26 '11 at 22:06
If a question can be misread; either you haven't payed enough attention or really thought about why it should be closed, or the question is written in such a way that it's vague / ambiguous and not directly clear what exactly is meant. In the first case this is a fault which you should just learn from, as you should really think twice before voting to close. In the second case the question has to be closed anyway... – Tom Wijsman Nov 4 '11 at 18:22
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I'm amazed that it has been almost three years since the OP and this is still , despite "close vote expiration" having been removed and the fact that the community clearly wants this feature. Not being able to consciously revoke your own close vote is simply asinine quite silly.

Consider this question, where I misunderstood the poster's question and voted to close as a duplicate. As was pointed out in the comments this question is NOT a duplicate. However, now my close vote (and the corresponding auto-comment, which cannot be deleted) are there for eternity.

SE team, please fix this.

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This isn't quite true... close votes do still expire except on questions with extremely few views (<100, I believe). It just takes a little longer than it used to. – Popular Demand Mar 13 at 18:49
@PopularDemand: ...and a little longer than it should, if the vote was cast in error. If close votes do still expire, then maybe the word to use is "silly" rather than "asinine". Regardless, I and at least 320 of my peers would still love to see this feature implemented. – Justin ᚅᚔᚈᚄᚒᚔ Mar 13 at 18:57
Hey, I voted this request up in June of 2010, I'm not the enemy. I just don't like incorrect information. – Popular Demand Mar 13 at 19:05
@PopularDemand: No worries, I wasn't directing animosity; just reiterating why this feature is wanted in spite of expiring close votes. – Justin ᚅᚔᚈᚄᚒᚔ Mar 13 at 22:26
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The comment should be deletable. – ChrisF Mar 14 at 15:29
@ChrisF: I tried deleting the "possible duplicate" comment yesterday to no avail; it would always show back up when I browsed to the question again. I just tried again and it appears to have worked. Perhaps there is some kind of "grace period" for auto-generated comments. – Justin ᚅᚔᚈᚄᚒᚔ Mar 14 at 15:37
The deleted comment showing again is probably just a matter of looking at the cached page: the comment is in the HTML on page load, and then removed from the view (and marked deleted in the database) when you delete it. If you then come back to the page without actually reloading it, then most (if not all) browsers will show the initial HTML again, not the manipulated HTML. That's the same with votes et cetera. – Arjan Mar 14 at 17:27
@Arjan: I don't think it was a matter of the page being cached (because I did do an explicit refresh, and because SO sets really short expire headers), but it's a possibility. I will have to do some experimentation to try and reproduce exactly what I was seeing. – Justin ᚅᚔᚈᚄᚒᚔ Mar 14 at 17:49
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That's why I will usually comment before voting to close, and only vote to close about an hour after that comment.

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SO makes this kind of workflow hard because you don't get notified of any changes on any questions you didn't ask. There's no way to bring it back to your attention so you have to remember and manually go back and check it. – cletus Jun 30 '09 at 1:31
@cletus: You could favorite the question so you can find it again later, then remove it as a favorite when you don't care to check on it any more. – gnostradamus Nov 4 '09 at 20:59
@gnost note that since these ancient comments, favorites now DO alert you of activity on them by default. – Jeff Atwood Aug 16 '10 at 9:21
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@gnostradomus It does seem a bit silly to favorite a question you're considering closing, doesn't it? – corsiKa Jul 18 '11 at 15:47
Why not have the user correct his question while the close votes roll in? If he edited it well it shouldn't result in further votes. In the case it does get closed it just takes a meta question to gather re-openers to reopen it, or get an explanation why his edit isn't good enough... – Tom Wijsman Nov 4 '11 at 18:32
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Bit of a shame that this has been declined. I think it would be a very good addition. But I see the decision was made some time ago, so any chance of re-opening the debate?

I just voted to close a question as "not a real question", but re-reading it I realised that he had actually asked a legitimate question; albeit he could have asked it better, but it is still a valid question.

I would have liked to have cancelled my vote-to-close, but of course I couldn't.

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I often see a question that is not yet closed and would like to cast a vote to re-open it if it gets closed. Can't we vote for a question to remain open (which will cancel out one vote to close)?

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Already requested meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/125/… – ChrisF Jul 6 '09 at 15:24
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I think this is a good idea... Maybe if that menu is reopened by a user with a current close or reopen vote, there can be a "cancel vote" button on there...

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If the close vote total never reaches the threshold of 5, there's no reason for you to rescind it since close votes eventually expire after a certain period of time (although I forget what that period of time is... maybe a week?).

...and if anyone is wondering, after a close vote expires you can vote again (i.e. you are only counted as having voted already if the question actually gets closed).

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I agree - this is a good idea and I upvoted it. There's an easy solution - don't vote to close ones that may be reopened. A little more leeway solves this problem.

I can see all the downvotes for this already...

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declining -- you can always cast a reopen vote if the post gets closed.

Also note that all close votes automatically expire after two days.

(and for that matter reopen votes, or any other vote that attempts to reach a threshold -- otherwise, over an absurdly long period of time, say 10 years, everything would reach the threshold eventually through a tiny trickle of accumulated votes)

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Not really the same though. People tend to avoid closed questions, and it has very little chance of being reopened if that happens. – GManNickG Jan 15 '10 at 21:36
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One more thing: you can't vote twice on the same question, so you can't vote to open if the OP edited the question into shape, or undo your close vote before it closes. – perbert Feb 23 '10 at 14:28
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@voyager: you can cast a single close and a single open vote on a single question, so you can re-open a question that you've closed. You cannot, however, re-open and then re-close a question if it was closed for the wrong reason. And this does nothing for cases where someone else edits a question into shape post-closing, and then it gets rolled back once re-opened. – Shog9 Mar 23 '10 at 20:55
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(+1) I think you should focus more strongly on explaining that close votes age. People don't understand that, and so the want to be able to rescind them, because they don't see that they are rescinded automatically. – devinb Aug 16 '10 at 11:51
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It's great that votes age (I did not know that) but it doesn't take two days for someone to fix their question. You say that this feature has been declined because there is a way to glue the vase together after it has been broken...but we'd rather not break the vase to begin with. Please reconsider. – Phrogz Jan 28 '11 at 17:45
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I disagree with that approach, nearly everything else on the site is undoable, why not close votes? Just because a question can be reopened later doesn't mean it will happen (closing is generally much "easier" then reopening). Please reconsider @Jeff – Truth Sep 9 '11 at 15:31
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Out of your impressive collection of 4300+ answers, this answer is by a good margin your most down-voted one. And on top of that, 99% of the answers and comments are in favor of making this change, and most of the other 1% are indifferent. Why are you completely ignoring the fact that the community is heavily in favor of this change? – Ben Lee Sep 29 '11 at 18:19
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Did it ever occur to you, Jeff, that it would only take five disgruntled users (trusted ones, granted) to delete this answer of yours? And none of the other users could even oppose it. Ironic, isn't it? – sbi Nov 9 '11 at 12:35
The two day expiration is no longer true leading to huge numbers of answers with close votes. Allowing us to retract close votes that no longer apply would make this more managable. – Martin Smith Nov 21 '11 at 12:46
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"Also note that all close votes automatically expire after two days." Not any more.... – Ian Ringrose Nov 21 '11 at 14:40
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@JeffAtwood what can you say about this? the close votes no longer expire, and we do not have the ability to remove our own close vote against a question. Please, listen to the community on this one. We enjoy self-moderation, and this would greatly benefit the quality of our efforts by giving the ability to be more accurate with our voting – rlemon Nov 30 '11 at 15:55
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Yes @JeffAtwood and other Mods, LISTEN TO THE COMMUNITY... This is a ridiculous stance. – Chase Florell Mar 4 at 18:29
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Perhaps the positive benefit from Jeff leaving SE will be that "mandates" like this will be revisited and (hopefully) reversed. – Justin ᚅᚔᚈᚄᚒᚔ Mar 13 at 18:35
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