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What is the point of voting up a question?

I mean, you can vote up a question, which may increase the reputation of OP by 5 points. But it won't bump up the question, nor will it add value to the answerers. So, why do people vote? Do votes really affect which question people choose to answer first? Or is it just a way to show if a a question is good or not?

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closed as exact duplicate by Lance Roberts, Rick Sladkey, kiamlaluno, Jeff Atwood Jul 12 '11 at 4:12

This question covers exactly the same ground as earlier questions on this topic; its answers may be merged with another identical question. See the FAQ for guidance on how to improve it.

2 Answers

up vote 5 down vote accepted

If you look at http://meta.stackoverflow.com/unanswered, you'll see that it's sorted by number of votes by default. So many votes certainly help. It's an easy way to show your interest in a question, without spending much time doing it.

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Voting has different uses in different contexts. On Meta (here), voting is an implicit, "I agree with your suggestion" or "Oh, this does appear to be a bug". For more on Meta voting, check out the FAQ.

On the Stack Overflow site, as is noted in the responses to this question, it often is used to:

  1. Given a reward for asking good questions
  2. To let more interesting and relevant questions rise to the top of filtered lists.

There is also a minor, influence the first impression for a question - I find that when I read a question's title -- if I see several negative votes, I'm less inclined to spend time with it. If I see several positive votes, I tend to make more of a concerted effort to read the question thoroughly. Personally, I spend the most time looking at questions in the active category and while the upvotes may not bump the questions, answers will and I'll be more attracted to questions with higher votes.

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