some people probably doesn't understand the question and then put downvote
The number of times this non sequitur is repeated is mind-boggling. It's especially claimed by frustrated people who had their question downvoted or closed and can't understand why.
In comments, you were asked for an example. In response you linked to a question of yours, How to read the same line from multiple files very quickly C#:
When all files is bigger than 60 Mb ,it works very slowly.
int count1 = File.ReadLines(sharesList.Items[0].ToString()).Count();
//The sharesList contains all files
for (int m = 0; m < count1; m++)
{
foreach (String s in sharesList.Items)
{
if (File.Exists(s))
{
string shar1 = File.ReadAllLines(s).Skip(m).Take(1).First();
if (shar1 != null && shar1 != "")
{
sharesL.Add(shar1);
}
}
}
}
Could anyone tell me how to make it very fast? Thanks in Advance
The reputation of the five people who close-voted that question as "too broad" is at least 15,000. I can only assume the same for the seven downvoters, and on the contrary, the single person who upvoted it probably felt bad for you or found it cool that you work with 60MB files.
Instead of providing a minimal example, you dump a bunch of code with obfuscated variable names that does some nasty things to files, and expect us to reverse engineer what it does, identify hotspots, find better ways to let it do exactly the same but more efficient, and post that as an answer. Those aren't the kinds of questions—or answers—Stack Overflow is looking for, because they won't be helpful to future users.
To understand why your question gets downvoted or closed, you really need to take a step back, read the question in the preview screen as if you were someone who was not you, who does not understand what you're trying to do, and evaluate whether it actually makes sense and is a good question. This is the crucial step that many people miss.
What you're suggesting here ("make downvotes weigh heavier for users with higher reputation") would not have changed the way your question was treated on the site, and more importantly, it wouldn't have improved the actual quality of your question—which is really the ultimate goal.