Your question is reminiscent of the uncatchable ChuckNorrisException
in that its scope is more curiosity than practicality.
I feel like your first revision was crystal clear as to what you were looking for: is it possible to divide by zero using only bit manipulation? Your attempts at "clarification" from there only served to muddle and mangle your question.
The logical answer would be provided in the answers, and your curiosity would be sated.
My gut tells me that you're receiving the kind of feedback that you are because these sorts of questions have a mixed reception. You can either hit the jackpot with the community and get a really good reception, or more typically, be relegated to the "this isn't a good question"-style comments and thus, be vulnerable to downvotes.
Problem is, both your question and the ChuckNorrisException
question are vulnerable to the same problem we have with questions: usefulness and lack of research.
The problem is that no amount of actual development work will ever make these questions "useful". Neither of these things are useful in practical, every day programming. Neither of these things would be good code to see.
Informative, sure; it's informative to know that you cannot bit-shift and wind up dividing by zero. That's got some value to it. It's also useful to know that you actually can throw an exception that can't be caught (but only after doing evil things with the JVM).
Personally speaking, I get why your question was downvoted, but I'm not a fan of that reasoning. I would think that your question was interesting, so I probably wouldn't upvote it myself, but I also wouldn't downvote it outright, either.
Lastly:
What can I do to avoid such experience in the future?
The only thing I can say: get lucky. This happens more often than we like to admit. There's no tooling or policy to help us ameliorate these kinds of "not entirely practical, but still a useful and otherwise on-topic programming question"-type questions, and until a policy exists, it's going to be at the whim of whomever's looking at the question to decide if they hard downvote it.