Looking at this question, the OP's intentions are not entirely clear. I have provided an answer based on what I interpret to be the aim, but (I believe) I have been downvoted because:
"there is no clear indication of the intended output, so no point answering."
I think this is wrong. The help center states:
"voting down a post signals the opposite: that the post contains wrong information, is poorly researched, or fails to communicate information"
I don't think my post qualifies under any of those criteria (unless we assume that I have misinterpreted the question, but I think that would be an unfair assumption - I'm pretty confident that I have identified the problem correctly, and I've asked the OP to clarify).
Was the downvoter wrong to downvote me?
Shouldn't it be the OP that is punished for lack of clarity in the question, rather than the answer provider? Isn't it nearly always possible for someone to misinterpret a question to some degree, and therefore invalidate virtually all posts on the site according to this person's statement?
Surely my post should only be downvoted if it is clearly missing the point (i.e. contains wrong information), not because there is some slight risk that it might miss the point.