Well, let's look at the guidelines.
Start by reading the tooltip on the upvote arrow:
This question shows research effort; it is clear and useful.
That's a good starting point.
Now, check out the tooltip for the downvote arrow:
This question does not show research effort; it is unclear or not useful.
Alright, that gives us three criteria to look at right off the bat: Research effort, clarity, and usefulness.
Cool. What else can we use to clarify these guidelines?
How about the privilege page for upvotes?
When should I vote up?
Whenever you encounter a question, answer or comment that you feel is especially useful, vote it up!
You have a limited number of votes per day, so use them wisely.
Alright, we've narrowed down the "useful" guideline to "especially useful." Cool again.
So, what about the downvotes privilege page?
When should I vote down?
Use your downvotes whenever you encounter an
egregiously sloppy, no-effort-expended post, or an answer that is
clearly and perhaps dangerously incorrect.
You have a limited number of votes per day, and answer down-votes cost
you a tiny bit of reputation on top of that; use them wisely.
So, sloppy no-effort posts are bad. Incorrect posts should not be upvoted. Alright... What else?
What about the "Why is voting important?" help page? The first line of the last paragraph is very relevant:
Voting up a question or answer signals to the rest of the community that a post is interesting, well-researched, and useful, while voting down a post signals the opposite: that the post contains wrong information, is poorly researched, or fails to communicate information.
Well, that's all useful information! But... It doesn't really give you a solid "Always upvote this, always downvote that" answer, does it?
That's where the last guideline comes in: Vote as you feel is appropriate.
Do you think a post is worthy of an upvote? Well, then upvote it. Your votes help us see the aggregate community value of posts.
All of the above count as guidelines and not hard, fast rules. You'll only encounter two rules for voting anywhere on our sites:
Do not use extra accounts (also known as "sock puppets") to vote in ways you could not with one account. For example, voting twice on one post or voting for your own posts.
Do not target your votes to users. For example, don't upvote a post just because your friend made it, and don't upvote a post just because the poster gave a good answer elsewhere. If you vote organically and without searching out users to vote on, you should never run afoul of this rule.
As a final note, keep in mind that just because a post looks clear and useful doesn't always mean it's on-topic for our site or completely up to our high standards. Does it have an MCVE? (Minimal, Complete, Verifiable Example) Does it give any errors thrown? Is all the code in the question, not hidden behind a link? That sort of thing.
When in doubt about the quality of a question per our standards, there is no shame in revisiting the help center to double check what we expect of posts. I still do so on a regular basis, and I'm sure other frequent users do as well.