Downvotes may mean disagreement like some commenters stated, but they can also mean the things in the tooltip. Particularly with your first question, I'm astounded that people would state that downvotes mean "I don't agree with this post" when confronted with the downvotes on the first of those two. I mean, how do you disagree with a question that is literally asking "Why X?". Do they mean "You're wrong to ask why?" Yeah, no, that's not a helpful way to explain away the downvotes.
That first question is a question we see on Meta a lot. I mean a lot. Like daily a lot. Nobody seems to get along with the "Not an answer" flag on the first try. Some people (and most of the moderators, who are the ones who decline or accept those flags) are of the belief that the Not An Answer flag should be used for things that are objectively not answers at all, such as "Thanks" answers, answers that just ask a new question, answers that ask for clarification, or attempts to bump the question. The main reason that they don't handle off-topic or wrong answers is because the moderators aren't expected to have any domain knowledge when they look at it, they can know it's not an answer regardless. For that question, a moderator viewing your flag sees a code block and easily assumes it's a valid answer, declining the flag.
For that first question, you got an answer, which was good because it solved your issue, which is what you came here to find. But it (1) shows a lack of research effort (The Meta FAQs include "When to flag an answer as “not an answer”?" which explains those 4 reasons to flag that I just mentioned), and (2) Is not useful for future readers, because there are so many questions just like it already. Remember, votes are mostly for future readers looking for an answer to know how worthwhile that question is.
Maybe the downvotes were a "Oh no, not this again" kind of gut reaction or any other number of reasons, but you don't need to go further than the tooltip on that one to find valid reasons for it to be downvoted.
So in that case, what you can do to improve is research the question more, and if you choose to ask a new question, make sure it's different enough from existing questions to be useful.
For your second question, that one might fall more into the "disagreement" category, as each answer is basically "This is why that was wrong." I can imagine people making a case for the question not being useful because it's based on a faulty assumption, but I'm not convinced by that. It seems to be well researched and clear, and it's useful to anyone else confused by that same issue, so I would probably be willing to call those disagreement votes. However if anyone would like to make a suggestion as to how that second question could be improved, please do.