The simplest way to get an idea of where a user's reputation came from is to look at their profile. Note that Meta sites share their reputation with main sites (activity on Meta appears in the Meta profile, but doesn't have any impact on reputation) so you need to make sure you're on their main site profile, e.g. : http://stackoverflow.com/users/<User ID number>?tab=profile
.
Firstly, you can look at their top badges and top posts, which give you a high-level idea of what they spend their time on and what their highest-rated posts are. For more detail, you can switch to the reputation tab on the activity part of their profile (http://stackoverflow.com/users/<User ID number>?tab=reputation
), where you can see post by post where their reputation came from.
If you want a summary of some of the sources of rep, you can use the Stack Exchange Data Explorer, which offers this query. Enter the user ID number to get a plot for all major activities resulting in rep awards, as follows:
- Upvote question: rep gained from upvotes on questions the user has asked (+5 per vote)
- Upvote answer: rep gained from upvotes on answers the user has provided (+10 per vote)
- Downvotes own Q and A: rep lost from downvotes on the user's posts (-2 per vote)
- Accepted Answers: rep gained from the user's answer being accepted by the OP (+15 per answer)
- Suggested Edits: rep gained from suggesting edits that were subsequently accepted (+2 per accepted edit; note that there is an all-time cap of 2,000 on this, and users with more than 3,000 rep can no longer earn rep from edits)
- Bounties Started: rep lost from placing bounties on questions (varies)
- Bounties Received: rep gained from writing answers that were awarded a bounty (varies)
Note that this does not appear to include all possible sources of reputation, see e.g. Why did I gain/lose reputation? Can I audit my reputation history? for more details.