There are multiple reasons to downvote a question, lack of clarity is not the only one. The tooltip for the downvote button reads:
This question does not show any research effort; it is unclear or not useful
In this particular case it would've been lack of research effort, which is a fairly common and generally accepted reason for casting a downvote.
To put it in perspective, I've never written a line of C# in my life, and just now I did a quick Google search which yielded enough information that I could have posted a correct and valid answer. It took me under 10 seconds -- probably less time than it took the author to write that question.
So, yeah, the question is crystal clear, but it lacks basic research effort.
The oft-linked How do I ask a good question? Help Center article has a good basic rundown of what is generally expected, in this case the first section "Search, and research" is relevant. That Help Center article is a good representation of current community values and policy, so if you're ever wondering why a question may have been poorly received, compare it to some of the guidelines there to get an idea.
if you don't know the terminology it is hard to find the information
Considering the question uses the correct terminology, clearly that's not applicable here. Since they do know the correct terminology, they can easily find the relevant information on the topic.WhatIsThisClass
class. For any specific attribute, you look at the documentation for that attribute.[ExampleCustomAttribute]
, theThis
may have added ambiguity.