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Today I asked this question: Generate a random number that guarantees a mean different from the average

It clearly seems that I didn't know how randomness worked as someone stated in one comment. At that point everything was fine, but then I started getting downvotes because of that. (There were four downvotes in less than one minute.)

So, is it right to downvote a question when the user doesn't even know anything about his own question?

I think the question was clearly asked, and that is what should be taken into account when voting up/down, isn't it?

How should these questions be handled?

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    closely related: meta.stackoverflow.com/q/258731/103167
    – Ben Voigt
    Jul 8, 2017 at 17:45
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    People generally downvote based on whether they think a question is useful or not. It's great that asking the question made you learn something about probability theory! But that doesn't mean that other people have to agree that it's a useful question, and if they don't then they can downvote it. A question being "clear" is only one of the three downvote reasons you can see when hovering over the downvote button.
    – Keiwan
    Jul 8, 2017 at 17:47
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    I suspect the reason why Niet posted what he did as a comment is because it's still possible to answer your question. The issue is just with your use of the term "random". From your description, it's clear that you don't actually want a random number, and Niet is pointing that out. It still remains for someone to post an arbitrary number generation algorithm that satisfies your requirements. (As for the meta issue, don't obsess over downvotes!) Jul 8, 2017 at 18:33
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    That comment is completely wrong. This is not an issue about randomness but an issue of uniformity. Randomness doesn't require uniformity.
    – ayhan
    Jul 8, 2017 at 22:00

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