I am no perfect questioner and I will admit I have asked my fair share of bad questions... but this time, although my question was a duplicate, I believe it contained a sufficient amount of information to answer the question. In fact, someone answered the question perfectly within 2/3 minutes of posting. However, it still got 3 votes towards closing the question because of insufficient information to diagnose the problem. As well as a number of downvotes, that I thought were completely unwarranted.
And I have been seeing this a lot, not just for me. People ask questions, but people refuse to read the whole thing or think about it for a second and they throw out downvotes because it's to hard for them to understand.
Could someone please tell me if I am crazy or not to believe that peoples votes to close the questions should've been towards a duplicate question instead of insufficient information?
Here is the question: Div overflow beyond browser width without setting width
It's just a little frustrating when you ask a completely reasonable and valid question yet people throw around downvotes.
(1)
Getting to Know Stack Overflow's Voting Culture, and(2)
When is it justifiable to downvote a question?.