SO users have a lot of latitude as to what standards they may want to apply to decide whether to downvote or upvote posts. In the case at hand here you hypothesize that people perhaps downvoted the question because the OP did not know where to post it. While it is possible that some downvoted for this reason, there are other possible reasons. Some people are averse (with good reasons) to optimization for the sake of optimization. The question you refer to does not provide any context for the code shown in the question. Why should it be optimized? Moreover, generally speaking, optimizations are trade-offs. One solution will be best for data having such and such characteristics and another solution might be better for data having different characteristics. (For instance, searching through ordered data will call for a different solution than searching through data which is unordered.) The OP is silent about what characteristics the data possesses that may influence optimization. Without having a critical mass of details regarding the optimization task, the whole exercise turns into opinion.
The one limitation to the latitude we have in voting is that we don't allow serial downvoting (which means going after a user's posts and downvoting them one after another).
There are voting behaviors that we can say are not beneficial to the site. For instance, if you downvote an excellent post because you had a bad day and just have to take it on someone, this is not helpful to the site. If you do this and ask me whether what you've done is okay, I'm going to say no. However, neither moderators nor SO employees are in the business of reverting such votes. And what is considered harmful to the site varies from person to person. Some people downvote answers to bad questions even if the answer is otherwise good, other people think such downvotes are unwarranted. Again, the powers-that-be do not intervene (so long as it does not turn into serial voting).