Searching this site seems to show conflicting answers. Take, for instance, Can you explain why my question was downvoted? - the top answer is highly upvoted. But the question (the Meta question) is downvoted. So - is it acceptable or not?
2 Answers
It's OK to ask after you've done your research. Have you sat down and read your question like someone who knows nothing about your question? Is it useful, clear, researched? Or is it closer to not showing research effort, unclear or not useful? If you've done your best (and can explain what you've done and found) it is ok. We want to help people learn how to ask better questions, but like the main site, we expect you to try to solve it for yourself first and not outsource your thinking at the first sign of trouble.
Also, asking about it for a single downvote is just annoying. One vote doesn't necessarily mean your question is bad. A couple means it's time to take a look at it.
So - is it acceptable or not?
It was marked as a (valid) duplicate.
Duplicates are acceptable in general, since they can build up a network of useful questions and answers that can be reached from many entry points.
Though an obvious duplicate lacking enough research from the OP's side is prone for downvotes because the question was more or less trivial.
Answers for such duplicates are still answers and live in the answer universe.
The pattern of downvoted questions and highly upvoted answers is pretty usual on Meta Stack Overflow (and other site specific Meta sites). May be Shog9's answer here sheds a bit of light on it.
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1Thanks. Though this doesn't make too much sense in this case, since if it's a duplicate - it means it shouldn't be answered. And I'm surprised that the respectable answerer there chose to answer it. Downvoted questions with upvoted answers make more sense in cases of feature requests.– ispiroFeb 4, 2016 at 20:24
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@ispiro it means it shouldn't be answered There are often answers for duplicates, that doesn't mean these are invalid actually. I didn't look at your particular sample so far. Maybe for that particular case you're right. Feb 4, 2016 at 20:26
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2@ispiro the "no research effort" is still a criteria for down votes on meta -- the highly up-voted answer to that question is basically an expanded version of the down-vote tool-tip, slightly tailored to the specific case.– TZHXFeb 4, 2016 at 20:27
a down-vote here has no effect on your ... ability to ask questions
- is inexact. It can ban you from asking questions here on meta.