Preface: This is just outlook, users are allowed to vote as they see fit.
(with exception of abuse of course)
In my opinion the voting outlook for questions and answers is different, perhaps not extremely different, but different nonetheless. I feel this is obvious, and offer a simple example supporting the notion in that it requires reputation to downvote an answer.
As such, and since "posts" tend to refer to both questions and answers, the answer here is going to be broken down a bit.
Posts
The overall outlook for all posts is to vote based on content. Some of the reasoning behind this is that voting based on content are votes that are
- giving signal to other users
- allowing good content to bubble to the top
- not "punishing" users with downvotes
- not "rewarding" users with upvotes (to counter punitive downvotes)
- not targeted towards a certain user (i.e. serial voting)
- common sense
Questions
Voting specifically on questions is a little different, as evidenced by not only the lack of reputation penalty for downvoting, but also by the difference in tooltip (title attribute)
▲ This question shows research effort; it is useful and clear
▼ This question does not show any research effort; it is unclear or not useful
From my perspective, any time I come across a question I would have asked when trying to solve a problem, I upvote it because it saved me time, even if the post was not perfectly written. There is a famous saying,
Don't let perfection be the enemy of progress
and I think that applies here to questions in general. Just because a question has some imperfection does not mean the time spent generating it should be overlooked if it saved you time.
Of course, there is the flip side of these where the question is not useful or well researched, but I think we can all identify those fairly easily. You know what to do.
The topic here was not for "best" versus "worst", it was for middle; and in the middle ground, if it was answerable, unique-ish, and stood the test of time I don't see why you wouldn't want to upvote it.
Answers
This was broken apart for the reason that each aspect was different, and so are answers. The tooltip is much simpler for answers,
▲ This answer is useful
▼ This answer is not useful
and I think it is simpler with good reason. Answers are more context based. A mediocre answer where there is no other answer may deserve an upvote because at its core it was useful in deriving some information from. However, a mediocre answer where there is another good answer doesn't necessarily need an upvote in my opinion - otherwise there is sort of a mixed signal being sent. Clearly if both answers are good that is a different story, but again the topic here is the mediocre answer, and in that case when a better one is present, I see no need to upvote the mediocre one.