I just failed an audit in First Posts which now locks me out for 2 days. While I perfectly understood why I failed before (misclicked button, misinterpreted problem statement), I was puzzled by that one.
In particular, it was this question: Create a prolog program that solves the peg jump puzzle
I downvoted and was about to comment that the author should please include some information about what "doesn't work" mean. They did include the desired output, that's something at least (but could be copied from the problem statement they had), but there was no information what failed (error message? incorrect result - if yes, which?) and what the OP already tried to do about the problem. (And I'm not the only one who thought that, according to the second comment.)
It appeared to me like a problem statement copied from an assignment plus the incorrect code.
This failed the audit because it was a "high quality question".
Now this made me think, am I downvoting too quickly? I read a few threads about this here at meta SO but the opinions vary between "downvote without comment at the slightest problem" to "hardly ever downvote at all" and it often appears to derail into protecting newcomers or not etc. etc.
If the question is written in a way that essential information, or information which would make understanding the problem a lot easier (such as what "doesn't work" mean, something I see all the time), is missing, I downvote and comment about it. Is this wrong? Should I only comment in this case? What defines that it is wrong and causes an audit to fail?
I read that the audit system is automatic, but things like this are confusing - in case I was right and the audit was wrong, is there any way to vote for an audit being bad...? Again, assuming I was right (correct me otherwise), aren't others also going to fall for a bad audit, causing frustration?
EDIT: Since the system asked me to explain how this question is different from that one: I am specifically asking about downvoting (not OT flags), plus about whether there are ways to flag bad audits. My question is a bit more complex than the other one, it would appear.
FYI, bountied questions are already excluded from use as audits in the Close, Reopen and Triage queues. Should probably just do that everywhere.- Shog9♦
. Here's the discussion where I found the quote: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/305872/…feature-request
post: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/260803/…