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Often I receive valid answers to my valid questions, but my question remains with zero votes, i.e user providing the answer did not find it necessary to upvote my question (yet wasted time to provide an answer).

I'm not talking about spam/homework/trivial/somehow-invalid questions. I'm talking about "ordinary" question that deserves (and hence - receives) the answer. I believe that if the question is "good enough" to provide answers, it is already useful to the community (tiny tiny bit at least), at the very least - it should be from the perspective of the user providing answer (otherwise, why bother answering and why not close it as duplicate/spam/etc).

I'm not saying that users should always upvote questions they answer, but for the most part, I don't think why they shouldn't.

So... What's the phenomenon here?..

P.S.: An example qeustion: How do I generate script for LocalDB database?

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  • 2
    Related: meta.stackexchange.com/q/509/204841 Jul 5, 2017 at 14:15
  • There's an up vote and a down vote on that question so while at least 2 didn't vote up, at least 2 of them didn't down vote either. If they didn't vote at all that implies they didn't feel that strongly either way about the quality or usefulness of the question to vote on it. I can see a user feeling 'meh' about a question but not also thinking it doesn't deserve an answer.
    – BSMP
    Jul 5, 2017 at 15:00
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    "Don't you contradict yourself when you provide answer to the question that you find not useful?" Only if you don't know what Stack Overflow actually is. The answerer still can post an answer to help you, although (s)he doesn't think that it is helpful for anybody else.
    – Tom
    Jul 5, 2017 at 17:04
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    Just because you think a question is a good question doesn't mean everyone else is obligated to agree with you. If you think the question is good, you can upvote it, if other people think it's not, they don't have to. Each person gets to determine their own vote, not everyone else's.
    – Servy
    Jul 5, 2017 at 17:05
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    You wouldn't upvoted any time you don't feel like it, and that's fine. Upvoting is optional, nobody is compelled to vote. People are completely free to use the site without voting at all.
    – user229044 Mod
    Jul 5, 2017 at 18:22
  • I have the same question as you. I can't understand why someone would think a question is good enough to answer but not good enough to upvote.
    – Suragch
    Jul 7, 2017 at 11:00
  • Related (but, oddly, highly upvoted): ‘‘Why answer a question not worth your upvote?’’ Dec 9, 2021 at 20:22

1 Answer 1

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You wouldn't upvote the question for the same reason you wouldn't upvote any question, it doesn't meet the stated upvote criteria of, "shows research effort; it is useful and clear". Note that only one of those is a reason to close or flag the question, so your statement that the question should be closed instead simply doesn't apply.

"it is already useful to the community" That the question has gotten an answer doesn't mean that it's useful to the community. There are millions of questions here with answers that aren't actually useful questions.

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