Original version of the question was way opinion based, broad and lacking any demonstrated research hence deserve downvotes* and close votes (see How to ask and self-answer a correct, high quality Q&A pair without attracting downvotes?).
What ideally should have happened: someone with reasonable understanding of the problem realized that this is indeed a good question without existing duplicate answer and edit the question in shape (i.e. by adding sample and cleaning language to remove what essentially asking for discussion).
Harsh reality is that in many cases such an edit would be reverted by OP with comment "keep your @#$@ hands away from my post, you @##$#". As result downvoting without comment is only safe option. Even leaving comment without downvote risks revenge downvotes as such question likely to get downvotes anyway.
In this particular case OP took the next best approach with the edit of the question making it clear and specific enough to be considered good on-topic question. OP also turned text of the post that was more like "someone said XXXX" into "I believe XXXX is true because YYYY" which is much easier to answer specifically.
Other option could be to bring question up to meta first to see if it is indeed new and how to ask properly. I'd limit that option to questions intended to be canonical answers similar to "What is NRE/NPE" questions.
*I would have downvoted even my own self-answered question -
What question mark means in C# code... And I have no idea how to make that one better. In that particular case I don't care as I created it only to serve as search/duplicate target - but still had to bring it up to Meta for help.
SendInput
is correct is clearly not an "opinion-based" matter.