You shouldn't have posted your comment as an answer, but downvotes on that non-answer weren't necessary. (But also not unexpected). Not-an-answer flags + a comment should be sufficient to point new users in the right direction.
This is exactly the kind of case where we could simply tell an over-eager new user (who clearly made a real effort to help) that they need to wait until they have 50 rep before commenting, please don't make a mess this way. Based on the fact that the comment included a link to a https://reverseengineering.stackexchange.com/ Q&A (i.e. the user is looking around on stackexchange sites and will hopefully figure out how we do things), I would have given @Mistercookiebite the benefit of the doubt that a comment + not-an-answer flag -> deletion would avoid repeat offences of comments-as-answers.
Re: the mess: Notice that the clarifications from the OP of the DLL question ended up as comments on the non-answer, not under the question. We really want edits to the question, but at least comments under the question are better than under an answer that needs to be deleted. It really did make a mess, and maybe hurt the chances of salvaging that unclear question more than it helped.)
It did lead to a mess, but the non-answer comment was actually the most useful thing anyone had yet added to the question, to ask for specific clarification. It would have been actively good and helpful as a comment. So it's very understandable for a beginner to want to bend/break the rules and post something helpful in those conditions. (Doesn't mean you won't get downvotes. And remember that votes aren't given for effort.)
If other comments had already requested more details (on this unclear question), there would have been much less excuse for bending the rules.
The flaw in the above reasoning is that it would require checking someone's history to see if they'd already done this before, and still weren't learning. The C and C++ tags especially have a low tolerance for poor questions (and apparently poor answers), because they get a LOT of traffic. Questions with both tags already put many people in a bad mood.
People aren't going take that much care to make sure you really deserve it before downvoting, especially when a post is obviously breaking the rules. Moderating the site to encourage the contributions we want and discourage those we don't takes time, and people are in a hurry when voting, too. Some people downvote even very good answers just because they're posted on bad questions, or IDK why. A downvote or two isn't normally the end of the world. (A temporary answer ban isn't the end of the world either; don't panic.)
I suspect most users who saw the non-answer in the hour or 2 between posting and deletion decided not to downvote. If it was actually bad as well as in the wrong place, it would have dropped much faster.
The two downvotes this got before being deleted (from a review queue) only resulted in a ban because of other poorly-received posts, and you could have deleted it manually after it got the first downvote. (You did know you were bending / breaking the rules and already had a previous downvoted question and answer, so it would have been a good idea to keep an eye on StackOverflow to see what happened here. I'm not trying to blame you here; maybe you didn't realize this would attract downvotes, or that downvotes would lead to a temporary ban. I'm pointing out other things you could have done, but maybe didn't realize at the time would have been a good idea.)
TL:DR: sit out your time in the penalty box and please try to find some good questions you can answer well, with clear explanations, to gain some rep before spending your time on questions that need improvement.
The SO system is designed this way to avoid a flood of noise from new users, because unfortunately a large fraction of new users are not interested in making helpful contributions the way you are. Please blame the help vampires and spammers that made us set up strict rules like this (with auto-bans and comment limits) and that taught us we need to aggressively downvote content that's doesn't belong.
For those who can't see deleted questions / answers:
question:
-3 score (totally deserved the downvotes: no MCVE or any way to answer)
I'm just curious to know how I can pack a DLL file so that it's hard
to disassemble. It's in C++, but every time I try packing it, and I
inject the DLL file into the game, it just crashes.
The DLL is for a GTA V mod menu in which I developed.
[dll]
(before an edit by @Peter Mortensen, was also tagged [c]
and [c++]
)
- comment: Define "pack". Please.
- comment: Stargateur's repost of the non-answer as a comment.
- more noise
non-answer from Mistercookiebite
-2 score
What exact error message do you get when you run your game/your compiled code?
Why do you need to "inject" the dll? usually, you need to inject something into a dll from the outside (in order to reverse-engineer it, see https://reverseengineering.stackexchange.com/questions/13599/how-to-manipulate-game-which-loads-many-dlls)
This is actually a useful comment, and even includes a link to a possibly-related Q&A. The only problem here is that it was posted in the wrong place by an over-eager new user who doesn't know the ropes yet.
Obviously it shouldn't be upvoted, but I don't think it was necessary to downvote it, instead just flag it as not-an-answer. (Especially after @Stargateur helpfully reposted it as a comment.)
At that point @Mistercookiebite should have deleted the non-answer if they get the notification from comments on the non-answer in time. (IDK what order things happened.)