The thanks button came and, deservedly, went rather quickly afterwards. The rationale for its quick death was sound: upvotes indicate assent.
But sometimes, you've been struggling with something for a whole day, or a whole damn week, and you try a specific combination of Google-fu and find an answer you didn't before, or an answer you've already come across is suddenly relevant to where you are in your problem-solving...
... and that answer immediately solves the issue that's been causing you to bang your head against the wall. You sigh with relief, and sit back and finally relax, and generally just feel so much better that you feel downright charitable. You'd like to do something nice for that person who posted that answer, and a single lousy upvote really doesn't seem like enough.
You've got rep, because you participate on Stack Overflow. And right now, you can't think of a better use for that rep than to give some of it to that kind person who just saved your sanity. You'd like to slice a bit of your rep off and donate it to their answer, because they deserve it, dang nab it.
But you can't, because that feature doesn't exist. So instead you make a Meta post suggesting it for consideration, and wait for people to tell you why it's the worst idea in the history of mankind...
x
is grateful for an edit to his own question by editory
. Sox
wants to "award"y
with some extra rep to show appreciation.