There are a lot of comments and answers here claiming that telling people how to vote is somehow wrong or unacceptable. That position is absurd. The problem is not whether you try to influence people's votes, but how.
Consider the following comment:
This answer suffers from SQL injection vulnerabilities because it constructs the query using string concatenation rather than parameterizing the inputs. This is a terrible practice that should never show up in production code.
Now consider this comment:
This answer suffers from SQL injection vulnerabilities because it constructs the query using string concatenation rather than parameterizing the inputs. This is a terrible practice that should never show up in production code; this answer deserves to be downvoted.
Is there really any difference between these two comments? No, there really is not. They are both encouraging you to downvote the post and avoid its advice by pointing out a severe problem, and they are both encouraging you to use our site's mechanic for rating content appropriately. One of them just does so implicitly while the other makes the action you should take explicit. That is fine. There is nothing wrong with providing a substantive response and encouraging people to take an appropriate action in light of that information.
So what is and is not an appropriate way of influencing other people's votes? It's pretty simple.
- Make sure your response is more than just telling people to vote. Provide a substantive reason for why they should vote a particular way.
- Make sure you provide it in the correct location. On the main site, it does not ever belong in a question or answer post (even an answer that explicitly addresses major problems in a competing answer). On Meta, it only belongs in a post that is intended to provide specific guidance about expected behavior; such posts should usually include specific policy or analysis that will allow users to generalize the behavior to many posts. A comment responding to a particular post is also a place this belongs, assuming you can fit the explanation in the comment with it.
- Provide quality content. Just because you have decided that you need to provide some information to influence people's votes doesn't mean your content gets to be low quality. All of our quality expectations still apply. On top of the correctness of the substance, this means it should use good formatting, punctuation, grammar, and word choice. This also means you shouldn't let a tangent about voting prevent you from improving your own question or answer. If an answer is unhelpful, consider whether the question can be clarified or otherwise improved to explain why that approach doesn't work, or whether it would be appropriate to address the problems of the other approach in your competing answer. This may be useful information even if a bad answer is eventually deleted.
- Save explicit voting recommendations for extreme cases. If you go around telling people how to vote on every post you see or decide to comment on, it's annoying. Save it for common but catastrophic errors where the author really should know better but many do not (like SQL injections) or for solutions that are absolutely brilliant but weren't obvious. Most of the time, it's enough to just point out the negative or positive qualities of a post directly, and voting doesn't need to be mentioned.
- Don't be rude. There's a difference between being harsh and rude. Some circumstances warrant being a little harsh, but don't cross the line. (Yes, what constitutes "rude" is subjective and a matter of debate that I won't get into, but for the moment, let's just agree there is some line you shouldn't cross.)
How does your specific example stack up against that?
- It's almost all caps. Very poor style.
- It's in the question, rather than a comment on the answer.
- It doesn't provide a substantive reason. (The user does provide substantive objections in direct comments on the answer, but not in the content you quoted.)
So yes, the specific content you quoted needs to go. But not because it tells people how to vote. It's because of the bad substance, style, and location.
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changes both Netbeans's own JDK and the new project JDK. See 6.8 Setting the Target JDK.