I just asked this question on main about how to parameterize a test suite or fixture using the Criterion testing framework. Currently, it has 11 downvotes, one close vote, and one upvote, which seems to indicate that it is low quality. What can I do to increase the question's quality?
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9Why do you feel it needs improvement? You only asked it 18 minutes ago. It has no downvotes, or close votes against it to indicate it "needs improvement"; it's just not been viewed much (5 people prior to me had viewed it, and I assume at least one of those will be you).– Thom ACommented Aug 31, 2023 at 15:19
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2@ThomA I might be wrong but I think almost everything can be improved, even well received questions do get edited from time to time.– Mehdi CharifeCommented Aug 31, 2023 at 15:24
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14Right, but like, there's no evidence that it needs to be improved, so this post is effectively acting as an unpaid bounty in driving traffic to it. That's not what meta is for.– Kevin BCommented Aug 31, 2023 at 15:26
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8That doesn't answer my question of why you think a question that was asked less than 20 minutes before you posted this question needs improvement. There's a different between something needing improvement and something that can be imrpoved. This question can be improved by explaining why you think it needs improvement, as that's clearly why you're here. Is it purely that you didn't get a response in 15~ minutes and so felt it was "low quality"? If so then you're mistaken; there are no SLAs on Stack Overflow and there's no requirement your question is viewed, let alone answered.– Thom ACommented Aug 31, 2023 at 15:28
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15@MehdiCharife probably because you invoked the meta effect– Robert LongsonCommented Aug 31, 2023 at 15:44
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22You'll want a time machine, @MehdiCharife, and then you'll want to stop yourself from posting this question.– Thom ACommented Aug 31, 2023 at 15:47
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9I assume you want the upvote on your question also reversed?– Thom ACommented Aug 31, 2023 at 16:07
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10My first impression is that it's hard to tell what the question actually is, because of how the presented information is organized.– Karl KnechtelCommented Aug 31, 2023 at 17:49
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14Please don't rollback useful edits, you don't need an "update" heading, as I stated in the edit comment.– Thom ACommented Aug 31, 2023 at 18:21
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7That doesn't change my point.– Thom ACommented Aug 31, 2023 at 18:23
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4It doesn't negate it at all. The point remains because the existence of the revison history is a fact. It is available for all posts. I'll try and find the meta post that advises if such headings.– Thom ACommented Aug 31, 2023 at 18:27
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12Meta post advising against such titles: Should "Edit:" in edits be discouraged– Thom ACommented Aug 31, 2023 at 18:29
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3The question should be the question, complete all by itself. The evolution of the post should not matter, nor should the fact that it evolved. No one should have to know there were edits and no one should have to visit the edit history except out of personal interest.– user4581301Commented Aug 31, 2023 at 19:14
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8Related: What should I keep out of my posts and titles? - "Changelogs. ... You don't need to tell people what you changed. There's a real changelog (revision history) that's visible to everyone upon clicking the edit card/link under a post, which takes you to the post's /revisions sub-page. And people who are following the post will get notifications about edits to the post."– Peter MortensenCommented Aug 31, 2023 at 20:26
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4@BlueRobin unfortunately (fortunately?) we can't directly ask those who casted said votes.– Kevin BCommented Sep 1, 2023 at 18:41
1 Answer
While it may be frustrating to see your question being down-voted (we've all been there), if no reason is given, then the only things you know are:
- downvoter count
- downvoting time interval (roughly)
- what your question is containing
From this position your question might contain some unwanted content (too long code chunks, inappropriate language etc.), here I do not speak about your question specifically, but in general, what unwanted content may be at question, wrong tags, missing content (details, code, text, illustration, whatever) or low quality content (misformulated statements, misleading assumptions, etc.).
If you think your question might need a review, then you can reread it once or twice and see whether you find things to improve. If so, do the improvement. This by itself might clarify what was wrong if you find some serious faults and fixed them.
But, if you did not find faults, or you consider them less serious than being down-vote magnets, then you might write a comment below your question, politely asking what needs to be improved in the question. If you get a meaningful answer, be polite, thank the answer even if you disagree and use it as a guidance for improvement if you find useful content in it.
If you do not get answers nor faults, then do not worry about it. Some people are down-voting for no reason. Others are down-voting with a reason, but do not bother sharing their concerns with you. And finally, those who politely tell you what was wrong with your question are trying to help you even if they were the ones who down-voted your question.
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2I will stay in the "no vote" camp as there are some merits to this answer, but especially the statement "If you do not get answers nor faults, then do not worry about it. Some people are down-voting for no reason" kind of ruins everything. There is no way to prove that is happening, it is just baseless conjecture. That does not belong in a meta answer. It is actually more likely that you get no replies in comments because people do no want to explain downvotes; it is too common that this results in angry retaliation.– GimbyCommented Sep 1, 2023 at 15:01
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2@Gimby in my thought process one needs to read his question again, trying to find errors and if he did not find anything to fix, then he should ask a question in the comments about it. Now, if you reviewed your question, found no faults and nobody has given you an answer on what the problem is, then you do not have the means to fix your question. This is why I think you should not worry in such situations. If you were unable to find out what the problem was, then you cannot improve your question. So, the last decision is whether to worry about it. In my opinion the answer is no. Commented Sep 1, 2023 at 16:22
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2@MehdiCharife Here I received some comments for the downvote and I consider them useful. But I still agree with my answer and hence, I'm not worried about down-votes until someone provides convincing explanation about the reason for his down-voting and maybe action points of what needs to be improved. Otherwise, down-votes are just manifestations of the freedom of opinion. I respect the opinion of all the down-voters, even if I still think this is a good answer. Commented Sep 1, 2023 at 16:25