As you can probably tell from my other comments, I dislike how this was handled (despite the fact that I don't think your answer was particularly great). However, I think that there are a few ways of looking at it:
Taken as an isolated case, should your answer have been deleted?
To me, your answer certainly should not have been deleted, for at least the following reasons:
- It was correct, even if it could easily have been improved by elaborating on the content further.
- A simple comment suggesting that you elaborate would have been much more likely to result in that effect than deleting the answer.
- It covered ground that other answers did not, despite its short length.
- Voters gave it 3 upvotes and no downvotes, indicating that the community as a whole did not find the answer objectionable.
- The presence of a marginal answer seems to me to improve the content of Stack Overflow rather than to harm it. If there are other, better answers they are likely to be upvoted past it. Furthermore, since your answer was particularly terse, reading it wouldn't waste much of a user's time anyway.
- Once the question is deleted, most users are unable to improve it (or add comments suggesting specific improvements) since they can't even see it.
- In fact, I suspect that your answer may be of greater than median quality for the site overall, since I often see multiple wrong or speculative answers to questions. Even if brief, at least your answer is correct!
However, your post was apparently flagged for moderation by a user. Another relevant question is therefore:
Given that your answer was flagged, was deleting it appropriate?
Here, there's a bit more room for disagreement. I'm not a moderator, but I imagine that there's plenty of crappy content that gets flagged for removal, and they can't afford to spend lots of time investigating each flagged answer. Therefore, it may make sense for the moderators' actions to be biased towards deleting marginal content. I'm skeptical that deleting mediocre answers actually benefits the site much (as opposed to deleting mediocre questions, which is more clearly beneficial), particularly compared to the discouragement of well-meaning answerers that may result. I'm willing to give moderators the benefit of the doubt, though, if they have reason to believe that they should err on the side of deletion. Having said that, I would hope that there would be some easy-to-read indicators that might help moderators discriminate bad content from ok content (such as your answer). For instance, mightn't it be worth taking a closer look at flagged content that has multiple upvotes but no downvotes?
Finally, what really disappoints me is:
How do incidents like this reflect on Stack Overflow
Even if the moderator can be forgiven for erring on the side of deletion, I hope they will take some time to think about how these sorts of things make the site look.
Your answer was flagged for moderation (merely because it was concise?), but the user who did so did not make any constructive criticism at all, such as leaving you a comment. This makes the resulting moderator action seem arbitrary and unexpected and therefore makes the community appear to be antisocial and unpleasant. By way of contrast, see the stern but constructive comments that Eric Lippert leaves at questions such as Vertical Curve Formula when the user isn't using Stack Overflow correctly. How can people be encouraged to provide actionable feedback when they flag things?
I fear that moderators often fail to consider how these things look in cases where content is wrongly flagged or deleted. A user makes conscious effort to help strangers, and is rewarded with the removal of his correct, helpful information and no actionable feedback of what he did wrong. The burden for getting his content undeleted is then on him, where he has to convince busy moderators that he has sufficiently improved his answer for it to be undeleted. It does not surprise me that many users do not take the moderators up on this offer.
Overall, this incident (and others similar in spirit, such as the recent deletion wars) has lowered my estimation of Stack Overflow; I suspect that there are others with similar feelings (though perhaps, like me, they are not active on Meta). Since the site is dependent on users freely contributing content, I hope that moderators consider the deterrent effects that current policies and procedures might be having, and try to find ways to improve them rather than risk killing the golden goose.