I've seen it a number of times that new users post questions which are perhaps not great, but definitely worthwhile, yet after a comment (either pointing out something that's not clear enough to give a precise answer, a thought-mistake that makes the problem somewhat trivial, or giving some literature reference that indirectly answers the question), their reaction is to completely delete the question.
Now, I can understand the reaction of wanting to remove “shameful” content (“silly me, I should have read the doc introduction better...”), but actually I think some of these questions would be particularly useful for future users stumbling into the same rookie issue.
What would be a good message to add to the “sure you want to delete?” that would urge the OP to consider the possibility that the content might still be useful, and encouraging to instead edit the question to become actually good, even if the OP themselves doesn't really need it anymore?
(I don't propose making it impossible to delete a question before it has upvoted answers, just making users aware that it may not be a nice thing to do.)