You can never answer "Why have [people] not done [something]". You would have to ask everyone who might have done [something] why - which is patently laughable.
What you can do, however, and thus what you could ask if you wanted to, is find out what barriers exist to doing something. This is often what the first kind of question is really asking, of course - for a suggestion of the most common/significant barrier(s).
See these two questions:
Why has nobody ever made a sandwich with ranch AND thousand island dressing on it?
vs
Would the taste profiles of ranch and thousand island dressing conflict if I put them on a sandwich together?
The second question is answerable. The first isn't really, unless you convert it to the second question in your head. The first is even less answerable because it's probably not true; similarly in your question, I'd be shocked if nobody had ever overloaded the -
operator to work on strings. It's just not common (nor is it part of the language).
So, if you want to know why it's not overloaded, you need to ask a more pointed, specific question, finding out what might cause it to not work. To make it a good question, you'd need to have some idea of how you would overload it I suspect; otherwise it's too broad (don't expect your audience to have to decide what the 'natural' or 'obvious' overload is: propose it). Then ask if that is a reasonable way to overload -
in your language(s), and what might be problematic with implementing that.
-
may not be used for removing strings, whereas the one here asked why the developers didn't bother to implement the operator for strings. I don't deny the involvement of Wiki magic, but the question on Programmers is just less subjective and has a very concise answer to it, too.