You can always visit the timeline of posts to get a more detailed view on the history and order of most events. Looking at that you'll see
Apr 30 at 12:02 history deleted Community♦ Scheduled: RemoveDeadQuestions
which is the Roomba in action.
Your question got down votes because its answers could only guess why the authors of the tutorial used one method above the other. Without the context of the tutorial it is hard to tell and even with the tutorial there might still be an educational reason to use a specific code example above a more logic choice. Remember that teachers are cruel: Sort this array in descending order but don't use the build-in Array.Sort method. And that only gives you another set of broken sort algorithms implementations.
To give a question like yours a bit more chance you could leave out one side of the why but you have to provide context what your (fabricated) use-case is. Using the for loop as an example you could ask for a performance spike you see, or memory pressure or something else that can be demo-ed in an MCVE. You can then ask about solutions for the effect you see. Hopefully someone answers to use removeAllChildren
and explains why that is better.