My question arises from a new user (1 rep) asking a generic single-sentence question (deeply downvoted), where a lengthy edit is suggested, completely rewriting the original question with detailed examples.
More in general, say that a user asks a very generic question such as:
"I am unable to catch errors in my Java code. Can you explain how Java exception handling mechanism works?"
Such a generic question would be downvoted up to the point it is deleted since too broad. But, before this, assume a kind user suggests an edit where s/he completely rewrites the original question, making it into a pretty and interesting one, with specific code examples.
Complete rewrites might well occur to improve an interesting but badly posed question and Jeff Atwood rule of the thumb is:
You edit to make things better, clearer, more effective -- never to change meaning.
In this instance, it is quite an exercise of imagination to asses what was the specific OP's problem and whether the edit complies to it. And, without an instrument to remotely read OP's mind, we cannot prove the edit matched with their intended meaning.
Without such a proof, the edit is to be rejected and the original questions is doomed to be deleted. Also there is the possibility that knowledgable users add good answers to the very poor question (perhaps possible good answers, given the broadness of the OP).
In these instances, we risk of throwing the baby out with the bathwater, that is, we would remain with a deleted or anyway worthless question cluttering SO, while we might have had a pretty question with pretty answers.
What is, then, the proper course of action here?