Right now, on Teams, the same rules for question deletion seem to be required as on any site (from the FAQ on MSE for post deletion):
You can't delete your own question when it:
- has an answer with upvotes (even if it has a net negative score)
- has an accepted answer
- has multiple answers (even if there are no upvotes)
- has an answer with an awarded bounty
I tried to delete an answered question of mine today and got the same exact series of popups that you get on any site:
The "do you really want to do this":
I'm pretty sure that the information here isn't correct regarding being blocked from asking questions if you delete answered ones... and if it is - why would it be?
When the post meets one of the bullets above, despite clicking "Delete Question", a red popup appears and chastises you for trying to delete the question:
Apparently, this order of events is intentionally chosen to teach users about when deletion is appropriate with the implication that they'd just flag the question for deletion if they couldn't do it themselves... but you can't flag things on Teams, so this isn't really of concern.
So, should this chain of events still be the expected process on Teams? Can/should these popups be adjusted so that they reflect the actual process?
With no deletion privilege or even close voting process (other than duplicates), the Teams infrastructure seems to imply that all questions asked, ever, will be perfectly acceptable for the Team. The only people who can override this are the Admins and there's no way to notify them since there's no flagging. Is this how Teams should work?