Tangentially related to this question, but recently I've been presented with a situation in which I spent a while asking for clarifications from a user on a question in order to better answer them.
This is typically the process for lower-quality questions, I've found, but I frequently see meta posts about turning low-quality questions into higher quality questions through edits and clarifications.
Unfortunately, in my case, the user seemed to get to their answer through the discussion in the comments, and, having come to the solution, deleted their question instead of posting an answer to the issue they were experiencing.
In this particular case, I believe there was a question to be answered still remaining, but the asker seemed to leave with no comments after they came to a conclusion.
My question is this: Is there any way that we can prevent users from deleting as soon as they get an answer? It seems like a way to rob users of time and reputation if they were giving a genuine attempt to help.
As I understand it, you cannot delete a question after an answer has been posted without sufficient approval, but that feels like anyone involved in helping the user come to a solution before then has just wasted their time.
This always seems like an inherent risk with answering questions, especially if they're lower quality, and I could always ask the question myself and answer it, provided I somehow saved all the details of the question before it was deleted (I didn't), but it still feels like a way to "game" the system.