From details you posted it looks like deletion prevented the question from gaining even more downvotes - which in turn made it easier to reopen in case if asker manages to sufficiently improve and generally, would prevent imposing harder asking rate limits if they choose to do nothing about it.
From this perspective one can argue that in specific case you describe, deletion made life easier for the asker.
One is of course free to think otherwise but I personally, as an asker, having some of my questions deleted like that, would really prefer this way. It is just more convenient to be able to edit your question without being bombed by downvotes and chatty comments (and flag or ask at meta to undelete and reopen after I'm done).
To make sure that my understanding of how system works is correct, I revisited one of my own deleted questions (at another site) and checked that I am able to do as described above. I found that I already tested this about 3 years ago and it worked fine back then and I was still able to edit my question now.
One difference I noticed compared to my testing 3 years ago is "Submit for reopening" check box (known non-critical issue reported at MSE). Another thing I saw and liked was how much easier it became to discover my deleted question due to this recent feature - now that was really convenient.
For comparison, this is how similar quick deletions were explained by a moderator at another site meta:
If you read the Help Center's page about what you can ask about here prior to posting, you would see that some questions aren't a good fit for this environment... your question fell into one of the topics that was specifically deemed by our community to be off-topic and documented as such in the Help Center... We have no obligation to keep your question around if it doesn't meet our community's standards. That's how it works here. Next time, you should read a site's rules and standards before posting your question.