This question (screenshots below) that I answered a few weeks ago was closed as a typo and deleted earlier today.
And here's my answer:
I can understand why the question could be seen as being caused by a typo and so subsequently closed, however, I don't think that deletion would be warranted. The Help Center says:
Closed questions that are of no lasting value whatsoever should be deleted.
Before voting to delete, please check whether there are any good answers; if so, then the question should be flagged for moderator attention as a potential merge candidate. We don't like to lose great answers!
I feel that my answer would count as "any good answer" and therefore wouldn't deserve deletion. Two users indicated that my answer was helpful by upvoting it and my answer had no downvotes indicating otherwise (furthermore, neither of those users was OP as they didn't have voting privileges).
So was deleting this question the right decision? If so, then why has the "any good answers" criteria not been met in this case?
[
and]
" is a "great answer" worth salvaging. Perhaps you want to extend your reasoning on that? Just going by score isn't that convincing: At leat three people felt the Q&A was worth deleting, more than the two upvoters. Plus, I'm guessing the upvoters were the other two people that felt answering an off-topic question was the right thing to do...random.randint([0, 2])
, exactly what do you expect this to mean? In particular, what effect do you expect the[]
to have?"