Parliament will not and can not allow the damage that no-deal would wreak. From your continued childish triumphalism, I take it that you are missing the point, that if EU members exercise their right to block any extension of A50, that the only course of action left is to WITHDRAW it entirely
This is of course, the correct answer.
Tbh though, 'yes' would probably have been a valid answer too, in this particular case.
Agree with your general sentiment, but the bad news is that "no deal" is indeed the legal default, without any sort of intervention from the EU and the UK. Yes, May has promised a commons vote on it, but that is irrelevant unless acted upon. i.e. if "no deal" is voted down, something still has to change to avoid it happening, and that is as yet undecided. And in any case, does anyone actually trust May to act if no deal is thrown out? This woman lies and backtracks just about every time she opens her mouth.