Every book I can put my hands on defines "delta" wing as a shape with no mention of flight characteristics. I am talking about the definition.
My aero engineering class at the USAF academy, and later on courses during fighter pilot training, all contained specific behavioral characteristics that were generally common or similar among pretty much all delta wing designs. The term "delta" wing was applied to any wing ROUGHLY triangular in shape, although a great number of variations such as cranked arrow, ogive delta, clipped delta, etc. were accepted and considered as "delta wings" in general because their performance characteristics were so similar.
Specifically noteworthy were descriptions of how in all of the delta shape variations, the lift generation would SMOOTHLY transition from traditional "airfoil" lift/drag profiles to a profile driven by strong vortices generated from the wing root as AOA increased. While this significantly increased drag, it also dramatically flattened the lift curve, nearly eliminating traditional stalling behavior. While the drag increase could be partially mitigated by features such as a drooped leading edge, combining a delta wing with a traditional horizontal stabilator or canards (lifting, fixed, or free-floating) provides a huge increase in performance and maneuverability. Still, even with a tail or canard, all "delta" style wings (modified, cranked, clipped, whatever) will feature a flat lift curve due to the vortices generated at the wing root.
This is a direct contrast to "swept" wings, which have completely different characteristics at high AOA such as a tendency to tip stall and a much more abrupt "stall" drop-off in lift as AOA is increased.
As for the utterly ignorant statement that a delta wing isn't useful because it has too much drag, take a good look at the B-58 hustler... That's one FAST airplane created with low drag in mind, very well designed for its purpose, and proof positive that a delta wing is sometimes the best (or only) way to achieve performance requirements. That's just as true today as it was 50 years ago.