Hi Carla!
A good way to understand what kind of forces a concrete deck is exposed to, is to see the deck as an board which ends are placed on two pallets.
Without any force from underneath, the board will bend downwards in the middle. This is what happens to your deck when you strain it with weight. with that scenario is it stretch in the downside of the cast and preassure in the top.
Without weight on the deck is the relation vice versa, since you always have preassure from the ground. So then the stretch is on the upper layer of the cast and the preassure in the lower layer

are you with me ........ Remember that concrete can whistand enormous amounts of pressure but not any stretch, almost! it's there the rebars comes in.
For the reasons above a proper made deck should have rebars in two layers of the cast and not just one........ with that being said many decks are poured with just one layer and doing ok anyway. I myself will use one layer on my deck and will place that on 2/3 of the cast's thickness.
Very importan though for every type of concrete pour, is to slow down the chemical reaction once the pour is made. Best way of doing that is to cover the surface with plastic which you constainusly keep wet with water, for as long as you can, the longer the better. That is an efffective way to avoid superficial cracks in the topplayer. How you finish the surface after it's poured is also important, just as the concrete mix itself. A good thumb of rule for that is..... less water in the mix, results in less shrinking and for that reason less intentions for the concrete to crack.
I have to add that I'm totally self taught when it comes to concrete, so take my advice for what they are, even if I know that they are pretty accurate
//Mats