You are not obligated to accept any answer that is posted to your question.
If someone tells you that, they're trying to get you to accept their answer so that they get 15 extra reputation points.
Only accept the answer that helped you the most or, if none truly helped you, don't accept one at all. Instead, try clarifying your question or telling the answerer(s) in comments why their answer(s) did not help. Of all of the things on Stack Overflow, accepting an answer is one of the things you have the most control over.
Otherwise, a simple upvote will signify a post's usefulness, and if you have multiple answers, it's a way to thank each answerer for their efforts (don't just do it to thank them, though: only upvote if the post is actually useful).
Now, if you come across a post on Stack Overflow that isn't yours and you're looking for a way to tell which answer is the best, votes are generally (not always) a good measure of the best answer: if an answer is upvoted, that usually means that someone who frequents the tag (and therefore likely knows about the topic) upvoted the answer as a way of recognizing its usefulness/correctness.
Another possibility is that someone having the same problem came across it and it solved their problem, so they upvoted it in gratitude. Either way, the answer was upvoted for its positive contribution to the question, so it is likely (but, again, not always) the best answer to the question.
Don't worry about which answer is accepted: as I've mentioned above, the accepted answer is generally the one that helped the OP the most, who may or may not have had the same problem as you. If no answer is accepted, it usually doesn't mean much because the OP either didn't know how to accept an answer or got an answer too quickly to be able to accept it and did not come back after the required waiting period to accept it.