Depending on how sure I was of the correctness of my edit (and how much time I happened to have on my hands to follow the matter), I would either add a comment stating that step so-and-so
- may be superfluous in the following circumstances, which I verified: ...
- may be superfluous.
- is, I believe, superfluous
- is superfluous according to documentation:
http://...
After a suitable time to allow the original poster to verify and/or refute my claim and/or provide an even better or more comprehensive answer, I might also edit the answer itself so that it reads, say,
- step 4
- step 5 -- update: this may be superfluous (see comments)
- step 6
This way, whoever reads the answer and can't be bothered to also read the comments before blindly following the recipe has, at least, a reasonable chance of not doing something superfluous.
Of course, the more important or dire the consequences, the more I would go from "non-intervention" to "quick-intervention".
Should my claim be refused (not refuted) and assuming I cared (which I mostly do), I might also/instead supply an answer of my own, with my own setup and test cases. This way, if it happens that the step in question is superfluous in some setups but not in others, readers would get a chance of trying both solutions. If I just removed the step, I'd be doing a favour to anyone with a setup compatible to mine... but everyone else wouldn't thank me.
Additionally (I had this happen to me a couple of times), indicating that a step may be superfluous can serve as a telltale that a given process or subsystem has a not-so-well-defined behaviour regarding some specific component. This in turn could help people sorting out a problem with that component, even if they have little use for the specific solution.
Giving both pro and con about the extra step yields more benefit than giving either alone.
sass
is no longer necessary? If so, then either accumulate 50 reputation and leave a comment under the answer or, alternately, post your own answer with your references about the up-to-date information. That may give you enough rep to comment next time around.