When a casual reviewer sees such a large volume of text being altered and code being added, it is pretty natural for them to reject it outright, without any further consideration. Most of the times, the people reviewing the edit will have no knowledge about the particular domain, and wouldn't be able to tell if the edit was actually good or not. Code changes are generally frowned up on, and are usually rejected unless they're fixing an obvious typo such as a missing semicolon, opening brace etc.
In this case, I think your edit changed the meaning of the post too much, and was substantial enough that it could be posted as an answer on its own. I'd have rejected it too, but perhaps with a more helpful rejection reason like "This edit changes the meaning of the post too much; please post it as a separate answer.".
I understand why you'd think it is not okay to post incomplete answers, but as secretformula notes, partial answers are perfectly alright. To be safe, you can just mention that it is not a complete answer, and is attempting to fix something in another answer. Similar answers have been posted in the past and they were well received. The only thing you need to make sure is that the answer should be able to stand on its own — if your answer needs to use some parts of an existing answer, feel free to quote it. It should be okay as long as you provide attribution to the original author. This way, your answer can stand along even if the original answer gets deleted.
TLDR: If you think it the problem is something minor, leave a comment notifying the original answerer to address the problem. If not, post it as a separate answer (make sure it answers the original question, too).