It's old, but I saw this answer today. It is incorrect, and someone had submitted a minor edit that that fixed it and had been approved.
This edit was then rolled back, with the following comment left:
I did a roll-back because, although the answer itself may be wrong, it is still a genuine answer. If you (correctly) think the answer is wrong, you have two options: 1) add a comment or 2) add a new answer (or do both). Don't change someone's answer to such that it says something completely different from what was intended by the author.
While I understand that we can downvote and/or flag answers (e.g. as this answer points out) if it is just a simple and minor error on the part of the answerer (in this case, one word), then shouldn't a correction be accepted?
Obviously re-writing an answer from scratch changes the entire nature of it. In that case you write your own answer and downvote / flag.
This may be a case that an absolute rule along the lines of minor edits only
(e.g. grammar, spelling, typo corrections) is preferable, however I would say that the edit did not violate the following:
"This edit changes too much in the original post; the original meaning or intent of the post would be lost"
addendum: for code syntax corrections, it seems that this is accepted behaviour (see this answer). Why would this not be the case here?
Edit: I should probably point out that the (currently incorrect answer) has upvotes, which could lead to someone (not reading the comment) thinking that it is correct.