I declined that flag, and I think I see what happened here. I was operating under the same assumption that gnat posted above, in that I thought that all edits automatically marked "not an answer" flags as helpful. Therefore, I assumed your flag came after the edits and I saw nothing about the final answer that made it worth deleting, particularly since it was accepted by the asker.
However, your flag instead came right after the initial version of the answer and before the two edits that fleshed it out. The edits did not clear your flag, as I had assumed they would, probably because these edits didn't come from review but were made by the poster themselves. Edits of that type don't appear to clear these flags, a case I was not aware of.
That said, I might have still declined the flag, even on the original version of the answer. While short and asking a question, it was still attempting to answer the question by providing a suggestion. I'm not sure that was worth deleting or converting to a comment.
Also, accepting a "not an answer" flag on something makes it eligible as a review audit case, and the audits are based on the current state of an answer. This would make that answer a really bad audit case, so accepting it even knowing the history probably wouldn't be something I'd do.
Sorry about the declined flag, but that's how I saw and acted on this.