tl;dr: the post is NAA, but the flag handling UI doesn't give enough context to determine that in this particular case.
There are two separate issues to consider here:
- Is the post not-an-answer?
- Is the not-an-answer flag the right one?
Nobody here is disputing that the post is not an answer to the question. It is, in fact, not even a comment to the question. It should, as you rightly pointed out, be a comment to the respective answer it is addressing.
However, the user interface for dealing with NAA flags is very restricted, in that it only shows the flagged post and nothing else. In your question and the comments, you describe why the post is not-an-answer: because the code it wants to correct doesn't even appear in the question and instead is code from another answer. Note that in order to come to the determination that the post is, in fact, NAA, you needed to examine three separate posts: the post in question, the question, and the other answer. None of the latter two are available to the person handling the NAA flag.
Thus, one should only use the NAA flag for posts that cannot possibly be an answer to any imaginable question. In other words: if you can construct a possible question to which this answer is an answer, then an NAA flag is not the right choice, because the person handling the flag has no way of knowing if this answer was posted as a response to exactly that hypothetical question or not.
The correct flag would be a custom mod flag with an explanation why this post is NAA.
this code
tothat code
" is an answer. After all, NAA flags are only for posts that don't attempt to answer any question at all and "Change your code this way" definitely looks like it's trying to answer something.