I recently flagged this answer for being low-quality and it was declined with the following message/reason:
declined - flags should not be used to indicate technical inaccuracies, or an altogether wrong answer
This to me had nothing to do with "technical inaccuracies" or a "wrong answer" and it wasn't what it was about, therefore I have to counter-decline that as being a valid answer for my flag.
Oh sure it solved the question since the OP accepted the answer, but the question is; "why"?
To me a "Try this" doesn't mean much. It's poor and doesn't explain what the fault was in the OP's code.
The OP states (that I fixed a few typos in an edit):
I think that this is the way, but something is wrong and I don't know what.
To me, that says that they want to know what they did wrong; correct me if I'm wrong.
The other answer in the same question, at least shows some explanation.
Since there is no flag to explicitly state the reason for a VLQ flag, the only one available to do that would have been the one for moderation, and that would have also been declined.
"Try this" IMHO will always be of very low-quality. So, why is it that these "Try this" answers keep getting passed VLQ flags?
Should I have posted a comment under the answer in asking them "why they should try that"?
And if they would not have responded with a fair answer (and/or expanded on their answer) only then I should have flagged as VLQ? At least I'd of had a comment to support my concern and to help keep what Stack Overflow as I've been told to be, a place of "quality" questions and answers.
After all, there is always or usually is a "reason", right?
Potential future visitors (new coders) to the question/answer(s) would probably also like to know where the faults were.