Editing others answers
I would never make substantial edits an non-community answer if it can be solved by a comment where I ask the author to solve the issue themself. That's step one. Exceptions to this, is things like small errors and formatting and cosmetic stuff and such.
I very rarely edit others answers. It happens, but I really hesitate to do that. How likely I am to edit someone else answer depends on a variety of factors. Age is one of them. I'm more likely to edit an old answer. And I especially avoid editing answers that are less than 30 minutes, because it's really annoying to have your answer edited while you're still editing it. Another thing is how popular the answer is, and how many other answers there are. If a highly upvoted answer to a question with a lot of answers, is missing information, it's rarely any point in adding another answer. That were the reasoning when I added a TL;DR to don't cast malloc
Stealing code or not and how to do it if you do it
But in the majority of cases, I would not edit someone else answer to add a lengthy explanation. So lets go over to how you do with others code. It depends on the situation, but sometimes I have written answers like this:
Others have already shown how it's done, but <explanation>
And just for completeness, here is a working code example: <code>
But you could just as well post a link to that answer
I often cite the source when I copy code. It can be another answer or a completely different site. However, I usually don't do it when there's basically only one way to do it. Let's say that the question is "How do I error check malloc?", then I would not cite a source for a snippet like this:
int *p = malloc(sizeof *p * size);
if(!p)
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
because this is pretty much how it's done. It's a real school book example. I would not blame anyone "stealing" a snippet like that anymore than I would blame anyone who "steals" a recipe for hard boiled eggs that says "Boil the eggs for 8 minutes".
Often when it comes to easy snippets like this, I just write the code from scratch. If it ends up almost identical to another answer, then so be it.
Also, remember that although working code examples can be good, they are not strictly needed. Especially not if the answer itself provides all information needed to construct such an example. Let's go back to my previous example with the question "How do I error check malloc?". I would say that this answer is good enough, even though a code example would make it better:
Upon failure, malloc returns a NULL pointer. So whenever you have made a call to malloc and assigned it to a pointer, then compare the pointer to NULL. If it's NULL, then an error has occurred and you need to handle it. How you do it is up to you. One option is to simply exit the program.
Accepted answers
TBH, I would not really care if someone has to choose between two answers. It does not really matter. Actually, I prefer if people not use that feature at all. It's flawed. One single user should not have the power to pin an answer to the top.