The flag was declined quite a while ago now, but it appears to have been rejected because the answer appeared to be useful. Indeed, some digging reveals that the asker did indeed find his answer buried in the "Community Additions" section of that MSDN article.
Granted, nothing in the answer even hints at the real solution (which the asker perplexingly edited into his question) nor even at its location (after the end of the article proper). It's an incredibly fragile, frustratingly cagey way to write an answer... And that's not even getting into the fact that the author of that answer himself is long ago deleted and can do nothing to fix it, nor the reasons for his deletion.
Personally, I would've deleted that answer. In fact, I've now done so purely to allow better answers to rise to the top of the post (and I've also fabricated an answer on behalf of the asker to contain the actual solution referenced by that post).
But there are many opinions on this, and I respect that some moderators may hesitate to take such drastic action. In these cases, you can still do much good by treating such an answer as an invitation to build a real answer out of the hints and pointers scattered around the thread; the answer I fabricated could've just as well been edited into the accepted answer with much the same results.