I flagged a couple of comments on this question as "no longer needed" because I thought they were obsolete. The comments don't seem to contain any information that isn't in the accepted answer, but the flags were declined.
I'm not asking this question to complain about the flags being declined; it's not a big deal and I don't like complaining. But it made me curious about how flag-handling works. I know mods have a ton of them to deal with so they can't spend that much time on each one. But now with just one flag reason, it seems like it can't be as obvious why something was flagged in some cases.
I wondered if the flags were declined because they were handled like one of the old "not constructive" flags, and the comments were constructive, at least initially. It really doesn't look like there's anything wrong with them unless you can see that they're included in the answer, and therefore obsolete, but I don't know if the answers are even displayed while a flag on a comment on a question is being reviewed.
If they aren't, what would be the best way to indicate that I'm flagging a question comment because it's obsolete due to being included in the answer? An "in need of moderator intervention" flag seems like overkill, but "no longer needed" may not be expressive enough in this case.
On the other hand, should I just avoid flagging comments like that in the first place? Maybe I'm operating under false assumptions and they are actually useful even though they seem redundant to me (or at least not unuseful enough to waste people's time getting rid of them)?