I'm one of the people who flagged it as "Not An Answer". Maybe I can shed some light on why I did so.
However, the reason why my question got posted to SO in the first place is that I am obviously not searching well enough in order to pinpoint the exact problem I am trying to find. Specifically, I am using words vastly different from others, due to the lack of knowledge of jargon, or rather, the lack of knowledge on whether this jargon even exists. I am missing duplicates because I have poor searching skills.
I based my flag on the above paragraph. The OP was asking how to do better research, which the answer doesn't address. It says to do more research, not how to do better research. Simply doing more bad research isn't often going to find better answers.
This is one of those "quantity vs quality" problems.
Doing research without knowing the jargon can miss a considerable amount of things. One of the things I've learned when doing research is to target where to do the research, and research usually includes asking questions. Asking the correct person the right question can end hours or days of research, and knowing who that "correct person" is part of knowing how to research. And some of those questions can lead to learning the jargon so other questions and research can be done better.
Stack Overflow and related sites are often the target for many topics, as it is a vast resource for answers to problems. It has become that "correct person". And it's open for people to ask questions, so people are going to ask those questions. Even a question like "Hey, do you remember how we fixed that thing X years ago?" is a reasonable question. And duplicate questions aren't necessarily a bad thing.
I really hate it when people suggest to not ask a question simply to avoid downvotes or to avoid a question being a duplicate, as comments on this thread and other places in Meta have said. The Only Stupid Question is the One You Don’t Ask. Is "don't ask a question" something a Q&A site really wants to promote? I can definitely understand that there are appropriate questions. And ones that have reasonable research behind them are definitely appropriate, even if it's a duplicate or unpopular, thus gaining downvotes. Or gather the ever-present "drive-by downvoter". However, there's a considerable amount of Meta conversations, Tour, and Help Center talk about what is an "appropriate question". Most of that comes down to personal opinion, including individual interpretation of the Tour, Help Center, and Meta conversations.
The whole reason why this current thread exists is because of those interpretations. This same "don't ask questions" theme is present in the answer in contention, "Asking a question on Stack Overflow should be the last resort". I definitely agree that a reasonable amount of research should be done before posting a question, but "last resort" is pretty extreme. I've asked questions after hours or days of research when nothing seemed to work and I seemed to be getting repeats or dead-ends, but I still kept looking.
Personal experience
At least one of my questions has gotten opposing feedback about the research I did. The first time I posted the question, I had one high rep user say that I didn't do enough research, and started posting links for me to try, even though I had those exact links in the question. And evidently because of that research, it got downvoted. It eventually got roombaed, but I still needed an answer, so I posted it again verbatim. This time another high rep member said I'd done too much research and needed to be more concise. How can I do more research and show less research while posting more relevant info while also having a shorter question? (People seem to think I'm arguing that I don't want to follow advice, except I'm arguing that I've previously gotten the opposite advice, so how can I follow both?) This new question also has downvotes, even though it's currently at +1.
I bring this up because of the fact that I still kept looking for an answer even after posting the question. I've seen numerous other questions where the OP answers themselves after continuing to do more research.
I also bring up my question to showcase how even high rep members all too often have differing opinions about the rules of what a good question is.
My question also shows that even doing a massive amount of research can still not lead you to an answer. And yet it also looks like a duplicate because of many other people having a similar situation and deciding on solutions that don't work for a particular reason. One of the reasons I posted so many links in my original question is that I didn't want it to instantly be marked as a duplicate. I'd found a bunch of other questions that had answers that worked for the asker, but not for me. And, it turns out, the answer I finally got was one that wasn't suggested anywhere else. It's also a solution I didn't think about using as I didn't know that would actually work, was less complicated than expected, and was explained with an example instead of a comment of "use a makefile", which isn't explanatory at all.
Conclusion
So much of my reasoning for not only downvoting the answer but also flagging to get rid of it is because it's apparently another one of the (many) RTFM Answers that doesn't really answer anything. What good is it to read a book/manual/site if it's not the right one or someone disagrees that it's the right one? What's the point of a Q&A site if questions aren't welcomed?
Stack Overflow/Stack Exchange has tried to make these sites more welcoming to members by the advent of the "be nice" ideology, yet there's still an elitist mentality in many members. I can't tell you how many times I've thought about deleting all my accounts here and never using the site again because of this elitist attitude. Maybe that's not how it's intended, but that's how certain things manifest in text. We all need to be mindful of how things sound when we don't have the speakers tone of voice to hear how it's intended.
And when an answer says "Believe it or not, people learned how to write software before the Internet.", that's pretty conceited. I can't think of too many ways that can be said without it being derogatory.