Stack Overflow is about getting answers to people with problems. It is incentivized by using Imaginary Internet Points™, because as we all know, people will do anything for imaginary internet points.
If you think you have a better answer, by all means post it. There's no reason to withhold a superior solution simply because you're worried about stealing points from someone else. That said, I'd include a few guidelines.
- Make sure you polish your answer. If you're going to post an answer derived from another user's answer, make sure it's high-quality. If anything, I'd try to make your answer present the same information in a superior way to the original answer. Spending a little extra time formatting and arranging your post will easily justify a little duplicate information.
- Give credit where credit is due. Link to the user who originally posted the helpful answer, and link to the answer itself, too. Make it clear what information is yours and what information was derived from the other answer.
- If you're worried about getting rep from someone else's work, make your answer community wiki. This will both invalidate any accusations of rep-hounding and encourage others to improve the answer further, possibly becoming a "definitive" answer.
So yes, do it! I'd also be careful, though. Here are a couple of possible pitfalls to avoid.
- Make sure your answer stands on its own. Your answer should not depend on the existence of the other answer. Anything can happen to the other answer, and if you're trying to make a new answer, it should be an answer, not a comment.
- Don't sacrifice the clarity of your answer to provide credit to the original answerer. Provide credit as a courtesy, but don't bend over backwards to do so. Part of the point is to format the information as nicely as possible, even if it doesn't fit into the original author's structure.