Choosing to flag as Not an Answer can be a problem when the issue is not cut and dry. Because there is no explanation possible (except by leaving a comment under the post) it will be declined more often than not, unless it is obvious why the post was flagged. This also goes for answers that appear to answer the question. The most successful "Not an answer" flags are the ones in which the answer is little more than gibberish, a thank you comment, a follow up question, or something completely unrelated to programming.
This is compounded by the fact that these flags go both to the community via the Low Quality Review Queue, and to the Moderators, so you will see inconsistent results depending on who responds to the flag. In my experience, Moderators tend to be more forgiving than the community when evaluating posts, so you might have success flagging a single post like that as not an answer, but if you do it often, you will see mixed results.
When selecting an "Other" flag, explanation is a priority. You might get lucky and your flag is seen by a moderator who is a subject matter expert (or at least has some experience) in the topic at hand. If so, they will probably see the same thing you do and act accordingly.
However, more often than not, you are going to get a moderator who does not know the material well enough to evaluate, and in some obscure tags they might not have a clue. As the flagger, you should take the time to lay out the situation for the moderator as briefly as you can. Tell them what (exactly) is wrong with the post and why it does't conform to our guidelines. You also should tell them what you expect them to do. Do you want them to convert it to a comment? Do you want them to delete the post? Do you want them to do something else?