This question is based on When should I make edits to code? - from what I can tell, this situation isn't covered by it.
What did I do wrong here? I thought I was operating under SO best-practices, but there was clear and swift pushback on my actions.
More importantly for future readers: Is it discouraged to edit an answer's code to make it more performant, if those edits don't change the result nor formatting of the code?
When trying to find a solution to a warning in Xcode, I found this question: How to resolve: 'keyWindow' was deprecated in iOS 13.0
In reading through the answers, I saw that some were very inefficient, and some were somewhat inefficient, iterating through collections multiple times when one iteration would suffice. Remembering guidelines for when to edit code, I edited two answers to improve their performance, making sure to maintain the original author's intent and the code's behavior. Here's the paragraph I had in mind when doing this:
If changing the syntax errors or typos would result in the code doing something other than what the answer says it will, consider creating a comment or a separate answer explaining your change. If posting another answer with only that change seems like it won't provide added value to future visitors, it probably doesn't change logic or functionality and should be an edit instead.
After doing this, I found another answer to the same question whose code was identical to the edit I made to one of these. Since the general advice is to "try to avoid providing 'answers' that are [...] duplicates of existing answers", and since the Not an answer flag's description reads "[...] It should possibly be an edit, a comment, [...], or deleted altogether.", and keeping in mind the above paragraph, I flagged this (and a couple others) as "Not an answer", since I believe they would be better-suited as edits. I made sure to leave comments on these answers explaining my reasoning, some of which have since been deleted.
Through these edits and flags, I kept in mind this advice from those guidelines:
Answers are intended to be resources for future visitors
Knowing my experience trying to solve an issue, I would really rather see one working answer using a given approach, knowing it's been edited to be the best it can be, and I would rather not see two or more conflicting answers, then try to figure out which contains the best code and why. I know that, because so few would be willing to weigh the pros and cons of each individual answer, and would be much more likely to just take the accepted or most-voted answer's code and move on, I didn't want such inefficient code to be copy-pasted into an untold number of codebases. Hence why I felt inclined to edit those accepted/upvoted/oldest answers, and flag those which I saw as the same answer with some basic edits applied.
I was then told, very definitively, that my comments, my flags, and one of my edits were not welcome: