I sort of know what you mean. I answer a lot of WinForms questions, and I naturally see a lot of snarky comments telling people that WinForms is "obsolete", "old", "useless" technology and that they should switch to WPF. More often than not, these comments are filled with misinformation and a significant amount of hand-waving. We are technical people, our job is to understand and solve technical problems. Just because something newer and flashier comes along doesn't necessarily mean it's better and everything else is old and useless. And it certainly doesn't mean that we can throw up our hands and give up solving the problems that we're presented with, no matter what language/technology they are in.
To be fair, these comments do contain some degree of truth. If you were truly starting over, either on a new project and/or learning a new technology, it would be probably be foolish to start in WinForms, Classic ASP, or a whole host of other such things.
But that is precisely the problem. When these comments bother me is when they're posted on advanced questions from users who clearly know the limits of the technology they're using, but are forced to use it anyway, and are looking for another advanced user to help them work around those limits. In that case, they're just frustrating noise and they should be deleted. I often flag them. I have a suspicion that most of my comment flags are declined, but I don't check back to see.
That said, I think the case in question here is a special one. The one instance where these comments are useful is when you're clearly dealing with someone who is new to the technology. It is very easy to tell from the questions someone is asking that they are a complete novice: they are clueless when it comes to the most simple and fundamental tasks. In the question you linked, he even tells you such explicitly. Those are precisely the people who need to be told "No, don't waste your time learning x. Use y instead, it is better for the following reason(s)."
Mind you, it is still not an answer to their question, but it is perfectly appropriate—even helpful—as a comment. It is just like the people who ask basic C++ questions but are clearly trying to learn from an obsolete book, or one written on C programming. Similar comments are necessary in that case for the newbies. They may honestly not know any better. Or if they do, and are just trying to slog their way through anyway, hoping no one will notice, then you should do them a favor and notice.
Sure, experienced users do sometimes get snarkier than they should. I feel like I can speak authoritatively about this, because I do lots of it myself. If we cross a line, we are sorry and we admit that we were wrong. But please, do cut us some slack—the volume of poor quality questions that we see flood into Stack Overflow on a daily basis, the vast numbers of pathologically helpless askers, and the sheer drudgery of continual moderation tasks really take a toll on our patience. Not to mention other things that may be going on in our lives.
As for the real question being asked here, of what you should have done differently. The best thing to do is not to get into a big fight. If someone has left a comment that is worded differently than you would have worded it, but still helpful, let it alone. If you disagree with that comment, for whatever reason, post your own well-reasoned dissent. But don't get into an argument with the original poster. That serves absolutely no purpose. It just flares tempers, bruises egos, and makes the problem worse. And although it goes without saying, bad questions should be closed. That has little to do with comments.