My general approach to this is written in this answer:
What someone considers to be an outdated or obsolete answer may not
necessarily be outdated for others.
There is a lot of value in keeping track of what the solutions were
for past versions of libraries, software, systems, ...
It's not because you're able to run the latest bleeding edge version
of the tools you're using that everybody will.
There are such things as legacy systems. Sometimes, you just can't
upgrade, or make the choice not to upgrade to prevent other problems
(cost, side-effects, ...). (We're all writing today the legacy systems
of tomorrow.)
In general, I'd add a second answer and leave a comment or editor's
note on the old answer, without
downvoting.
However, what to do may need to be adjusted on a case-by-case basis. This problem is also similar to this question.
When all the answers are no longer relevant with newer versions of the framework or tools involved, it's probably worth editing the question itself to say "up to version X". Otherwise, leaving a quick editor's note in the answer to mention that some only apply to version X is probably a good idea.
After that, it's up to the reader to make the right move. In general, when reading an answer with a 5-year old timestamp, a good software developer should know that they should dig deeper and read other answers or try to find more recent documentation.