You seem concerned with the idea that there is useful information in your answer. Consider who will be reading this question in the future, and why.
The future reader is not going to be using the same code as the author of the question. They won't care if the original revision of the question was missing a library import. They're not looking for information about print format specifiers. They don't need to know about the timing of your answer and the edits to the question and so on.
All they want is an answer to the question in the title. Your answer buries this information below several paragraphs of other content, most of which will be irrelevant to your greater audience.
Sure, you expanded your answer later. But the users who downvoted it have no reason to wait around and watch your answer. They have moved on and are not likely to read your edit or give your answer a second thought; or they think it is still not useful because you buried it underneath a bunch of irrelevant points. Either way, there is another answer that directly and concisely provides the information relevant to the majority of this question's audience.
I appreciate your willingness to help identify other problems in the author's understanding but Q&A here are meant for a broader audience. Over time, the author should fade into the background; only the problem itself, as can be found via search engine, remains relevant. With that in mind, I think your answer is not adding any value here. In your situation, I would choose to delete it.