Personally, I put as much effort into my reviews as the OP seems to have put into their answer. Now before you jump down my throat with a pile of downvotes, let me explain what I mean.
If the answer I am reviewing has any things like formatting, an attempt at mostly correct grammar/spelling, code blocks, an explanation of the code, and/or has been edited, then I will actually look at why this has ended up in a review queue and will generally provide a reason why the answer has been reviewed as closable.
If the answer is something along the lines of
Can yuo show me how 2 get a URL frm a internet paeg. I am usng Firfox and JQUERY on Ubuntu.
I am noob plz help with teh codes.
Thank you in advance
Example
which has none of the above, I generally don't choose a reason.
This is because, personally, I have found that if I choose a reason, the OP seems to think something along the lines of "Someone has read my atrocity and vaguely engaged with it, maybe they can help me do my job/assignment/homework for me" and I get pinged with a either a request for assistance, or a furious demand to explain why I downvoted.
I feel like if I didn't do this, I wouldn't still be reviewing posts. I'd have given up out of frustration.
However if the answer is not someone saying "Have same problem plz help" or posting an entirely different question as an answer) 95% of the time I will provide a reason, because the answerer hasn't got as big a stake in the answer being accepted as a questioner has in getting their question answered, if that makes sense. I feel like they've at least attempted to improve the community, by providing an answer.
TL;DR: Declining to leave a comment is an option for a reason. If you feel like the OP should understand why their answer is not acceptable if they had read the Help Center, then feel free to decline to provide a comment.
bar = ...
instead offoo =...
. I've significantly curtailed my dupehammering lately because of this.