tl;dr
Don't edit the original code. Make a new answer, and link to it (in a comment) from the original answer, and vice versa. Don't hide your potentially valuable new information in a comment that links to another castle site.
Well-written code should be self-explanatory, requiring few (or no) comments, and those comments should only be to explain why the code is performing a particular action ("why" comments). Comments that explain the action itself ("what" comments) should be avoided, since a reader competent in the language should not need such comments and will just see them as clutter. ("What" comments may sometimes be required to explain the action of an obscure algorithm, including code that uses "clever" tricks for optimization reasons).
However, newbies, by definition, are not yet competent in the language, are still coming to grips with the syntax and the facilities of the language, and may have great difficulty in understanding code that looks straight-forward to experienced programmers, especially if this is their first language and they have not yet acquired the mental skills that experienced programmers take for granted. When I'm answering newbie questions I try to explain what my code does as clearly as possible in the accompanying text and I also tend to annotate my code liberally with both "why" and "what" comments, and add explanations in the accompanying text.
If someone feels that my code needs further explanation I'd prefer that they communicate with me via comments, and I'll improve my answer. IMHO, making substantial edits to someone else's answer (i.e., edits that change the original intent of the author) should only be done as a matter of last recourse.
[ Aside:
If you simply disagree with an answer (and that includes believing that it's technically incorrect) then you certainly should not edit it, you should write your own answer. OTOH, if the answer is potentially dangerous due to technical errors and the original answerer is no longer around (or is not responding to comments) then it may be necessary to edit it. Of course, minor edits (like correcting typos or improving formatting) are ok, but even then I think it's more polite to submit a suggestion to the author via comments first. ]
I would not be happy with someone adding code comments to my answer, especially if they were a less competent programmer than me. :) OTOH, newbies can often relate well to the problems of other newbies, so the newbie perspective can fill in gaps that the more experienced programmer may not even notice.
So if someone wants to create a new answer that contains an annotated version of my code, with extra text and code comments designed to help other newbies, I'm more than happy for them to do that (in fact, I'd probably be a little flattered), as long as they make it clear to future readers that their answer is derived from mine. I would appreciate it if they left me a comment on my answer linking to their answer; that comment will help future readers to find their post.
If they do a good job, I'll probably give them an upvote. But if they do a bad job, be prepared for a barrage of comments and potential downvotes. :evil grin:
maybe I make higher quality answers than you do
- there is no call for that sort of thing here, since it sounds rather elitist. Be nice!