It seems like overkill to worry about Community Wiki here.
I think your intended use of Community Wiki fits with the actual intention of the feature, but I also think that the feature has flaws that have been discussed on site Metas and Meta Stack Exchange. Not to mention that there are newer and better tools on Stack Overflow (like Documentation). On other sites, that don't have Documentation and where a topic is much too big for a tag wiki entry, then I think you can probably get away with a Community Wiki post.
The biggest problem with your idea is ensuring clean attribution of other people's work. Even though you are posting it on Stack Overflow, my understanding is that you are creating a new work and need to abide by the CC-BY-SA rules for attributing each author of an existing post that you put into it. That could get pretty verbose and make a post harder to read.
It's OK to have multiple answers. I would suspect on most sites, there are multiple correct answers to many (if not all) questions, plus different people's experiences may offer slightly different perspectives. The tour addresses this well - the good answers are voted up (and it's implied that the bad/wrong/incomplete answers are voted down) and the accepted answer does not indicate the best or right answer, but the one that helped the asker.
In this specific instance, I'd say that the question is too broad. The question doesn't mention a specific Markdown implementation, and many of the answers are unique to a particular implementation - some don't even say which implementation(s) they are valid in. Given the tools we have now, this may be better suited to Documentation (which has a Markdown topic).
If there was a question like this on Programmers, I'd probably use the moderator lock to create a single Community Wiki answer. The question is not one I would want deleted (it's averaging almost 45k views per year and is still receiving attention), but isn't a good example of a question I want to see (it doesn't specify enough about the environment and is attracting a larger number of answers). I'm not sure if this is a viable solution on Stack Overflow, though, due to size and volume.