You can comment using @editor to communicate with the editor if necessary but I don't feel that it is at all. If was a good edit, you will benefiting of it. It obviously doesn't change the main point of your answer:
since you use 2fa, you need a Personal Access Token.
The edit just expanded the answer in the same vein without changing at all the meaning: it still explains why it happens and how to fix it. The only thing added was an example of sorts.
I were you, I would leave it as is. It is a leap improvement of the content and in the long run, you and others will be benefiting from it.
Just for fun I opened the timeline, this is what I saw:
today votes daily summary N/A Up: 1 Down: 0
2 days ago votes daily summary N/A Up: 1 Down: 0
2 days ago comment added kernix @Oliver, saved me a lot of frustration - you rock! :)
May 3 votes daily summary N/A Up: 1 Down: 0
May 3 at 23:36 history edited Beau Smith Added hierarchy, example, numbered steps, and more explanation.
Since the edit, it has only got upvotes and thank you comments:
@Oliver, saved me a lot of frustration - you rock! :)
It's clear that the answer is still helpful.
@name
, see How do comment @replies work?