I would really like to accept this answer, but as I explained in comments there, it solves my problem by telling me that I should do something different from what I was doing which led me to ask the question. In other words it solves the root problem I had but not the problem the question asks about.
Basically, I wanted to autoscale a chart's Y axis when the chart is scrolled, so I thought I needed to detect the horizontal visible area, so I asked how to detect the visible area and I happened to mention why (if I didn't, the question would have been as valid; it was like extra context I gave, actually unnecessary for the question).
User @teylyn wrote that if my final goal was to autoscale, I'd be better off using another approach, which happens not to require to detect the visible area at all. But my question was about detecting the visible area, and future users will find that question when they search about visibility detection.
What's appropriate here ? My doubt that accepting that answer might be incorrect is due to the above, but if I do that (not accept that answer) it would mean that the answer's author loses points due to having been too helpful, which doesn't exactly feel right.
In this specific case I also have the option of accepting another answer from the same user, which does directly address my original question, but it's not the one that solves my root problem; it's the one that solves the problem the question asks about. It would be a way to give the author the well deserved points but it totally feels like a hack.
This meta answer by @Sobrique seems to indicate that I should not accept that answer, and although I think that the term supplicant used there was uncalled for and that it doesn't fit my question, the rest does seem to fit my case.
But the help center says Choose one answer that you believe is the best solution to your problem. and I don't know if it refers to the root problem or to the derived problem that the question asks about.
Please advise.