Accepting an answer is the OP prerogative, an they can accept any answer they feel it helped them the most.
As voting, it is a personal privilege and can't be contested unless there is a case of abuse.
Going beyond the "the OP is free to do what they want with their acceptance mark", timing in answers is not relevant at all to determine an answer's helpfulness or quality.
While fast answers are nice, great answers are way better.
And better answers stand a greater chance to be more useful to the questioner, and from that it follows that they are more likely to be accepted.
(Or not, because no matter what the questioner is free to accept any answer they want. The check-mark supposed to signify "this answer helped me the most", but we can't force anyone's choice, nor read anyone's mind.)
Also, please try not to tell users things like this:
That is simply not true, and you should not try to teach new users to value promptness over quality or thoroughness.
In the linked example, I do not think the accepted answer is really ripping off the ideas posted on previous answers, as posting a more complete version of a very simple answer.
This could serve to encourage you to post more in-depth answers in the future instead of quickly dumping a few lines of code.
I do not think your answer is bad in any way (and you've already got more points thanks to votes than the accepted answer did), but you could have spent a couple more minutes writing an explanation that is not only more useful for the OP, but generally speaking more useful for future readers.