You should be posting an answer if you think that your answer would be a helpful addition to future readers of the question. You're free to use whatever criteria you personally feel is appropriate in determining what you think "helpful" means. If you think that performance is all that matters, and that a less performant solution isn't helpful, you can make that decision. If you feel that your answer is clearer, easier to understand, applicable to a wider range of possible readers or additional situations, or any other criteria besides performance, then by all means, post your answer.
If you think that your answer has no benefits to readers beyond what's already conveyed in the other answers, then don't post it. If even you don't think that it would be useful to other people, then that's not a very good sign for its usefulness for others.
Note that if you feel there are very small/minor problems with other answers, you could consider either editing them or commenting on them such that they can address whatever problems you feel that they have. That wouldn't be appropriate for an entirely different approach to solving the problem, as you mentioned (if you feel that other approach is useful for readers, that merits its own answer) but if you feel a portion of an existing answer is simply unclear (or less clear than it could be), or just missing a small detail, it doesn't always require a whole new answer.
numpy
/pandas
library-based answers topython
questions. Funnily enough, the user sometimes ends up accepting these answers even when they are downvoted.