I think that the bulk of your comment was pretty welcoming and doesn't need much help but if you're looking for a way to improve it, I think it can definitely be done.
When I write comments for users (obviously not here on SO), I try to focus on what they can do rather than what they shouldn't do. You get to that, eventually, which is really great, but you start out by calling the OP out and (perhaps passively) accusing them of asking the site to write code for them.
StackOverflow is not a code writing service. You are expected to write the code yourself.
I can understand what you're getting at but you've used up some of your limited characters telling them something that's not helping them fix their problem. What these words mean to you may not be the same as what they mean to others and they sound pretty harsh to me. To use an absurd example:
Couple walks into a Mexican restaurant, sits down, peruses the menu.
Waiter: Welcome, may I take your order?
Husband: I'm not really seeing anything on your menu I like, do you have sushi?‡
Waiter: We are not a sushi restaurant; you have to pick something off the menu.
This is true... and it's pretty silly for the Husband to have even asked for sushi at all... but it's not really service-oriented or welcoming. Now, we aren't paid to be here... we're just helping out the people who need help but that doesn't mean we can't make a small amount of effort to follow the best practices of the service industry... so, instead, he might say:
Waiter: Well, we have ceviche, which has some similar elements. This is where you can find the description on the menu but that's the closest we can manage. Let me know if you have any questions.
So, here he's letting them know an option that is possible and that it's similar to what they're asking, giving them access to the information to learn about what that is while clarifying that it's the only option and then opening it up for additional assistance if needed.
So, in a comment situation, if there's something specific you can suggest that will improve their question, make that suggestion. Link to the MVCE post so that they don't have to find it themselves... but don't get link-happy and post 2-3 comments with a dozen links in them, either. It's better to help them in stages than to overwhelm them with information they'll have trouble absorbing.
Start with a greeting. I know it's dumb and silly looking but it can mean a lot and take a lot of the edge off and, while not OK in posts, is fine in comments. With users who are clearly posting their first or near first question, I try to say "Welcome" to them, or "Welcome to [sitename]". Heck, if you're using the AutoComments script, it does it for you.
Speaking of AutoComments... if you're using them, great... but I've found, over time, that while they're a good repository for helpful links, if you don't edit the comment to make it specific to the needs of the post you're commenting on, it's not going to be as helpful as it could be. So, use the AutoComments but also don't hesitate to tailor them to the post you're commenting on.
It's unlikely that you'll be able to make everyone feel welcome but there are always rough edges to grind off that will increase the likelihood of them feeling welcome. Yes, all of this takes more effort. I'm sorry about that... but once you've done it a few times, it really does become much easier and eventually it becomes sort of second-nature. Well, that's what seven years in retail did for me, anyway.
‡ - OK, so on SO it might be more like "I haven't read the menu yet but, do you have sushi?"