By convention, reserve flagging questions and answers for things that the community cannot deal with itself.
What this translates to is pretty simple; if an action taken by someone in the community cannot remedy a problem with a post, then flagging the content should be done.
This manifests itself in several ways:
- The post is overly and wantonly offensive - makes sense to flag for moderator intervention to be sure that they get the time out they deserve.
- The post is advertising a product without any attempt to answer the question - makes sense to flag it as spam.
Also note that these are "standard" flags. Elect to use the custom moderator flags for a situation that requires significant detail and requires elaboration; for example, an edit war (multiple edits and rollbacks).
Typically, though, the community can handle the vast majority of actions needed to keep the site in functioning order.
- Bad answer? Downvote it!
- Poor question? Downvote it!
- Question seems to be a typo? Close it as a typo!
- Question seems to be too broad? Close it as too broad!
- Poorly formatted question? Edit it (but be careful to not break the code by accident)!
Moderators don't need to be involved in anything like the above and flagging for their attention is counterproductive.
For your examples...
- The first question could probably be closed for a couple of reasons: we don't support Plunker, and the problem likely couldn't be reproduced again.
- The second question is pretty vague so it's tough to figure out what the OP is asking. You could elect to close that as "too broad" and leave a comment asking the OP to be explicit about how they're installing MySQL. It's something that developers use so I don't necessarily see this question as being off-topic, although there are differing schools of thought on this.
- The question-and-answer combination looks fine to me and isn't worth downvoting or close-voting. Someone asked a question. They got an answer. It doesn't seem like it's a typo. We have no close reason for "beginner" questions, and shoehorning a reason into this space does more harm than good.