Heavily inspired by this question, suggesting a change to the text of the NAA flag to include the typical canned response for mis-used NAA flags ("The (NAA|Not an Answer) flag should not be used to indicate technical inaccuracies, or an altogether wrong answer"), I have a slightly different suggestion.
For my own experience my confusion stemmed entirely from the text of that canned response. I'm more than happy to learn and to update my understanding of how the community works, and declined flags are part of that, but my thought process, upon seeing a fairly highly upvoted answer that was correct but irrelevant to the question went something like:
- This doesn't answer the question - it's clearly a response to some of the other answers here. It should either be a self-answer to a different question, or a comment on those other answers.
- Raise a NAA flag.
- "declined - flags should not be used to indicate technical inaccuracies, or an altogether wrong answer"
- Ah, the moderator has misunderstood my intent with that flag; I didn't mean it was inaccurate or wrong, I just meant that it doesn't answer this question. I'll try to explain better in a custom flag.
- "declined - flags should not be used to indicate technical inaccuracies, or an altogether wrong answer"
- What? No, that's not what I'm saying. I guess I'll have to ask in Meta to understand.
Only after asking in Meta, did I discover that the community has decided that an answer includes anything that answers a question that could conceivably be on topic on SO, no matter how irrelevant.
I was confused, because people kept repeating the concepts of "technical inaccuracies" and "wrong answer", neither of which applied to the answer I was flagging. It felt like people were misunderstanding my reason for the flag.
Granted, a bit more careful searching of Meta first would probably have highlighted this to me, but because searching for anything related to NAA has so many results, I couldn't reasonably read them all, and none of the ones that I did read seemed to be describing the scenario of an irrelevant or off-topic answer.
If the decline reason had said something more like:
declined - flags should not be used to indicate technical inaccuracies, or an irrelevant or altogether wrong answer
I'd have learned my mistake from the first decline, saving yet another Meta post and a bunch of mod's time trying to explain it to me. If I was still confused, I'd at least have a more convenient search string for Meta.
I appreciate that this might be a relatively rare case, but it's such a small change that it hardly seems to have any downside, and (IMHO) it makes the canned text more accurately represent the reason for the decline.