I declined the flags you raised on this. I'm happy to explain my rationale, but don't take this as creating or implying any sort of general rule.
In the motivating case, the user asked you a follow-up question, you asked him to clarify, he did, and then you replied with a quick answer. That you were able to reply with a quick answer basically served as confirmation that it was a "simple" follow-up question, and thus a legitimate use of comments.
The user then asked yet another follow-up question, conceding that that one may have been off-topic. You responded to that by linking him to a Q&A on another site.
For those following along at home, here are the comments at the time of flagging:

You raised a "no longer needed" flag on Delfin's last comment. I deleted this comment because, in my judgment, the question being asked there was utterly off-topic and (more importantly) unlikely to be helpful to others ("what is POSIX?" is either blindingly obvious and/or downright trivial to Google for). This deletion marked your flag as "helpful".
I declined "no longer needed" flags that you raised on Delfin's other two comments, because, as explained above, I determined that these were simple follow-up questions and thus legitimate uses of comments. I kept them because they were short enough that the noise volume wasn't a concern, and because I thought they might be of help to future readers. If one person has a follow-up question, it's very likely that others will have the same follow-up question. This is kinda the whole principle of Stack Overflow: one question, one answer, many beneficiaries.
Once again, Hans's cynicism is pretty much right on the money:
…in general, if you use the flag then be sure to do so before you answer the comment. If you do it afterwards then it looks too much like the comment was relevant and should be kept.
– Hans Passant
Not only did your response make it look like the comment was relevant, but the fact that you provided a response which was appreciated by the asker made it look like deleting this content would be making the Internet a worse place. Given my moderation strategy, that was a natural reason to dismiss the flag and leave the comment in place.
(Note that moderators cannot mark a comment flag "helpful", but still decline to delete the comment. Well, technically, we could delete the comment, which would mark the flag as "helpful", then undelete the comment, which wouldn't change the disposition of the flag, but that's way too much work for something as insignificant as a comment flag.)
Honestly, I don't really understand what motivates people to flag these types of comments, especially with such determination that they will flag them multiple times when they don't get removed. How are these comments hurting anything? Why are you so motivated to get them removed? Maybe I'm missing something and you can explain this to me.