The intention of my delete-undelete-delete dance was to ensure that the deleted answer was not chosen by the system as an audit. Umm…that strategy apparently failed. You weren't the only one who got this as a review audit. Sorry about that.
I was told that this dance would work to prevent a mod-deleted post from being chosen as an audit. I will find out why it didn't work, and what I need to do instead, so that this doesn't happen again.
Regarding the answer itself, it's quite useless. If you check the date of the question as compared to the answer, you'll see that the answer provided cannot possibly be the solution because those versions did not exist when the question was asked. Possibly the answer could be saying, "The version you have contains a bug, and it was fixed in version x", but…that's not what the answer actually says.
It's really just an extremely low-effort "try upgrading" answer, akin to a "try restarting" answer, neither of which are remotely useful. I happily delete these, even though flagging them is complicated.
As for what to do when presented with answers like this in a review queue, it depends on whether you have the requisite domain knowledge to judge whether or not it's useless. If you do, handle it accordingly: downvote and, if appropriate, delete. If you don't, Skip.
I'll quote yivi's comments, in order to amplify their stellar advice:
Personally, if I'm not familiar enough with the technology to know if I should upvote or downvote, I believe "skip" is the correct action.
If you don’t know enough to determine if you should upvote or downvote; why choose “no action needed”? That’s not a good use of the “late answers” queue.
If you wouldn't upvote a post you see in a review queue, it's exceedingly unlikely that "No Action Needed" is the correct choice. Since you generally shouldn't upvote answers where you are unfamiliar with the relevant technology, and you'll probably be able to effectively edit if you are familiar with the relevant technology, it's actually quite rare that you should be saying "No Action Needed" when reviewing answers.