The full timelines of the answers include extra information relevant for assessing some of the claims being made in this discussion. In summary:
Dec 9 '15 at 12:42 -- Answer A (timeline) is posted, saying there is no ready-made solution.
Apr 12 '16 at 17:01 -- Answer B (timeline) is posted, pointing out a newly available solution.
- Answer A score at the time: 1
Jul 22 '16 -- Answer A is downvoted, possibly due to not including the new solution.
- Answer A score: 0
- Answer B score: 5
Jul 25 '16 at 15:16 -- Answer A is edited to incorporate the same solution featured in answer B.
- Answer A score: 0
- Answer B score: 5
Apr 23 '19 at 18:57 -- Answer A is accepted. (Note that, while unaccept events are not recorded in the timeline, in most cases they show up in the reputation history of the user. Looking at the latter shows no unaccepts on that particular answer, so it is very likely this was the first accept vote cast on it.)
- Answer A score: 10
- Answer B score: 27
Before continuing, let's get one matter out of the way: plagiarism is way too strong a charge for this situation. There is hardly any original content at play (as Erik A puts it, "the code involved is one line, and that line is stated in the docs"), and it is entirely plausible that the answer A author knew of the new solution by means other than answer B, and was reminded to update his answer by some other event (say, the Jul 22 '16 downvote).
The absence of plagiarism, however, does not mean the actions by the answer A author were the best possible ones. The timeline analysis above shows that answer A, in all likelihood, was only accepted nearly three years after the edit, and that it never was the top answer scorewise. Since there is no substantial difference between the edited answer A and answer B, the ideal course of action would be deleting answer A upon noticing it was superseded.
(Had answer A been the accepted one at the time of the edit, deleting it would not have been an option, and so editing the new solution would have been reasonable. In such cases, attribution should be included if the edit was based on another answer, though, as discussed above, that might well not have been the case in this concrete case. It is also worth noting that, in such a situation, an alternative approach would be asking the question OP to change the accept vote.)