The answer in question was flagged as "not an answer" by a community member. To the moderator who originally handled this flag, the answer looked like it was thanking another answer and making a minor suggestion on how to improve it ("your solution works fine. You can try the shorter…").
Upon closer inspection and review by other moderators, it was determined that this initial judgment was in error. When the answerer said "your solution", they were referring to the one proposed in the question. This was also the first answer that was posted to the question, so it's impossible that they could have been thanking and/or iterating on a previous answer.
For all of these reasons, the answer was undeleted and restored. Mistakes do occasionally happen when moderators handle not-an-answer flags, especially when they do so at high volumes and/or outside of their core subject-matter expertise. Neither is a reason to raise alarm; however, we do appreciate your bringing it to our attention when you disagree with one of our decisions. We're happy to review and reconsider.
As for "Flags haven't resulted in a reaction": basically what oguz ismail said. The flag you had raised on the answer was only active for 1 hour before you posted this Meta question. The daily volume of flags on Stack Overflow is vastly higher than would allow us to guarantee sub-hour flag turnaround times. It wasn't a matter of us ignoring you or declining your flag; we just hadn't seen it yet.
But, for future reference, it is better to use Meta as a venue for questioning/disagreeing with a moderator's decision than to raise a second flag. Meta allows us to explain our rationale, something which cannot really be done in response to a flag. It also allows us to have a discussion and/or involve the larger community (including those with more relevant expertise), which can be very helpful in more complicated cases.