Today I encountered an answer that was prefaced with a questionnaire to the OP. Something like "I'm not sure I understand what you mean..." and a few questions asking to clarify the question.
To my surprise, the how to answer help article doesn't mention anything about this or give any guidance to new users that this is wrong.
The Pay it forward paragraph mentions that a thank-you answer is not OK. There is also the Answer well-asked questions paragraph which is fine, but it doesn't mention anything about not asking for clarifications in the answer itself.
While it might look obvious to seasoned community members, it is surely not so for new users. This is evident by the fact that the aforementioned user reacted with "duly noted. Didn't know about this" when I told them in a comment that questions to the OP should go in comments and not in the answer.
I would like to see a paragraph (or maybe part of the Answer the question one) about commentary in answers in that help article. Something along the lines of:
Don't address the author of the question [new users might not be familiar with OP] or write conversational comments. Your answer should directly answer the question. If you have any questions or need clarifications, you can use comments under the question (if you have over 50 rep).
I know, I know what you're thinking and I already agree - "Even if that text would be there, what makes you think that user even bothered to read that page?". But I was going to link to the help article in a comment when I thought to check if that is actually mentioned there.