Regarding how (and where) you said it
First off: locking is only doable by diamond moderators (and up: i.e. "Community Managers" and Stack Overflow staff). In particular, the "moderation tools" granted at 10,000 reputation do not include this.
If something happens on a website that involves just you and a moderator, and it leads to a moderator taking a moderator-exclusive action, there are effectively two possibilities: either you have a complaint about a moderator abuse of power, or you are being rightly censured.
For Stack Overflow, asking on Meta is the right way to check whether something is an abuse of power, assuming that you can't reason it out with common sense; and it's also the right way to start doing something about it. However, a moderator action that prevents you from doing what you were doing (i.e., in this case, engaging in a rollback war) should always be treated as a cease and desist. No matter what community this was, no matter what suspicion you had that the moderator was in the wrong, it would never, ever, ever be right to "re-rollback after the lock window" (or the equivalent). Even in cases where an investigation into the matter found that you were 100% in the right and that whatever you were editing should be in the state you wanted to roll back to, that should be done by either a (now-crow-eating) moderator, or by a third party.
StackOverflow is not a code-writing service. The community here expects you to try yourself and to show where you're stuck.
Accepting for now that such commentary is appropriate, it should be a comment on the question. Not anywhere within an answer, and not as a comment on your own answer (because it pertains to the question, not the answer). After all, since Stack Overflow is not a discussion forum, questions and answers should not contain discussion.
Do note the comment attached to your question.
If it was your own comment, then you have already said everything that needs to be said. If it was someone else's comment, you could upvote it.
Regarding what to say
We want OPs to show research effort, yes - because it helps to clarify questions, not as a barrier to demonstrating that one "deserves" an answer.
Stack Overflow is, indeed, not a code-writing service: code written to spec constitutes an implementation of functionality, not an answer to a question. Stack Overflow is a Q&A site, so we answer questions, rather than writing code to implement functionality. However, the purpose of "expecting OP to try" is to identify a problem concretely, and of "showing where OP is stuck" is to focus on that problem and communicate a corresponding question.
Please do not express your frustration with OP's laziness on the site, in any form. The best response is your own laziness: just ignore the question, if you really consider it "below your pay grade". (I personally am happy to give in-depth answers to questions that are "easy" - as long as they can plausibly come about from a genuine lack of knowledge.)
Meanwhile, note the advice in How do I write a good answer?: "Answer well-asked questions". Typically, a failure by the OP to "try something", or to show a sticking point, will result in a question that Needs More Focus, or occasionally which Needs Details or Clarity. If that is an actual issue - i.e., if solving the problem entails following multiple steps, or if you as a would-be answerer are not sure which step OP wants to know about - then please vote to close the question, rather than answering.