My particular comments there were in the spirit that Can We Please be a bit nicer to new users doesn't just apply to the questioners...but to the answerers too.
(Maybe even moreso, because they're "trying to help"? But I dunno, probably just equal.)
The system is disorienting to people who are unfamiliar, and the evolution of StackOverflow has sort of Craigslist-style stagnated for years now. Most new features surround making new sites and triage, plus dev cycles for winter hats and april fool's jokes...not basic usability improvements, or tending to feature suggestions or even trying them on Meta. What-color-is-the-icon or what-font-in-the-CSS is taking precedence over helping new users have a good experience. This is a gripe for me, personally. (See also "Triage All Feature Requests")
We shouldn't really have to be the ones who prod and poke and get the discoverability of the "edit" button into the consciousness of the person with the Q or A. If you get downvoted it should have a "what does this mean, what do I do about it" that points that out. But until such magic comes online, I think that sometimes the best service to a bad answer is to make a pointed comment asking for clarification and bring their attention to the edit button.
I agree with you that this was a poor answer that needed some help. So I looked around for a good generic resource link to help. For bad questions there's a fair amount to bring up...but it seems for answerers less. This is what shows up in the help center:
http://stackoverflow.com/help/how-to-answer
If I had a downvote to put on that, I would. It doesn't address this kind of thing at all, and is a bit useless. So I'd suggest making that page better would be a good start.