Yes, it's technically an answer, though that seems to rarely be what users are actually asking when they ask after NAA flags on Meta.
In your own question here, you say it's not a "sufficient" answer and that another one is a "real" answer. Dare I say you think this is a poor answer? Which is an answer, Q.E.D., and I hop off chortling at my semantic victory. (No, that would be much too silly.)
I think what you're really asking here is twofold:
- You want to know if flagging this NAA was reasonably correct.
- You want to know if this answer should be removed.
First, let's take a quick look at What is a disputed flag? in the MSE FAQ, specifically this part:
- An edit on a post in the Low Quality Review Queue, will resolve the flags attached to it as disputed.
- When a post, flagged as NAA or VLQ, enters on the Low Quality Review Queue while being upvoted or accepted, if all reviewers selected "recommend deletion" it will result in a disputed flag.
There's no edit history on the post, but the second scenario is plausible. 11 users found this answer helpful and it has a net score of +9, so even trusted users don't have the ability to vote to delete it, but they may still have agreed with you in the queue that it should be deleted.
I don't know that I would have cast the flag in your place; that said, I think your justification for flagging it is reasonable. It may take a moderator to figure out exactly how the status of the flag came to be "disputed" but speaking generally, I wouldn't take that as a sign you did something wrong.
As for whether the answer should be removed, forget about helping the author of the question—it's almost five years old! Years after the fact, with +11/-2 score, the burden is no longer on the answer to show that it's useful or relevant. The score argues that point fairly well. The burden is on us to show that, for whatever reason, those 11 upvoters were wrong and this really isn't worth keeping around for any reason.
You have a point that "it's trivial" is somewhat dismissive. Have you considered editing the answer to soften that language?
You also have a point that the answer is very short, and would be helpful as a comment. That said, what harm has this answer done in the past five years? It's not spam, it's fairly civil, it's not repeating or displacing better answers.
If you really feel strongly that an old, objectively helpful answer needs to be converted to a comment, a custom flag explaining that directly to the moderators who can perform that action seems like the most effective course of action. Personally, I don't think this needs to be deleted or converted to a comment, but the issue is debatable.