I recently flagged this "answer" for moderator attention. Disclosure: I am the OP of the relevant question.
The question asks about how to share Dart code between iOS and potentially Android apps. The purpose of the question is to find out how to share Dart code and I believe the question makes that clear. Specifically note that the question does not ask about Flutter apps memory usage/consumption or any other resource allocation by Flutter apps. To explain question motivation the question states only as a side note that Hello World app in Flutter consumes 117MB of memory (RAM).
The "answer" does not try to answer the question (how to share Dart code?), instead it disputes the statement that Flutter Hello World app consumes 117MB of memory. In addition to that, based on "answer" author's comment (the "answer" itself is so low quality that it's hard to tell what exactly its author meant) the author really meant that the apps' bundle size is less than 117MB, not it's memory consumption. That is completely irrelevant in context of the question. Therefore, IMO it is clearly NAA (it should have been a comment instead) and should be deleted.
Yet, the flag was declined. I might have made a mistake by flagging it for moderator attention (not as "not an answer") and additionally stated that "btw. the answer is also untrue" in description of my flag. The moderator might have focused on that instead on the main reason for flagging it, which is it does not even try to answer the question.
Is this "answer" NAA and should it be deleted?
For context, I flagged the answer 2 times, and these are the responses I got
First flag text: Besides being false, it does not answer the question - instead it argues with a side note stated in the question. No evidence or reference is provided (and the answerer's argument is quite obviously incorrect).
First flag response: declined - flags should not be used to indicate technical inaccuracies, or an altogether wrong answer
Second flag text: It does not answer my question. The question is "How to share application logic only between iOS and Android using pure Dart (without Flutter)?" and this answer deals with Flutter app SIZE, or possibly memory consumption (not clear from the answer). That is not relevant AT ALL when it comes to "How do I share Dart code". Note: Flagging again as the previous flag decline reason does not apply to it's not an answer flag.
Second flag response: declined - flags should not be used to indicate technical inaccuracies, or an altogether wrong answer