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The purpose of the 'not an answer' flag is well summarised in the meta-discussion Flagging as 'not an answer'. I reproduce it here for convenience.


The "not an answer" flag is for the following situations:

  • The OP...
  • needed to update the question with new information, but posted the new information as an answer.
  • wanted to reply to an existing comment or answer, but posted the reply as an answer.
  • posted a "resolution answer" saying something along the lines of "Joe's answer worked for me"
  • A user...
  • wants to reply to the OP, an answerer or a commenter, but doesn't have enough rep, and instead of thinking "maybe there's a reason I'm not allowed to post comments," ignores the help text about what an answer is.
  • posts to say "I'm having this problem too, does anyone have a solution yet?"
  • has a related issue and isn't aware of the "Ask Question" button.

These are common situations for new SO users who may be confused by the reputation, editing and/or commenting systems. They may be used to forums where it's normal to add a new post underneath the existing posts, and blindly click the "Post Your Answer" button.


So:

  1. If the answer really isn't an answer, but something else entirely (see above), flag it.
  2. If an answer is technically inaccurate, wrong, or just doesn't answer the question, downvote it.