Every once in a while, someone asks something which can't be accomplished. Obviously, a solution of how to do it won't appear. The post in question in this case did describe the only way you truly could have accomplished your goal, which was to code your own version of the mod. So I marked it yes.
Like I said, the answers you want won't always be the answers you get.
If something is right, but not applicable in your particular instance, you do not have to make it "no." In fact, I'd prefer that didn't happen, because then people will think the whole post is bollocks, and that's just not the case. Clicking nothing will turn the post into a normal post once a correct answer has been selected.
To take an example: Someone posts "My texture lights won't work"
Someone responds with a Yes/No that the .rad file needs to be in the correct folder.
The particular solution turns out to be that they were using a light texture that isn't in the .rad file without manually adding it.
The response about the folder shouldn't be marked wrong - it didn't solve this problem, but the information is still valid.
Gollum tends to meander with thoughts, and his particular post both included the only solution to your problem, and a theoretical supposition of a hack to work around it. The idea didn't work, but the first half was right. Technically, he should have split it up into two posts.
If you wish to discuss the matter further, you can PM me.