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Christian Gollhardt's answerChristian Gollhardt's answer and the comments on it have good information, but I have a couple issues with the phrasing:

Just handle it, since the author has not solved the problem

Whether or not the author solved the problem is irrelevant. Questions are judged on solely on their own merit, regardless of whether or not a resolution is posted. Saying "since the author..." is misleading and incorrect.

The same comment applies to the original questionoriginal question:

This might be an adequate question if the author shares the answer to their own problem.

The user providing an answer does not make the question okay. If any of the close reasons apply, then flag or vote to close. If they don't, then edit or vote as you see fit and move on.

From a commenta comment:

It's about the case, when the author marks his question [solved], but provides no solution

It's not a special case. It's exactly the same as if there had been no "[solved]" in the title or a solution had been posted.

Short Answer
  
Questions should never have any meta-information in the title, such as "[solved]" in the title. Edit it out and conduct your review as if it had never been there.

Christian Gollhardt's answer and the comments on it have good information, but I have a couple issues with the phrasing:

Just handle it, since the author has not solved the problem

Whether or not the author solved the problem is irrelevant. Questions are judged on solely on their own merit, regardless of whether or not a resolution is posted. Saying "since the author..." is misleading and incorrect.

The same comment applies to the original question:

This might be an adequate question if the author shares the answer to their own problem.

The user providing an answer does not make the question okay. If any of the close reasons apply, then flag or vote to close. If they don't, then edit or vote as you see fit and move on.

From a comment:

It's about the case, when the author marks his question [solved], but provides no solution

It's not a special case. It's exactly the same as if there had been no "[solved]" in the title or a solution had been posted.

Short Answer
  Questions should never have any meta-information in the title, such as "[solved]" in the title. Edit it out and conduct your review as if it had never been there.

Christian Gollhardt's answer and the comments on it have good information, but I have a couple issues with the phrasing:

Just handle it, since the author has not solved the problem

Whether or not the author solved the problem is irrelevant. Questions are judged on solely on their own merit, regardless of whether or not a resolution is posted. Saying "since the author..." is misleading and incorrect.

The same comment applies to the original question:

This might be an adequate question if the author shares the answer to their own problem.

The user providing an answer does not make the question okay. If any of the close reasons apply, then flag or vote to close. If they don't, then edit or vote as you see fit and move on.

From a comment:

It's about the case, when the author marks his question [solved], but provides no solution

It's not a special case. It's exactly the same as if there had been no "[solved]" in the title or a solution had been posted.

Short Answer 
Questions should never have any meta-information in the title, such as "[solved]" in the title. Edit it out and conduct your review as if it had never been there.

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Christian Gollhardt's answer and the comments on it have good information, but I have a couple issues with the phrasing:

Just handle it, since the author has not solved the problem

Whether or not the author solved the problem is irrelevant. Questions are judged on solely on their own merit, regardless of whether or not a resolution is posted. Saying "since the author..." is misleading and incorrect.

The same comment applies to the original question:

This might be an adequate question if the author shares the answer to their own problem.

The user providing an answer does not make the question okay. If any of the close reasons apply, then flag or vote to close. If they don't, then edit or vote as you see fit and move on.

From a comment:

It's about the case, when the author marks his question [solved], but provides no solution

It's not a special case. It's exactly the same as if there had been no "[solved]" in the title or a solution had been posted.

Short Answer
Questions should never have any meta-information in the title, such as "[solved]" in the title. Edit it out and conduct your review as if it had never been there.