It's not against the rules to answer low-quality questions. We answer questions because we think that it will be found by people in the future with a similar problem who will benefit from our answer. You are encouraged to edit the question after answering to improve its quality. After all, that should be your goal, to have both question and the answer of very high quality. A great answer can even save poorly written question from deletion.
If you see a low-quality question being answered then don't blame the answerer. Blame the tag experts who didn't close the question in time or blame Stack Overflow for not providing us better moderation tools to deal with the inflow of bad questions. If the answerer is a new user, then you can post a helpful comment explaining why it is not worth posting answers to unclear/off-topic/typo questions. There's a good post explaining this here: How to deal with unclear questions and their lightning-fast ("fastest gun in the west") answers?
If you think the answer itself is wrong or just poorly written (no explanation, guessing at a problem, "Try this:") you can also downvote the answer. Remember that it is not ok to simply downvote an answer because the question was bad quality. It is forbidden to go through their profile page and downvote their other answers too.
If the user has flag or close privileges already you can spend some time to instruct them when it is more appropriate to close a question rather than askinganswering it. You were also a new user at some point and you also had to learn when to close and when to answer. Be polite!
If someone is consistently posting poorly written answers then you can involve moderators who will talk to the user and if necessary suspend them for providing low-quality content. Make sure that you properly explain why you think their contributions are harmful to the site.