Wouldn't it be better to encourage askers more to answer their own questions if they found one? Of course there´s the self-learner badge, but is it enough?
The system already encourages users to answer their own questions. There doesn't seem to be any more that we could do to encourage it than we already do. There are only two distinctions between self-answers and answers posted by others:
- You do not earn the +2 acceptance bonus when you accept your own answer. This is to prevent abuse, and the logic is the same as why you cannot upvote your own answers.
- There is a period of delay imposed between the time that you post a self-answer and the time that the system allows you to accept your self-answer. The theory behind this is that you should give other users adequate time to answer the question before deciding on which answer to accept, in case someone else has a better solution than you do.
I don't think either of these should be changed. You still earn reputation as normal when other users upvote your answers. I posted this Q&A pair a while back because I still get a lot of activity on a similar old answer of mine, but updating that answer to work for Windows 10 would make it too unwieldy, so I just turned it into a new Q&A of its own. Naturally, I cannot upvote any of my own posts, but 4 people thought the question was useful (which earned me 5 reputation × 4 = 20 points), and 11 people thought the answer was useful (which earned me 10 reputation × 11 = 110 points). (Well, not necessarily, because I probably hit the reputation cap that day, but the point still stands.) There's plenty of incentive here to answer your own questions.
[T]here are many questions that never ever get an answer. I assume at least some of those actually get one by the askers themselves after a while, however it´s not documented on SO in any way and gets lost for ever.
You're right, there are plenty of questions that get asked but never get an answer. I have a theory about why that is the case, though. The problem isn't that self-answers are insufficiently encouraged, the problem is the questions themselves.
You see, most of these questions that never get answers are actually XY problems. The real answer to such questions is either "this is impossible," "you're going about it the wrong way", or both.
Users typically don't post these types of answers because they are not popular with the community. Not only do they earn few upvotes, they tend to attract downvotes and flags. No one seems to like "don't do it" answers, even when they are the correct answer.
And the person who asked the question probably does eventually figure out a solution to their problem, but they typically arrive at this solution by punting the problem. They still don't have an answer to the question that was asked, they only have a solution to the problem. That doesn't get posted as an answer for the same reason.
In my mind, what needs to change is the community presumption against "don't do it this way" answers. Or, one could argue that these questions are not useful because they contain erroneous assumptions and can never truly be answered. Not ever getting an answer serves as a signal to the roomba that the question should be automatically deleted.