Sometimes they don't include the attempts of the author, sometimes important details that I would expect are left out, etc. etc.
Explicitly showing attempts is usually not necessary and often inappropriate. What we want to see is a question that has been informed by those attempts:
Someone who was trying to solve a problem that straightforwardly involves following multiple steps, should generally have already figured out what those steps are by trying, and then figured out a specific part to ask about; or else might ask if there is some more "direct", built-in way to do something (with a precise specification), only after doing the straightforward analysis
Someone whose code does not work should have already figured out where the issue appears to be by following standard debugging steps and attempting to produce a minimal reproducible example.
Maybe my standards for questions are too high
Unlikely, honestly. As a rule of thumb, you should feel comfortable with the idea that some day in the future, some other question gets closed as a duplicate of this one. (At least as long as it receives whatever editing it might need that can be done by others.)
since a number of people seem to understand the authors needs and provide seemingly valid solutions that often have received upvotes or ave even been accepted by the question's author.
So what? It would be perfectly possible to say all of those things about a blatantly off-topic question, for example. Stack Overflow is full of people who don't properly understand the site's goals, and will upvote content that is completely misaligned with the site's purpose. And of course, simply asking something understandable is nowhere near sufficient. Oh, and I have seen OPs accept ridiculous, completely irrelevant, likely AI-generated garbage, just because they're happy to have received an answer.
However in those cases I'm not sure of that, since other people did understand the problem, and they didn't require debugging details.
Just because someone was able to figure something out on the information given, doesn't mean the question shouldn't have specified. It could have been a wild guess. Alternately, it could be a sign that the question relates to a problem so common that it can be identified from a few telltale signs without going through proper debugging - this is a sign the question may be a common duplicate. People improperly answer questions they know are duplicates, all the time (the reputation system rewards them for it).
Also, the description "This question cannot be answered" below the "Flag" option in the triage queue view makes me feel uneasy
"Cannot" in the sense of "it would be counter to site policy to do so". The point is supposed to be "other users can't fix the problem by editing; the question needs to be closed now".
That's why it takes you to the normal flagging interface, which offers you all the normal closure reasons. Clearly it's possible to answer a question that is a duplicate. You should still flag such questions, and in the Triage queue you should still use the interface to get at this option.