It's a good practice to define your resources in a consistent hierarchy, so that they are easily understandable and predictable.
Let's say this is the URL to retrieve a question -
GET /users/{solverId}/problems/{problemId}
It clearly conveys that the problem belongs to the {solverId}.
The following URL would clearly show that the we are retrieving all solutions for problems solved by {solverId}
GET /users/{solverId}/problems/{problemId}/solutions
To create a new solution for the {problemId}, you would do a post on
POST /users/{solverId}/problems/{problemId}/solutions
To retrieve a particular solution you would do a get on
GET /users/{solverId}/problems/{problemId}/solutions/{solutionId}
When to use Ids in path vs query ?
If an ID is definitely required to identify a resource, use it in the path. In the above scenario, since all three Ids are required to uniquely identify a solution, all of them should be in the path.
Let's say you want to retrieve a solution that was given in a particular date range, you would use the following
GET /users/{solverId}/problems/{problemId}/solutions?startDate={}&endDate={}
Here startDate and endDate cannot uniquely identify a resource, they are just parameters that are being used to filter the results.