I'm going to somewhat disagree with Alexei here, and say that you did the right thing by finding an answer to a related question that also solves this other similar problem, copying it, and clearly attributing the content of your answer to its original source.
Copying, where appropriate and with correct attribution is explicitly encouraged on Stack Overflow. See e.g. this question and its answers, which say:
Is it considered plagiarism on StackOverflow.com to take material from another answer on the same question and re-use it with modifications?
No. You are expressly permitted to do so - as long as you give attribution.
— Original answer by Pekka 웃 on Apr 20 '14 at 16:00
In particular, all posts on SO are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license, which permits redistribution of any so licensed content in both modified and unmodified form, provided that the original author(s) are attributed and that any modified content is released under the same license (which posting it on SO implicitly and automatically does).
Now, all that said: Whenever you see two questions that can be answered with essentially the same answer — whether yours or somebody else's — that's a sign that there might be a deeper issue involved. In particular, it's possible that:
The questions are asking about the same problem, and one of them (preferably the one with fewer / poorer answers) should be flagged as a duplicate of the other. (If both questions already have excellent answers, and the questions really are identical, you can flag them for moderator attention and ask them to merge the answers together under one question.)
One of the questions is asking about a specific instance of a general problem, and this general problem has already been asked and answered in the other question thread (e.g. "How do I frob a red widget?" vs. "How do I frob a widget?", where the color of the widget doesn't really matter when frobbing it). Again, unless there's something that would make the answer to the specific problem different from the general one, the more specific question should be closed as a duplicate.
This does tend to require a bit of careful judgement and domain knowledge. In such cases, in addition to casting your close flag / vote, you may want to leave the asker a comment such as:
We already have a question about frobbing widgets with some good answers. Do they solve your problem? If not, please edit your question to tell us why your problem is different.
The questions are both asking about different special cases of a more general problem (e.g. "How do I frob a red widget?" vs. "How do I frob a blue widget?"). This is what seems to be the case with your example questions here.
This is a slightly trickier case to handle. If one of the questions can be easily edited to generalize it, you can do that and then vote to close the other one as a duplicate of it. Otherwise, it may be a good idea to ask (and, if you can, answer) the general question yourself, and (once the general question has a good answer) suggest that the specific questions be marked as duplicates of it.
Still, even when several questions have effectively the same answer, it may not always be easy or even possible to come up with a single general question that would cover all the possible variations of the problem, at least not without the question and its answers becoming so abstract that it's hard to understand how they answer the specific problem unless you already know enough theory to see how the problems, deep down, are really the same. In such cases, it's perfectly fine to have some duplication if it means that the specific answers are easier to understand for people facing that specific variant of the problem.
So, getting back to your copied answer, could you have handled that better? Sure. In particular:
Instead of copying the entire answer verbatim, you could've only summarized the relevant parts of it, and provided a link for more details, e.g. like this:
This is really the same problem as sharing JavaScript files among projects, which Erik Philips has already provided an excellent answer for.
The solution (which Erik describes in more detail in his answer, linked above) is to create a new solution folder, with a correspondingly named directory, to store the common files in. You would store the files you want to share in the directory, add them to the new solution folder (using Add > Existing Item...), and then also add them as links to any project that needs them (using Add > Existing Item... and selecting "Add As Link" from the drop down menu in the file selector dialog).
Alternatively, you could've copied the answer in full, but edited it (while retaining attribution, of course) to apply to all kinds of files for which this general solution works, instead of just JavaScript files. That way, you'd end up with a generic answer that (especially if the question was also edited slightly to mention that it's an instance of a more general problem) could be used as a duplicate target for later questions.
In either case, if you were concerned about people thinking that you were "unfairly" earning rep by copying another user's answer, you could've marked your own answer as Community Wiki (which would stop you from earning any rep from it, and make it clear that you consider the answer a collaborative effort, as opposed to your original contribution). You don't have to do this, but voluntarily eschewing rep like this from answers that heavily lean on someone else's content can sometimes make them better received.
Finally, since Erik is an active user, you could've just left a comment on their answer linking to the other question (possibly after briefly answering it yourself, as I suggested above), and suggesting that they might want to generalize their answer to apply to both questions.
But still, the way you handled this was by no means wrong, and you shouldn't feel ashamed of it. Copying answers with attribution, like you did, is perfectly within the rules, and you didn't do anything to disguise your actions or to mislead users into thinking that you had written the content when you hadn't. If anyone still thinks that it would be unfair to award you rep for that answer, they can just, you know, not upvote it.