I suspect option #2 will become the most valued answers.
Questions on Stack Overflow are often asked by people looking for specific, personalized assistance, and then later googled for by people looking for general information, e.g. missing documentation. If a question is completely answered by some example in documentation, a link to said documentation should serve as the meat of an answer, but responding with nothing besides a link (or, especially so, leaving a link plus a derisive comment) feels dismissive, even to a beginner, who may be unaware of the docs that they should be reading.
Option #1 feels backwards - if a question can have a solid, generalized answer, it may be good to create documentation and link to it as your answer.
Option #3 I mentioned earlier. "I wrote this doc to answer this question" is reasonable and constructive, but Stack Overflow is not exclusively a place to record knowledge in Q&A format, it is also a place where people are asking questions to get them answered by other people. If a link would suffice to answer a question, then they may need to specify their question.
Option #4 This seems like the kinder version of #3. See Laurel's 'impossible currently' link for discussion of adding this feature. What this would do, hopefully, is deflect redundant questions, either to proper documentation, or make it clear that their question is different from or more specific than the common-knowledge answer available in the documentation, and would push them to rewrite their question to be closer to what they actually need to ask.
As for the described implications - in a perfect world, #4 would be the correct implication, that docs can give answers and that Q&A is a backup for edge cases. However, docs require up-front, generative work whether hosted by Stack Overflow or not, which is why so much of the world's documentation is lacking in the first place. Q&A became the resource it did because randomized reactive answers produced a kind of decentralized documentation as a side-effect. We'll see as time progresses whether Stack Overflow's documentation become a formidable enough resource that people can expect to search through them first, but for the moment we should still ask and answer knowing that ours may be the first words found by people trying to investigate.