Pick either 2 or 3, as appropriate (just make sure it isn't a link-only answer).
2. Answer with a copy from the docs (And linking to them, of course),
3. Answer the question as you usually would, but also link to the docs,
Just because something has an answer elsewhere on the Internet does not make it an inappropriate question for Stack Overflow. "RTFM" has been proposed as a close reason and rejected.
Just because something is mentioned in the documentation does not mean that it is sufficiently clear to everyone who reads it. There is a lot of bad, confusing, and misleading documentation out there. There is plenty more that requires a sufficiently in-depth understanding of the library before one can make heads or tails out of what it is trying to say. In those cases, you need an expert to translate it for you, or perhaps just find it for you. That's what Stack Overflow excels at.
If we started closing questions where the answer could be found in the documentation, we wouldn't have any questions left. Or at least not any good ones. We'd have a bunch of "debug my code" questions, and confused questions about obscure, poorly-documented libraries. Bleh! Most of the questions with the c# tag could be closed as duplicates of something on MSDN; many of the questions about C++ (and probably all of those with the language-lawyer tag) could be closed as duplicates of the language standard.
That said, the same rules for good and bad questions apply here just as they always do. There are questions that betray such a state of confusion or complete ignorance that they cannot reasonably be answered without literally writing a book. Don't try and write one in the answer box, you'll run out of room. And even though you could answer these by posting a link to the manual, it won't do anyone any good. Close these questions as "too broad" or "unclear what you're asking". If you so desire, press the person to clarify their question in a way that it becomes specific and answerable.