When linking to documentation for a proprietary product like Java, I believe that it is sufficient to say "Here is the Java 7 documentation" because it is the canonical reference material created by the company themselves. However when it comes to C++, it's a little more sketchy.
In my experience, cplusplus.com, i.e. Why is the cplusplus website bad? is frowned upon for sometimes having incorrect information and because of frustration of its appearance to being an authoritative source (website title as well as being popular on google). I feel this is similar to W3Fools, a website which discourages the use of W3Schools.
The superior alternative is cppreference.com, a wiki site that in my experience tends to condense material directly from the standard into layman terms. However, it's not perfect and it's not an authoritative source either.
In both of these sites, referring them as "the" documentation is probably incorrect, because it implies that they're authoritative reference material and that they're infallible. I recently made a comment on this answer requesting a change although I'm unsure if it's too pedantic. Despite cplusplus.com being generally frowned upon, I still see answers to it that carelessly refer to it as "the" documentation and comments decrying it may be just noise.
A similar issue exists with linking to the man pages because there are several sites which offer them and the best way to get accurate man pages for one's platform is to run it on their machine. In one situation, I told someone that cplusplus.com is bad and that they should link to linux.die.net instead, although I was unaware that the site has advertisements on it and their argument was that cplusplus.com's table is easier to read.
Is it necessary to be so pedantic about which source is used if it's generally the same information?
Here are examples (not to call anyone out, but rather to be illustrative). Often we use the draft standard n3337 for C++11 answers (the answerer did not reference which document so I made an assumption to which he did not complain and edited it in).
here's the standardeese from N3337: [..] (12.3" AFAICS it is identical to C++11 (N3290). It does not match the quoted text in the answer.
Interaction between decltype and class member name shadowing an external name
You cited a draft, which means little. I'm showing you how to cite the actual standard, which is authoritative.