The mere fact that a question's answer can be easily found on Google (or in the documentation, or whatever) does not mean that the question is inappropriate for Stack Overflow. If none of the close reasons fit, then you should not be voting to close the question.
To put it another way: simple, straight-forward questions are on-topic here, even if they're not destined to become popular. If you have an answer, please post it. Even better if you can back it up with an authoritative reference to the documentation, or some other resource with a respectable reputation found via Google. The logic here is that Stack Overflow has set a goal for itself of being a repository of expert answers to programming questions, and that includes simple questions.
The only time you can legitimate close these questions is if they are duplicates of a question that has already been asked on Stack Overflow. For the really obvious ones, this is probably the case, so it's usually a good idea to run a quick search before navigating away from the question.
"Too broad" is sometimes an option, but only if the question is—well, you know, actually too broad. Please don't abuse "too broad" as "too obvious". They are nearly polar opposites. Same thing with "unclear what you're asking". If you found the answer using Google, the question was almost certainly clear enough for you to understand and identify the proper search terms.
You are, of course, always welcome to downvote the question if you think it is "not useful" or fails to show research effort. These are explicitly given as valid downvote reasons in the arrow's tooltip.
See also:
site:stackoverflow.com
and close as a duplicate of question that appears in search results. Don't forget to vote down along the way. See also: Reviewing some awful questions is just a waste of time, can we have a “no comment” close reason for these?