The how to spot vampires guide is a nice read (thanks @jokerdino). Interestingly, though, many of the things she proposes against vampires are not possible in our format or should be used more intensively.
For instance,
Creating resources: A FAQ—with real Frequently Asked Questions, not ones which just sound likely. And with clearly phrased, actionable (urgh) information for each question.
This is a bit problematic. On the one hand AU wants to provide canonical answers, on the other hand these answers are mostly navigated via searches and tags. We could invest a lot more in wiki pages based on good answers and refer to the wikis in the comments without answering the question. This will a) force the vampire to read, b) create an even nicer stack of canonical [pun not intended] information.
Another example:
Enforce autonomy. No matter how beneficent you’re feeling, never directly answer a common question. This is the lazy way out, and you only enable the Help Vampires instead of truly helping them. Let the URL to your help resources be your only answer, but tell the vamp you are happy to help if he explores those avenues of self-help and still cannot find an answer.
This is obviously against our policy as we not only want the link, but also the essence of the link's content... In other words, vampires are just really part of SE (by the way there are a lot more vampires on SE and SE is not the only Q-A system that has this problem).
Conclusion:
- If you think a question is too easy, just don't answer it! Let low reputation users get easy rep on easy questions. This is crucial. High rep users should focus on difficult questions and not easy ones. The best people on the hardest tasks.
- If a question is answered in the documentation, just don't answer it! Refer to the wikis intensively in comments. Let the wikis rule for easy questions. Learn vampires how to read.