What size is that copper? You can get plastic p-trap kits in 1-1/2" and 1-1/4", and these can be easily connected to your copper via slip ring compression fittings. Basically they consist of a nut with a cone-shaped plastic washer, which when compressed by the nut squeezes against the (copper) pipe to create a seal. Usually these are only on the sink side of things and the wall side has glued-on plastic but you can use the compression fittings on both ends.
Here is a 1-1/2" Plastic p-trap
If you want to solder, a better solution than using a compression ring on the wall side would be to sweat on a copper x female adapter, followed by a male PVC adapter and a PVC trap adapter. Better yet if you can find one, just use a brass copper trap adapter like the following:
A less desirable but acceptable solution would be to use a fernco fitting to go from the copper to PVC, and then you can avoid soldering.
The photos posted above were really helpful, since many people may not know what connectors and adapters are available -- as I didn't before replacing two vanities. Therefore, I thought I'd post photos of what I did and the components I used.
The first thing to do is come out of the wall with a wall tube (otherwise known as a quarter-bend wall tube). Cut the long side if necessary, so it slides into the drain tube in the wall (make sure you have at least several inches in the wall drain).
The flange typically connects to the short leg of the J-trap.
There are two types of J-traps: one with a threaded slip-joint fitting on each end and a "repair" J-trap, with a slip-joint on the longer leg and a compression flange on the other. Use whichever one is suitable for your existing piping.
The connectors you use depend on two factors: how far is the tailpiece horizontally from the drain connection, and how far above or below it?
In the above situation, the drain connection is several inches to the side of the tailpiece and slightly below it. To close up horizontal distance, you can use another wall tube cut to the appropriate length, connected to the J-trap. The other end connects to a 90-degree elbow to make the turn and cover the vertical distance. Use a reducing washer to adapt a 1 1/4" tailpiece to 1 1/2" drain piping. (All the components pictured here are from Home Depot; other stores have similar items).
My other vanity has greater horizontal distance and less vertical. Therefore, I connected the longer leg of the J-trap to the wall tube, to get more displacement down, so the connectors would have room to cover the horizontal distance on the way back up. In this case, the 90-degree elbow didn't quite make it to the bottom of the tailpiece, so I had to add a coupling, attached to the elbow with a scrap piece of the wall tube I had cut off.
If, for some reason, you need even more vertical distance, you can use an extension tube, which has a threaded slip-joint fitting on one end, and connect it between the wall tube and the J-trap. (I tried this first, then realized I didn't need all that vertical distance and could eliminate the extension tube.)
If you find that it leaks after you tighten everything up, and you have water on top of the reducing washer on the tailpiece, it means your drain assembly isn't watertight against the sink. You may need to tighten it (carefully, so as not to crack the sink) or remove it and apply more silicone or plumber's putty, along with Teflon tape on the threads.
Best Answer
OK as a temp fix you could: