Do not tag such questions with all 3 tags.
C++ is not a superset of C, it is a completely different language with a shared history and similar syntax. The answers may be completely different. And even in the case of Objective-C, which is a strict superset of C, the idioms are not necessarily the same. You could write C code in Objective-C, but then you're not writing Objective-C, you're writing C. Support for that is an important feature of the language, but it is irrelevant in our tagging system.
Consider the example you gave: manipulating a bit flag. The code to do that in C is simply:
unsigned int bitField = 0U;
bitField |= flag; // set a bit
bitField &= ~flag; // clear a bit
That would be the correct answer if the question were tagged c.
However, were the question to be tagged c++, you could expect a very different answer; namely:
Use the bitset<N>
container class provided by the standard library.
That answer would, of course, not be valid if posted to a question with the c tag, since the C standard library provides no such functionality. But not only is it provided by the C++ standard library, it is the preferred way of manipulating bit fields in C++ code. Sure, you could do it "the C way", but then you are not doing it "the C++ way" and have misleading tagged your question with the c++ tag . You should have used c if you want to get answers on the C way of doing things.
If you don't find that convincing, and still feel strongly that C, C++, and Objective-C are so similar as to merit this abuse of the tag system, consider the C# language. You certainly wouldn't dream of tagging the question c#, would you? But why not? C# shares a history with the C language, and a whole lot of its syntax. Certainly you could check if a bit flag is set using the same code in C# as you would in C. The only thing you'd need to change would be unsigned int
to uint
, a commonly used typedef even in the C world:
uint bitField = 0U;
bitField |= flag; // set a bit
bitField &= ~flag; // clear a bit
So what do you do? Use the tag that most accurately describes the either the language you're working in, or the language whose idioms you want to adopt. Ignore the fact that the answer might also be the same for some other language, or set of languages. You could easily be wrong. And even if you're not, it is quite irrelevant that Java experts may also be able to answer the question.
If the question is language-neutral, or you are looking for solutions that go beyond the idioms and idiosyncracies of particular languages, use the language-agnostic tag. Please do not use all of the tags for all of the languages that you might have some tangential applicability to your question.