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I asked a question (question has been deleted for reasons unrelated to this question) about some code of mine. Nothing in the question was specific to C# 2.0 but that is the version I am developing in. The C# 2.0 tag says "For issues relating to development with C#, version 2.0." and that is what I am doing.

Should I only use this tag if the question I am asking relates to features only present in 2.0? I have been using it mainly as an indicator that answers must be limited to features present in 2.0 (so and answer that uses LINQ for example would be unacceptable), have I been using it incorrectly?

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I agree with you that the C#-2.0 tag was appropriate. You are limited to C#-2.0 development, and tagging it C# would leave you open to answers that use features from later versions.

Whenever you are working on the non-current version of a language and are unable to change versions, tagging it with the language version is helpful to me.

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Should I only use this tag if the question I am asking relates to features only present in 2.0?

Yes. The version-specific tags are for questions concerning issues that are unique to that version.

If you just want to tell people what version you're using, you would include that information in the body of the question. Not everything belongs in the tags. You're probably also compiling it on the Windows operating system, but you wouldn't tag it . It is not relevant to the question.

I have been using it mainly as an indicator that answers must be limited to features present in 2.0 (so and answer that uses LINQ for example would be unacceptable)

No, this would be a perfectly valid usage. But you shouldn't expect that to be clear just from the tag. You need to articulate these caveats in the question body.

Especially considering how many people misuse version-specific tags. Editors see this "anti-pattern" and their finger itches to remove them. If there's nothing in the question that indicates they belong there and you know what you're doing, they will give in to their urges.

The C# 2.0 tag says "For issues relating to development with C#, version 2.0." and that is what I am doing.

Yeah, it does. That's too vague. Fixed that for you.

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    This answer introduces a possible issue. What if I do not know that the best answer uses a feature that is not present in 2.0? Say I asked "How do I search an array?" then someone answers with a LINQ answer. Do I edit my question to say that I need a 2.0 answer and add the tag or ask a new question with the the tag now knowing that I have an issue unique to 2.0?
    – Fr33dan
    May 30, 2014 at 8:02
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    I don't understand the issue. If you know that you cannot target a newer version of the framework, you include this constraint in the question from the very beginning. THen people won't answer with LINQ. Or they might, but for the benefit of others who aren't operating under the same unusual constraints. You are free to ignore their answer. May 30, 2014 at 8:09
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    You said in this answer that using the tag to indicate that I need a solution that is limited to 2.0 is a valid use of the tag, but since I will not know if possible answers need to be limited I would never get to use it in that context unless I already know there is a solution exclusive to later versions. This will result in questions that belong in that tag for having answers unique to 2.0 (as users have limited their response because 2.0 is mentioned in the text) not ending up where they should be.
    – Fr33dan
    May 30, 2014 at 8:37
  • So if there is an answer to a question that uses later features, removing the tag makes that an unhelpful answer.
    – podiluska
    May 30, 2014 at 15:44
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    Why shouldn't it be clear just from the tag that C#3.5 features are not appropriate? May 30, 2014 at 15:44
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    This is opposite from common practice in the sql-server tags. There the consensus generally seems to be that the OP should tag with the version they are specifically using rather than just stick this information in the text of the question somewhere. As an answerer I much prefer seeing this information in a consistent place too. May 30, 2014 at 16:38
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    Isn't this a bit contradictive with the fact that we explicitly tell people not to put the language into the title (or question) but use tags for it? This may be a bit reductio ad absurdum, but theoretically we could apply the same argument to the c# tag as well. Also in general (there are definitely exceptions!) I'd say it's impossible to know if a problem/solution is specific to one version of the language or not before you know the solution - so that'd be a bit clairvoyant.
    – Voo
    May 30, 2014 at 20:43
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    100% agreed with @Martin. I've lost count of the number of questions I've answered in, say, 2013, where I assumed the OP was on at least SQL Server 2008 (and in some cases even 2005), and this is not the case, and I ended up expending a lot of effort for nothing, because the solution doesn't work on the version they're using (and it's fair to usually make an assumption that they're on something relatively modern). The version tag is a much more appropriate place to determine exact or minimum version than parsing the entire question, sorry.
    – Aaron Bertrand Staff
    May 30, 2014 at 21:30
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    @podiluska see this answer for my thoughts on that.
    – Aaron Bertrand Staff
    May 30, 2014 at 21:45
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    I'm confused on what exactly all the commenters (and downvoters) are disagreeing with. I said that the version-specific tags should be used only if the question is unique to that version. If you have a constraint that you must use only that version, then you have an issue unique to that specific version and can/should use the tag. My point was merely that you shouldn't add tags just to describe your environment when they are not relevant. Normally, it doesn't matter if you are using Mono or .NET. If it does, use the tag. Otherwise, if you still want to mention it, put it in the body. May 31, 2014 at 4:49
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    Cody, specific or only version isn't the only problem. Min and max version can also be very important in a lot of cases, depending on context. I find the version-specific tags very useful when thinking about a potential answer, because it immediately tells me what approaches may (not) be possible. That is WAY BETTER for me to see in a tag than to parse the entire question hoping they may have mentioned it. So my main disagreement is with your suggestion to mention it in the question, where it is hard to find, and where the OP may not know it matters in the first place.
    – Aaron Bertrand Staff
    May 31, 2014 at 17:13
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    @Aaron Okay, I understand your objection. I guess I'm agreeing with you that if the version is relevant, it should be represented in the tags. I just think it should also be in the body. And if it isn't important, leave it off the tags but still put it in the body. What I don't understand is "min" and "max" version. How do you indicate that? Do you put one tag for the min version and one tag for the max version? Jun 1, 2014 at 1:47
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    Sure, often if someone needs a solution that works in 2005 and 2008, they'll tag both. The problem is usually that the OP doesn't realize the version may be relevant, so we're often pulling teeth for this info. By definition this is something the answerers know but the askers rarely do.
    – Aaron Bertrand Staff
    Jun 1, 2014 at 3:32
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    @Voo: A lot of people misunderstand that guidance. You aren't supposed to use the title or question body as a keyword list, e.g. we often see people title their question as "Ambiguous overload (C++) (templates) (variadic functions)". That's not appropriate. Listing germane information in the question title and body, even if it is also listed in the tags, is completely appropriate, and always has been. No thanks to a few editors who keep trying to remove it.
    – Ben Voigt
    Jun 2, 2014 at 2:27
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    @voo (continued) Keyword lists in titles should preferably be changed into meaningful phrases, e.g. "Why does my C++ compiler complain about ambiguous overload only when I add a variadic version?", not simply removed.
    – Ben Voigt
    Jun 2, 2014 at 2:27

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