Generally, when I don't want to refer to c++11 or c++14 I simply tag as c++. However, there are some like Mike Seymour who may assume C++11 from c++ alone:
@ikh The question isn't tagged C++11, so I wouldn't make a big fuss
over C++11 features. – remyabel
@remyabel: It's tagged C++, which these days means C++11 (or possibly
14, I'm not sure whether that's officially the standard yet). – Mike
Seymour
@Mike I think C++14 has been ratified, but does that mean
C++14 should be assumed? I don't think so. – remyabel
@remyabel: I think so, although the best answers will mention when
they use new features, and suggest workarounds for those stuck in the
past. That's just my opinion though. – Mike Seymour
Of course, it would be disingenuous to omit information such as "use smart pointers" or "use <random> instead of rand()" even if the question isn't tagged C++11, unless the user is specifically asking for a pre-C++11 solution. Then the C++03 tag will clarify that.
For the longest time, I mistakenly believed that C++98 and C++03 were treated differently in GCC. According to the documentation for GCC, ansi (in C++ mode) and C++98 and C++03 refer to the same language standard. I'm unable to find the proper documentation for Clang, the manual simply says it fully implements the C++98 standard. I'm assuming it behaves similarly to GCC.
In Is C++03 a new version of the C++ Standard or just a Technical Corrigendum (TC) of C++98?, Cheers and hth. - Alf says:
C++03 (ISO C++14882:2003) is a standard in its own right, and it is
also "just" TC1 because it is only C++98 amended with a set of
corrections.
You can say that C++03 is what C++98 was intended to be, the actual
wording of C++98 revised to make it say what it was meant to say.
Followed by the wg21's standard's page:
The first edition of ISO/IEC 14882 was published in 1998. A technical
corrigendum was approved in 2003, . [sic] and the standard was
published again as the ISO/IEC 14882:2003 edition, published
2003-10-16. Then the ISO/IEC 14882:2011 was published 2011-09-01.
And for completeness, the back cover of The C++ Standard: Incorporating Technical Corrigendum No. 1:
This is technically BS ISO/IEC 14882:2003 (Second Edition) as approved
by all national standards bodies (such as ANSI). It is the ONLY
available bound version of the standard.
However, C++03 introduced value initialization. Of course, if modern compilers treat C++98 and C++03 mode the same, then it doesn't really make a difference.
I'm not necessarily in favor in making these tags synonyms, but I felt it was necessary to stand corrected on my mistaken assumptions.
-std=c++98
and-std=c++03
did the same thing. Can you point me to the relevant documentation for either one?c++98
andc++03
as two headings for the same paragraph. (Edit: Just so you don't think I'm crazy, someone deleted some comments I was replying to.)