I recently wrote a question about C interop in Swift: Converting a C char
array to a String. The tags, originally, were c, swift, array and tuples. I chose these because before asking, I searched for something like "c array to swift string".
Another user came along and insisted that it did not belong with the C tag, because the question was only marginally about C, and could apply to people using C, C++, Objective-C and Objective-C++ as well.
This is correct: the question has really little to do with C itself. I'm even asking for a "pure Swift" solution. In my opinion, though, the main purpose of tags is to facilitate search, and since "C array" unambiguously designates the construct in question (regardless of how many other languages share it), it is inevitable that anyone with this problem will eventually look for "C array".
It appears that in his opinion, the main purpose of tags is to neatly categorize questions. I can see why: people can follow tags, and followers of the C tag could be disappointed if all they got were questions about interop to a different language.
At the same time, tags are meant to overlap and most C-tagged questions actually deal with a library that only happens to be written in C.
Similarly, people having C interop problems would probably look for questions tagged C and whatever language, and I think that searchability is more important than standalone categorization. I think that it's justified to use the C tag to talk about interop between C features and another language.
Said user went ahead and retagged the question, changing c to interop, which I find less searchable. Should I roll it back?