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This is somehow related to Disallow the tagging of questions with both C and C++ tags, but not quite the same. I just came across a question that was initially tagged with both tags. The code shown was clearly C++. But the root of the problem with the code lied in the usage of a C API C standard library function. So, to my understanding, the Q&A was helpful to both C and C++ programmers. Someone edited the question, removing the C tag. Personally, I think this is harmful in that special case. In fact, being totally strict it was a C question, but paraphrasing the shown code to C would have been a major edit.

So, what do you think -- should the code shown really be the only determinant for which tags are appropriate? I feel like it should depend on whether the question and answer is applicable to the language tagged.

Edited for clarification: Just using any API that happens to be implemented in C indeed doesn't justify a C tag, as one answer points out -- I agree with that.

Edit #2: This duplicate accusement is ridiculous and a bad example of some behaviour on here. I'm not talking about a question showing "only C code" but tagged C++, I'm talking about a question showing clearly C++ code but the root of the problem was a C standard library call!

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    Some SO users suffer from a pretty serious case of parochialism and will insist there can be no crosstalk between languages. Even if it is a very common practical usage case. I post answers to a C++ language extension tag, one of the posters here spent weeks of his free time to remove the [c++] tag from them. Pretty hard to stop them, they are willing to invest an enormous amount of energy to avoid learning anything new. Just roll back the edit, the odds that it will last are however not good. Jul 25, 2015 at 10:23
  • Downvoted because you did zero research into previous discussion of this topic on meta
    – Ben Voigt
    Jul 26, 2015 at 23:17
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    After seeing what is happening on here, I really don't want the poster of this particular question being exposed to this.
    – user2371524
    Jul 27, 2015 at 7:32
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    Hmmmmmm what is happening here? Discussion? Well, yes...that's the point to ask something on meta, I think. My POV is: rename c with pascal. Now repeat your question "Tags Pascal and C++ … should it really only depend on the posted source?". They share something, true, but they're different languages. Like C and C++ Jul 27, 2015 at 7:37
  • I'm referring to those who don't want to discuss but prefer to "do away with it" my marking it as a duplicate of something different.
    – user2371524
    Jul 27, 2015 at 7:38
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    Most of the time, if the problem stems from a C standard library function call in a C++ program, the problem is precisely that the code is using a C function instead of a C++ function or technique, and very often the fix is to use the C++ native library or facilities instead of the C function. The techniques that are appropriate if the program is C++ are usually not applicable if the code is C, and very often the converse applies too, but including both tags makes it unclear which is really wanted. Please don't encourage dual tagging; it makes it hard to provide good answers. Jul 27, 2015 at 12:44
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    For those arguing against double-tagging, I wonder how they would handle the case of a question asked with a [c++] tag that has a duplicate existing question with a [c] tag (or vice versa). Would you still vote to close even though they are "different languages" ? Jul 28, 2015 at 11:40
  • @JonathanPotter maybe. Maybe also editing new/old question to use the right tag (C or C++). Of course ready for exceptions, blind closing votes/retagging is seldom useful. Jul 28, 2015 at 13:54
  • remotely at best. Tagging the question because its problem and solution applies to C clearly follows the categorization approach. People here seem just in general opposed to it, only because the example code happens to show C++ around the problem.
    – user2371524
    Jul 29, 2015 at 18:29

5 Answers 5

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Tags are used to indicate the relevance of a question to specific programming topics, tools, libraries, etc.

If both C and C++ are relevant to a single question, then I see no problem with tagging that question with both of the languages. The relevance can be just from code, or it can be from APIs that can be used from either C or C++, or really any other reference that is applicable to both C and C++.

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    If the code is C++, it should not be tagged C. If the code is C, it should seldom be tagged C++. They are two vastly different languages, and there are very few questions that should be dual-tagged. 90 times out of a 100, dual-tagging is wrong. That leaves a fair margin for 'some questions benefit from dual tagging'; I think I've probably left too big a margin and the claim should be for more than 90% being incorrectly dual-tagged. Jul 27, 2015 at 7:11
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    What I don't understand is how often both C and C++ tags are relevant to same question. Yes, of course, there are corner cases where it applies however they're exceptions (and IMO OP should explain this in his question, no one will complain if he says "I'm tagging both C and C++ because..."). Jul 27, 2015 at 7:19
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    @JonathanLeffler They're not vastly different (in that C is a ~80-90% subset of C++), still I agree with your rough numbers. I see a lot of dual-tagged questions just because the op has no clue about the differences. The motivation for my post here is that it seems there's an automatic reflex (probably because of those many inappropriate tags) for some users to remove one of the tags no matter what
    – user2371524
    Jul 27, 2015 at 8:50
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    A big -1 from me. It is very rare that a question should be tagged with both. Please do not encourage it. Jul 27, 2015 at 11:30
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    @FelixPalmen is C a subset of C++? Can I kindly disagree? If you think so then you're right about double tagging. Unfortunately they're two different languages. Jul 27, 2015 at 13:55
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    It is due to the fact C++ was designed to be a superset. It's not complete, but as I wrote you WILL find 80-90% of C in C++. This doesn't make them somehow the "same language" as many confused people may believe, so your emphasizing is not really contradicting me. (And I have to add, as much as e.g. Microsofts crap annoyed me before until i found a way to compile C (not C++) code in VS ... claiming they had nothing in common like any other languages is just not hitting it)
    – user2371524
    Jul 27, 2015 at 13:57
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    Felix: just be clear. With super-set you imply that C++ has all features C has (or, as you say, 80/90% of them). However it's not. C++ is compatible with C standard library and it has a very similar syntax but languages are different (I hope I don't have to repeat here that (in)famous list). In fact they're different languages (yes, that's true!). Some rare times they interop (=you use C library in a C++ program) but if you use printf() in C++ then you're not writing C code. Any doubt about this? Jul 27, 2015 at 14:18
  • With this in mind then...how often you need to tag, let's say, a question with both c++-cli and c#? It's not impossible but rare enough to be an exception unless, for example, you're explicitly issue a problem with them (let's say to consume indexed properties made in C++/CLI in C#). Jul 27, 2015 at 14:19
  • @FelixPalmen Where do you get 80-90% from? Here's one way to look at it. The C++ standard has 30 clauses. 15 of them (Member access control, Special member functions, Overloading, Templates, Exception handling, the Strings/Localization/Containers/Iterators/Algorithms/Numerics/IO/Regex/Atomics/Thread libraries) are about language features or library elements that do not at all exist in C. And those cover very significant features of C++...
    – Barry
    Jul 27, 2015 at 14:44
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    @AdrianoRepetti is it so hard to understand? a (near) superset doesn't make it the same language, that's not what I'm saying. And the case with C# and C++ (be it CLI or not) is a different one, C# was never designed to be a superset of C++ (thanks god btw...) ... and Barry, you got the interpretation of the percentage figures wrong. It means 80-90% of valid C code is also valid C++ code. A 100% superset would mean ALL C code would have to be valid C++ code, still C++ could have 3 times the features...
    – user2371524
    Jul 27, 2015 at 15:14
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    Felix. Why on Earth you think if you write printf() in C++ then you're writing C code? You're not. if you write if (a > 2) then are you writing C code? No, you're not. Given that why you would ever tag a question with both tags? C++ is not a C compiler with 80% of C standard library and tons of new features, catch this. This has been widely discussed on meta and main site. If they're different languages then it makes no sense (99.999%) to use both tags and this has been widely accepted. Jul 27, 2015 at 15:37
  • Yes you may propose to change this and even create a new unified tag c-or-c++ but I doubt you'll get any support from people who knows C or C++ just a little bit. One question with both tags is a corner case (and yes people shouldn't blindly remove one of them when they see a question) but you'll see it once every 1000 questions. That said this is my opinion, meta is the place to discuss about this and get consensus. Jul 27, 2015 at 15:44
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    Silly? Absolutely yes! That's why they were so extreme. Think that it's what (many) people think when they see a question with C and C++ tags together. What's your question? Should we tag according to source code? No, we shouldn't because it doesn't matter if you use printf() instead of cout: if you're compiling with a C++ compiler then you're still writing C++ code. There may be cases where a question can be double tagged? Of course yes but they're so rare that we may consider them exceptions, rule (reasons?) are described in supposed dupe of this question. Jul 27, 2015 at 21:18
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    You may argue that sometimes (or even often) the same question can be valid both in C and in C++. In that case it's probably a bad question (or answer). It's extremely rare to write C++ code that it's also C code (it means you're not using C++ features at all and, for example with void* casts, you will have bad C code). It's also rare to write C code that is decent C++ code (because probably you're not using C++ features). In most of that cases (I think) this compatibility should be in answer, not in question (unless OP is aware of it and it's what he is looking for). ù Jul 27, 2015 at 21:23
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    I would like to see a link to such question (good question plus good answer that can be tagged both C and C++) for each upvote on this answer... Jul 27, 2015 at 21:25
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No, it is absolutely not a good idea for questions about standard library functions to be tagged both C and C++. C++ does not import the complete C standard library unmodified, it adjusts some of the functions so that they work better for C++. Most people answering know how a function works in C, or know how a function works in C++, but not both, and guess about how to use it in the other language. That guess is usually correct, or at least close enough, but not always. Additionally, even if a function works the same way in both languages, best practices on how to use it, and even on whether to use it at all, can still be different. Good answers for a C question are often bad answers for a C++ question, and vice versa. Using the tag for the language that the OP is actually interested in means getting better answers.

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Sorry, but the fact that you are using a library which might be written in C from your C++ code does not a C question make.

Why do I say "might"?
Because there are many languages which allow using that calling convention, and we don't want to introduce .

You might make a case for using if the calling convention matters, but that's the extent of it.


If you really want to ask the C crowd, consider asking an equivalent C question instead. Shouldn't be hard, as you asserted that everything important is the same in C anyway.

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  • The case I was talking about was using a function of the C standard library ...
    – user2371524
    Jul 24, 2015 at 22:17
  • @FelixPalmen: So? It's also part of the C++ standard library. And there's no guarantee it's written in C. Jul 24, 2015 at 22:18
  • That's the whole point of this discussion: Is it useful to C programmers? I think yes, it is. What's your argument it is not?
    – user2371524
    Jul 24, 2015 at 22:21
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    @FelixPalmen: My answer is definitely no, too much noise drowning out the C questions if everything remotely related is tagged C. Jul 24, 2015 at 22:27
  • That's in my opinion not remotely related but directly and for too much noise, have a look at the c# tag. But I see your opinion seems to be somehow representative on here...
    – user2371524
    Jul 25, 2015 at 6:54
  • While I think you are right and it's representative, feedback to date on this question is too sparse to show it. Jul 25, 2015 at 8:38
  • The answer you linked makes perfect sense to me, still I think it's a bit different when the source of a problem is the usage of a function of the C standard library, which I consider being part of the language C.
    – user2371524
    Jul 25, 2015 at 8:54
  • And that's what I'd like to put up on discussion here. It might be a corner case, but the problem was clearly C, although the shown code was C++. In my opinion, it shouldn't even be tagged C++, but then you had to rewrite all the shown code.
    – user2371524
    Jul 25, 2015 at 9:11
  • Remove the other-language part and make it C or pseudo-code, and we can talk. Because then, you know, you no longer have a some-other-language-than-C question. Jul 25, 2015 at 9:20
  • I would automatically be less annoyed when SO users follow the edit guidelines they recommend. Jul 25, 2015 at 13:44
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    @HansPassant: A good part had all the editing needed done, but proper tagging. Most of the rest only had minor issues left, which I fixed. There are also a few which would need a full rewrite from scratch, with new/the missing data from the OP, but I cannot get that. Might I have edited a few of them too little? Certainly possible. (I went back through the last 8 posts I edited just now.) Jul 25, 2015 at 13:56
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The question you should ask yourself is:

Do someone that only knows C (or C++) have the qualifications to answer the question?

If the answer is "no", obviously the tag shouldn't be used. The same reason why sometimes some people wonders "why the heck I'm seeing this question!". Here lies where the propose of the tags shines, either you know the answer to the question (also, evaluating the correctness of the previous answer) or you are interested to acquire that knowledge.

The only reason why I would use more than a language tag is when is more than obvious that the question require more than one area of expertise to be accurately answered, otherwise seldom to do so.

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This is now live: Proposed update to C and C++ tag usage wikis

It addresses this specific issue:

A question should be tagged with both c and c++ if it is about:
...

  • C++ code that uses C libraries (for example code using extern "C").

This means cases like C++ code using C libraries like pthreads.h, Windows API, Linux API and so on.

Questions about the C standard library, or how to use that one from C++, is another story. I think it will have to be handled on case-by-case basis.

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