One of the confusing (or do I mean irritating?) scenarios is when the question states it is about C but the code uses features found only in C++ (such as the <iostream>
header, or a ::
scope qualifier, or class
or template
). If the question is dual-tagged with C and C++, the C tag can be promptly removed — if it uses a C++ feature, it can't be C.
There are fewer features that are strictly C and that can't be C++; many of those are archaic parts of C (such as main()
with no return type, or a K&R-style non-prototype function definition). If such code is posted as 'compiling' and is dual-tagged, it is reasonable to remove the C++ tag as it can't be compiled by a C++ compiler.
If either is posted with a single tag, but the tag is the 'wrong' one, it is debatable whether to retag. Generally, it is best then to solicit input from the person asking the question, trying to establish what they are writing in. Sometimes they aren't sure, or think they're writing C but they have to be compiling with a C++ compiler because the error messages they get are only valid when the code is compiled by a C++ compiler. For example:
Sometype *obj = malloc(sizeof(*obj)); // Not C++ — requires a cast
The statement is valid in C (provided the <stdlib.h>
header has been included); it is not valid in C++ as there is no implicit conversion from void *
to other pointer types. But if they're getting a compilation error on the line about 'cannot convert void *
to Sometype *
', then they must be using a C++ compiler, even if they think they're writing C code.
In general, you should give deference to the questioner's views on the language they're using, but some questioners make it hard to keep a straight face.
I generally look strongly askance at dual-tagged C and C++ questions, and usually aim to remove one or the other tags.
Something else to be careful about when closing a question as a duplicate is to ensure that the language tags of the two questions are the same (preferably both with a single tag). Closing a question tagged C as a duplicate of a C++ question or vice versa is generally a very bad idea. Where it is appropriate (there are a few cases where it might be acceptable), it probably warrants a comment explaining why — and the comment should be separate from the automatically generated 'possible duplicate' message since those get removed if the question is closed as a duplicate of another.