First, it seems to me that the difference between gcc and g++ are not the same as the difference between clang and clang++.
gcc refers to the entirety of the compiler collection, all languages for which the GCC stack works. g++ refers specifically to the part of GCC that compiles C++.
With Clang, it's kinda the opposite. clang, according to the tag info, refers to ''just'' the compiler front-end. But it does so for all of the languages that Clang project has front-end support for: C, C++, and Objective variants thereof. clang++ doesn't refer to just the C++ version of the front end (again, according to the tag info). It instead refers to the entire compilation suite, from text file to output binaries.
clang stops with LLVM code; clang++ continues through to linking and so forth.
So it seems that the combination of clang and c++ is meaningful: it's for questions about the Clang front-end, when used to compile C++ code, or when you're actually modifying the Clang front-end, like if you're making static analysis tools or something.
Similarly, the combination of clang++ and c is meaningful, because the tag description for clang++ is not ''solely'' about C++. So there's nothing to be changed with regard to languages; you need to use a language tag with both clang and clang++.
Personally, I'd prefer that the clang tag refers to Clang-as-a-build-suite, while a tag like clang-fe
could be used for issues related solely to Clang-as-a-front-end. clang++ referring to the full source-to-executable stack is something of a misnomer, considering how few people use it as such.
As for gcc vs. g++... how much do we really care about that distinction? I'd be fine if g++ vanished into the aether and we just used gcc + appropriate language tags. It seems obvious to me that if you tag your code c/gcc, you're not talking about the C++ parts of the compiler. Similarly, if you tag you question java/gcc, you're not interested in the C part of the compiler.
I just see no need for a tag for a multi-language compiler that incorporates the compiler and the language in one tag. You're still going to put the language tag in there, right?