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For two of the major C++ compilers, we have two tag options each:

: the GNU Compiler Collection. It's the de facto standard C compiler on Linux and supports many other languages and platforms as well.
: the C++ frontend to the GNU Compiler Collection (gcc).

and

: the LLVM compiler front end for C/C++/Objective-C, which provides fast compiles, useful error and warning messages, an accommodating license and offers an extensible platform for building sou…
: a C, C++, and Objective-C compiler which encompasses preprocessing, parsing, optimization, code generation, assembly, and linking. Depending on which high-level mode setting is pass…

A lot of C++ questions are tagged (7k questions) or (1.8k), where those are really broad family tags. Should they be retagged to (4k questions currently) and (388)?

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  • 3
    Maybe [g++] and [clang++] should be synonymized to [gcc] and [clang] instead, respectively? Mar 17, 2016 at 21:03
  • 1
    @Deduplicator Seems reasonable to me
    – Barry
    Mar 17, 2016 at 21:11
  • 3
    Based on your description though, doesn't [clang] also compile C++?
    – Rob Mod
    Mar 18, 2016 at 0:58

1 Answer 1

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First, it seems to me that the difference between and are not the same as the difference between and .

refers to the entirety of the compiler collection, all languages for which the GCC stack works. refers specifically to the part of GCC that compiles C++.

With Clang, it's kinda the opposite. , 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. 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.

stops with LLVM code; continues through to linking and so forth.

So it seems that the combination of and 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 and is meaningful, because the tag description for 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 and .

Personally, I'd prefer that the 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. referring to the full source-to-executable stack is something of a misnomer, considering how few people use it as such.

As for vs. ... how much do we really care about that distinction? I'd be fine if vanished into the aether and we just used + appropriate language tags. It seems obvious to me that if you tag your code /, you're not talking about the C++ parts of the compiler. Similarly, if you tag you question /, 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?

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  • 1
    Synonymize then?
    – Barry
    Mar 17, 2016 at 21:43

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