The brief description of the c++
tag says
C++ is a general-purpose programming language. It was originally designed as an extension to C and has a similar syntax, but it is now a completely different language. Use this tag for questions about code (to be) compiled with a C++ compiler. Use a version-specific tag for questions related to a specific standard revision [C++11], [C++14], [C++17], [C++20] or [C++23], etc.
Yes, as answered here, the full c++
tag wiki says the tag, without other qualifications, applies to the latest-and-greatest standard (at the time of the question). But the above is what you see when you hover over the c++
tag or click on it to get the tag's questions - which I imagine is where most users stop looking. And it says its for "code to be compiled with a C++ compiler". Full stop.
"Modern" generally means lambdas, move semantics, variadic templates, type traits, and such, introduced in C++ and extended/improved since then, plus the entire panoply of programming techniques built on them. Yes, post-C++11 standards make some things easier or possible but it is possible to distinguish both "modern" from "pre-modern" and also "modern" from "latest-and-greatest".
There should be a modern-c++
tag. The reason I'm here answering this meta-question now is because I had a need for it.
new int[n]
was still OK andstd::vector<int>
looked strange.c++
tag is according to the tag wiki).