48

This question: Clang vs GCC - which produces faster binaries?, which was asked 11½ years ago, was (rightly) closed as opinion-based ("Seeking recommendations …" may also be appropriate) but it does appear to be both popular and useful (136k views, +272 score and over 100 users have bookmarked it). It also has some great answers.

In the ~5 years since its closure, it has attracted 4 delete votes – 6 more such would remove it from general view, which I don't think is appropriate. It is currently in the Reopen Votes Review Queue where, ironically, it may attract more delete votes.

Should this question be historically locked, to prevent possible deletion by over-zealous 'curators'? (I believe that it should be locked but others may disagree.)

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  • 18
    One more delete vote has appeared since I posted this question. Isn't there a "rule" that posts actively under discussion here shouldn't be delete-voted? Dec 29, 2021 at 2:17
  • 5
    Perhaps an unwritten rule? Dec 29, 2021 at 2:23
  • 37
    @HovercraftFullOfEels I think a moderator did write it down somewhere, but it was deleted. :) Dec 29, 2021 at 2:24
  • 6
    But I agree with this rule, written or unwritten Dec 29, 2021 at 2:28
  • 6
    Related: "What is a historical lock, and what is it used for?"
    – Makyen Mod
    Dec 29, 2021 at 3:29
  • 15
    IMO it shouldn't even be locked, let alone deleted. The question is not opinion-based.
    – tdy
    Dec 29, 2021 at 4:04
  • 7
    The problem with the question is not that it's opinion-based but that it's very broad and might change depending on version, arch, etc. But if an answer shows the question does have a broadly applicable answer, then maybe it's ok as not too broad to be answerable.
    – qwr
    Dec 29, 2021 at 5:27
  • 16
    100% agreed it shouldn't be deleted. IDK if setting it as a "favourite" will help notice if it does get deleted, so I can vote to undelete. Discussion in comments was getting into the details of locked vs closed but unlocked vs. fully open, which is also relevant. If we leave open, perhaps a note at the top or bottom of the question linking to meta discussion about how it's not a model question for future askers, etc. (And perhaps mentioning a non-deletion consensus). I haven't yet seen any argument here in favour of deletion; would be curious to see one of the voters argue their case. Dec 29, 2021 at 6:04
  • 14
    Don't delete. Jeez. Clearly a lot of work there. Can we solve real problems?
    – Travis J
    Dec 29, 2021 at 9:08
  • 11
    The term "over-zealous 'curators'" is rather disrespectful. SO strives for high quality and it is done by volunteer moderation. It's natural that for some questions there will be some disagreement in judgement. I don't think it's justified to use such tone towards people who simply have a different opinion on the quality/fitness of a question (disclaimer: I haven't seen this question ever, nor have I voted on it).
    – BartoszKP
    Dec 29, 2021 at 14:50
  • 6
    btw looking at it now, I agree it should be deleted. The fact that there is "a lot of work there" doesn't change anything, because we don't judge questions solely by the fact that someone has put a lot of work in the answer. Not only it is too broad, but it's guaranteed to get out of date every time a new version of either compiler is released. Updating this ad infinitum is pointless.
    – BartoszKP
    Dec 29, 2021 at 14:55
  • 13
    Temporarily locked since Meta is thrashing it open and closed
    – Machavity Mod
    Dec 29, 2021 at 18:32
  • 9
    please focus on that rubbish 0 value questions swamping in on a daily base. But on the other hand leave that historical content for future readers. Close it, if necessary. Lock it, if necessary, but please don't delete it to the eyes of <10k ers. Thank you all involved!
    – Vickel
    Dec 29, 2021 at 18:42
  • 8
    I still think this question can yield good, mostly objective answers. And the main reason for controversy is that for many people this objective difference is anything but - it's their personal religious belief in a holy war, and any infidel challenging their belief is automatically subjective and wrong. I might agree with justification of "too broad" as an analysis of domains where one shines and the other doesn't could be a book's worth. But a matter of opinion? Only to those who conflate "inconvenient facts" and opinion.
    – SF.
    Dec 29, 2021 at 23:28
  • 6
    One more issue: it's only subjective when it's a close call. At the time of asking the question, if I asked "which has faster compile times" the answer would be unambiguous, unchallenged "Clang". The difference was so large there were no test cases where GCC would compile faster. That was also what triggered this question: does Clang manage to outperform GCC on speed so much by doing the bare minimum mechanical translation while GCC optimizes the binary? Or were its authors so brilliant they achieved such compile time gains without compromising the end result quality?
    – SF.
    Dec 29, 2021 at 23:51

3 Answers 3

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According to the link from @Makyen's comment on the question, this is the criteria of a post whether it is appropriate for historical lock.

When is it appropriate to lock a question for historical reasons? Questions can be historically locked when:

  1. The post does not meet the current guidelines for a good, on-topic question, and
  2. The post is stellar, in spite of its off-topic nature, and
  3. There are a large number of views, upvotes and inbound links on the post, and
  4. The post is contentious; e.g., it has been closed and reopened at least once, or deleted and undeleted at least once.

So, let's check it one-by-one.

  1. The post does not meet the current guidelines for a good, on-topic question, and

The post here does not meet the current guidelines because it is closed as opinion-based question.

  1. The post is stellar, in spite of its off-topic nature, and

As I am not a native English speaker, I don't know much about the meaning of the word "stellar" here, so I googled.

Stellar Meaning

I will give it the "exceptionally good; outstanding" meaning because I think it is the most appropriate one here.

Therefore, the post in question must be exceptionally good and/or outstanding.

I would say, for me, it is questionable. Really subjective -- depends on who see/ don't see the values from the question.

  1. There are a large number of views, upvotes and inbound links on the post, and

"Large" number of views, upvotes and inbound links. Let's look at the number. As of 29/12/2021, it has 137k views, 273 upvotes, and 102 inbound links including bookmarks/favorites.

Since no one defines how much is it for "large" in here, so it is difficult to say whether those numbers satisfy the criteria.

  1. The post is contentious; e.g., it has been closed and reopened at least once, or deleted and undeleted at least once.

By looking at the history of the question's activities and as @Adrian Mole 's comment, the question was closed and has now been reopened, which makes it contentious.

Summary

It is debatable for the question to be historically locked because some criteria are clearly satisfied but some are questionable.

1
7

No, the question doesn't really deserve a historical lock.

First, we have to ask whether the question should even be closed, and the answer is yes, definitely. The question is way too broad, and the only reasonable answer is "it depends on many many factors" (which all 7 answers admit). The question is not very different from "Is Java or Python faster?", say, which I expect most users would think is not a question that should stay open.

Now we can ask whether a historical lock is appropriate. These locks are for posts that are off-topic (which this one definitely is), but are nonetheless very useful. Having read through the answers, I can't really find any useful information in there. There are a couple of answers that describe in depth the results of bench-marking both compilers on specific projects, but that doesn't generalize in any way (as the answers clearly state). The results are also rather out of date (the most recent version of GCC in the answers is 5.2, which is quite old).

Now, if there existed an answer that demonstrated how to go about performing comparisons between both compilers, that would be useful. None of the answers show how to do that though, so as it stands, the answers are just anecdotal.

To address some of the arguments made in this meta question:

  • Yes, the question has lots of views, but for a decade old question with an extremely click-baity title like "Is GCC or Clang faster?", that's to be expected. As a daily user of both these compilers, I'm almost guaranteed to click on a title like that.

  • Yes, the question has lots of upvotes, but again that's to be expected for similar reasons as mentioned in the above bullet point. Also, clearly a lot of effort went into writing the top scoring answer, and an upvote is a good way to reward that. However, demonstration of effort is irrelevant on Stack Overflow when it comes to determining if a post should be open/closed/deleted; it only matters whether the post is useful.

  • Yes, the question has been bookmarked by a lot of users. I don't actually know the reasons for that. Personally, I would bookmark a question like that to use it with my gold tag badge as a duplicate target for questions like What are the key differences among the gcc, mingw, clang compilers? so as to save wasting 2 close votes on a "POB", or "Needs more focus" reason (which are also valid reasons). Maybe some of the bookmarks are for that, I couldn't say.


To summarize, I'm not advocating strongly for deletion; the question (while it was closed), was not causing any harm. I would have just let it be, and not shed any tears if it happened to be deleted. However, bringing it up on meta makes that pretty much a non-option. Within a couple of days, the question will either be deleted, or historically locked, and if I have to choose between those options, I'm going for deletion.

Note: In the future, if you think a question deserves a historical lock, you should flag it for moderator attention first, and if the decision doesn't go the way you want it to, then raise the issue on meta. This avoids unnecessary drama, and in particular, avoids blatantly off-topic questions from being reopened by users who may be doing so as an "anti-delete" vote. (This "anti-delete" is now particularly effective, since it turns out none of the 5 delete voters can vote to delete the question again, now that the reopening has voided their delete votes.)

1
  • "In the future, if you think a question deserves a historical lock, you should flag it for moderator attention first, and if the decision doesn't go the way you want it to, then raise the issue on meta" I really hate moderators locking questions. I still have yet to see a question that actually benefit from this, it's usually done out of annoyance with some feature (people flagging a post because zalgo) or with a very unproductive hoarding mentality.
    – Braiam
    Jan 2, 2022 at 14:34
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This question sadly is a loaded question, it asks for benchmarks for two very complex enormous applications which has similar objective: convert code to binary. This question while you can measure performance between two applications, at the end you are doing some kind of micro-benchmarking. What if your program relies heavily on one feature that the compiler is poorly optimized, or well optimized; difference between versions; difference between flags; which processor was used; how much memory; <insert here any other potential variable>.

Those kind of questions are closed as too broad, there's too many things that we have to consider to have an authoritative answer.

This obviously doesn't answer the question: should this question be historically locked? No, it should not. It has many issues and it isn't particularly high quality. The information is obsolete (Phoronix article about GCC vs Clang on Intel i9 11900k: shows just .1% difference between both in most benchmarks) at best and misleading at worst. Since that was the whole point of the question, there isn't any redeemable quality that can save this question from deletion.

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  • 1
    Oh, look at this, another more recent benchmark but with AMD's phoronix.com/… :)
    – Braiam
    Dec 29, 2021 at 16:17
  • 11
    The question was being updated and kept up to date with newest changes for years while it was still open.
    – SF.
    Dec 29, 2021 at 23:33
  • 13
    Obsolete and/or misleading? Should we then burn all 1st editions when a 2nd edition is published? No, of course not! At the very least, this question has well-researched information that could serve as good basis for any future, related posts. I agree that it is now off-topic, but maybe not at the time of posting Dec 30, 2021 at 6:39
  • 1
    @AdrianMole people looking for this is looking for up to date information. We aren't providing that, and there's several resources that provide it. You don't need to burn the books, just store them in a box and forget about it.
    – Braiam
    Dec 30, 2021 at 12:03
  • 12
    Putting the books in a box would be the equivalent of closing and locking the question. Deleting the question would be like burning the books. The question (and the books) may contain information that is of historical value. Dec 30, 2021 at 12:23
  • Good point about up to date phoronix benchmarks; the question or the top answer should be edited to have a section linking those, and that future readers should check there for up-to-date test results. Their methodology and set of programs benchmarked is likely a more reasonable cross-section than whatever some one-off test from someone maintaining an SO answer would do. Dec 31, 2021 at 21:23
  • @PeterCordes how about we remove our version and just let people find Phoronix articles. Or better yet, let them find out about openbenchmarking.org. We don't need to have actual benchmarks on the site. How to benchmark is ok, how to improve my code to fare better in a specific benchmark is ok, finding what is slow in my code is also ok. There are many interesting questions around benchmarks that are timeless and need low maintenance, unlike actual benchmarks where you need to specify so many variables, lets steer clear of that mess.
    – Braiam
    Jan 2, 2022 at 14:30

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