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You're just assuming that people are downvoting the question because it has both C and C++ tags. I see no evidence of that. No one is commenting about the tagging of the question (unless those comments were posted and deleted before I read the question), and there are lots of comments pointing out other problems with the question, suggesting that the downvotes are based on those other reasons.

For starters, the edit by the user that wasn't the post author made the question far worse. The original question was asking for an explanation of why a given snippet works in one language and not in another; it was effectively asking for the section of the language specs in each language that either prohibits or allows that snippet.

I personally wouldn't consider that first revision a particularly great question (partly because it's two questions in one, as it's combining, "Why is this valid C++?" and "Why is this invalid C?" into one question, and also because the latter is largely answered by looking at the compiler error you see when trying to compile it, which really should be in the question, with an explanation of why the error message is unclear or fails to accurately explain why the code isn't valid C code.

But the revision makes the question unclear. After the revision it could be interpreted as asking why the designers of C choose to make this code not valid, and why the designers of CC++ choose to make it valid. The question has been made unclear as to whether it's asking that or for an explanation of what, in the specs, mades the snippet valid or invalid.

And for those that interpret the question as asking why it was designed the way it was, rather than for documentation on why the exhibited behavior is correct, it poses new problems. Asking people why someone else choose to do what they did is simply not a good question on SO, as it ends up with opinion based answers, rather than factual answers. Lots of people find the quesitons more "fun", because thinking about how you should design a language is fun for a lot of people (hence I suspect why someone edited the question from what the author actually asked into that) but it simply doesn't make for a good question on SO.

You're just assuming that people are downvoting the question because it has both C and C++ tags. I see no evidence of that. No one is commenting about the tagging of the question (unless those comments were posted and deleted before I read the question), and there are lots of comments pointing out other problems with the question, suggesting that the downvotes are based on those other reasons.

For starters, the edit by the user that wasn't the post author made the question far worse. The original question was asking for an explanation of why a given snippet works in one language and not in another; it was effectively asking for the section of the language specs in each language that either prohibits or allows that snippet.

I personally wouldn't consider that first revision a particularly great question (partly because it's two questions in one, as it's combining, "Why is this valid C++?" and "Why is this invalid C?" into one question, and also because the latter is largely answered by looking at the compiler error you see when trying to compile it, which really should be in the question, with an explanation of why the error message is unclear or fails to accurately explain why the code isn't valid C code.

But the revision makes the question unclear. After the revision it could be interpreted as asking why the designers of C choose to make this code not valid, and why the designers of C choose to make it valid. The question has been made unclear as to whether it's asking that or for an explanation of what, in the specs, mades the snippet valid or invalid.

And for those that interpret the question as asking why it was designed the way it was, rather than for documentation on why the exhibited behavior is correct, it poses new problems. Asking people why someone else choose to do what they did is simply not a good question on SO, as it ends up with opinion based answers, rather than factual answers. Lots of people find the quesitons more "fun", because thinking about how you should design a language is fun for a lot of people (hence I suspect why someone edited the question from what the author actually asked into that) but it simply doesn't make for a good question on SO.

You're just assuming that people are downvoting the question because it has both C and C++ tags. I see no evidence of that. No one is commenting about the tagging of the question (unless those comments were posted and deleted before I read the question), and there are lots of comments pointing out other problems with the question, suggesting that the downvotes are based on those other reasons.

For starters, the edit by the user that wasn't the post author made the question far worse. The original question was asking for an explanation of why a given snippet works in one language and not in another; it was effectively asking for the section of the language specs in each language that either prohibits or allows that snippet.

I personally wouldn't consider that first revision a particularly great question (partly because it's two questions in one, as it's combining, "Why is this valid C++?" and "Why is this invalid C?" into one question, and also because the latter is largely answered by looking at the compiler error you see when trying to compile it, which really should be in the question, with an explanation of why the error message is unclear or fails to accurately explain why the code isn't valid C code.

But the revision makes the question unclear. After the revision it could be interpreted as asking why the designers of C choose to make this code not valid, and why the designers of C++ choose to make it valid. The question has been made unclear as to whether it's asking that or for an explanation of what, in the specs, mades the snippet valid or invalid.

And for those that interpret the question as asking why it was designed the way it was, rather than for documentation on why the exhibited behavior is correct, it poses new problems. Asking people why someone else choose to do what they did is simply not a good question on SO, as it ends up with opinion based answers, rather than factual answers. Lots of people find the quesitons more "fun", because thinking about how you should design a language is fun for a lot of people (hence I suspect why someone edited the question from what the author actually asked into that) but it simply doesn't make for a good question on SO.

Source Link
Servy
  • 203.6k
  • 105
  • 683
  • 806

You're just assuming that people are downvoting the question because it has both C and C++ tags. I see no evidence of that. No one is commenting about the tagging of the question (unless those comments were posted and deleted before I read the question), and there are lots of comments pointing out other problems with the question, suggesting that the downvotes are based on those other reasons.

For starters, the edit by the user that wasn't the post author made the question far worse. The original question was asking for an explanation of why a given snippet works in one language and not in another; it was effectively asking for the section of the language specs in each language that either prohibits or allows that snippet.

I personally wouldn't consider that first revision a particularly great question (partly because it's two questions in one, as it's combining, "Why is this valid C++?" and "Why is this invalid C?" into one question, and also because the latter is largely answered by looking at the compiler error you see when trying to compile it, which really should be in the question, with an explanation of why the error message is unclear or fails to accurately explain why the code isn't valid C code.

But the revision makes the question unclear. After the revision it could be interpreted as asking why the designers of C choose to make this code not valid, and why the designers of C choose to make it valid. The question has been made unclear as to whether it's asking that or for an explanation of what, in the specs, mades the snippet valid or invalid.

And for those that interpret the question as asking why it was designed the way it was, rather than for documentation on why the exhibited behavior is correct, it poses new problems. Asking people why someone else choose to do what they did is simply not a good question on SO, as it ends up with opinion based answers, rather than factual answers. Lots of people find the quesitons more "fun", because thinking about how you should design a language is fun for a lot of people (hence I suspect why someone edited the question from what the author actually asked into that) but it simply doesn't make for a good question on SO.