I'm not the best at this, so I thought it would be best to post a discussion rather than directly editing the excerpt.
Current excerpt:
C# (pronounced "see sharp") is a high level, object-oriented programming language that is designed for building a variety of applications that run on the .NET Framework (or .NET Core). C# is simple, powerful, type-safe, and object-oriented.
Problems I see:
- For some reason, object-oriented is repeated.
- Saying it's only object-oriented is very misleading, since it has a lot of functional features (the entire LINQ library couldn't exist without them, and that's only an example). It's much more a multi-paradigm language than an object-oriented one.
- It's misleading saying it "runs on .NET and .NET Core". What about Mono and, currently in preview..., WebAssembly? I don't see the point of including this part at all.
- It also supports the DLR, so it's as type-safe as you want it to be (I'm looking at you, Office interop)
For a starting point, I'd suggest something like the following.
C# (pronounced "see sharp") is a high-level, multi-paradigm programming language that is designed for building a variety of applications.
I don't think we need to say much more. We could add that a version-specific tag should only be used if the question is related to a feature introduced in that version.
We could go with something similar to what Revision 36 and Revision 45 had:
C# (pronounced "see sharp") is a multi-paradigm, managed programming language developed by Microsoft. Questions should include code examples, sufficient to reproduce the problem. Add extra tags, relevant to the used technology or library.
C# (pronounced C sharp) is a general-purpose, multi-paradigm programming language encompassing strong typing, imperative, declarative, functional, generic, object-oriented (class-based), and component-oriented programming disciplines.