Question1 is about if-if
statements vs if-else if
statements in C#. And question2 is asking the same thing, but in C/C++, which was answered perfectly, meanwhile the answer is also suitable for question1. Should the C# question be marked as a duplicate of the C/C++ even though they are different languages?
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11In my view, in general, different languages may have different features and restrictions to solve the problem, while 2 questions may have same answers occasionally, it does't imply they are asking or requiring the same thing. Also I see the question is about optimization, which is quite language specific, marking them as duplicate may mislead beginners.– ggrrCommented Mar 23, 2016 at 2:58
1 Answer
I'd leave them separate, per language. If you can find a C# dupe, then use that one.
At first glance, the answers in the current thread are similar to the c/c++ question, which are also similar to this java/c++ question and probably others too.
On the one hand, multiple if
statements vs an if/else
structure is a question about logic, and isn't necessarily dependent on a particular language, at least at first.
But then there's a comment like this in the java/c++ question, regarding whether there's any difference:
It's a significant difference, because you can implement operator== in C++ to do nasty (side-effecty) things (which has also an influence on optimisation ...). AFAICR this doesn't work in Java.
If there are language-dependent considerations (like the above), based on the particular language the OP is asking about, they're not exact dupes.
Also, it may confuse/mislead people who are seeking answers about one language, to then be forwarded to a thread with examples and notes about a separate language.
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