I was just about to ask a question on SO that is technically very similar to the question Why does C have these weird translation limits (section 2.2.4.1)?, though perhaps slightly different in spirit.
When I searched for relevant tags to add, I started typing history, leading me to history and its related wiki page, warning me about the following:
DO NOT use this tag for questions about the history of a programming concept or feature; those questions are off-topic.
After reading about the reasons behind its deprecation, and a relevant question on meta.programmers, I'm still at loss.
I feel that if Why does C have these weird translation limits (section 2.2.4.1)? is on topic, then my question-to-be is on topic. However, just because a question has escaped the clutches of the diligent moderators doesn't necessarily mean it's on-topic, although it was recently posted, a fair bit after the ominous last edit to the history tag.
My question is definitely not about programming history, so it should really not go to programmers. It is about a very specific tool and its implementation and usage.
It is however a why question, which should be off-topic on any site on the stack exchange network according to the boilerplate "You should only ask practical, answerable questions based on actual problems that you face" written on every page in the help center. A literal interpretation of that sentence would exclude a lot of very good questions.
... and now to my actual meta question
Is Why does C have these weird translation limits (section 2.2.4.1)? on topic considering present-day stackoverflow culture, and can I interpret its continued existence as a guideline to what type of questions I can ask?
history
tag. The question is about the reasons for the limits being as they are, for an old version of a programming standards, definitely not an actual problem.