In my question, I was trying to add the c++17 tag, but when I select the tag and save it, it is replaced by the c++1z tag.
Why is the c++17 tag replaced by the c++1z tag? (That is, why does this synonym exist?)
In my question, I was trying to add the c++17 tag, but when I select the tag and save it, it is replaced by the c++1z tag.
Why is the c++17 tag replaced by the c++1z tag? (That is, why does this synonym exist?)
The C++17 tag is being automatically replaced by the C++1z tag because the former is a synonym of the latter. c++1z is the "master" tag, so it is the one that gets ultimately displayed.
Why is c++1z the "master" tag? For historical reasons, mostly. When the tag was created, we didn't know that the language draft known as C++1z would ultimately be released in 2017, so using the name "C++17" was potentially misleading. We're now pretty sure, and people are starting to use the name "C++17" most of the time, but the synonym mapping hasn't been reversed, and arguably shouldn't be until C++17 is officially released later this year.
Compilers still tend to call it C++1z, too, for the same reasons.
The nice thing about synonyms, of course, is that you don't need to worry about any of these details. You just enter (or search for) c++17 and the system takes care of it.
c++1y
but we've run out of alphabet!. I vote for c++1{
.
Jul 11, 2017 at 14:08