16

I'm aware the K&R C is a fairly prevalent C standard, but should be a valid tag given that a lot of the questions that use the tag pertain to a specific book?

What is Stack Overflow's policy about book specific tags?

9
  • 4
    All I can really do right now is grumble. I don't think it belongs here but I'm not sure if removing it is smart right now. They're asking questions about solutions they see in the book, which I guess is okay, but I wish there was a better way to go about this.
    – Makoto
    Mar 28, 2018 at 22:26
  • 24
    K&R was the C standard before C89 was released, a standard set by the book. Questions about code in the book ought to be tagged that way, given that it is not C89-compliant. It is still pretty popular today. Very healthy tag, 95% of all questions got answered. Mar 28, 2018 at 23:18
  • @HansPassant I think it is a good idea to include this into tag info then Mar 29, 2018 at 7:42
  • 4
    @HansPassant There is another tag:kr-c for that.
    – Oleg
    Mar 29, 2018 at 8:39
  • 11
    @Oleg That one should maybe be a synonym of the other then, or vice versa. Mar 29, 2018 at 9:06
  • 4
    Personally - although nobody agrees with me! - I'm totally fine with questions about books (or e.g. popular online tutorial series) existing. It seems that they describe topics where it's far more possible to have genuine "expertise" than most tags on Stack Overflow. Years of Python experience don't come close to meaning that I know the answer to every Python question, but if somebody asks "How do I avoid overfrobnicating the widget in Problem 1.3.4 in Fooscript++ for Beginners", and I've solved all the problems in that book, then that's perfectly suited for me to answer.
    – Mark Amery
    Mar 29, 2018 at 10:49
  • @HansPassant Regarding the health of the tag, I think that's mostly because it isn't normally a tag that the OP adds by their own initiative, but rather something edited in by veteran c users. Which is of course perfectly fine.
    – Lundin
    Mar 29, 2018 at 11:09
  • 3
    The formal policy regarding books, as set by the Stack Overflow company is: we love to have lots of information about books all over! Bad books, good books, trash books! Anything that generates site traffic is lovely! See this as proof, where SO employees mangled the decisions of (user-elected) diamond mods and the community. I hear next up in the road map is cute cat pictures and porn.
    – Lundin
    Mar 29, 2018 at 11:22
  • @MarkAmery While answering questions that are triggered by a certain book is certainly not a bad thing, that doesn't mean we need tags for each and every programming book ever.
    – Mr Lister
    Mar 30, 2018 at 8:08

1 Answer 1

16

Yes it is a valid tag. The tag is for code and examples from the K&R book, which is (unfortunately) frequently used by beginners still to this day. We created exclusively for questions regarding the examples in the book.

One use for the tag is to explain why the code in the question is strange - because it is a copy/paste from an obsolete book, rather than the OP being bad. So the tag is rather similar to in a way, as it is used to show that the code is artificial and badly written for a reason.

This is not to be confused with questions regarding pre-standard C, which should use . (And those question are rare)

There's a meta discussion about it here. Which I believe lead to burnination of . is supposedly the replacement for that bad tag.

This is all explained in the kr-c tag wiki and the kernighan-and-ritchie tag wiki respectively.

EDIT

I assumed that everyone participating in the discussion actually have a clue about the topic, but apparently not...

This book acted as industry de facto standard for the C language during the years 1972 to 1989, before a formal standardization was available. So it is not just any random book, it is intimately connected to the language specification itself, with the inventor of the language as co-author. As such, it is absolutely on-topic.

11
  • 4
    "We created kernighan-and-ritchie exclusively for questions regarding the examples in the book." - note that other tags meant to group together problems from a particular problem set (like the ruby-koans tag, which I used to have favorited) have been burninated en masse in the past, to my dismay. You say it's a "valid tag", but I fear the community and the mods may disagree, especially given the purpose you've stated for its existence.
    – Mark Amery
    Mar 29, 2018 at 10:54
  • 4
    @MarkAmery This book is special though, since it actually acted as the language standard for over 15 years. See this. You can't compare it with some generic "puzzle/competition tags".
    – Lundin
    Mar 29, 2018 at 11:06
  • 6
    I'm well aware of the significance of the book; the implication in your edit that I don't "have a clue about the topic" is wrong. Yet per your own description of the tags, kr-c is about the pre-standard C language-as-informally-standardised-by-K&R (analogous to, say, the c99 tag), and kernighan-and-richie is simply about the contents of the book in its own right, not as interpreted as a standard (surely analogous to any other tag about a famous programming book?). It's the latter tag whose survival is at stake, not the former, and it's unclear to me that that is a special case.
    – Mark Amery
    Mar 29, 2018 at 11:39
  • 6
    Also, it's missing the point to argue that questions about the book are "absolutely on topic". Programming questions taken from any competition site are like "on topic" too; that's wholly orthogonal to whether they should have a tag.
    – Mark Amery
    Mar 29, 2018 at 11:40
  • 3
    @MarkAmery A programming language = as it is described in the standard, or as in this case, the only canonical source available in the 1980s. If questions about the language (de facto) standard are not ok, then I don't know what is.
    – Lundin
    Mar 29, 2018 at 12:37
  • 1
    "If questions about the language (de facto) standard are not ok" - I've not said anything that implies that. For one thing, I agree a tag about the book should exist. For another, as I understand your own description of what the tags mean, questions about K&R taken as a standard ought to be tagged kr-c and not kernigan-and-ritchie, and the appropriateness of the kr-c tag is not the topic of the question. And for another, you're still conflating the appropriateness of a tag existing with the acceptability of the questions covered by the tag, when these two things are distinct.
    – Mark Amery
    Mar 29, 2018 at 13:13
  • 1
    @MarkAmery Examples: a question about why the hello world example in the book (which is the hello world example) crashes when executed should be tagged kernighan-and-ritchie, while a question about the meaning of the code func(a,b) int a; { ... } should be tagged kr-c.
    – Lundin
    Mar 29, 2018 at 13:25
  • Surprised to see you say unfortunately in "...K&R book, which is (unfortunately) frequently used by beginners still to this day."
    – kjhughes
    Mar 30, 2018 at 20:30
  • 2
    @kjhughes It's a horrible and outdated book that's why. I'd rather have beginners reading good books. Regardless, this is not the place to discuss the quality of the book itself.
    – Lundin
    Mar 31, 2018 at 16:08
  • 1
    Since August there is a synonym from kr-c to kernigham-and-ritchie. That really hurts. Oct 18, 2018 at 16:31
  • Is all the code in the book written in the "KR C" version of C? If so, why do we need a separate tag for the book, especially if non-book questionss about KR C are exceedingly rare as you say? Why not just mention in the body of the question that your question is about a code snippet from the K&R book? As for 'questions about the standard', we don't typically have tags just for standards works... we have tags for the language, or version-specific tags, at most, which encompass questions about their respective standards.
    – TylerH
    Jul 27, 2023 at 19:52

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .