In a recent question about a unknown language feature, a user tagged the question with c. This makes sense to me, considering the code is in fact C.
On the other hand, the unknown parts of the syntax represented compiler extensions features, not strict part of the language standard. A moment later another user removed the C tag with the argument:
this question uses gcc-specific extensions (and asks specifically about them), thus this question is off-topic for C and on-topic for gcc.
It is important to note that the extensions discussed are not exclusive to the GCC compiler, they exist in others as well. However the inclusion or not of the language tag remains an open question. To my eyes including it is relevant, since the code is C and at the questioner point of view it is inevitably a unknown language feature (if known to be an extension, the question would be worded completely differently). However to the editor's eyes, the language tag is off topic since an extension is not part of the standard described in the tag wiki:
This tag should be used with general questions concerning the C language, as defined in the ISO 9899 standard […]
Should a language tag only be used when the question included standardized features?
#if GCC then workaround()
or#if MSVC then workaround()
?). As compilers improve or new compilers/platforms are added to a project, knowing that is important. I usually find it in the standard myself instead of asking here, but not everyone is well-versed in standardese, so for them a language-lawyer question is the way to go