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If you look at the top unanswered questions for the [C++] tag, you realize that most (if not all) of them are not really questions about C++ but rather about how to do something in a third-party library, which happens to have a C++ front end.

Is it OK to tag these questions with C++? I often find myself looking at the C++ tag for good language-related questions, but they are often buried below the sea of library specific, language agnostic questions.

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  • There's a feature request somewhere about "tag hierarchies".
    – bjb568
    Apr 18, 2014 at 8:22
  • Related question about creating a "c#-language" tag on Meta.SE.
    – jscs
    Aug 19, 2015 at 20:58
  • Related meta.stackoverflow.com/q/298019/389812
    – gdw2
    Aug 26, 2015 at 23:19
  • @Cerbrus: not that's not an exact duplicate, please ask before you make assumptions. Where a C/C++ or Java package is wrapped for (say) Python or R, users often have issues with triggering crashes, coredumps, exceptions, memory leaks, multithreading, mystery stacktraces. These are quite clearly "problems that are directly connected to coding in language X". Since we're trying to use the wrapped code in language Y, they're also "directly connected to coding in language Y".
    – smci
    May 7, 2019 at 7:28
  • Look, most of the time the use-case is an urgent "I downloaded package P wrapped for language Y, I'm following the doc but it gives all these unintelligible errors in language X, is this fixable, is it due to my client code? or due to the package itself just broken/bug-happy/unuseable and should I just abandon using it?" And by the way the answer to that urgent question is quite often "Yes, it's unuseable", which is very important information, even if it's one word long. (Have you ever tried to use jython, for example?) And the rest of the time, often the answer is "Upgrade to version V"
    – smci
    May 7, 2019 at 7:29
  • @smci: This question is about 5 years old, and I closed it over a year ago. If the closure were wrong, it'd have been reverted already. Just vote to re-open it. I don't see why you need to ping me about this, especially with a presumptuous line like "please ask before you make assumptions".
    – Cerbrus
    May 7, 2019 at 8:19

1 Answer 1

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Yes.

If a question is about a specific language, it should have the associated language tag. Whether or not it involves some 3rd-party library should be irrelevant.

In fact, the language tag is usually the most important tag on a question since it is how most people will find the question.


It's not a coincidence that many of the top unanswered questions are about niche/obscure libraries. It's because they are niche and obscure that nobody has been able to answer them yet.

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