While editing the tag wiki, I noticed that there is a tag uint32 and a uint32-t, and there is even a question that asks about the difference in C++ between the two types. Is the difference (one being standard, the other not) significant enough to justify two tags?
There is also a uint8t that does not have a counterpart without t, but nothing for the 16bits,64bits and 128bits versions.
Actually I came to wonder if we need all those int variations at all. An expert in int32 is likely to also be expert in uint32 and int64 since to my knowledge the memory representation of integers does not vary much across compilers and languages (only sign bit versus 2's complement).
Should something be done about this list of tags?
Here is the complete list that I found: int, uint, uint8t, uint16, int32, uint32, uint32-t, int64, uint64, int128
uint32
is a valid type in C#.uint32_t
is not.c-inttypes
(whose synonyms would include the versions with-t
) andc#-inttypes
(whose synonyms would include the versions without-t
).