Fortran is an evolving language. On Stack Overflow we have fortran as well as many language-revision-specific tags: fortran77; fortran90; fortran95; fortran2003. An idea for a fortran2008 was not well received.
Many questions tagged as Fortran 77 genuinely are specific to that revision: there's an awful lot of old code out there which even young people need to understand.
Other questions are tagged Fortran 77 seemingly because they use old-style features. One can even find multiple revision-specific tags where it doesn't seem meaningful.
Then one has questions tagged as Fortran 77 but where the problem is merely with the use of fixed-form source code (similar to above). Some questions using fixed-form source use features not introduced until after Fortran 77.
Those tagged Fortran 90 and above are often: "I know it's not Fortran 77". Very few people with free-form source code will have to care about restricting to one language revision. It makes much more sense, if it's a "how do I do this", or "why isn't this working" to mention the compiler (including version) in the question than using a Fortran 90 or 2003 tag.
Suggestions, then:
- We remove revision-specific tags from questions where they clearly aren't necessary;
- We create a fortran-fixed-form (or better):
- add this new tag to questions as necessary;
- remove Fortran 77 tag from these questions, except where that is still sensible.
- We update tag wikis to discourage revision-specific tags except where it would be good.
I can see problems with these. Certainly, many people who have problems because their broken fixed-form source doesn't compile (or are using the wrong file extension) wouldn't know to use a specific tag. Further, students, say, having a supervisor dump "lots of old FORTRAN code" on them would still struggle.
Any comments on the suggestions, or how to resolve the problems even I see?