Similar problems are occurring in C++ land, where C++11 feature compliance is not universal, C++14 is spotty, and C++1z (std::experimental
and other) features are on the horizon.
My personal approach at this time is to answer using C++14 and mention what C++14 features I'm using, with at least a sentence to describe how to replace them. I won't implement the replacement, but I will give enough keywords that someone can learn how to do it.
If C++1z has a feature that would make the solution better, I'll try to mention it. I try not to rely on it in answers without prompting.
A year or so ago, I'd default to C++11, and if I used C++14 library features I'd either re-implement them (many of them are 2-liners), and if I wanted the language feature I'd just mention that it would make things easier.
A year or two before that, I'd be cautious about using C++11 at all, and try to do it in C++03. If I used C++11, I'd mention it explicitly, and sometimes implement it manually in C++03 if needed.
Before that, I would mention C++11 as in "you can do this better in C++11 via $some_keyword$."
In short, it is a gradient. It moved as I found people where less and less likely to say "I cannot get this to work on my compiler, I cannot use C++11" in response to my use of the features.
If you are worried, start using Java 8, mention explicitly you are using it, and (optionally) include a short description of what Java 7 changes would be required. If lots of people are stuck on Java 7, they will say "I cannot get it to work on Java 7, can you help?" in your comments. And you'll learn you moved to Java 8 by-default a bit too fast.