Disclaimer: I have already seen the following questions which are related to, but not focused on, this one:
- How can we stop SO suggesting both C and C++ tags on questions?
- Disallow the tagging of questions with both C and C++ tags
What caused me to ask here is this question: Why are multiple pre-increments allowed in C++ but not in C?
It has all what is needed to get flaming:
- Asked by a low reputation points user
- No language-lawyer tag (no surprise because of the above line)
- Both C and C++ tags
But it is nevertheless about a subtle difference, and it got quite a nice answer - that happened to get a downvote, too...
What is interesting about this question is that the highest reputation points users (Bathsheba or Lundin) agree that it is a correct question - which is also my opinion - while the most abrasive comments come from lower reputation points users.
What is even worse, it that even after being edited by Bathsheba to become a good question following Stack Overflow rules, it still remains heavily downvoted.
My opinion is that we have educated users to flame any question with both C and C++ tags just because they are different languages. It is true that many question were asked with both tags with no good reasons (so the two referenced questions), but now even good questions get downvotes which is not how Stack Overflow is supposed to work.
I'm afraid not to be able to propose anything to solve that beyond a remark on the tag wikis explaining what questions deserve both tags, and collectively try to avoid too abrasive comments when a question should have only one. Because not doing so visibly prompts many user to downvote any question with both tags even when the question is good and both tags are relevant.
Of course this question is also relevant for Objective-C, which I did not initially include, because it was not used if referenced question and I do not use or know it.
Since I first asked this question, Batsheba has added another answer with a rationale (and not just standard quotes) for the different behaviour. IMHO a question that gets three answers, all of which are correct and two of which show really interesting points cannot be so bad.
[c]
[c++]
. (Possibly related: 16,552 questions tagged with[java]
[javascript]
)++
question", and would probably initially have downvoted just for that, had it not been double digits already. The question is also not about a programming problem the OP has, or about something practically useful for the rest of us. We do have the more obviousx+=2;
that we don't have to ask questions about.The question does not show any research effort; it is unclear or not useful.
and the description contained all ofWhy does the operation "++++i" work in C++ and not in C
. Despite the edit by another user, it largely remains the same. Besides, the OP "code_dragon" hasn't responded to comments at all. Trust me, I considered none of the "flame" reasons you mentioned when I close voted. I thought SO expected question-askers to put at least some effort into their questions...