If we decide that these are duplicates because the answers are the same, that opens us up to misinformation. See, it is possible for that duplicate nature to change with time.
Consider the "multiple variables in for
" question. The answer that is true for C is true for C++... kind of. See, it was certainly the same for many years. But C++17 now allows you to do this: for(auto [x, y] = something; ...)
. In a strictly rigorous standard language sense, x
and y
are not "variables" (yes, really). But from a user perspective, you can mostly treat them as such. And x
and y
do not have to be of the same types. Indeed, some people abuse this feature for the purpose of putting multiple "variables" of different types in a for
statement:
for(auto [val1, val2, val3] = std::tuple(1, 4.5f, "some_string"s); ...)
So while it may be strictly true that C++ is no more capable of allowing you to declare multiple variables of different types in a for
statement, for all useful purposes, that is no longer the case.
So if we allow these to be duplicates due to similar answers today, we need a way to un-duplicate them tomorrow should the answers change. That seems kind of weird to me.
The alternatives are essentially this:
- Allow the questions for the two separate languages/APIs/etc to be distinct, but make one duplicates of the other.
- Have people ask questions about all of a related family of languages/APIs. That is, a user would ask if C or C++ allows multiple variables of different types.
- Allow the questions for the two separate languages/APIs/etc to be distinct, but without making them duplicates.
I really don't like #2. In the event of language changes, such questions become Too Broad and thus require the creation of two separate questions. And #3 leads to a lot of replicated answers. The best we can do is probably #1 and hope that people are proactive in unduplicating them should changes occur.