On the tag name: as you know, the primary, C meaning concerns an ubiquitous function called free
. As far as that is concerned, free is a crystalline tag name. From that point of view, free-memory is a substantially worse alternative: it looks awkward (like a Wikipedia disambiguation title -- "Free (memory)" -- but without the parentheses) and reads ambiguously (is "free" a verb or an adjective?).
On misuse: from a quick look at the question feed, I count six (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6) blatantly mistagged questions among the last hundred free questions, spanning a period of six months -- and at least half of those should have been closed. Is that significant misuse? Maybe. Is it significant enough to justify changing the tag to a substantially worse name? Probably not.
All in all, I tend to agree with Hans on this change not being worth the trouble -- with the caveat that a strong consensus in the other direction among C and C++ contributors (who presumably do the brunt of the curation in this tag) should suffice to override my concerns.
free
command in Unix/Linux? It is a specific wordstd::malloc
in its standard library).free
only applies to memory allocated usingmalloc
andcalloc
, and these functions are all inseparable. You should never usemalloc
without afree
, and you cannot usefree
if you haven't previously used amalloc
. I don't see the point of separating them out into separate tags.