Incorrect use of c and c++ in the same question has been a long source of unclear posts and conflicts. To deal with that problem, the community established rules for cross-tagging in this meta discussion which then lead to the current C tag usage and C++ tag usage rules. From that we learn that the c and c++ tags should not be used together unless the question is explicitly about differences between the two languages, such as questions regarding compatibility and porting.
Now I just posted a C question here and when I did so, the site incorrectly suggests that I should add the C++ tag, even though my question has absolutely nothing to do with C++. As it happens, the question is even about a language feature which is completely different in C and C++. Had I added the C++ tag like the site suggests, my question would have become too broad and unclear.
I realized that this suggested tags feature is very likely a source of needless mistagging. It is clearly too blunt and probably just looks at tags that are usually used together. (C and C++ both are often used with the gcc tag, probably why.)
Ideally it should be possible to configure the suggested tags feature with specific rules to avoid incorrect tagging. Or alternatively disable it for tags where it causes harm.
c++
is the most used tag in conjuncture withc
- with more than 38k questions. The next in line is just with 27k questions. It is not true the other way around.c
is "only" the third-most used tag withc++
c
into the tag bar (before even adding any tags), immediately givesc
andc++
as suggestions. And... well... that's valid as suggestion, and unfortunately may be just as likely to make the "C/C++" people tags with both. Although.... now that I tried it again, it doesn't... That's good.++i++
, complete with links Q&A pages that explained what was going on, and still saw the question or derivatives at least once a day. No one reads the tag wikis until it's too late. But that's another "solve the human problem" problem.