Both C++ and Rust have libraries named chrono
. Currently, most questions in the chrono tag are about C++ (837 questions) and the tag description is also explicitly about it, but there are 19 questions tagged rust chrono.
It may be good to have separate chrono-c++ and chrono-rust tags, or at least have a chrono-rust tag and referring to it in the chrono tag.
chrono
in Rust do something different to thechrono
in C++, or do they actually achieve the same thing(s)?[chrono] -[rust] -[c++]
-[tag-name]
for each tag to exclude. Try this search. I've been adding the main language tag to questions that didn't have one.[boost-*]
to see some of the tags) like[boost-chrono]
. I'd use that tag since it already exists, but if it didn't, those questions could probably stand just fine with just[boost]
(and aC++
tag probably) alone.std::chrono
should not be tagged[boost-chrono]
(which currently has 2 questions, BTW). C++ standard library features often start of as part of Boost and get standardized, but once they are standardized, that history isn't relevant, and it makes no sense to expect people to remember which things came fro boost and which didn't. In this case,boost::chrono
was written to implement the C++11 chrono proposal before it became official, as a testing ground. boost.org/doc/libs/1_80_0/doc/html/…chrono
in Rust. It's a 3rd-party library, unlike C++ wherestd::chrono
is a core language library. Both are trying to solve similar problems in providing robust and universally usable date/time primitives, with only C++'std::chrono
delivering on those goals.