Problems with the older revision:
- C# is not multiparadigm. It's OO. The wiki is the thing that's misleading. It has a few features that enable stuffing functions into variables, but it is definitely not a functional language. Functional languages are not imperative, and C# is definitely not equipped to avoid writing imperative code.
- Telling people how to write questions is out of scope for a tag wiki.
Suggested modest revision to the current excerpt:
C# (pronounced "see sharp") is a high level language that is designed for building a variety of applications that run on the .NET Framework or .NET Core. C# is simple, powerful, type-safe, and object-oriented.
Possible improvements over this:
- Cut out the references to .NET Framework and .NET Core? Maybe replace with something more general?
- Cut out the groan-worthy "powerful" and possibly "simple" and replace with less subjective, more meaningful information about the language.
- The type-safe bit is kind of misleading, too, in light of
dynamic
, but granted that's not the default or normal way of using the language. - I don't think saying it's designed for building "a variety of applications" is particularly helpful information. I guess it's just trying to say it's general purpose instead of specialized? There's probably a more clear way of saying this.
Things I notice in the full wiki:
- The the bit about "multiparadigm" needs to be removed there.
- It claims
dynamic
enables "type inference," but that's not what it does. It disables static typing for that variable, preventing the compiler checks on type compatibility and member references. - I don't know why there's a bunch of info about which versions introduced certain keywords and the features that correspond to them. Maybe it should just talk about the features themselves, without making it a change log? An SO tag wiki seems like a bad place for a change log.