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.
Suggestion:
C# (pronounced "see sharp") is a high level, statically typed, object oriented programming language developed by Microsoft. Its most widely used implementation is Microsoft's .NET family of tools and runtimes, which include the .NET Framework and .NET Core. Use this tag if your question involves code written in the language or the language specification.
Reasoning:
- It's important to give the reader some brief description of what we're talking about.
- It's likely that people will be confused about the difference between .NET and C#, so this attempts to clarify that .NET is the tools and runtime while C# is the language.
- Tag wikis should indicate when to use the tag.
Thoughts:
- Should we include a note about including one of the .NET platform tags as well? Usually, one of them will be needed, and sometimes whether the author is targeting .NET Framework, .NET Core, or .NET Standard matters.
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.