I just came across a C# question tagged with [tag:new-operator]. I was curious, so I went to the tag, and found a bunch of questions from different languages, including C#, Java, C++, php, etc.  But the tag wiki only talks about C++, as if this is specific to that language. I'm wondering what the rationale behind that is, or if the wiki needs to be edited to include other languages.

Here's an excerpt of the tag wiki to demonstrate what I'm talking about.

> Use this tag for questions about dynamic allocation in C++ and questions about overloading `operator new`. The [tag:placement-new] tag may also be relevant for questions about constructing objects in existing memory.

**Edit:** A Google search on `new operator` brings up pretty much exclusively C++ results. If you append C# onto the search terms, you get [the Microsoft documentation for the new Operator][1]. Searching with Java instead gives you [the Java documentation on creating objects][2]. Note that it *does* refer to `new` as both a key word and an operator. Javascript gives you [the MDN web docs for the new operator][3]. I searched some other languages such as php, however I just got language-related SO questions with "new operator" in the titles.

So I think there is some truth to the fact that it might exist in different languages. My results are by no means extensive, and I'm sure some other people will be able to point me towards some other language examples.

[1]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/language-reference/keywords/new-operator
[2]: https://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/javaOO/objectcreation.html
[3]: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/new