It happens. Imagine you decide on the MS-compatible bits C99, then the team naturally picks up new people and loses the ones who made the decision. Eventually, people will know the standard is C99 from the build system but not the reason behind the decision.
So they add a feature not supported by MSVC and don't learn that it doesn't work until someone else tries to build on Windows.
If you choose to use features based on whether they work or not, you don't need to choose a standard at all. But that loses you all of the guarantees a standard provides.
So they add a feature not supported by MSVC and don't learn that it doesn't work until someone else tries to build on Windows.
If you choose to use features based on whether they work or not, you don't need to choose a standard at all. But that loses you all of the guarantees a standard provides.