The answer is that it really depends on the munitions being used. A prime example of a dual purpose weapon is the German 88 mm Flak cannon. It was designed as an anti-air weapon but worked pretty well as an anti-anti weapon when the artillery shells were swapped for armor penetrating.
The big issue is anit-armor munitions typically don’t work very well against lightly armored or unarmored targets and most things that work well for anti-air…don’t penetrate armor.
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