Yes, we should burn them all (including linked-list, list, stack, queue and vector).
Let's compare these tags against the reasons we tag questions.
Tags connect experts with questions they will be able to answer.
Nope.
Any experienced programmer should have extensive experience with these basic data structures yet be unable to answer a question about it in a language they don't understand and anyone who calls themselves an expert in just about any language should be extensively familiar with these basic concepts in that language*.
Thus the language tag would be a much better indicator of whether someone will be able to answer a question tagged with one of these tags.
*: I'm open to the idea that there are languages out there where these are advanced concepts, and that having these tags in those languages would be useful, but, if that's the case, I'd be inclined to say we should create language specific versions of this tag, to prevent it being used in e.g. Java or C++.
Tags are for sorting your question into specific, well-defined categories.
Nope.
"My question involves a String" tells you practically nothing in a Java question (most Java code uses Strings somewhere). "My question is about a String" tells you more, but it's still not particularly specific - are you trying to search, replace, format, compare, concatenate, find the length of, split, pass to or return from a function, read or write to a file or the console or something else? Way too broad, and each of those things already has one or more tags dedicated to it.
Are there language-agnostic questions about arrays or strings? Maybe, but these are probably mostly about array-algorithms or string-algorithm instead.
Tags are used in searching.
Maybe, but...
Tags are not for summarizing your question. That's what the title and the abstract are for.
Tags are not for indexing your question.
You should search for [java] sort array
, not [java] [sorting] [arrays]
. I don't think arrays has any benefit in terms of searching here.
AND
tags together when you search, so presumably a tag that has no intrinsic value on its own gains some value in conjunction with others.