user is useless. Too ambiguous. Everything we develop is about the user of it. What's important for us isn't that there's a user, it's that there's a specific programming question (whose solving should benefit users).
4 Answers
I agree that tag should go.
Even if there are people who specialize in user-interface I don't think there are experts for users.
I didn't find a question in the list that I thought had a necessity for this tag and thus suggest we just delete it and have it auto-removed from all the questions.
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3@GolezTrol Probably/maybe, but careful not to jump to that conclusion. There are aspects of UI implementation that deal with coding/design/functionality that are only indirectly related to experience. If the focus of the question isn't on the experience, don't push for it to be moved because it is disruptive and likely just to get moved back.– AaronLSAug 11, 2014 at 14:33
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11If you ever find an expert on users, let me know. My job could be so much easier if I understood them.– ScootsFeb 19, 2018 at 16:00
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Looking at the questions tagged user, it seems that the common theme is that they're about user identification, management and/or credentials, not about user interface. So what tags should be used instead of user for those things?
Related tags I can find include user-management username user-accounts user-permissions user-registstration user-profile userid... and that's just the ones with user
in them.
Is user useful as a meta-tag for all of these?
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As there is a huge gap between questions between for example user-permission and user-registration I don't see how adding the user tag would make those question better discoverable or limit your results in a useful way.– reneFeb 19, 2018 at 20:20
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1Seems reasonable for a blacklist message: stackoverflow.com/questions/ask?tags=user– Shog9Feb 21, 2018 at 18:14
Here are the criteria to burninate:
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
As stated in the question, it's definitely not unambiguous. The tag wiki just states the definition of a user along with a "DO NOT USE!", there is no guidance for when the tag should be used (on the contrary, it says it should not be used).
Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
I guess it is most of the time, but it's too ambiguous to say anything in the general case.
Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
Not much. Most programs are made for users, so a user tag isn't really meaningful just like that. Maybe some questions tagged user could benefit from a more specific tag, but user is too broad to add any meaningful information.
Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
As stated in Chris Dodd's answer, a lot questions tagged user seem to be about user identification, but there are a lot more specific tags for those. Besides, there are 51 questions tagged user and user-interface, and those questions are about user interface and not user identification, so all user questions aren't about the same thing.
So yes, I think that user should be burninated.
This website is about how to serve users -- users of programming languages directly, and the users that use their programs indirectly.
They are far from useless. I think how to serve users is key to the purpose of Stack Overflow.
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27Isn't that the point with (almost) all software? The same would be to add the tag [bug] to a lot of questions. Aug 11, 2014 at 17:37
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17+1 and LOL @ all the people who don't get subtle sarcasm (and for that matter, can't click links!) Aug 11, 2014 at 19:37
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2If SO tries to do Tron's job, who will do SO's job? (But if we get light cycles, then OK, I'll fight for the users.)– abarnertAug 12, 2014 at 11:33
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2there are no bugs in software...malfeatures, surprises and easter eggs Feb 20, 2018 at 20:38
user
tag was about user-mode as opposed to kernel-mode, but I don't think I've come across many questions using this tag.