The tag trap seems to be used in a few different ways. This list is in approximate order of occurrence, however none of them is obviously dominant over the others.
- Shell scripting / Bash related. "trap" is a keyword in Bash. Example: cp: command not found
- SNMP traps. Generally questions about SNMP communications, where a trap is a kind of notification message. Example: snmp trap specific trap code
- Systems programming in C or ASM, "trap frames" for exception handling: Motorola 68K TRAP instruction as a bridge to OS
- Various other languages where "trap" is a keyword (Powershell etc)
- Seemingly at random, like How to trap negative integer inputs in C++ program? or Trapping mouse on one monitor
It could be argued that these disparate uses, taken together, indicate that the tag has "no clearly defined meaning" in accordance with the rules from the FAQ How do tag removal (burnination) requests work?
There are currently 250 questions tagged trap. They all seem to also be tagged with some more useful tag, like bash or snmp.
So, perhaps trap ought to be burninated? It seems to only cause confusion since it can't reliably be used to search for questions on a particular topic. On the other hand, in the first four uses listed at least, the "trap" term used in a valid way in the question, and I can see how it made sense to the poster to add the tag in the first place.
If I start re-tagging, should I re-tag the SNMP questions as snmptrap? It's a common enough term that it might warrant its own tag, but the tag doesn't exist at the moment.
trap
works?