I happened across a question a while ago that was in my area of expertise, but in addition to clojure it was tagged with four other things that looked totally useless: arguments, parameter-passing, optional-parameters, keyword-argument. I edited the post; since it was well-written other than the tags, this involved just removing those four tags.
Then, the user asked me: why did you remove my tags? I realized I don't have a totally clear answer prepared: they just look useless to me, mere visual noise. Here's the answer I ended up giving, copied for your convenience from a comment on that question:
Tags are for helping people with relevant knowledge find your question. Just loading up with a bunch of tags doesn't help, if nobody is following those tags: you don't need an "arguments" expert (does such a thing exist?), you need a "clojure" expert. Most language-related questions don't really need any secondary tags; they're mostly useful if the problem centers around some third-party library or something.
Is this the right approach to take to tagging? Would it be better to just leave the useless-but-harmless tags alone, only removing them if there are other significant edits to make to the body of the post, or what?
If removing them on this post is right, are there any questions where such tags are useful? I could imagine parameter-passing
being useful in discussion of implementing compilers or language runtimes or something, but for general use of a language X, I expect X to be the only tag necessary to ask "How do I pass arguments in language X?", so I don't see what value such generic tags add.
argument
, and probably alsoparameter-passing
. Not for being incorrect but for being useless. Remember they are not only for attracting experts, but also for finding, thus I would leave the other two.