I suggest that the nosql tag should be burninated.
Background: NoSQL is a very wide catch-all category for all kinds of database technologies which don't use SQL. It covers document-oriented databases like MongoDB or CouchDB, not-quite-sql table databases like Cassandra or Google BigTable, graph databases like Neo4j or key-value stores like Redis. Technologies which don't actually store data but interact with systems which do, like Hadoop or Lucene, are also sometimes put into this category.
When you look at the questions tagged as NoSQL, you mostly see two kinds of questions:
- Questions about how to do something with one specific database technology. These questions are also tagged with the tag for that technology, making NoSQL a meta-tag. It's also a redundant meta-tag because following that scheme, every single question tagged as mongodb, couchdb, neo4j or cassanda could also get the nosql tag (in fact many of them do).
- Questions which ask which NoSQL database to use for a specific problem. In these cases the question is often not tagged by just one but many different nosql database technologies - any the author could think of. These questions almost always get downvoted and closed because they fall into the "Gorilla vs. Shark" or the "Which technology to use" category, making it an off topic tag.
Let's take the litmus test from the "When to burninate" meta-meta-question.
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
NoSQL is a very vague and badly defined concept without a theory as consistent as the relational database theory behind SQL databases. That makes it a very ambigous, almost meaningless, category. Sure, not as ambigous as many other tags burninated in the past, but still not very meaningful.
Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
There are very few questions you could ask about NoSQL which are not either "which database is better" or specific to a single technology. The term NoSQL is very vaguely defined anyway, so there are few overarching theoretical concepts which apply to all of these database systems equally. And when they are, I would consider them more on-topic on Programmers.
Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
Most questions about database technologies which are commonly grouped under NoSQL are perfectly described by the tag for the database technology itself. When asking a question about, say, MongoDB it makes not much sense to add the nosql tag just because MongoDB is a nosql database, because you would then add it to every single question you ask about MongoDB.
Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
As said, NoSQL is a very vague concept anyway. All the different NoSQL technologies have few things in common. The only thing they do have in common is that they don't use SQL, but whatever they use instead is very different. In the rare cases where you find a question which is tagged only as nosql and is not a "which technology to use" question, you often realize that the user is talking about only one specific NoSQL technology which is the only one he is familiar with so he believes that all others must work the same way.
As a little random sample, here are the current 15 newest questions from the NoSQL tag. As you can see all but one of them either fall into my category 1 or my category 2:
- How to perform millions of inserts,updates and selects in a minute A "recommend me a technology" question which already has 3 close-votes
- What is the tradeoff in NewSQL solutions? Why would someone choose NoSQL over NewSQL? Gorilla vs. Shark
- NEST ElasticSearch c# how to Filter on Nested Object Perfectly described by ElasticSearch, nosql tag is redundant as it could be added to any question about ElasticSearch.
- What is a good solution for cross datacenter master-master replication? "recommend me a technology", already 2 close-votes
- NoSQL statistics type query with BaasBox - OrientDB 1.7.10 Perfectly described by OrientDB, nosql tag is redundant as it could be added to any question about OrientDB. Also suffering from the "Every NoSQL database is like my NoSQL database" misconception.
- NoSQL quorum comparing to virtual sharding Finally a question which is neither specific to one database or a technology request as it compares two different concepts which are used by different database technologies to solve the same problem. However, it is quite a discussion-oriented question which would fit better on programmers IMO.
- Aerospike : LDT error in cross datacenter replication Specific to Aerospike - nosql is redundant
- using javascript to create queries in mongodb terminal Specific to MongoDB
- connection gwan with aerospike db in C Specific to Aerospike
- CouchDB Compression Specific to - you guessed it - CouchDB
- Couch DB - Is Hovercraft still actively maintained? Guess!
- Cassandra CQL3 conditional insert/update Specific to Cassandra
- Asynchronous Oracle NoSQL client? Specific to Oracle NoSQL which has its own tag and which this question is also tagged with
- Google Datastore - Not Seeing 1 Write per Second per Entity Group Limitation Specific to Google Datastore
- Mongodb Deep Embedded Object Array Query Specific to MongoDB
sql
tag. I'm not sure this is a worthy candidate. Questions could potentially be answered in thesql
tag or even thenosql
tag without it being a specific product.sql
tag don't suffice. Ansi SQL is a joke. ForNoSql
I guess it even worst because there are not even a try to standarlize it