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Regarding this question.

The OP was asking about OpenGI, a similarly named C library, but tagged it .

I'm now aware that OpenGI actually integrates with OpenGL, so that tag is still appropriate, but might still need an OpenGI one.

There already exists a tag (not related), which SO saw as a duplicate of and explicitly prompted me to ask this...

Should a tag be created for ?

More generally, and ignoring the topic of tags with similar spelling, what defines the threshold for less well known names to become tags?

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    It is unrelated to OpenGIS, so the prompting reason was incorrect. OpenGI, if there is sufficient volume, is a distinct topic from what I can tell. Mar 4, 2015 at 19:55
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    Regarding the more general question about what gets to be a tag, the FAQ entry only says that you should create tags when you see a "clear need" for them to exist. This discussion about the many git command tags is very relevant to how the meta community audits the general community's perception of "clear need."
    – Air
    Mar 4, 2015 at 20:39
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    The prompting reason was correct; the name [opengi] shares sufficient overlap, letter-wise, with the existing [opengis] tag, that the system (which obviously has no context as to what the letters "opengi" or "opengis" actually mean) rightfully cautioned against the creation of the tag. Aug 30, 2022 at 18:27
  • it's also a warning, lazy users will start typing and then tab+enter autocomplete not realizing they picked the wrong tag. Is there a way we could expand OpenGI that would be clear as to what was meant without being too long? Aug 30, 2022 at 19:07

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