I think a lot of the replies on this question are missing something significant. That being the answer to the question:
What is a tag for?
Tags are not for aiding in searches. While I will never defend the Stack Overflow search engine, it does look at more things than just tags. So even without the Farsi tag, people can still find Farsi questions just by searching for them. Losing this tag will not make it harder for people to find solutions to problems involving Farsi.
And where SE's search engine fails, Google succeeds. So you can still find it one way or the other.
The purpose of a tag is to be a rallying point for a group of people who bring expertise to that subject. A tag should be something that an expert could explicitly monitor. Where a person who has domain expertise can frequently check all questions that mention this subject, since they could probably answer a percentage of them.
So one question of relevance here is this: does the use of Farsi, in a programming context, rise to that level? Does the use of Farsi in programming require such specific domain knowledge that there are experts in that field?
But even that alone is not sufficient. Not only must there be a body of domain expertise (such that an expert would reasonably want to patrol the tag), but the field should not be hierarchical. Allow me to explain.
My personal feeling (and I have little experience with Internationalization issues, so I may well be talking out of my ass) is that most of the issues that Farsi brings to programming are in the I18N domain: text formatting&layout, collation, encoding, and so forth. I suspect that most people who know solutions to the issues Farsi brings to these domains are experts in those domains, not specifically in Farsi.
That is, someone who knows about the collation rules in Farsi probably also has knowledge of the collation rules of many other languages. And if they don't know the answers, then as I18N experts, they probably know where the resources are to find the answer.
So my feeling is that Farsi questions could probably be placed under the specific domain that the question is asking about. Collation questions in the Farsi language use the collation tag. Text formatting/layout in Farsi use the appropriate tag for formatting and layout of text.
So what I feel needs to be demonstrated are these:
That Farsi issues in programming are of such significance that they have a body of expertise around them, such that those experts would benefit from having a tag.
That this body of expertise are not all (or mostly) also experts in I18N issues, and therefore would have found such and attended to such questions without the tag.
meta:true
. Also, combining the search might take a decent amount of backend development.farsi
andpersian
as alias, but that should be it.