I recently edited a question on the basis of thinking that consensus was framework/language-agnostic questions should not include tags for unrelated things such as language, IDE, etc. It was pointed in the comments, that I should not interfere with language tags. One of the reasons was the [swift]
tag's description:
Use this tag only for questions that are specific to Swift language features, or those that require code in the language. Use the related tags ios, osx, apple-watch, [tag: tvos], cocoa-touch, and cocoa for (language-agnostic) questions about the platforms or frameworks.
(Emphasis mine)
I think this description is problematic. The description asks users to only use the tag when the question is related to language specific issues, otherwise the framework and platform tags should be used. A later edit added the italic part, but I think it makes little sense given the other instructions (emphasised in bold).
Moreover, I think allowing users to limit their questions to a specific language for such framework-related issues, which are already widely answered, would create many many duplicate questions, where the only difference is the language used to call framework methods. For example, to the question above, the following are answers to duplicate questions:
Typesetting a font in small caps on iOS
Does CoreText support Small Caps?
In the original question, among the things I edited out, the following remark existed from the OP:
Again, please don't mark this as a duplicate question and then link to an Objective C answer. This has not been answered for Swift.
The OP is aware other answers exist, yet chose to create a duplicate question. With the smallest of effort, the OP would get his answer from already existing answers, including the two I provided.
Should such questions really be allowed? Is the tag description above accurate? Especially with such related languages as Swift and Objective C when it comes to iOS/OS X frameworks, I think language alone should not allow for duplicate questions.
I think this description is problematic.
It's a wiki, feel free to edit it.