Is there a reason for the tag limitation of 5?

I find folksonomy incredibly useful and often times I'm caught retagging someones post where I don't want to remove one of their five, but merely add a 6th.

Is there a reason for this? Apologies if this question exists somewhere already.

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Related: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/21344/… – Ether Jan 6 '10 at 23:18
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A surprising number of people have absolutely no clue what makes for good tagging. You'll see questions "tagged" with every single keyword used in the post, or the raw title, or the entire question... That's probably not the reason for the limit, but it does help. – Shog9 Jan 7 '10 at 0:15
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and what have we learned about any process involving people that has no limits..? codinghorror.com/blog/archives/001228.html – Jeff Atwood Jan 7 '10 at 0:31

3 Answers

up vote 6 down vote accepted

The truth is, no matter how many tags were allowed, there are outlier question that the author thinks needs just one more tag.

The consensus is that if you need more than five tags, you should probably look at simplifying the question. Your question may simply be too big and encompasses too many areas of interest.

But, more likely, if you consistently need more than five tags, your are probably adding superfluous tags that aren't really needed. Five is a good limit because it encourages you to pare down the tags to just the essentials. Tagging is supposed to help categorize your question into its major areas of interest. It is not meant to try and sum up your question into every conceivable interest.

If you don't agree, I would suggest that you link to a few sample questions that need more tags. You'll either prove the convention wrong or the users here will come up with some recommendations.

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I agree with the sentiment, but is this view backed up with any hard evidence .. why not four for example, does six degrade search performance - if so what evidence is there ? – NimChimpsky Jan 2 at 12:40

If there wasn't a limit, then you would end up having questions with tens of applicable tags, which would help no-one - forcing a tag limit ensures that some thought goes into what tags are most applicable to a question.

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Some people already seem to want to make every noun in their questions into a tag. Don't encourage them.

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Agreed. I think the point is to force you to think about your tags for a moment. – Joel Coehoorn Jan 7 '10 at 3:02

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