Tag editing appears to be fairly random. It seems to me that the point of tags is to help me find stuff.
For instance, I use the [c#] tag to find questions on C# - one of my specialities.
Why do people keep editing tags to say [subjective] or [off-topic]? Why would I ever want to search for subjective questions?
Is this just the (still unattainable) Librarian badge calling? I'm sure we'll all get it eventually.
I tend to edit tags in the following circumstances:
The tag might help the asker get a useful answer - for instance if they've missed a C# tag on a clearly C# question.
The tag might help those answering - for instance if they've failed to specify .Net 3.5 but are asking about Linq (only added in 3.5)
They've put one tag where another different one might be appropriate - for instance "sql" and "2005" instead of"sql2005".
I'm not sure of the point in:
- "subjective", "off-topic", etc - why bother with a tag?
- "duplicate" - there's a close option for this.
- "coding", "programming", "software" - aren't they all?
- "meta-discussion", etc - surely the "stackoverflow" tag already states that?
There seems to be some fairly pointless tag editing going on - with no agreement on when we should edit them.
What rules do you follow? When would you re-tag? When wouldn't you? Am I missing something? Do some people find [subjective] a really useful tag?
I've split the debate on subjective out into a new question.