37

Building on this request, I just noticed that plenty of the language tags are pretty useless.

  • (x279) - use when referring to natural languages instead, or is there a need to have a tag for questions not about natural languages that aren't about natural language processing?

  • (x77) - I wouldn't even know what types of questions this is for. We should probably use more specific tags. Perhaps use in some cases.

  • (x90) - mostly too broad, probably typically don't make questions with lasting value.

  • (x21) - not sure about this one.

  • (x904) - I originally thought this is a decent tag, but now I'm not sure any more. My guess is that most questions that uses this tag appropriately would fit better on Computer Science or Programmers.

Too broad - use specific language tags in favour of these:

Possibly useful, but hopelessly too broad: (I doubt anyone can be an expert in any of these)

Synonymization:

If you disagree with anything...

It would probably be best to post an answer with a single point, as to make it easy for people to show agreement or disagreement with individual points.


Feel free to point out if I missed one.

10
  • 21
    For language-lawyer, see this previous discussion. Despite how generic a term it is, it's actually useful as-is for the C++ folks.
    – Charles
    May 9, 2014 at 17:34
  • 6
    keyboard-language -> locale ?
    – Goodwine
    May 9, 2014 at 19:48
  • Are we supposed to answer if we agree on a specific point? I am definitely +1 for merging java-language-spec and jls.
    – John Y
    May 9, 2014 at 21:00
  • @JohnY I don't know. Probably not. The JLS one is pretty clear-cut IMO. The idea is to upvote if you agree on some, and point out those that you don't agree with in the answers, but I guess that isn't perfect because that assumes everyone has opinions on all of them. I guess I was just to lazy to split this into 27 different questions. May 9, 2014 at 21:19
  • 3
    The problem is that tags do not exist for all languages. This forces users to use more generic tags (i.e. esoteric-languages instead of befunge).
    – Alex
    May 11, 2014 at 23:43
  • 1
    keyboard-language -> input-language?
    – user541686
    May 12, 2014 at 8:31
  • There is also keyboard-layout May 12, 2014 at 10:03
  • Clean up your language* young man!
    – crthompson
    May 12, 2014 at 21:47
  • Personally, I like the esoteric-languages tag. Once I start looking at one, I inevitably become interested in others.
    – Almo
    May 13, 2014 at 13:29
  • Pretty sure intermediate-language represents the language used when compiling, so there would actually be two "specific language tags", but you may be asking a question specifically about that third, intermediate language. I know .NET IL is supposed to use cil, but nobody really uses that abbreviation AFAIK; I've always seen IL. Jan 9, 2015 at 18:08

7 Answers 7

27

You need to be very careful here, as there's a whole load of different tags and different usages. The right action for one is not necessarily the right action for another.

Let's look at some extremes.

  • The tag needs clearing out. There's no coherence; it's all over the place. Drain that swamp! Make some alligator handbags!

  • The can probably stay, at least for the moment, as the questions in it appear to be at least reasonably on topic for such a thing. (I'd never heard of the term before, but it does seem to be a clear concept.)

  • You're right that and look like synonyms. But which way is best? I'm inclined to say that it's actually that should go, despite it being the more widely used tag at the moment; it might be a term well known to some, but the other one is going to be more widely known and there'll be no harm.

I'm inclined to say that it's only worth putting effort in to getting rid of a tag if there's enough disagreement over the meaning to make it unclear what it means. Or if every question tagged with it is closed as off-topic.

We need to remember that the purpose of a tag is two-fold:

  1. To make the question easier for computers (especially search engines of various kinds) to understand. This improves the overall value of the site; this is absolutely fundamental.
  2. To provide a basis for people to observe just part of a site. I subscribe to some tags, keeping an eye on them and trying to answer questions in them.

If a tag is single-topic (according to a consensus of human interpretation) and worth having good open questions in, it's worth keeping. Because of that, I think you should un-ask this question and instead ask a number of more focused questions. After all, you have no idea what the voting on this question is in favour of.


Bad questions are just bad questions. Fix 'em or close 'em, but don't waste effort fiddling around with just the tagging on them as that (probably) won't make them be good questions.

1
  • Agreed that most of the tags seem reasonable. I actually do think "JLS" is more widely recognized than "java-language-spec", though; I've never before seen the "Java language" part spelled out without the "specification" part spelled out as well.
    – Warren Dew
    May 12, 2014 at 17:03
19

The tag is very definitely not the same as (NLP is natural language processing). The former is about programming languages designed to be like natural language. Or to put it another way, striving to use natural language as a programming language. The latter is about using computers (typically with traditional programming languages) to process natural language.

So, while it's definitely a small niche, it's not a good candidate for synonymization.

2
  • I cleaned up the questions where this tag was misapplied to refer to natural language processing. However, while it doesn't make a good synonym, I question whether it's useful on SO. Any question I can think of where a tag about natural language programming in general (as opposed to a tag for some specific language implementing the idea) would be better suited for CS or Programmers than it is for SO. Most of the questions where it's already being used correctly are rightfully closed.
    – Wooble
    May 9, 2014 at 20:43
  • Could be an appropriate tag, in theory, but there's just a lack of appropriate questions. This one is the only one with that tag (of the open 5 remaining...) that might have some potential, but even that would be better suited on Programmers. Agreed that we shouldn't synonymize them. May 9, 2014 at 21:06
7

I think the tag is accurate, but most of the questions so tagged appear more suited to cs.stackexchange.com instead.

6

Unfortunately, is a mess. It's definitely not convertible to . Some folks use to indicate that they are talking about multiple programming languages (e.g. trying to choose among them, or issues surrounding the use of multiple programming languages for a single application). Some folks use the tag to mean they are dealing with internationalization or locale issues. I suspect it's actually uncommon to use this tag when is meant, because folks who do NLP tend to know the tag.

So, I guess the main alternatives here are to burninate (too loosely used to be meaningful, and just intrinsically vague) or to manually review the questions and retag as appropriate.

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  • 1
    @smci: Y'know, I didn't mean for those to be tags, otherwise I would have done it myself. I would like to be able to use regular English prose and just speak in plain sentences with plain words, thank you.
    – John Y
    May 12, 2014 at 13:28
  • John Y: sorry, just 'internationalization','locale' are already tags. It seemed clearer to me to write them as such.
    – smci
    May 12, 2014 at 20:01
4

I agree with most of your suggestions, but (which you mark with a "?") is unrelated and should stay. (Many of these questions are on the fuzzy border between stackoverflow, cs-theory, math, and cs.) In particular, it does not refer to an unspecified class of programming languages but to "formal" languages as defined in logic. (It's actually closer to than any of the language tags.)

4

is used when you are interested in the theory behind some particular (often obscure) language detail, which may not have any practical use.

For example, if you would post a question about how the expression i+++++i is interpreted by a C compiler, then is appropriate as an explanation of why you post such strange code. If not for the tag, people would just reply "don't write crap like this, it is bad practice/it doesn't make any sense" etc.

The tag could certainly do with a better description however. I also agree that it may possibly be synonymous with .

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  • Your example would be better written as i+++++j. May 13, 2014 at 14:02
  • I find language-lawyer a very bad description for this case. If you're interested in corner-cases of a programming language, just use something like language specification.
    – oɔɯǝɹ
    Jan 9, 2015 at 15:34
2

"Too broad - use specific language tags in favour of these"

That's fine provided they already exist. I'd recommend keeping at least a couple "inferior tags" (as BradleyDotNET called them in a comment) for questions by sub-1500s about programming languages that happen not to have a tag on SO yet. Perhaps they can be cut down to and .

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