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I recently created tag.

In help center, I read following:

When should I create new tags?
Most common tags already exist on a mature site. You should always favor existing tags; only create new tags when you feel you can make a strong case that your question does cover a new topic that nobody else has asked about before on this site.

No, the tag does not cover new topic on this site. Other tag cover everything that can be covered under new tag that I created.

But, I still think new tag is on-topic and valid on this site. It is actually sub tag of existing one. We have many language/tool tags and sub tags with their versions. We have and also have tags with specific ORMs.

I am not involved on tag related activities on meta and on main site too much. I may not explain my reasoning in good sense. That is why I put this for community to discuss.

I have asked different question related to this tag. I will wait until community agree/disagree on that.

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    42 Views, +3/-2 votes on question and +6 votes on answer from @poke. I do not think the decision matters much to community. I will leave this as is. I will NOT re-tag the old questions. I will NOT remove the tag from existing 1 question. Future users may use this tag.
    – Amit Joshi
    Aug 16, 2018 at 11:05

1 Answer 1

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As per my comment on the other question, I do not believe that this is a good fit for a tag. A generic repository is still a repository, and as such it’s a way to apply the repository pattern. It’s just that it uses generics to enable code reuse for a few basic and unspecific operations.

So every question that is about a generic repository, is also a question about the repository pattern. So any question tagged with would have to be tagged with .

In general, there would be nothing wrong with that, we do have some tag pairs like that. However, I do not think that the tag is useful anyway:

If you look at resources about a generic repository, what you find most are recommendations not to use it. It is often considered an anti-pattern. So I would expect questions that really are about a generic repository to always have some answer that goes in the direction of recommending against using a generic repository, moving to a non-generic repository (or even skipping it completely).

There are only a handful of different question variations I could think of until we can probably close all the remaining ones as duplicates of another. So I don’t believe there’s any gain with such a tag.

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  • Even though pair-tagged, we can classify the question question for generic repository easily. This will be advantage. About your second last paragraph, what we put in answer should not be the criteria for existence/non-existence of the tag IMHO.
    – Amit Joshi
    Aug 11, 2018 at 13:49
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    @AmitJoshi I understood that more like "what's the point of adding a tag if it refers to something that people should always avoid", not like "we should base the tags on the answer's content". Aug 11, 2018 at 14:06

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