I use the java.net.http tag to cover questions which use the new Java package of that name, introduced in JDK 11.
But there also exists a java-http-client tag which seems to have a magnetic attraction to such questions even though its tag wiki says that it relates to JDK 9 (which offered a non-finalised incubator package, which differs in numerous little ways from the final JDK 11 package).
I've been editing questions to add the java.net.http tag to questions which relate to the new JDK 11 package, and removing the older tag if it's clear that it does not relate to the older version. But the java-http-client tag seems to continue to be the popular go-to tag for new questions even if they relate to the new JDK 11 package.
Should we continue to edit questions to have them use java.net.http instead of java-http-client? Or should the tag wiki for java-http-client simply be edited to allow it to apply to both the experimental JDK 9 package and the finalised JDK 11 package?
java-http-client
isn't the proper name for that, because at first glance, the name perfectly matches. Maybe its time to re-think how the tags are named to make it easier to find the right tag? The JDBC™ API is taggedjdbc
and notjava.sql
. In fact, using the package name isn't done for the 30 most popular tags for Java.java.net.http
questions that aren't covered by thejava
tag? Seems just as useless as some .NET tags like console.writeline (really, a tag for a single method?????)java
tag also applies to these questions, but Java is such a large collection of technologies that it seems useful to partition the major modules.