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For this question here, Python Multiprocessing: billiard vs multiprocessing, I tried to replace the wrong tag [billiards], which is about the game, with [billiard], the Python 2.7 multiprocessing-fork. This would have created the billiard-tag, but I get this message:

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We should not have any tags called or . They are ambiguous and not necessarily about programming.

What you could do is to create a tag , which is sufficiently narrow and has a clear scope. Since I don't know the topic, I can't tell if there's a need for such a tag or if is sufficient to cover it.

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  • Would go with python-billiard then, python-multiprocessing would be ambiguous here.
    – Darkonaut
    Feb 25, 2019 at 16:02
  • @Darkonaut My remark about that is: will this Billiard thing have at least some traffic and distinguish itself enough to merit a tag of its own? As in, will it be used. I have no idea if the tag makes sense myself, the Python community has to make that call.
    – Lundin
    Feb 25, 2019 at 19:20
  • In the link @BDL provided it's stated that: "Uncommon topics are perfectly valid for a tag, as long as they're still clearly defined. "- so high traffic is not a prerequisite. Traffic will be low, but it distinguishes clearly since it's an alternative to Python's multiprocessing module in the standard library. So to prefix it with "python" could be even missleading IMO.
    – Darkonaut
    Feb 25, 2019 at 19:52
  • To be honest, I don't understand why my question provoked so much downvotes. There is no clear line when to prefix with a language tag. There are so many tags out there which don't have it (e.g. [dill]), although they deal exclusively with python and the link @BDL provided also doesn't lose a word about how to deal with it. Anyway, I created python-billiard and provided a wiki excerpt which explains what billiard is about, so people don't need to google it.
    – Darkonaut
    Feb 25, 2019 at 19:52

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