The [revoke] tag on StackOverflow seems to be a mixture of two contexts in which "revoking" is a thing; questions using this tag seem to be either about the SQL DCL command (apparently the tag's intended use as per tag wiki), or a token context (mostly OAuth2, but not exclusively). There are currently 36 questions with the revoke tag — it wouldn't take long to fix this ad hoc.
10 most recent questions:
- WSO2 Identity Server 5.7.0 Revoke Method don't work WSO2 OAuth2
- Is it (now) possible to revoke Gitlab access tokens through the API? GitLab OAuth2
- Revoke access to a database not applied on mysql active DB Connection MySQL command
- FB Logout Flow: Revoking Permissions Facebook API token
- Checking if a Discord OAuth2 access token (/refresh token) has been revoked Discord OAuth2
- how to revoke sender url in docusign: getting 404 DocuSign View Token
- Revoke Modify (INSERT UPDATE Delete Truncate) on a table Cassandra DSE Cassandra command
- Revoke Delete privilege (There is no such grant defined for user) MySQL command
- Withings API disconnect/revoke token Withings OAuth2
- Postgres tables created on a schema are visible under Public - How can I prevent that? PostgreSQL command
I'm new to Meta, but I think in this case the best option is not a burnination due to ambiguity, but re-tag the token questions with [token-revoke] and then rename the old [revoke] into [sql-revoke] to keep them separated in the future?
Task.Cancel
in C#. How'd you deal with that? Just remove the tag from that particular question altogether?Task.Cancel
, removing the 'revoke' tag is probably best — presumably there's at least a C# tag on the question (and if not, it should be added). Neither of the proposed tags applies — it is unlikely to be worth creating a 'c#-task-revoke' tag.