TL;DR;
While @iRon's answer correctly points out the differences between Windows PowerShell and PowerShell Core as well as why both the powershell and powershell-core tags should remain, I disagree with its assertion that PowerShell's version-specific tags should be burned. I would instead propose the following:
Why it matters for Windows PowerShell
While there are not many breaking changes from version to version, if you are locked into a specific version the built-in cmdlets and functions change and code which works in later versions will not work if those built-ins don't exist in an earlier version. If the asker is in a PowerShell 4.0 environment, code which was written for 5 may not work without minor to major modification, depending on what needs to be reimplemented. While this sounds familiar for any language continuing to be developed, PowerShell is a bit special in that:
- The base installed version changes depending on the installed version of your operating system.
- This is less of a concern moving forward since 5.1 is essentially frozen for feature work, so 5.1 should be the Windows' OS default for some time.
- Note that Windows PowerShell 4.0 is still the pre-installed version for the soon-to-be-EOL'd Windows Server 2012R2 OS.
- Windows PowerShell 5.1 and earlier can only have a single version installed, which cannot be downgraded outside of a rollback.
- This restriction does not apply to PowerShell Core versions (6+) as they can be installed side-by-side and the OS does not carry a dependency on it.
- Microsoft does not maintain PowerShell documentation for versions older than 5.1 on MSDN, meaning one should be especially knowledgeable in older versions when answering questions pertaining to those versions.
A major point of tags is to connect experts with questions they can answer. I and others can of course filter on powershell or powershell-core. However, if a question is for powershell-3.0, I immediately know to avoid suggesting cmdlets that were not available in version 3. From the other side, a candidate answerer who did not use PowerShell until version 5 or later may be unaware that some of their code uses functions or cmdlets that were not available in that earlier version. This can result in a wholly incorrect answer that does not work within the presented scope. Sure, you can say the question body should mention the version but the majority of questions in the PowerShell tags I come across don't mention specific versions outside of the use of version-specific tags, and such a statement de-legitimizes the use of tags in the first place. (rhetorical: Why not standardize on the single powershell tag and rely on the question body to give any runtime context at all?)
If you are not well-versed in an older version, you would need to maintain parallel installations of Windows to test code against older versions of PowerShell, with one exception.
Note: The next claim juxtaposes the PowerShell documentation, which is incorrect on the matter. The only earlier PS version you can explicitly set is 2.0
. This parameter has no effect in PowerShell Core.
powershell-2.0 is a different beast which carried a different SLA to its later versions. Windows PowerShell versions needed to maintain V2 compliance across OS releases for several years, and continues to do so at this time of writing. Questions tagged for Windows PowerShell v2 are (or were) especially important to maintain a distinction for due to this. For the same reason, PowerShell v2 is the only version for which you can tell Windows PowerShell to run an older version of the engine and have it actually run in that same version (executing against any other previous version silently runs the latest engine). While this does make v2 code more testable than v3 or v4 at present, compliance with v2 was still a restriction of many PS questions and remains important for historical classification of such questions and answers.
Why it matters for PowerShell Core
When it comes to PowerShell Core, organizations will often standardize on LTS releases of PowerShell Core. Answers for these questions should still be limited to solutions for those versions. For example, 7.0 and 7.2 are both LTS releases of PowerShell. Someone locked to 7.0 in their environment will be unable to use answers using features presented in PowerShell 7.1 and later. The same will
apply when 7.3 exits preview status and eventually when the next LTS release comes out.
There is admittedly less use here for non-LTS versions but it seems untenable to suggest only using LTS version tags.
Therefore, for historical classification and in cases where users may be locked into a specific version (see the above about Windows Server 2012R2 which is not yet EOL'd), version-specific tags are still useful. They may not be as useful for classifying newer questions, especially as older Windows versions remain stagnant and fall further out of support, but removing them from appropriate questions would only serve to harm the content to which these questions are bound.
Instead, we should merge or synonymize the duplicate version tags (like the v
and non-v
variants denoting a specific PS version) and clean up questions which incorrectly use incorrect version specific tags. Is this as simple as burning the version-specific tags? No. But I believe it is the best way to taxonomize questions relating to particular versions of PowerShell.