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Bhargav Rao Mod
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replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
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Many burninate requests argue that if no one is an expert in a given tag, we should burninate. If this is true, should we burninate and as well? No one's really a expert IMHO, and I doubt many people search to find questions to answer. Nonetheless I think these tags can be useful:

  1. They make it easy to find questions involving strings in javaquestions involving strings in java
  2. While I'm not a string expert, I could be a java string expert, and having a tag seems silly.

How should we evaluate tags like these that only make sense alongside other tags? For example, should this [internet] burninate request take into account the fact that a Java question tagged probably has a different focus than one only tagged java?


EDIT: I mention [string] and [array] to debate the "burn it if it has no experts!" philosophy rather than their tag-destinies (although the two are pretty related...).

Many burninate requests argue that if no one is an expert in a given tag, we should burninate. If this is true, should we burninate and as well? No one's really a expert IMHO, and I doubt many people search to find questions to answer. Nonetheless I think these tags can be useful:

  1. They make it easy to find questions involving strings in java
  2. While I'm not a string expert, I could be a java string expert, and having a tag seems silly.

How should we evaluate tags like these that only make sense alongside other tags? For example, should this [internet] burninate request take into account the fact that a Java question tagged probably has a different focus than one only tagged java?


EDIT: I mention [string] and [array] to debate the "burn it if it has no experts!" philosophy rather than their tag-destinies (although the two are pretty related...).

Many burninate requests argue that if no one is an expert in a given tag, we should burninate. If this is true, should we burninate and as well? No one's really a expert IMHO, and I doubt many people search to find questions to answer. Nonetheless I think these tags can be useful:

  1. They make it easy to find questions involving strings in java
  2. While I'm not a string expert, I could be a java string expert, and having a tag seems silly.

How should we evaluate tags like these that only make sense alongside other tags? For example, should this [internet] burninate request take into account the fact that a Java question tagged probably has a different focus than one only tagged java?


EDIT: I mention [string] and [array] to debate the "burn it if it has no experts!" philosophy rather than their tag-destinies (although the two are pretty related...).

replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
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Many burninate requests argue that if no one is an expert in a given tag, we should burninate.Many burninate requests argue that if no one is an expert in a given tag, we should burninate. If this is true, should we burninate and as well? No one's really a expert IMHO, and I doubt many people search to find questions to answer. Nonetheless I think these tags can be useful:

  1. They make it easy to find questions involving strings in java
  2. While I'm not a string expert, I could be a java string expert, and having a tag seems silly.

How should we evaluate tags like these that only make sense alongside other tags? For example, should this [internet] burninate requestthis [internet] burninate request take into account the fact that a Java question tagged probably has a different focus than one only tagged java?


EDIT: I mention [string] and [array] to debate the "burn it if it has no experts!" philosophy rather than their tag-destinies (although the two are pretty related...).

Many burninate requests argue that if no one is an expert in a given tag, we should burninate. If this is true, should we burninate and as well? No one's really a expert IMHO, and I doubt many people search to find questions to answer. Nonetheless I think these tags can be useful:

  1. They make it easy to find questions involving strings in java
  2. While I'm not a string expert, I could be a java string expert, and having a tag seems silly.

How should we evaluate tags like these that only make sense alongside other tags? For example, should this [internet] burninate request take into account the fact that a Java question tagged probably has a different focus than one only tagged java?


EDIT: I mention [string] and [array] to debate the "burn it if it has no experts!" philosophy rather than their tag-destinies (although the two are pretty related...).

Many burninate requests argue that if no one is an expert in a given tag, we should burninate. If this is true, should we burninate and as well? No one's really a expert IMHO, and I doubt many people search to find questions to answer. Nonetheless I think these tags can be useful:

  1. They make it easy to find questions involving strings in java
  2. While I'm not a string expert, I could be a java string expert, and having a tag seems silly.

How should we evaluate tags like these that only make sense alongside other tags? For example, should this [internet] burninate request take into account the fact that a Java question tagged probably has a different focus than one only tagged java?


EDIT: I mention [string] and [array] to debate the "burn it if it has no experts!" philosophy rather than their tag-destinies (although the two are pretty related...).

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Laurel
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Gordon Gustafson
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Gordon Gustafson
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