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Timeline for Clean up the HTTP status codes

Current License: CC BY-SA 3.0

16 events
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Oct 7, 2021 at 7:34 history edited CommunityBot
replaced https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc with https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc
May 23, 2017 at 12:38 history edited CommunityBot
replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
Mar 20, 2017 at 8:46 history edited CommunityBot
replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
Jan 20, 2015 at 18:48 answer added Kevin Brown-Silva timeline score: 1
Jan 20, 2015 at 18:48 history edited Kevin Brown-Silva CC BY-SA 3.0
Better reorganize the post with examples of questions to burninate and retag
Jan 18, 2015 at 21:17 comment added Kevin Brown-Silva @Ben I didn't suggest burninating that tag because I do see some value in keeping the general tag around for things like implementation questions, as they're pretty different (and more fitting for a tag) than questions about why the error itself is triggered.
Jan 18, 2015 at 18:21 comment added Ben You're almost certainly correct about some of these but you haven't actually provided an argument for removing all of them. If they have their own tag then people can find them quicker. How does hiding questions under thousands of others help? Why not burninate http-status-codes for being too generic rather than the tags themselves?
Jan 18, 2015 at 18:04 history edited Kevin Brown-Silva CC BY-SA 3.0
More clarification! The comment under "burninate" wasn't that great.
Jan 18, 2015 at 6:36 comment added Kevin Brown-Silva I've reworked the initial post as I do agree that some of these tags shouldn't be completely burned without considering the question, but instead should be merged as http-status-codes because they are referencing the codes themselves, and not the cause for them being triggered.
Jan 18, 2015 at 6:34 history edited Kevin Brown-Silva CC BY-SA 3.0
Per the discussion, lets clean this up instead of burning it to the ground
Jan 18, 2015 at 6:20 history edited Kevin Brown-Silva CC BY-SA 3.0
Tried to make this a bit more clear for those who are tl;dr
Jan 18, 2015 at 5:15 comment added Makoto I did say some of them. Yes, there are those that just don't need to be around (I'd say 200, most of the 3XX class, 404, and 500), but there are others which could serve a purpose. I think these need to be looked at on a case-by-case basis rather than a blanket burn-'em-all.
Jan 18, 2015 at 5:12 comment added Kevin Brown-Silva @Makoto Tags are meant to group questions into specific, well-defined categories. Giving something a [http-status-code-404] tag because "it says it can't be found" is about as meaningful as giving something a [bug] tag because it "just stopped working". There might be some tags worth saving, I encourage you (and others) to point them out if they exist.
Jan 18, 2015 at 5:03 comment added Makoto More to the point, why shouldn't we keep (some) of them around? It more or less gives a narrower scope to the actual issues at hand, and they may not always be related to a framework.
Jan 18, 2015 at 5:01 comment added Makoto I think the bigger cleanup effort should be finding and cataloging all of those tag excerpts that say, "DO NOT USE", since that's clearly not doing a damn thing to prevent their usage.
Jan 18, 2015 at 4:59 history asked Kevin Brown-Silva CC BY-SA 3.0