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The problem with this tag is that it doesn't really tie the questions together in a meaningful way. In other words it fails Burnination Test #4. Let's consider some actual questions

They're all about chemistry problems, but each describes a different type of coding problem. So even if I had a coding question about chemistry, this tag is all but useless to me because they're just the subject of the problem. This is why I disagree with Mark Amery, on this

Note also that we have several other tags for industries and problem domains that are not innately programming-related, including finance, physics, accounting, statistics, and linguistics (all with >100 followers).

This is a terrible reason to keep a tag. It's like saying we need a tag for cars, because people can write code to run a car. Or run inside a car's computer. Or use while riding in a car. Tags should describe what language or coding concepts are being used or asked about. Tags that merely describe the subject of the problem should have no place here. Put those words in the title or question, not the tag.

The problem with this tag is that it doesn't really tie the questions together in a meaningful way. In other words it fails Burnination Test #4. Let's consider some actual questions

They're all about chemistry problems, but each describes a different type of coding problem. So even if I had a coding question about chemistry, this tag is all but useless to me because they're just the subject of the problem. This is why I disagree with Mark Amery, on this

Note also that we have several other tags for industries and problem domains that are not innately programming-related, including finance, physics, accounting, statistics, and linguistics (all with >100 followers).

This is a terrible reason to keep a tag. It's like saying we need a tag for cars, because people can write code to run a car. Or run inside a car's computer. Or use while riding in a car. Tags should describe what language or coding concepts are being used or asked about. Tags that merely describe the subject of the problem should have no place here. Put those words in the title or question, not the tag.

The problem with this tag is that it doesn't really tie the questions together in a meaningful way. In other words it fails Burnination Test #4. Let's consider some actual questions

They're all about chemistry problems, but each describes a different type of coding problem. So even if I had a coding question about chemistry, this tag is all but useless to me because they're just the subject of the problem. This is why I disagree with Mark Amery, on this

Note also that we have several other tags for industries and problem domains that are not innately programming-related, including finance, physics, accounting, statistics, and linguistics (all with >100 followers).

This is a terrible reason to keep a tag. It's like saying we need a tag for cars, because people can write code to run a car. Or run inside a car's computer. Or use while riding in a car. Tags should describe what language or coding concepts are being used or asked about. Tags that merely describe the subject of the problem should have no place here. Put those words in the title or question, not the tag.

replaced http://meta.stackexchange.com/ with https://meta.stackexchange.com/
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The problem with this tag is that it doesn't really tie the questions together in a meaningful way. In other words it fails Burnination Test #4Burnination Test #4. Let's consider some actual questions

They're all about chemistry problems, but each describes a different type of coding problem. So even if I had a coding question about chemistry, this tag is all but useless to me because they're just the subject of the problem. This is why I disagree with Mark Amery, on this

Note also that we have several other tags for industries and problem domains that are not innately programming-related, including finance, physics, accounting, statistics, and linguistics (all with >100 followers).

This is a terrible reason to keep a tag. It's like saying we need a tag for cars, because people can write code to run a car. Or run inside a car's computer. Or use while riding in a car. Tags should describe what language or coding concepts are being used or asked about. Tags that merely describe the subject of the problem should have no place here. Put those words in the title or question, not the tag.

The problem with this tag is that it doesn't really tie the questions together in a meaningful way. In other words it fails Burnination Test #4. Let's consider some actual questions

They're all about chemistry problems, but each describes a different type of coding problem. So even if I had a coding question about chemistry, this tag is all but useless to me because they're just the subject of the problem. This is why I disagree with Mark Amery, on this

Note also that we have several other tags for industries and problem domains that are not innately programming-related, including finance, physics, accounting, statistics, and linguistics (all with >100 followers).

This is a terrible reason to keep a tag. It's like saying we need a tag for cars, because people can write code to run a car. Or run inside a car's computer. Or use while riding in a car. Tags should describe what language or coding concepts are being used or asked about. Tags that merely describe the subject of the problem should have no place here. Put those words in the title or question, not the tag.

The problem with this tag is that it doesn't really tie the questions together in a meaningful way. In other words it fails Burnination Test #4. Let's consider some actual questions

They're all about chemistry problems, but each describes a different type of coding problem. So even if I had a coding question about chemistry, this tag is all but useless to me because they're just the subject of the problem. This is why I disagree with Mark Amery, on this

Note also that we have several other tags for industries and problem domains that are not innately programming-related, including finance, physics, accounting, statistics, and linguistics (all with >100 followers).

This is a terrible reason to keep a tag. It's like saying we need a tag for cars, because people can write code to run a car. Or run inside a car's computer. Or use while riding in a car. Tags should describe what language or coding concepts are being used or asked about. Tags that merely describe the subject of the problem should have no place here. Put those words in the title or question, not the tag.

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The problem with this tag is that it doesn't really tie the questions together in a meaningful way. In other words it fails Burnination Test #4. Let's consider some actual questions

They're all about chemistry problems, but each describes a different type of coding problem. So even if I had a coding question about chemistry, this tag is all but useless to me because they're just the subject of the problem. This is why I disagree with Mark Amery, on this

Note also that we have several other tags for industries and problem domains that are not innately programming-related, including finance, physics, accounting, statistics, and linguistics (all with >100 followers).

This is a terrible reason to keep a tag. It's like saying we need a tag for cars, because people can write code to run a car. Or run inside a car's computer. Or use while riding in a car. Tags should describe what language or coding concepts are being used or asked about. Tags that merely describe the subject of the problem should have no place here. Put those words in the title or question, not the tag.