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Cody Gray Mod
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The problem with number 2 is a simple misunderstanding of what was meant by a "meta tag". Consistent with the definition of the Greek-derived prefix, "meta", a "meta tag" is one that describes the nature or type of a question, rather than its content. Examples of meta tags are , , , , , , and so on. It is not as simple as "a tag that cannot stand alone as a question's sole tag", and even if it were, or could certainly stand alone—it just wouldn't be as effective as having multiple tags, which is why we allow up to 5 tags per question in the first place.

The tag system is designed to filter/sort based on multiple tags using basic Boolean logic, so experts on Word VBA that don't want to see Excel questions can just filter by + and exclude . This is just as natural, if not more so, than filtering by and having to contend with "generic" questions where a particular application has not been specified.

The problem with number 2 is a simple misunderstanding of what was meant by a "meta tag". Consistent with the definition of the Greek-derived prefix, "meta", a "meta tag" is one that describes the nature or type of a question, rather than its content. Examples of meta tags are , , , , , and so on. It is not as simple as "a tag that cannot stand alone as a question's sole tag", and even if it were, or could certainly stand alone—it just wouldn't be as effective as having multiple tags, which is why we allow up to 5 tags per question in the first place.

The tag system is designed to filter/sort based on multiple tags using basic Boolean logic, so experts on Word VBA that don't want to see Excel questions can just filter by + and exclude . This is just as natural, if not more so, than filtering by and having to contend with "generic" questions where a particular application has not been specified.

The problem with number 2 is a simple misunderstanding of what was meant by a "meta tag". Consistent with the definition of the Greek-derived prefix, "meta", a "meta tag" is one that describes the nature or type of a question, rather than its content. Examples of meta tags are , , , , , , and so on. It is not as simple as "a tag that cannot stand alone as a question's sole tag", and even if it were, or could certainly stand alone—it just wouldn't be as effective as having multiple tags, which is why we allow up to 5 tags per question in the first place.

The tag system is designed to filter/sort based on multiple tags using basic Boolean logic, so experts on Word VBA that don't want to see Excel questions can just filter by + and exclude . This is just as natural, if not more so, than filtering by and having to contend with "generic" questions where a particular application has not been specified.

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Cody Gray Mod
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As Hans Passant commented, the VBA tags have been the subject of a number of retagging wars, motivated by (as far as I can tell) two primary factors:

  1. People who feel that naming makes a big difference in discouraging off-topic questions, and therefore want to eliminate a tag like that might imply general-use questions about Excel are on-topic, replacing it with something like that is more obviously about programing, and

  2. People who misunderstand the guidance provided regarding "meta tags", misapplying the rule of thumb that a good tag is one that can stand alone on a question to exclude the possibility of using combinations of tags. These people feel that separate and are no good because a single one of those tags wouldn't be adequate to describe the topic of the question, and they therefore deem both of those tags as "meta tags", preferring to replace them with a single, combined tag, .

The problem with number 1 is that the theory is lacking for evidence. Even when we use tags like , we get plenty of off-topic questions under that tag. There's never been any data presented to confirm the hypothesis that begets more off-topic questions than . Furthermore, as I repeatedly insist, we need not clutter up our tag system with things that should be obvious, like the fact that this site is intended for programming questions. The tag exists, but nobody rolls up to this site asking questions about large, non-venomous snakes. It doesn't need to be (even though it now could be, since the tag character limit has been increased to 35).

The problem with number 2 is a simple misunderstanding of what was meant by a "meta tag". Consistent with the definition of the Greek-derived prefix, "meta", a "meta tag" is one that describes the nature or type of a question, rather than its content. Examples of meta tags are , , , , , and so on. It is not as simple as "a tag that cannot stand alone as a question's sole tag", and even if it were, or could certainly stand alone—it just wouldn't be as effective as having multiple tags, which is why we allow up to 5 tags per question in the first place.

All of that to say, there is absolutely no reason to have an tag when separate and tags will do. The only reason we have this is someone (or multiple someones) with retagging privileges decided to invent it, and everyone thereafter who asked an Excel VBA question saw all these tags in the auto-suggest pop-up and didn't know which one to pick, resulting in the current mess.

The tag system is designed to filter/sort based on multiple tags using basic Boolean logic, so experts on Word VBA that don't want to see Excel questions can just filter by + and exclude . This is just as natural, if not more so, than filtering by and having to contend with "generic" questions where a particular application has not been specified.

It's the same reason why we are fine with and tags, instead of a tag. You can use in conjunction with any programming language tag that supports pointers. There is no universe in which it is better to have separate *-pointer tags for each programming language.

Unfortunately, given the current set of tooling surrounding tags, the mess is going to be difficult to correct. Makoto suggests that a moderator might be able to selectively remove tags using some type of Boolean logic, but unfortunately, we cannot do so. We can merge tags (and, as a subset of that functionality, rename tags). We can also create synonyms, which establish automatic mapping relationships between two tags. But that's pretty much it. I believe that a developer or community manager can delete tags, but I don't think it supports logic sufficiently advanced for a task like this.

That leaves us with manually retagging all of the questions, which is a massive amount of busy work (not to mention creates a large amount of disruption) that I don't really think would pay dividends at the moment.

Again, as Hans suggests, contributors should just follow all of the relevant tags: , , and . When asking a question, you will be safe if you only include one of those tags, but it's best if you include all of them.