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moved the other answer to https://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/356082/648265 as per its comments
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ivan_pozdeev
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Here, IThis is a case of the "intersecting categories" problem. Let's see how the general considerations the criteria in the "intersecting categories" problem outlinethe linked post apply to thethese specific tags at hand:

    1. holds for multiple-product questions if programming proper is only done in some of them and not others (which are a vast minority). It doesn't hold for one-product questions.
    1. is borderline: VBA has few enough differences in features, code organization and operation between Office products for a person proficient with one be able to relatively quickly work out an answer for any other shall they feel like that. On the other hand, people proficient in one product may not feel like spending time on (questions on) those that they don't actively work with.

Combined, in the typical case, it seems more likely that arguments for the combination tag don't hold rather than they do.

Here, I see how the general considerations in the "intersecting categories" problem outline apply to the specific tags at hand:

    1. holds for multiple-product questions if programming proper is only done in some of them and not others (which are a vast minority). It doesn't hold for one-product questions.
    1. is borderline: VBA has few enough differences in features, code organization and operation between Office products for a person proficient with one be able to relatively quickly work out an answer for any other shall they feel like that. On the other hand, people proficient in one product may not feel like spending time on (questions on) those that they don't actively work with.

Combined, in the typical case, it seems more likely that arguments for the combination tag don't hold rather than they do.

This is a case of the "intersecting categories" problem. Let's see how the criteria in the linked post apply to these specific tags:

    1. holds for multiple-product questions if programming proper is only done in some of them and not others (which are a vast minority). It doesn't hold for one-product questions.
    1. is borderline: VBA has few enough differences in features, code organization and operation between Office products for a person proficient with one be able to relatively quickly work out an answer for any other shall they feel like that. On the other hand, people proficient in one product may not feel like spending time on (questions on) those that they don't actively work with.

Combined, in the typical case, it seems more likely that arguments for the combination tag don't hold rather than they do.

edited body
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ivan_pozdeev
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  • 62
  • 84

Here, I see how the general considerations in the "intersecting categories" problem outline apply to the specific tags at hand:

    1. holds for multiple-product questions if programming proper is only done in some of them and not others (which are a vast minority). It doesn't hold for one-product questions.
    1. is borderline: VBA has few enough differences in features, code organization and operation between Office products for a person proficient with one be able to relatively quickly work out an answer for any other shall they feel like that. On the other hand, people proficient in one product may not feel like spending time on (questions on) those that they don't actively work with.

Combined, it seems more likely that in the typical case, it seems more likely that arguments for the combination tag don't hold rather than they do.

Here, I see how the general considerations in the "intersecting categories" problem outline apply to the specific tags at hand:

    1. holds for multiple-product questions if programming proper is only done in some of them and not others (which are a vast minority). It doesn't hold for one-product questions.
    1. is borderline: VBA has few enough differences in features, code organization and operation between Office products for a person proficient with one be able to relatively quickly work out an answer for any other shall they feel like that. On the other hand, people proficient in one product may not feel like spending time on (questions on) those that they don't actively work with.

Combined, it seems more likely that in the typical case, arguments for the combination tag don't hold rather than they do.

Here, I see how the general considerations in the "intersecting categories" problem outline apply to the specific tags at hand:

    1. holds for multiple-product questions if programming proper is only done in some of them and not others (which are a vast minority). It doesn't hold for one-product questions.
    1. is borderline: VBA has few enough differences in features, code organization and operation between Office products for a person proficient with one be able to relatively quickly work out an answer for any other shall they feel like that. On the other hand, people proficient in one product may not feel like spending time on (questions on) those that they don't actively work with.

Combined, in the typical case, it seems more likely that arguments for the combination tag don't hold rather than they do.

added 9 characters in body
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ivan_pozdeev
  • 35.8k
  • 3
  • 62
  • 84

Here, I see how the general considerations in the "intersecting categories" problem outline appliesapply to the specific tags at hand:

    1. holds for multiple-product questions if programming proper is only done in some of them and not others (which are a vast minority). It doesn't hold for one-product questions.
    1. is borderline: VBA has few enough differences in features, code organization and operation between Office products for a person proficient with one be able to relatively quickly work out an answer for any other shall they feel like that. On the other hand, people proficient in one product may not feel like spending time on (questions on) those that they don't actively work with.

Combined, it looks likeseems more likely that in the typical case, arguments for the combination tag more like don't hold rather than they do.

Here, I see how the considerations in the "intersecting categories" problem outline applies to the specific tags at hand:

    1. holds for multiple-product questions if programming proper is only done in some of them and not others (which are a vast minority). It doesn't hold for one-product questions.
    1. is borderline: VBA has few enough differences in features, code organization and operation between Office products for a person proficient with one be able to relatively quickly work out an answer for any other shall they feel like that. On the other hand, people proficient in one product may not feel like spending time on (questions on) those that they don't actively work with.

Combined, it looks like in the typical case, arguments for the combination tag more like don't hold than they do.

Here, I see how the general considerations in the "intersecting categories" problem outline apply to the specific tags at hand:

    1. holds for multiple-product questions if programming proper is only done in some of them and not others (which are a vast minority). It doesn't hold for one-product questions.
    1. is borderline: VBA has few enough differences in features, code organization and operation between Office products for a person proficient with one be able to relatively quickly work out an answer for any other shall they feel like that. On the other hand, people proficient in one product may not feel like spending time on (questions on) those that they don't actively work with.

Combined, it seems more likely that in the typical case, arguments for the combination tag don't hold rather than they do.

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ivan_pozdeev
  • 35.8k
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