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Active reading. Used more standard formatting.
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Peter Mortensen
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Reading through the answers there'sthere are a lot of very good points around VBA in Windows vvs. Mac, the host application, and tag limits.

The crux of the matter, from my inspection, revolves around user knowledge - does the average user know the difference, and know how to tag their questions?

The crux of the matter, from my inspection, revolves around user knowledge - does the average user know the difference, and know how to tag their questions?

To that end, the type of solution I would present would provide more granularity to the user's intent and help them conform to a standard. I would do this by breaking apart the tagging structure in the following way:

  • Programming Language Tags: [VBA]
  • (Optional) Host Application/IDE: [Excel 16], [Word 16], [PowerPoint 16], [MS Access 16], [CAD], etc.
  • Operating System: [MacOS], [Windows 10], etc.
  • Additional Tags: [Regular Descriptor Tags]

**Programming Language Tags:** [VBA]

**(Optional) Host Application/IDE:** [Excel 16], [Word 16], [PowerPoint 16], [MS Access 16], [CAD], etc.

**Operating System:** [MacOS], [Windows 10], etc.

**Additional Tags:** [Regular Descriptor Tags]

We ask users to be more specific in asking their questions, why not help guide them with the way we tag?

 

 

This would work for other languages too:

**Programming Language Tags:** [Python 3.6]

**(Optional) Host Application/IDE:** [Jupyter]

**Operating System:** [Windows 10]

**Additional Tags:** [Seaborn], [Data-Viz]

  • Programming Language Tags: [Python 3.6]
  • (Optional) Host Application/IDE: [Jupyter]
  • Operating System: [Windows 10]
  • Additional Tags: [Seaborn], [Data-Viz]

Reading through the answers there's a lot of very good points around VBA in Windows v Mac, the host application, and tag limits.

The crux of the matter, from my inspection, revolves around user knowledge - does the average user know the difference, and know how to tag their questions?

To that end the type of solution I would present would provide more granularity to the user's intent and help them conform to a standard. I would do this by breaking apart the tagging structure in the following way:

**Programming Language Tags:** [VBA]

**(Optional) Host Application/IDE:** [Excel 16], [Word 16], [PowerPoint 16], [MS Access 16], [CAD], etc.

**Operating System:** [MacOS], [Windows 10], etc.

**Additional Tags:** [Regular Descriptor Tags]

We ask users to be more specific in asking their questions, why not help guide them with the way we tag?

 

This would work for other languages too:

**Programming Language Tags:** [Python 3.6]

**(Optional) Host Application/IDE:** [Jupyter]

**Operating System:** [Windows 10]

**Additional Tags:** [Seaborn], [Data-Viz]

Reading through the answers there are a lot of very good points around VBA in Windows vs. Mac, the host application, and tag limits.

The crux of the matter, from my inspection, revolves around user knowledge - does the average user know the difference, and know how to tag their questions?

To that end, the type of solution I would present would provide more granularity to the user's intent and help them conform to a standard. I would do this by breaking apart the tagging structure in the following way:

  • Programming Language Tags: [VBA]
  • (Optional) Host Application/IDE: [Excel 16], [Word 16], [PowerPoint 16], [MS Access 16], [CAD], etc.
  • Operating System: [MacOS], [Windows 10], etc.
  • Additional Tags: [Regular Descriptor Tags]

We ask users to be more specific in asking their questions, why not help guide them with the way we tag? 

This would work for other languages too:

  • Programming Language Tags: [Python 3.6]
  • (Optional) Host Application/IDE: [Jupyter]
  • Operating System: [Windows 10]
  • Additional Tags: [Seaborn], [Data-Viz]
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Schalton
  • 3.1k
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Reading through the answers there's a lot of very good points around VBA in Windows v Mac, the host application, and tag limits.

The crux of the matter, from my inspection, revolves around user knowledge - does the average user know the difference, and know how to tag their questions?

To that end the type of solution I would present would provide more granularity to the user's intent and help them conform to a standard. I would do this by breaking apart the tagging structure in the following way:

**Programming Language Tags:** [VBA]

**(Optional) Host Application/IDE:** [Excel 16], [Word 16], [PowerPoint 16], [MS Access 16], [CAD], etc.

**Operating System:** [MacOS], [Windows 10], etc.

**Additional Tags:** [Regular Descriptor Tags]

We ask users to be more specific in asking their questions, why not help guide them with the way we tag?

This would work for other languages too:

**Programming Language Tags:** [Python 3.6]

**(Optional) Host Application/IDE:** [Jupyter]

**Operating System:** [Windows 10]

**Additional Tags:** [Seaborn], [Data-Viz]