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Active reading [<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_page> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WHATWG> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ECMAScript>]. Expanded.
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Peter Mortensen
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[ecmascript-temporal] sounds like the best choice to me, but this question reveals a need for some standardization in that area.


We already have , for a similar case and it seems to work pretty well there. (There was a single question tagged but I just edited it out).

There are many [javascript-*] tags, most of which are at least questionable, and the rest are just plain wrong. 
For instance, is in the process of being burninated by Brian for years. If we consider "JavaScript" to mean the language, then there is no JavaScript Event, except maybe that one, Events as we know them in a web-page page are speccedspecified by the DOM standards (whatwgWHATWG). 
A similar situation exists with for which I started a synonym request since that API is a Web API (W3C), and is not related at all with TC39.

The only ones in there that relate to an EcmaScriptECMAScript feature are and , and I believe they'd be fine as a synonym of an [ecmascript-...] equivalent.

We also have a lot of [es6-*] tags, which seem way cleaner, as they correctly do relate to EcmaScriptECMAScript features. However ES6, a.k.a ES2015, shipped in ... 2015. We're now at ES2020, and I guess the Temporal feature would land in ES2021. But who really cares Promises went out in 2015? We still have many questions today about Promises running in an ES2020 environment.

There is also the [js-*] tags, which seem to relate to specific libraries rather than language features.

I believe all these tags relating to EcmaScriptECMAScript features should be made synonyms of an [ecmascript-...] equivalent that has to be created, though I'm not sure how this should be coordinated.

[ecmascript-temporal] sounds like the best choice to me, but this question reveals a need for some standardization in that area.


We already have , for a similar case and it seems to work pretty well there. (There was a single question tagged but I just edited it out).

There are many [javascript-*] tags, most of which are at least questionable, and the rest are just plain wrong.
For instance is in the process of being burninated by Brian for years. If we consider "JavaScript" to mean the language, then there is no JavaScript Event, except maybe that one, Events as we know them in a web-page are specced by the DOM standards (whatwg).
A similar situation exists with for which I started a synonym request since that API is a Web API (W3C), and is not related at all with TC39.

The only ones in there that relate to an EcmaScript feature are and , and I believe they'd be fine as a synonym of an [ecmascript-...] equivalent.

We also have a lot of [es6-*] tags, which seem way cleaner, as they correctly do relate to EcmaScript features. However ES6, a.k.a ES2015 shipped in ... 2015. We're now at ES2020, and I guess the Temporal feature would land in ES2021. But who really cares Promises went out in 2015? We still have many questions today about Promises running in an ES2020 environment.

There is also the [js-*] tags, which seem to relate to specific libraries rather than language features.

I believe all these tags relating to EcmaScript features should be made synonyms of an [ecmascript-...] equivalent that has to be created, though I'm not sure how this should be coordinated.

[ecmascript-temporal] sounds like the best choice to me, but this question reveals a need for some standardization in that area.


We already have , for a similar case and it seems to work pretty well there. (There was a single question tagged but I just edited it out).

There are many [javascript-*] tags, most of which are at least questionable, and the rest are just plain wrong. 
For instance, is in the process of being burninated by Brian for years. If we consider "JavaScript" to mean the language, then there is no JavaScript Event, except maybe that one, Events as we know them in a web page are specified by the DOM standards (WHATWG). 
A similar situation exists with for which I started a synonym request since that API is a Web API (W3C), and is not related at all with TC39.

The only ones in there that relate to an ECMAScript feature are and , and I believe they'd be fine as a synonym of an [ecmascript-...] equivalent.

We also have a lot of [es6-*] tags, which seem way cleaner, as they correctly do relate to ECMAScript features. However ES6, a.k.a ES2015, shipped in ... 2015. We're now at ES2020, and I guess the Temporal feature would land in ES2021. But who really cares Promises went out in 2015? We still have many questions today about Promises running in an ES2020 environment.

There is also the [js-*] tags, which seem to relate to specific libraries rather than language features.

I believe all these tags relating to ECMAScript features should be made synonyms of an [ecmascript-...] equivalent that has to be created, though I'm not sure how this should be coordinated.

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Kaiido
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[ecmascript-temporal] sounds like the best choice to me, but this question reveals a need for some standardization in that area.


We already have , for a similar case and it seems to work pretty well there. (There was a single question tagged but I just edited it out).

There are many [javascript-*] tags, most of which are at least questionable, and the rest are just plain wrong.
For instance is in the process of being burninated by Brian for years. If we consider "JavaScript" to mean the language, then there is no JavaScript Event, except maybe that one, Events as we know them in a web-page are specced by the DOM standards (whatwg).
A similar situation exists with for which I started a synonym request since that API is a Web API (W3C), and is not related at all with TC39.

The only ones in there that relate to an EcmaScript feature are and , and I believe they'd be fine as a synonym of an [ecmascript-...] equivalent.

We also have a lot of [es6-*] tags, which seem way cleaner, as they correctly do relate to EcmaScript features. However ES6, a.k.a ES2015 shipped in ... 2015. We're now at ES2020, and I guess the Temporal feature would land in ES2021. But who really cares Promises went out in 2015? We still have many questions today about Promises running in an ES2020 environment.

There is also the [js-*] tags, which seem to relate to specific libraries rather than language features.

I believe all these tags relating to EcmaScript features should be made synonyms of an [ecmascript-...] equivalent that has to be created, though I'm not sure how this should be coordinated.