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Aug 19, 2021 at 0:36 history edited bad_coder CC BY-SA 4.0
Ease of reading edit. Stylized tech name.
Aug 18, 2021 at 19:44 comment added Herohtar "What other tag is appropriate for that specific question?"... github, and only that tag. It requires an expert on GitHub to explain where GitHub looks for a specific file (which just happens to be README in this case). An "expert in READMEs" (whatever that is) wouldn't be able to answer it.
Aug 18, 2021 at 17:57 comment added Connor Low By itself, the readme tag tells me nothing certain about the question. It could be related any number of things: github, a repository, some software, etc. And there is no formal standard that says a readme file has to be markdown. Even the wiki tag is extremely broad: "...a file that contains information about something that should be read...". Burnintate it.
Aug 18, 2021 at 14:31 comment added zcoop98 @DanielWiddis I'm sorry if I was unclear, I didn't mean to imply that this tag was only used for GitHub readme questions; I simply wanted to acknowledge that this tag has some good questions in it, and that many of the best, most viewed, most upvoted questions in the tag are about GitHub readme's specifically (the top 3 questions in the tag all concern that specific topic; this is in addition to the fact that over half of [readme] questions are also tagged [github]).
Aug 18, 2021 at 8:52 comment added Passer By You contradict yourself, it is ambiguous. the linked questions regarding different platforms all ask some platform-specific problem, none of which bears similarity other than the name "readme".
Aug 18, 2021 at 6:43 history edited Daniel Widdis CC BY-SA 4.0
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Aug 18, 2021 at 2:01 history edited Daniel Widdis CC BY-SA 4.0
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Aug 18, 2021 at 1:37 comment added Daniel Widdis @Braiam and I'm talking about the folder. The Desktop folder, which isn't a Desktop folder, but a folder which name happens to be Desktop. Which, if it happens to be in a certain special location actually does something different than folders named Desktop in other random locations, like on someone's Desktop.
Aug 18, 2021 at 0:57 comment added Braiam I'm talking about the file. The readme file, which isn't a readme file, but a text file which name happens to be readme (said name set by metadata of the filesystem, btw).
Aug 17, 2021 at 23:53 history edited Daniel Widdis CC BY-SA 4.0
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Aug 17, 2021 at 23:51 comment added Daniel Widdis @zcoop98 Not all readme questions are github specific. There's questions for Docker Hub, Nuget, Gitlab, pub.dev, npmjs and more.
Aug 17, 2021 at 23:44 comment added Daniel Widdis @Herohtar Then the majority of quesetions are mistagged. And the tag should be removed from those mistagged questions and left only on questions where it is relevant. Oh, wait, once you bring something up on Meta as a burnination request you can't take any action to moderate it until it's approved. Guess they're stuck like that until this tag ever gets burninated, which will probably be never, so this very request has made the problem worse.
Aug 17, 2021 at 23:43 comment added Daniel Widdis @Braiam I was talking about your desktop. It's just a folder in a filesystem. It doesn't deserve its own tag. I don't care what files you put in it. There's nothing special about that folder.
Aug 17, 2021 at 21:53 comment added Braiam @DanielWiddis no, on the most common operative system in the world and how every program sees it: application/text: ASCII. If it had .md at the end, it would be a markdown file. If it had rst it would be a reStructuredText format. README files are no different from any text file. That's the point. Github being helpful and showing you any README\.?(md|rst|etc. file formatted is something that is unique to github. If I was using git-web, I wouldn't get that.
Aug 17, 2021 at 21:29 comment added Herohtar The readme tag adds no useful information to the majority of the questions currently tagged with it. Most of them are questions of how to use markdown, or how to do something with a text file that just happens to be a readme file, but in most (if not all) cases the fact that the file in question is a README is irrelevant.
Aug 17, 2021 at 21:13 comment added zcoop98 @DanielWiddis I respect that the GitHub Readme use-case for this tag is a valid one; I also just don't see any other great use-cases where [readme] would add anything of note. One good usage doesn't necessitate a tag of its own, and this tag isn't specific to the GitHub case anyway. If categorizing questions about the GitHub-specific Readme file was useful, then we should have a [github-readme] tag; at the moment [readme] doesn't usefully describe the vast majority of questions that use it.
Aug 17, 2021 at 20:48 comment added Daniel Widdis @braiam "On your desktop" means "In your Desktop folder on your filesystem." Which is just a folder, nothing special about it. It's only special on your operating system. No need for desktop tag at all.
Aug 17, 2021 at 18:00 comment added Braiam @DanielWiddis it's only special on Github. On my desktop is nothing more than an ASCII text file.
Aug 17, 2021 at 16:19 comment added Daniel Widdis It's kinda a stretch to say "this tag doesn't have any utility" and it's kinda a stretch to say that it's "irrelevant" that a file a special file designed to be the front page of github site.
Aug 17, 2021 at 12:47 comment added Passer By There's only 77 questions with accepted answers with positive score. Kinda a stretch to say there's many high-quality questions and answers.
Aug 17, 2021 at 12:06 comment added John Bollinger What in the world would constitute expert-level knowledge specifically of README files? What is there to know about them that is neither context dependent nor characteristic of the format in which they are written?
Aug 17, 2021 at 9:06 comment added Camilo Terevinto I agree with @user202729. If I want to rename my README.md file to DONOTREADME.md file, it's going to be the exact same file. If GitHub expects a specific name, then the github tag is what should be used, since it's a GitHub question specifically.
Aug 17, 2021 at 3:07 comment added Daniel Widdis @user202729 See the specific answer by Chris that I linked and tell me what tags would apply to that expert-level knowlege. The github and markdown tags by themselves are insufficient.
Aug 17, 2021 at 3:01 history edited Daniel Widdis CC BY-SA 4.0
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Aug 17, 2021 at 2:51 comment added user202729 It only shows that VonC is a GitHub expert rather than a readme expert.
Aug 17, 2021 at 2:45 history answered Daniel Widdis CC BY-SA 4.0