TLDR: Let's squash minor versions and equate python to "the current version".
As Cody Gray suggests in another answer, moderators turning tags into aliases is a viable way to do this.
From my experience on the Python tag, minor version tags such as python-3.5 are almost never useful. Most prominently:
- To describe features, these tags fail to cover other versions in which the feature works the same. For example, the top Q&A on python-3.5 for the then-new
@
operator,async
/await
keywords, and type hinting are still relevant for the most recent versions. - To describe dependencies, these tags fail to provide accurate information. Bugs in Python implementations usually affect multiple minor versions but at different patch version; the platform and even 32-bit vs 64-bit builds are still relevantoften needed as well. That is assuming the interpreter is actually relevant forin the problemfirst place, which many askers do not knowcannot tell.
=> The resolution of Python tag versions should be reduced. All major.minor tags should be aliased to the respective major tag.
As someone developing new software with Python but also keeping production systems running, I must say the distinction between Python 2 and Python 3 is still relevant – in fact, it is more relevant today seeing how the two diverged by 10+ years. Not just differences in the language itself, but changes in the technology of implementations and the ecosystem affect how to approach tasks.
In contrast to minor versions, Python 2 users know that they are dealing with a special version. Answerers tracking this tag know that they are dealing with a special version. The tag is not something used on a whim.
=> The Python 2 tag should be kept to distinguish this "legacy" version. Python 2 should not be aliased into broader tags.
Now, what about Python 3 and plain Python? In an ideal world "Python" could mean "any Python" whereas "Python 3" is a specific version – but that is not how it would work in practice, as far as I can tell. We just have too many people that do not care about the distinction. Ultimately, the two must mean the same one way or another.
Since I am proposing to keep python-2.x as a "real" tag, I am slightly in favour of keeping python-3.x "real" as well and making python an alias to it. That way, python-M.X
means a specific major version and python
just means "the current version" – as unlikely as the latter is to change in the foreseeable future.
=> The Python tag should just select the "default" version. Python should be aliased to the Python 3 tag.