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Jan Schultke
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... then a newanother problem arisesbecomes clear. Namely, applying this tag becomesis an extremely opinionated decision. Questions like the following arise:

  1. Is something frequently asked only if it's asked on Stack Overflow? After all, it could be that a question is frequently asked elsewhere, but there is no evidence on SO itself that it is a frequent question. What external sources should we consider, if any?

  2. Does popularity imply frequency? For example, What is the '-->' operator in C/C++? has over 10K upvotes, but it's debateable whether people frequently ask about -->. It's not a pattern that is commonly recommended, or found in real code; it's more of a neat trick that people find interesting. Some people may use the sheer popularity of this question as rationale for tagging it though.

  3. Can an author add to a new question? After all, the author might speculate that a question will be frequently asked in the future. They might do so because the question is about a brand new version of programming language, and they suspect it will become frequently asked over time.

  4. Should the tag be removed if the question used to be frequently asked, but not longer is? There are plenty of historical questions about C++03 or lower, etc. One day, C++11 is going to be rarely used, and a lot of Q&As about it are going to be superseded. If a domain shrinks over time, does that justify removing the tag?

  5. Does a question have to be frequently duplicated to be frequently asked? Duplicates might be a good indicator for "frequently asked". However, such a metric ignores all the questions that are never asked because someone quickly found the canonical. What about deleted duplicates? Not everyone has access to deleted questions, to my knowledge.

... then a new problem arises. Namely, applying this tag becomes an extremely opinionated decision. Questions like the following arise:

  1. Is something frequently asked only if it's asked on Stack Overflow? After all, it could be that a question is frequently asked elsewhere, but there is no evidence on SO itself that it is a frequent question. What external sources should we consider, if any?

  2. Does popularity imply frequency? For example, What is the '-->' operator in C/C++? has over 10K upvotes, but it's debateable whether people frequently ask about -->. It's not a pattern that is commonly recommended, or found in real code; it's more of a neat trick that people find interesting. Some people may use the sheer popularity of this question as rationale for tagging it though.

  3. Can an author add to a new question? After all, the author might speculate that a question will be frequently asked in the future. They might do so because the question is about a brand new version of programming language, and they suspect it will become frequently asked over time.

  4. Does a question have to be frequently duplicated to be frequently asked? Duplicates might be a good indicator for "frequently asked". However, such a metric ignores all the questions that are never asked because someone quickly found the canonical. What about deleted duplicates? Not everyone has access to deleted questions, to my knowledge.

... then another problem becomes clear. Namely, applying this tag is an opinionated decision. Questions like the following arise:

  1. Is something frequently asked only if it's asked on Stack Overflow? After all, it could be that a question is frequently asked elsewhere, but there is no evidence on SO itself that it is a frequent question. What external sources should we consider, if any?

  2. Does popularity imply frequency? For example, What is the '-->' operator in C/C++? has over 10K upvotes, but it's debateable whether people frequently ask about -->. It's not a pattern that is commonly recommended, or found in real code; it's more of a neat trick that people find interesting. Some people may use the sheer popularity of this question as rationale for tagging it though.

  3. Can an author add to a new question? After all, the author might speculate that a question will be frequently asked in the future. They might do so because the question is about a brand new version of programming language, and they suspect it will become frequently asked over time.

  4. Should the tag be removed if the question used to be frequently asked, but not longer is? There are plenty of historical questions about C++03 or lower, etc. One day, C++11 is going to be rarely used, and a lot of Q&As about it are going to be superseded. If a domain shrinks over time, does that justify removing the tag?

  5. Does a question have to be frequently duplicated to be frequently asked? Duplicates might be a good indicator for "frequently asked". However, such a metric ignores all the questions that are never asked because someone quickly found the canonical. What about deleted duplicates? Not everyone has access to deleted questions, to my knowledge.

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Jan Schultke
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should be burninated. This would solve all questions about when it should be applied.

Firstly, note that the most highly upvoted answer on the post that started the FAQ (Setting up a FAQ for the C++ tag) argues against the concept of the C++ FAQ. With a vote of +63/-8, there is overwhelming consensus that the FAQ project is problematic.

Besides this answer, there are additional tagging issues that have become clear to me recently. In short, community wikis do a better job at encouraging edits from the community than , and whether something is frequently asked is opinion-based. This tag does not bring enough value to the community to keep existing.

1. is a meta-tag which possibly encourages collaboration

The current excerpt states:

Provides a collaborative, community-edited C++ FAQ

I have seen at least two interpretations of this so far:

  1. "Collaborative" and "community-edited" are redundant, as this applies to all posts on SO anyway. The tag description merely says that questions tagged this way are "questions that are frequently asked". The excerpt should be updated and this redundant information should be removed.
    This perspective is popular, see https://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/426733

  2. Alternatively, the tag has a strong connotation of inviting edits from the community because it emphasizes "community-edited". This makes the tag very difficult to apply to questions because inviting collaboration is something only the author can do themselves. If the author doesn't want to advertise a Q&A as "Please edit this, community!", then adding this tag to their question would conflict with their intent.

Whichever interpretation you see as correct, it's questionable that a tag states "collaborative" and "community-edited". If someone encourages their Q&A to be edited by the community, they can communicate this clearly by making their post a community wiki.

2. Whether something is frequently asked is subjective

If we remove the "collaborative" and "community-edited", and make the excerpt something like:

Frequently asked C++ questions.

... then a new problem arises. Namely, applying this tag becomes an extremely opinionated decision. Questions like the following arise:

  1. Is something frequently asked only if it's asked on Stack Overflow? After all, it could be that a question is frequently asked elsewhere, but there is no evidence on SO itself that it is a frequent question. What external sources should we consider, if any?

  2. Does popularity imply frequency? For example, What is the '-->' operator in C/C++? has over 10K upvotes, but it's debateable whether people frequently ask about -->. It's not a pattern that is commonly recommended, or found in real code; it's more of a neat trick that people find interesting. Some people may use the sheer popularity of this question as rationale for tagging it though.

  3. Can an author add to a new question? After all, the author might speculate that a question will be frequently asked in the future. They might do so because the question is about a brand new version of programming language, and they suspect it will become frequently asked over time.

  4. Does a question have to be frequently duplicated to be frequently asked? Duplicates might be a good indicator for "frequently asked". However, such a metric ignores all the questions that are never asked because someone quickly found the canonical. What about deleted duplicates? Not everyone has access to deleted questions, to my knowledge.

Overall, none of these questions have an obvious yes/no answer, and it would require a huge community effort to find consensus for all of them. Whether a tag should be applied to a question should not be opinion-based, and a tag for "frequently asked questions" encourages opinion-based tagging.

Perhaps we could have an [faq] meta-tag applied automatically by Stack Overflow, but that's beyond the scope of this answer.