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TylerH
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The tag has 79 questions in it, has no wiki or wiki excerpt, and is used for questions where the questions refer to different things. Running through the burnination criteria:

Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?

No; while it may partially describe the contents of the question, the fact that it is ambiguous means it can never be a reliablyreliable way to tell what the question is about, or even what language the question is about.

Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?

No, the names of classes are not relevant to programming questions. What someone chooses to name a class is a matter of opinion and has no bearing on whether the code will work (with the one exception of trying to use a reserved keyword for a class name, but I don't think we need an entire sub-tag beyond just for this one case.

Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?

No (see the first test above); since the tag is ambiguous and has no wiki information, it doesn't really add useful information. Especially when there is a much more popular umbrella tag available.

Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?

No. The oldest question to use the tag (presumably the one that created it) used it in a subjective way: to refer to the concept of naming a class in a way that is long but still appropriate. However, questions throughout the years have used it not only to refer to the programming construct known as a class, but also to the HTML attribute class (or the CSS version for the class selector), to the npm package by the name 'classname', to the similar concept className in React/JSX.


Furthermore, all of the use cases of that I have found are already adequately covered by the existing tag (or, / when about the HTML attribute or CSS selector type), or for the className property in React. Thus, I suggest we burninate this tag.

The tag has 79 questions in it, has no wiki or wiki excerpt, and is used for questions where the questions refer to different things. Running through the burnination criteria:

Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?

No; while it may partially describe the contents of the question, the fact that it is ambiguous means it can never be a reliably way to tell what the question is about, or even what language the question is about.

Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?

No, the names of classes are not relevant to programming questions. What someone chooses to name a class is a matter of opinion and has no bearing on whether the code will work (with the one exception of trying to use a reserved keyword for a class name, but I don't think we need an entire sub-tag beyond just for this one case.

Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?

No (see the first test above); since the tag is ambiguous and has no wiki information, it doesn't really add useful information. Especially when there is a much more popular umbrella tag available.

Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?

No. The oldest question to use the tag (presumably the one that created it) used it in a subjective way: to refer to the concept of naming a class in a way that is long but still appropriate. However, questions throughout the years have used it not only to refer to the programming construct known as a class, but also to the HTML attribute class (or the CSS version for the class selector), to the npm package by the name 'classname', to the similar concept className in React/JSX.


Furthermore, all of the use cases of that I have found are already adequately covered by the existing tag (or / when about the HTML attribute or CSS selector type). Thus, I suggest we burninate this tag.

The tag has 79 questions in it, has no wiki or wiki excerpt, and is used for questions where the questions refer to different things. Running through the burnination criteria:

Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?

No; while it may partially describe the contents of the question, the fact that it is ambiguous means it can never be a reliable way to tell what the question is about, or even what language the question is about.

Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?

No, the names of classes are not relevant to programming questions. What someone chooses to name a class is a matter of opinion and has no bearing on whether the code will work (with the one exception of trying to use a reserved keyword for a class name, but I don't think we need an entire sub-tag beyond just for this one case.

Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?

No (see the first test above); since the tag is ambiguous and has no wiki information, it doesn't really add useful information. Especially when there is a much more popular umbrella tag available.

Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?

No. The oldest question to use the tag (presumably the one that created it) used it in a subjective way: to refer to the concept of naming a class in a way that is long but still appropriate. However, questions throughout the years have used it not only to refer to the programming construct known as a class, but also to the HTML attribute class (or the CSS version for the class selector), to the npm package by the name 'classname', to the similar concept className in React/JSX.


Furthermore, all of the use cases of that I have found are already adequately covered by the existing tag , / when about the HTML attribute or CSS selector type, or for the className property in React. Thus, I suggest we burninate this tag.

Added npm package that Hans found
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TylerH
  • 21.2k
  • 22
  • 229
  • 328

The tag has 79 questions in it, has no wiki or wiki excerpt, and is used for questions where the questions refer to different things. Running through the burnination criteria:

Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?

No; while it may partially describe the contents of the question, the fact that it is ambiguous means it can never be a reliably way to tell what the question is about, or even what language the question is about.

Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?

No, the names of classes are not relevant to programming questions. What someone chooses to name a class is a matter of opinion and has no bearing on whether the code will work (with the one exception of trying to use a reserved keyword for a class name, but I don't think we need an entire sub-tag beyond just for this one case.

Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?

No (see the first test above); since the tag is ambiguous and has no wiki information, it doesn't really add useful information. Especially when there is a much more popular umbrella tag available.

Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?

No. The oldest question to use the tag (presumably the one that created it) used it in a subjective way: to refer to the concept of naming a class in a way that is long but still appropriate. However, questions throughout the years have used it not only to refer to the programming construct known as a class, but also to the HTML attribute class (or the CSS version for the class selector), andto the npm package by the name 'classname', to the similar concept className in React/JSX.


Furthermore, all of the use cases of that I have found are already adequately covered by the existing tag (or / when about the HTML attribute or CSS selector type). Thus, I suggest we burninate this tag.

The tag has 79 questions in it, has no wiki or wiki excerpt, and is used for questions where the questions refer to different things. Running through the burnination criteria:

Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?

No; while it may partially describe the contents of the question, the fact that it is ambiguous means it can never be a reliably way to tell what the question is about, or even what language the question is about.

Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?

No, the names of classes are not relevant to programming questions. What someone chooses to name a class is a matter of opinion and has no bearing on whether the code will work (with the one exception of trying to use a reserved keyword for a class name, but I don't think we need an entire sub-tag beyond just for this one case.

Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?

No (see the first test above); since the tag is ambiguous and has no wiki information, it doesn't really add useful information. Especially when there is a much more popular umbrella tag available.

Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?

No. The oldest question to use the tag (presumably the one that created it) used it in a subjective way: to refer to the concept of naming a class in a way that is long but still appropriate. However, questions throughout the years have used it not only to refer to the programming construct known as a class, but also to the HTML attribute class (or the CSS version for the class selector), and to the similar concept className in React/JSX.


Furthermore, all of the use cases of that I have found are already adequately covered by the existing tag (or / when about the HTML attribute or CSS selector type). Thus, I suggest we burninate this tag.

The tag has 79 questions in it, has no wiki or wiki excerpt, and is used for questions where the questions refer to different things. Running through the burnination criteria:

Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?

No; while it may partially describe the contents of the question, the fact that it is ambiguous means it can never be a reliably way to tell what the question is about, or even what language the question is about.

Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?

No, the names of classes are not relevant to programming questions. What someone chooses to name a class is a matter of opinion and has no bearing on whether the code will work (with the one exception of trying to use a reserved keyword for a class name, but I don't think we need an entire sub-tag beyond just for this one case.

Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?

No (see the first test above); since the tag is ambiguous and has no wiki information, it doesn't really add useful information. Especially when there is a much more popular umbrella tag available.

Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?

No. The oldest question to use the tag (presumably the one that created it) used it in a subjective way: to refer to the concept of naming a class in a way that is long but still appropriate. However, questions throughout the years have used it not only to refer to the programming construct known as a class, but also to the HTML attribute class (or the CSS version for the class selector), to the npm package by the name 'classname', to the similar concept className in React/JSX.


Furthermore, all of the use cases of that I have found are already adequately covered by the existing tag (or / when about the HTML attribute or CSS selector type). Thus, I suggest we burninate this tag.

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TylerH
  • 21.2k
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  • 328

Should we burninate [class-names]?

The tag has 79 questions in it, has no wiki or wiki excerpt, and is used for questions where the questions refer to different things. Running through the burnination criteria:

Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?

No; while it may partially describe the contents of the question, the fact that it is ambiguous means it can never be a reliably way to tell what the question is about, or even what language the question is about.

Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?

No, the names of classes are not relevant to programming questions. What someone chooses to name a class is a matter of opinion and has no bearing on whether the code will work (with the one exception of trying to use a reserved keyword for a class name, but I don't think we need an entire sub-tag beyond just for this one case.

Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?

No (see the first test above); since the tag is ambiguous and has no wiki information, it doesn't really add useful information. Especially when there is a much more popular umbrella tag available.

Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?

No. The oldest question to use the tag (presumably the one that created it) used it in a subjective way: to refer to the concept of naming a class in a way that is long but still appropriate. However, questions throughout the years have used it not only to refer to the programming construct known as a class, but also to the HTML attribute class (or the CSS version for the class selector), and to the similar concept className in React/JSX.


Furthermore, all of the use cases of that I have found are already adequately covered by the existing tag (or / when about the HTML attribute or CSS selector type). Thus, I suggest we burninate this tag.