5

Lately, I've been editing questions and removing any extra or redundant tags. Before I continue doing it, I just want to make sure I'm doing the right thing.

For example, a question about permanent storage on Android had the tags , , , and (Android's permanent storage).

The tag trumps ; has no meaning. Now, is on topic, but doesn't quite provide a classification of the question. I'd rather take it out, because I believe tags should not be as granular as covering all topics of a question; they serve just to frame it.

5
  • Link to the question in question please? Otherwise our tag experts cannot judge ;) Commented Apr 13, 2015 at 23:15
  • 1
    Are you sure there are no non-java android questions? Maybe scala or native... Commented Apr 13, 2015 at 23:29
  • At this point Android is its own set of problems. If you're dealing with data types and algorithmics, anything that can be unitested in a SE JVM, that's a java tag. If it has one call to any of the Android framework classes, it's Android tag because you're deaing with a different problem. Commented Apr 13, 2015 at 23:33
  • Similarly, if you have a tooling problem in Gradle, you're still in Android space. If you're using Kotlin or Scala or any of the non-standard languages, each has its own tag. They're enough of a rarity to deserve it. Commented Apr 13, 2015 at 23:35
  • As for C++, the few lot that use it have the android-ndk tag, plus their c++-related ones. Commented Apr 13, 2015 at 23:36

2 Answers 2

1

I'm not normally a fan of editors removing tags; the more the merrier when I'm looking for a question to answer. Clicking through from the front page to the question can easily cost me 5 minutes of my life that I'll never get back when the tags are not specific enough.

But you made the right call here, is superfluous with , and is useless. They don't add an extra signal. + is perfect. You didn't have to remove , but removing was however important, since not every Java expert knows Android.

1
1

The android tag trumps java; save has no meaning. Now, sharedpreferences is on topic, but doesn't quite provide a classification of the question.

Your reasoning was spot on. A tag that doesn't connect the question with the people that are able to answer them, aren't useful at all. You can safely remove them without a second through, specially if you know what you are talking about. The languages tags are a given, the save tag has no user other that BalusC which consistently answer questions, and even then, he hasn't been doing so since '13, certainly not a trend. sharedpreferences also have the same problem, the people with most answers in them, even Commonsware, aren't consistently answering these questions. Remember:

[...] ideally, you want to identify all of the core topics without hitting too many tangential ones. [...] In all cases, try to avoid just throwing a bunch of related tags onto the question.

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .