toc is an appreviations for tableofcontents and tableofcontents is the most common related tag for toc. I suggest we make these two tags synonyms with tableofcontents as the master tag.
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on what StackExchange?– djechlinApr 11, 2014 at 18:05
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@djechlin On StackOverflow. (I tagged the questions as such and clicking the tags is the question leads there.)– KaraApr 11, 2014 at 18:08
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was confused since when I clicked it defaulted to the "featured" tab which was blank. But I see now.– djechlinApr 11, 2014 at 18:49
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I wouldn't accept an answer which isn't implemented on a synonym-request. But that's just me...– DeduplicatorAug 25, 2015 at 21:40
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I am not a native english speaker but I think you question, can be interpreted wrongly. Maybe add a comma or a full stop before "and".– AthafoudNov 3, 2016 at 10:28
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1Looks like ToC is being used for Theory of Computation in many places. That needs to be taken care of before we synonymize the tags.– Bhargav RaoMar 10, 2019 at 12:39
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Went through the posts, seems like there were 9 related to computation theory (I remember seeing more, but I guess someone has retagged it already). Atleast that issue is over now.– Bhargav RaoMar 23, 2019 at 11:14
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checked the remaining ones, they were all about table of contents. Syn'd now– Bhargav RaoMar 23, 2019 at 11:33
2 Answers
Given there aren't that many questions using either, I think the better option would be to just remove the toc tag and tableofcontents from all questions, and replace with a new table-of-contents tag. The dashes for spaces convention is far easier to read and is more commonly accepted around the site.
Once that is done, toc and tableofcontents will just fade into the sunset. If either gets recreated, then it might be the appropriate time to discuss synonymizing the tags.
All this being said, I completely forgot that us mere mortals can't create table-of-contents since tableofcontents already exists. The alternative would be to just use tableofcontents then have a moderator rename the tag.
I'm somewhat opposed to this, since
- it isn't that common,
- use of "toc" to mean "table of contents" isn't overwhelming,
- I don't think it's a particularly meaningful acronym - certainly impossible to tell from the acronym alone unless you already are in the table-of-contents community
My third point is most dubious but I think it applies here, since you could say similar things about, say, http or wysiwyg. There's a difference between "everyone in my field calls it this and knows what it means," and "it made enough sense and was easier to type," and this is the former.