The tag wiki for fuzzy says
Do not use this tag. It is ambiguous: see fuzzy-search, fuzzy-logic, or image-processing for more appropriate tags.
If the wiki says not to use it then shouldn't we do as it says?
The tag wiki for fuzzy says
Do not use this tag. It is ambiguous: see fuzzy-search, fuzzy-logic, or image-processing for more appropriate tags.
If the wiki says not to use it then shouldn't we do as it says?
Having a tag that shouldn't be used serves at least two purposes:
Warns people not to use that tag. We all know many people carelessly type in any word they think is relevant, and use that as a tag. If that word is not a tag, nothing happens. But if that word is a tag, its description appears immediately below. So the user will be informed by the description (assuming they read it) that the tag shouldn't be used.
That description also points to other related, more relevant tags that should be used.
fuzzy
you'll get all of the tags you should be using.
Commented
Jul 16, 2014 at 15:08
fuzzy
isn't being drastically misused (ignoring the wiki description), and it's probably not worth splitting it into more specific tags - unless there are established names for specific "fuzzy" algorithms.