I was looking around (again) and noticed that there are tags for the HTTP status codes. Many of these tags only have a few questions, but some of the main ones (301, 304, 404, 500, etc.) have hundreds of questions, all with the common tie of "this doesn't work, here's the error code".
The http-status-code-500 excerpt says
Please DO NOT USE THIS TAG. It is meaningless for categorizing your question.
Which I think sums up most of these tags, and is the reason behind making this request: They're meaningless for categorizing the questions.
Most of the heavily-used status codes (404, 500, etc) contain very general questions, typically involving services or scripts which return the status code. These questions almost always have a common tie of "this doesn't work, help me fix it", which goes against the point of tags.
Tags are meant to group questions into specific, well-defined categories. Giving something a http-status-code-404 tag because "it says it can't be found" is about as meaningful as giving something a bug tag because it "just stopped working".
- Jquery ajaxrequest xhr.status code 0 but html status code 200
- Htaccess 301 redirect one url to another with special characters doesnt work
- Upgrade to ASP.NET MVC 5 Error 403.14 Forbidden
- laravel 4 all routes except home result in 404 error
- ASP.NET MVC / IIS 7.5: 500 Internal Server Error for static content only
Many of the less-used status codes (205, 308, 418, etc) fit better under http-status-codes as the questions are general geared towards implementation questions about when the status codes should be used, and what is required to use them.
- What's the purpose of the HTTP status 205 Reset Content?
- Can I use HTTP response 424 when a request requires another request to be done first?
- HTTP Status Code for Captcha
- What's the deal with HTTP status code 308?
- HTTP Status 412 (Precondition Failed) and Database Versioning
So I propose the tags are burninated, retagging questions where it is appropriate to http-status-codes.
Related retag requests