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I just looked up this term on Stack Overflow to learn up, and in the process I found the questions are split between two similar tags that probably ought to be synonyms, but since I've never used either tag I don't have the "score" necessary to suggest them as synonyms.

So I'm bringing them to the attention of the community should they wish to merge them:

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    Both these tags should be destroyed.
    – animuson StaffMod
    Commented Feb 2, 2015 at 4:20
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    I leave it in the hands of whoever makes such decisions, which hands are not my own ... Commented Feb 2, 2015 at 4:21
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    And I'll sit over here and hand-wring!
    – Andrew Barber Mod
    Commented Feb 2, 2015 at 4:35
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    That seems to be a pretty strange definition of self-hosting anyway. To me, self-hosting means a tool that can make a newer version of itself. E.g., make being used to build a newer version of make, GCC being used to compile a newer version of GCC, Eclipse being used to develop a newer version of Eclipse, etc. Commented Feb 2, 2015 at 14:30
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    @JörgWMittag It depends on the context. Services that were traditionally hosted inside another service, such as websites being hosted in apache, now have options for self-hosting where they operate independently as both the HTTP host and the website. It's becoming more common for certain niche applications, so I wouldn't call it strange, but certainly without any context it is ambiguous for the reasons you point out.
    – AaronLS
    Commented Feb 3, 2015 at 3:07

1 Answer 1

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I think we should burninate these tags as they are too ambiguous.

  • There is no tag wiki for , there are only a few questions, and would be really broad to cover the current questions in that tag.
  • The tag except for is very broad, but the tag wiki gives it a strangely narrow scope. Unfortunately, it also has the same issue as where if the tag wiki was accurate to the questions, it would be incredibly broad.

It's a sign that the tags are too ambiguous, lets fix this before it turns into .


From Wikipedia, "Self-hosting"

The term self-hosting was coined to refer to the use of a computer program as part of the toolchain or operating system that produces new versions of that same program—for example, a compiler that can compile its own source code. Self-hosting software is commonplace on personal computers and larger systems.

The tag appears to have taken that definition and applied it to only .NET applications and a few cases of people looking to host their own web applications. Part of this might be because of the tag wiki, which is pretty specific to WCF applications

Self-hosting refers to a program or service which does not require a hosting environment. This term is often used to describe WCF web services that do not require IIS as their web host - a self-hosted WCF service establishes its own HTTP endpoints and listeners and is responsible for its own routing, security, and configuration management.

But we've also learned that people usually read those after they tag their question, so it is interesting WCF/ASP.NET questions have gravitated towards that tag. After filtering out all WCF/.NET questions, there appeared to be 50 "general purpose" self-hosting questions under the tag.

So, just to recap:

  • The tags are ambiguous.
  • The tag wikis don't match the excepts (when they exist).
  • The tags would be too broad if everything was correct.

Let's burninate them instead.

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    Well it's a year and a bit later and both tags are back: self-host has 65 questions and no tag wiki. self-hosting has 435 questions and the tag wiki excerpt "Operating independently of a hosting infrastructure" Commented Jun 2, 2016 at 13:20
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    I synonymized the two tags, @hippietrail, easier to burn one tag instead.
    – Bhargav Rao Mod
    Commented May 1, 2019 at 5:23

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