I have come across many questions like this one which are very poorly tagged. The problem is that the OP really doesn't know how tags work on Stack Overflow, so they're just picking words they feel might be relevant. On this question, which has to do with time series in pandas, the pandas
tag (which would have actually been helpful) was not present, but all of the following were:
date: "an ambiguous interval in time, which usually refers to a day, month and year."
for-loop: "a control structure used by many programming languages to iterate over a range."
offset: "The relational position of an entity, when compared to another entity with fixed position."
Each one of these tags refers to something so generic that it is available in nearly every programming language. Because of this, the questions that the tags themselves refer to are all over the map in terms of what programming languages and problems they are about. While there are some questions that are clearly and properly tagged, others (note: deleted) have fairly useless tags without even indicating the language of the code sample in the question.
The problem I have with such tags is that they seem to be more confusing than useful. New people who are less familiar with the way tags are used to organize questions here will select useless tags that do not get the right eyes on their question. This is because, in my opinion, there is very little reason to subscribe to these tags. Is anyone really an expert in for loops that answers questions about them, regardless of language? How many problems are really caused by offsets that can't be adequately described in the title or the body of the question?
Looking at the questions for the above tags shows more of the same sort of tags with some dozens of followers but thousands of only loosely related questions. Before I do more legwork to find more of these tags and compile statistics on them, I wanted to start a discussion about the question I hinted at earlier:
Does the usefulness of these tags to those who answer questions outweigh the cost of encouraging less experienced askers to pick bad or useless tags for their questions?
PS -- I saw this question which seemed to me to be generally in favor of getting rid of loops, yet it remains.
[javascript] [for-loop]
and all of the questions will be closely relateddate
around, is it really sufficient to preserveoffsets
?expressions
?for-loop
simply because the OP's code sample contained one, even though the question wasn't really about looping and the selected answer doesn't containfor
.for
loop is different from awhile
loop is different from ado/while
is different from afor-each
, and the differences between them and the situations in which a programmer might prefer one style over another are generally consistent across languages. If questions using these tags seem inconsistent, that's a problem with users being bad at tagging things, not with the tags themselves.