The farsi
tag is irrelevant to many questions just the same as cyrillic
or traditional chinese
might be. Mostly they are there to address either an encoding issue, or a writing direction issue.
However, it can help attract those who dealt with issues in that language to join discussions, as some questions tagged farsi
are presumably asked by non-persian users who deliver products requiring in't to the extent it requires compatibility with farsi
. It also says a certain level of understanding of that language is needed to fully understand the situation in question, whether it be a grammatically challenged problem or automatons regarding a certain type of communication.
At the same time, persian
, greek
or chinese
become relevant in issues addressing calendars and dates, which are infact entangling tradition of date keeping with sciences like math and even astrophysics.
In the end, farsi
may not be popular, but it may be helpful. In terms of technicality, persian
is favorable over farsi
, mainly because it refers to a whole culture rather than farsi
which is just a language.
Technicality aside, I think from the tone of the discussions here, this whole thread may be considered a hate speech towards certain people.
farsi
andpersian
as alias, but that should be it.