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I answered a question which was written when Objective-C was the only way to make iOS apps. The answer uses Swift.

I received a down vote, because

"Swift answer for 4 year old question tagged Obj-C."

I then added the swift tag to the question but it was removed by the person who downvoted with the reason:

"There is no way the author could've meant to ask for swift, so your edit clearly conflicts with the author's intend. [...]"

My question is NOT about wether or not this specific tag belongs to this specific question, but in general, is it bad practise to change tags based on the evolution of the Q&A as a whole?

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    you shouldn't change the intent of a post with an edit. Adding swift to make your answer "valid".... is pretty much exactly that
    – Patrice
    Feb 25, 2016 at 19:15
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    In general, you can always write and self-answer your own question if you feel your answer has value (and the question hasn't already been asked). I remember there was a meta question about Swift and Objective-C questions specifically, though I don't remember what it concluded. Feb 25, 2016 at 19:34
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    What I want to know: how did three editors editing the tags manage not to remove the incorrect bold???
    – Joe
    Feb 26, 2016 at 21:00
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    Retagging question and changing its context is just the start of a huge problem with legacy content. It makes the other answers seem irrelevant and eventually users will downvote them as well. (so many stupid people not answering the question! that will teach them..)
    – prusswan
    Feb 27, 2016 at 17:54
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    Certainly not. The author isn't infallible about what's relevant. Very often author tags have to be removed and others provided. And as per your example, relevancy can change over time.
    – user207421
    Feb 28, 2016 at 11:16

2 Answers 2

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Rules that require reading someone's mind are not good rules.

Rules that prevent us from improving the site in deference to someone who got his question answered 4+ years ago are also not particularly good rules.

Fortunately, there are no rules that say you can't edit tags if the author wouldn't have added them. Can you imagine if we did? All MySQL questions on Stack Overflow would be tagged . Tags should always describe the content of the question, and if the author's own tags don't do that then it's our duty to change them.

So let's look at your specific case:

  • The question isn't about Objective-C; it's about the iOS API, with added because it's traditional on Stack Overflow to use language tags in sort of a meta sense to request that answers be provided in that language. Since no other languages were encouraged for iOS development back in 2011, of course it would be this one.

  • The same guy who removed your tag also removed the tag and added the tag. Now, it's a pretty good bet the asker was actually developing software for the iPhone, so we can dismiss any notions of sacrosanct author intentions right now: ios makes a better tag, and as your adversarial editor realizes, better tagging trumps speculation on author intent any day.

So hopefully, we've put this whole "author intent" thing to rest. We're just left with the question of whether it's appropriate to answer an API question, with a preferred language specified, in an alternate language.

This has been somewhat controversial for years, even on platforms whose owners weren't keeping a choke-hold on the practical availability of languages. I'd imagine that on iOS, a platform only recently blessed with a second supported language, the bright light of choice might be unbearably blinding for some.

So... That's the environment you have to navigate. If more people are offended by seeing a Swift answer than are aided by it, your answer will end up with a negative score. If it turns out Swift coders need to detect bold text too, then you might end up with a positive one. Make the call based on your perception of need, not anyone else's. Or as Anthony Pegram wrote years ago,

Expanding outwards to cover the non-.NET universe, if the answer is indeed in the wrong language and it does not assist in answering the question, that's where we have downvotes. But if the answer helps move the needle, then the language itself is not a problem. It could even be pseudocode, for all we care.

Truth be told, that question doesn't really need either language tag at this point; the question isn't about Swift but isn't any more about Objective-C; if I was searching for an answer to this problem on any of the other platforms where Objective-C can be used, I'd be mighty irritated that this question pops up; frankly, would make a better tag than at this point.

Related:

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    Thanks for bringing this post to my attention. Please note that the "iphone" tag is intended to be used with hardware-specific questions, which isn't the case here; if this wasn't tagged objective-c by the author, I'd never even criticized the answer, nor downvoted. Please also note that as time of that post, many other languages including Haskell and C have been perfectly okay to develop iOS apps in.
    – Tobi Nary
    Feb 25, 2016 at 19:53
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    I'm familiar with the history there, @Jan - note though that when the question being discussed was asked, the rebrand had been in place for barely a year and the iphone tag was still something like 5x more popular on Stack Overflow for these questions. Situations change; tags should change with them.
    – Shog9
    Feb 25, 2016 at 19:59
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    Right; that's for the iphone/ios retag. Now running around and doing the (trivial) translation of objective-c code to swift on old questions is something I prefer to use downvoting for when I stumble over it. Adding the swift tag to make this right should never have gotten reviewed as the other answer already points out and I did in a comment on the answer in question.
    – Tobi Nary
    Feb 25, 2016 at 20:04
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    I agree, but not because of any nonsense about author intent - it's just an unnecessary tag. You could've dropped [objective-c] while you were editing too. As for downvoting... That's your prerogative; as I said in my answer here, ultimately the votes from all readers will determine the worth of an answer, regardless of language.
    – Shog9
    Feb 25, 2016 at 20:07
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    Exactly:) as for objc, as in that time the haskell iOS build chain came along, I rather didn't want to guess, even if chances are objc might be a mistag as well.
    – Tobi Nary
    Feb 25, 2016 at 20:10
  • Yeah, yeah, I knew a guy who used to throw logo on questions, because... Hey, it could be correct.
    – Shog9
    Feb 25, 2016 at 20:11
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    @JanGreve Forgive me for getting one-to-one here, but if you "prefer to use downvoting" because you feel I'm "running around and doing the (trivial) translation of objective-c code to swift on old questions", than that's perhaps a bit prejudiced. I saw the WWDC 2015 video about Swift 2.0 and found this new way of achieving it much more readable, concise than any Swift or Obj-C way before this and therefore a valid answer to the question. I do hope you reconsider this way of looking at Swift answers on Obj-C posts.
    – Arjan
    Feb 25, 2016 at 20:52
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    There are some good points in here, but it seems to look more at whether it's okay to answer an old question asked in LanguageA later on with a response in LanguageB, when what we're really looking at is if it's also okay to then edit the question to add the additional language tag. While I agree 100% it's fine to answer the question, I'm not so sure adding the language tag is such good practice. Sure, let's add an ios-api tag (or similar), but the swift tag seems like it's putting a whole new dimension into the question that wasn't there before. Feb 28, 2016 at 4:25
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    To continue, I'm not 100% against the idea, either. If I'm a swift developer looking for help, having that tag there is a definite win. Maybe I should search for ios instead, but that doesn't always happen. And for this reason I also would never want to remove the objective-c tag, which was part of the suggestion. Back to the swift tag, though, adding it is only an improvement if the answer is quality. Older questions tend to attract many fewer views/votes, and so the answer published along with the new tag has limited opportunity for review compared to a new question in the same area. Feb 28, 2016 at 4:35
  • I think the tagging is mostly a red herring here, @Joel; the question was whether it's ok to add tags that "the author didn't intend" - but we do that all the time, because it's not always obvious to askers which tags are appropriate. So that's a really boring question. A slightly more interesting question is whether language tags should be added to language-agnostic API questions; as you note, there's a SEO justification for that, but if we're after SEO then iphone beats all. The truth though, is this specific argument (and many like it) don't start with tagging; they're language wars.
    – Shog9
    Feb 29, 2016 at 17:17
  • So many new insights. A special thanks to @Shog9 for taking the time to elaborate so much on the issue.
    – Arjan
    Mar 1, 2016 at 8:26
  • But... What if I'm developing for iPad?
    – Seth
    Mar 4, 2016 at 20:19
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As the help-center says:

When should I edit posts?

Any time you feel you can make the post better, and are inclined to do so. Editing is encouraged!

Some common reasons to edit are:

  • to fix grammatical or spelling mistakes
  • to clarify the meaning of a post without changing it
  • to correct minor mistakes or add addendums / updates as the post ages
  • to add related resources or hyperlinks

Your edit clearly doesn't follow that mandate.
The rejection-reason for any such edit-suggestion is:

clearly conflicts with author's intent

This edit deviates from the original intent of the post. Even edits that must make drastic changes should strive to preserve the goals of the post's owner.

Or (as it was only a tag-edit), the one which nearly got your edit rejected as it should have been:

This edit introduces tags that do not help to define the topic of the question. Tags should help to describe what the question is about, not just what it contains.

If you have a good answer, but no question to go with it, you might be able to write an acceptable on-topic question for it. Just don't try to take over some different question which is nearly what you want to answer. Self-answers are allowed, even encouraged.

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    Thanks. Exactly my thinking on this.
    – Tobi Nary
    Feb 25, 2016 at 19:46
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    @JanGreve tell that to everyone editing swift onto old iOS questions like this. Fortunately, the edit was reversed here, but that hasn't stopped people in the past.
    – JAL
    Feb 25, 2016 at 21:15
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    to correct minor mistakes or add addendums / updates as the post ages. That seems to me to be entirely in keeping with the edit proposed.
    – Joe
    Feb 26, 2016 at 20:58
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    How can you say "Your edit clearly doesn't follow that mandate"?? Are you asserting that the editor did not feel they could make the post better, or were not inclined to do so? Feb 26, 2016 at 21:53
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    @SamuelEdwinWard: It's "without changing it" that was tripped on. Feb 26, 2016 at 23:30
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    You're quoting the letter of the law, while its spirit is somewhere entirely else.
    – CodeCaster
    Feb 28, 2016 at 11:15

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