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I encountered the tag on this question. I didn't know what it means so I looked at the description and there is none. I see that there are 3 other questions tagged that seem to refer to the npm package react-templates.

I retagged the original question with since that's what it's actually about. I assume was suggested to the asker because they included "React templates" in their title (though there's nothing in the question to suggest it's related to the npm package.)

  1. I was really surprised to see that a tag can be created with zero description. Why is that?

  2. What's supposed to happen in a case like this? Update the description to match the apparent usage?

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  • another example is [vbox] vs [virtualbox] Commented May 12, 2016 at 14:34
  • The system doesn't offer an option to add a description when you create a tag and it looks to me pretty complicated to have included in the post question workflow somehow. So you always first create the tag and later bother about the description. Writing a good tag-wiki is not done by simply copy-paste a wikipedia page.
    – rene
    Commented May 12, 2016 at 14:36
  • It looks like your question is similar to this one?
    – rene
    Commented May 12, 2016 at 14:37
  • @rene Wow, really?? That seems like a really strange way to create something that's supposed to group related questions, and exacerbates the turf war situation that's already an issue with tags and users applying the tag when it makes no sense (like with the question I linked). Who said anything about "copy-paste a wikipedia page"? I wouldn't consider null a good tag-wiki either, unless they're just supposed to be free-form and not have a canonical meaning. That other question is a bit similar.
    – JMM
    Commented May 12, 2016 at 14:51
  • I mentioned the copy-paste not as an insult but as a warning with this in mind. Based on your meta question users might start creating tag-wiki's the easy way which is worse IMO then having a null one...
    – rene
    Commented May 12, 2016 at 14:58
  • I'm all for stopping / avoiding plagiarism, but I really don't think anyone needs to be creating a tag if they can't provide even an elementary description of what it means. That's even easier than finding something to copy & paste. Example for [react-templates]: "The react-templates npm package" or "react-templates".
    – JMM
    Commented May 12, 2016 at 15:10

1 Answer 1

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When you find a tag that has no description and no excerpt yet you're free to provide one.

There is no create tag page. A tag gets created if you add a non-existing one to a question, provided that you have the tag creation privilege (1,500 at Stack Overflow).

As a consequence of that workflow, tags are initially created without wiki or excerpt. In the moderator-tools there is a new tags stats and for the under 10K's you can visit the new tags page to find freshly created tags and spot the ones without an excerpt. Alternatively you can use SEDE.

If you decide to create an excerpt and wiki for a tag, make sure to include usage guidance.
There is no point for an excerpt to be an advertisement of the topic. We have to assume people already have some understanding about it, if not they have completely different problems.

The excerpt need to provide just enough guidance so the OP can know if the tag is appropriate. I think the term elevator pitch as descibed in the help topic is spot on. For example

use the tag for issues with the template language. Don't use it for template extensions

The wiki follows a similar structure, explaining which topics can be asked under this tag, which shouldn't be asked, link to canonical duplicates and link to documentation, official sites etc.

You might find the blog post on the topic helpful.

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  • Thanks, I checked out those links. Apparently I'm free to suggest one. Not sure your description as "There is no point for an excerpt to be an advertisement of the topic." is quite the way to put it. The help topic you linked says you shouldn't define generic concepts like email, but when the topic is a specific library / language like react-templates I'd say the excerpt does need to be an advertisement of the topic. For example, the person who asked the question I linked thinks of things like JSX conceptually / genericaly as "react templates" and thought the tag was applicable.
    – JMM
    Commented May 12, 2016 at 15:51
  • Yes, I think that there are a number of things where it's more helpful to have a description. There are some things where there's no need to have usage guideline because it would just be use this for questions about [tag-name]
    – Laurel
    Commented May 12, 2016 at 20:43

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