Tag warnings have now been implemented for the android-studio, visual-studio, and visual-studio-code tags. The suggested guidance is largely based on the wording suggested here by Cody Gray and Ryan M.
The following tag warning will appear when someone tries to use the android-studio tag:
Is your question about the Android Studio IDE itself?
Only use the android-studio tag for questions about the features and functionality of the Android Studio IDE itself, not merely because you are using Android Studio to write the code you’re asking about.
For questions about developing Android apps (whether you're using Android Studio or another IDE), use the android tag instead.
The following tag warning will appear when someone tries to use the visual-studio tag:
Is your question about the Visual Studio IDE itself?
Only use the visual-studio tag for questions about the features and functionality of the Visual Studio IDE itself, not merely because you are using Visual Studio to write the code you’re asking about.
Questions about code written in Visual Studio should instead be tagged with the language the code is written in (such as c++, c#, c, vb.net, etc.) and any relevant frameworks or libraries.
If the app's title bar says "Visual Studio Code" (or just "Code" on macOS), use the visual-studio-code tag instead of this one for questions about the editor itself.
And finally, the following tag warning will appear when someone tries to use the visual-studio-code tag:
Is your question about the Visual Studio Code editor itself?
Only use the visual-studio-code tag for questions about the features and functionality of the Visual Studio Code editor itself, not merely because you are using it to write the code you’re asking about.
Questions about code written in Visual Studio Code should instead be tagged with the language the code is written in (such as javascript, css, html, etc.) and any relevant frameworks or libraries (such as react-js).
If the app's title bar says "Visual Studio", use the visual-studio tag instead of this one for questions about the Visual Studio IDE.
Your post contains mostly code
warning), but we have no real way to measure how many of the hundreds of questions that are asked correctly that were corrected/made acceptable because the user, before posting, saw a warning that told them a behavior isn't okay. Adding a tag warning can't hurt, and potentially can help loads.