This tag has been burninated. Please do not recreate it. If you need advice on which tag to use, see the answer below. If you see this tag reappearing, it may need to be blacklisted.
The convert tag currently has no tag wiki and 868 questions (growing all the time). I propose that it be burninated.
To address the standard tests for burnination requests:
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
No, "convert" is ambiguous and isn't even a real topic. Someone can't really be an expert in "convert."
Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
Possibly, given that it could refer to programming topics.
Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
No, none whatsoever.
Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
No, not even close. Looking at the tagged questions, it's used to refer to numerous different concepts (typecasting, converting between file types, converting between languages, etc.) and it's unclear which one is "correct."
One of the ImageMagick command line tools is "convert", but a previous burnination effort created a imagemagick-convert tag specifically for programming questions about that tool.
Also, since this was previously burninated (once back in 2011, and then again in 2012), yet keeps coming back, I suggest that it be blacklisted as well.
convert
to be a meaningless tag because you can't meaningfully expect "experts in general conversion" -- anywhere, ever. Given that "lack of experts" is indeed not a valid reason for burnination on its own, though, it's best to avoid it even as an example. It's enough to sayconvert
is clearly ambiguous and leave it at that. Obviously, we could (and probably do) have experts on every specific thingconvert
could refer to. (Like T-SQL'sCONVERT
, I'd call myself an expert on that, why not.)convert
actually meanstype-conversion
(or is itdata-type-conversion
?) 99% of the time, and should just be made a synonym of it after fixing the remaining 1%.convert
is one of ImageMagick's command line tools, used to something something image files from one format to another with optional graphical operations performed.