There doesn't really seem to be a need for these two to be separate tags, for the same reason that it would be silly to have [database] and [databases] be separate tags.
1 Answer
Both tags are a hot mess
Package broadly refers to two things: 1) a usable unit/component of built/compiled of software, or 2) a partition of the global namespace (java).
Multiple definitions for a tag never bode well
For questions relating to the use of or naming of packages in Java, Scala, Python and other languages.
Sounds off-topic (how to name things is not part of SO)
I would suggest we do the following
- Retag the Java questions to java-package
- Make a new overall tag (say [software-package] to remove any Java doubts), write a more concise excerpt, and synonym packages and package to this new tag
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Packages are what the packagers says it is. tar files are packages, zip files are packages, deb files are packages. Anything that has the word packages without the packager is not useful, and the interesting thing is the actual packager, not the package itself.– BraiamCommented Mar 30, 2018 at 3:46
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@Braiam in your reasoning package is at best about the bytes (format, location, order), right? If I'm writing an unzip tool and don't know what the byte 42 means I would tag with package?– reneCommented Mar 30, 2018 at 7:15
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What about packages in other languages rather than Java? (I believe they exist) Commented Mar 30, 2018 at 7:55
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@rene if you are writing a unzip tool and you don't use the readily available libraries that can figure it out for you, you have bigger problems.– BraiamCommented Mar 30, 2018 at 11:55
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Since this question is closed as a duplicate, but this disambiguation remains, I've referenced this answer in a new question: meta.stackoverflow.com/q/424907/1108305 Commented May 30, 2023 at 23:07