I just came across this question about soldering some hardware together. While there is probably a better site for the question, I was surprised to see the seam-solder tag. It has 12 questions, 2 watchers, and no tag wiki explanation. It should probably be removed since it's not about software development at all.
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1It looks like that one question about soldering was the only off-topic question (and they actually took the hint and moved to Electronics.SE) so we're ready for a synonym/merge– Machavity ModJul 3, 2019 at 0:19
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So I attempted to create a tag synonym and am unable to because the tag needs at least a score of 5 on answers for people to vote on it, and it doesn't have any, apparently. given there are only 11 questions, I could simply edit each one by hand to change the tag from [seam-solder] to [deltaspike] if that would be appropriate.– user1118321Jul 3, 2019 at 0:57
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1Nah. Let a mod do the synonym so it retains it for the future. We don't want the tag recreated– Machavity ModJul 3, 2019 at 2:27
2 Answers
It looks like it used to be a Java framework. But per what looks to be the official site it's been renamed
Active development of Solder has been halted by Red Hat. This project has been migrated over to Apache DeltaSpike.
And we have deltaspike, with 100 questions. So, it looks like we just have an older name tag. What we should do is clean up the few off-topic questions and then synonym this to deltaspike
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2Maybe the wiki for deltaspike could be edited to mention something along those lines too. Jul 3, 2019 at 0:10
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It is about software development though, it's this i.e.
Seam Solder is a library of Generally Useful Stuff (tm), particularly if you are developing an application based on CDI (JSR-299 Java Contexts and Dependency Injection), or a CDI based library or framework.
Although that can't be the wiki explanation as it would need rewriting to avoid plagiarism and be in an appropriate format for wikis.
Most of the on-topic questions are clearly about that. E.g.
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In that case, can you add the above description to the tag so it's not confused with the hardware technique of the same name? Jul 3, 2019 at 0:02