I thought I'd try learning the new language Beef, and that it would be a good opportunity to write some posts about what I've learned and what I can't learn on my own. So, I created a tag for it, basically just taking an excerpt from the language's official documentation (emphasis mine):
Beef Overview
Beef is a performance-oriented compiled programming language. The syntax and core library design derives from C#, but there are many semantic differences due to differing design goals. The language has been developed hand-in-hand with its IDE environment, and careful attention has been paid to the holistic pleasurability of developing Beef applications. The intended audience is the performance-minded developer who values simplicity, code readability, fast development iteration, and good debuggability.
And the usage guidelines I submitted were:
Beef is a performance-oriented compiled programming language. It has been developed hand-in-hand with its IDE environment, "the Beef IDE". Use this tag for discussing the Beef programming language or the Beef IDE.
But the usage guideline was rejected, with the second rejection reason being:
This edit defaces the post in order to promote a product or service, or is deliberately destructive.
That rejection vote makes no sense to me because it's an excerpt taken from the language's official page and the only thing I can think of "promotion" is it calling itself "performance-oriented", but that doesn't make sense either because it's consistent with how other language usage guidelines describe them. Scala for instance has in its usage guidelines:
Designed to express common programming patterns in a concise, elegant..way".
Was this a bad call on the reviewer's part and should I simply re-submit the same usage guidelines?
beef
isn't a term to describe a programming technique, calculation, or problem, I don't think it's super urgent.