How should .NET 5.0 and ASP.NET Core 5.0 tags be organized? Specifically, what should be done with the legacy .net-5.0 tag (now removed) and asp.net5 tag (now marked as deprecated)?
Background
Back in 2016, Microsoft chose to rename the forthcoming releases of .NET Framework and ASP.NET Framework 5.0 to .NET Core and ASP.NET Core 1.0. By that point, the tags .net-5.0 and asp.net5 had already been created in anticipation here on Stack Overflow.
Since then, there have been a number of discussions about what to do with these tags, with the .net-5.0 tag ultimately being removed (discussion), and the asp.net5 tag being deprecated (discussion) with the following tag wiki:
ASP.NET5 was (code-)name of the next generation of Microsoft's ASP.NET framework. The name was abandoned and the product was released as ASP.NET Core. Don't use this tag anymore use the ASP.NET Core tag.
Fast forward several years, and Microsoft has announced that the next version of .NET Core will be .NET 5.0 in recognition that this is a successor to both .NET Framework 4.8 and .NET Core 3.1. As there is now a preview release, the .net-5 and asp.net-core-5.0 tags have been created for related questions.
Update: Per @George-Stocker's answer, while the next version of .NET will be .NET 5, the next version of ASP.NET will be ASP.NET Core 5.0. I have updated this post to reflect this.
Questions
This raises a number of closely related questions:
Should the deprecated asp.net5 tag now be marked as a synonym of asp.net-5.0?- Should the removed .net-5.0 tag now be recreated and marked as a synonym of .net-5?
- What version agnostic tag, if any, should be recommended? .NET 5 has more in common architecturally with .NET Core (.net-core and asp.net-core), but the name is a continuation of its .NET Framework heritage (.net and asp.net).
Note: the current tag name of .net-5 is inconsistent with the convention used elsewhere (e.g., .net-4.8, .net-3.1, .net-3.1, &c). Personally, I prefer maintaining the
[product-#.#]
convention (i.e., .net-5.0) for consistency.
Prior Discussion
This eventuality has been speculated about on a number of previous threads, though the can has always been kicked down the road since, at those times, there wasn’t much information about Microsoft’s plans for future versions. Nevertheless, the commentary on these threads offers good background:
- Remove [.net-5.0] tag and merge them into [.net-core]
- What will become of [asp.net-5] and [entity-framework-7] tags?
- ASP.NET 5 / EF7 tags incorrectly synonymized
- Burninate [asp.net-core-mvc6] and [asp.net-mvc6]
In particular, an answer last year from @poke
anticipates the need for this discussion:
Looking forward, we fortunately know a bit about the roadmap for ASP.NET Core and .NET Core: .NET Core will unite with everything else as .NET 5 soon. At that point, we will probably have to think about on how we proceed since .NET 5 will be more similar to .NET Core than to .NET 4.x (which is the .NET Framework).