50

The tag has around 200 questions, which are mainly -related, but they are all around the place.

The description reads:

A readme file is a file that contains information about something that should be read, generally before use.

Sounds pretty vague and useless for me. It's not even about programming.

Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?

Yes, all the questions I've seen are about README.txt/README.md files.

Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?

It doesn't describe the contents at all, usually it's about formatting the file, but not necessarily. Therefore, it's not unambiguous either.

Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?

No, not at all. It's irrelevant that the file is a readme file.

Is the topic described even on-topic for the site?

Yes, but the tag itself is not about programming. Anything can have a readme file.

Is the tag harmful?

Not really, but it's not useful either.

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  • 6
    README - "A README file contains information about other files in a directory or archive of computer software. A form of documentation ... text file called Read Me, READ.ME, README.TXT, README.md (Markdown markup), README.1ST – or simply README. ... Contents ... Configuration instructions. Installation instructions. ... Copyright and licensing information, Contact ... programmer. Known bugs. ... A changelog (usually for programmers. ... the GNU Coding Standards encourage including one to provide 'a general overview of the package'". Aug 16, 2021 at 12:57
  • 3
    It is related to programming, but perhaps too vaguely. Aug 16, 2021 at 12:57
  • 7
    @PeterMortensen I mean, if you're gunna argue a readme is related to programming you might as well argue a generic book is related to programming Aug 16, 2021 at 12:58
  • 19
    @Nick: For 50 years it has been a consideration before putting out software in the public. What should the documentation for the software be? How should the documentation be packaged / distributed? It is part of open source culture. Aug 16, 2021 at 13:00
  • 14
    Yeah, and instruction manuals have no doubt been a consideration before putting out any old piece of hardware like a pump, a generator, maybe even a self-assemble piece of furniture for longer than that. They're the same thing. It's not possible to be an expert in read me's, the tag is worthless Aug 16, 2021 at 13:01
  • 5
    Not that I'm against this burnination request but the fact that it's not possible to be an expert in something doesn't necessarily mean that the tag is worthless. Otherwise, we should also burninate tags like [list] or [string]. CC: @Nick
    – 41686d6564
    Aug 16, 2021 at 13:33
  • 5
    @41686d6564 IMO those should be burninated or split as well. Aug 16, 2021 at 13:39
  • 8
    @TamásSengel Tags serve other purposes besides having experts follow them and answer questions about them. An important one is making it easier to search for and categorize posts based on tags. There's a reason the [string] tag has over 167K questions. See: Should we delete the [string] and [array] tags because they have no experts?
    – 41686d6564
    Aug 16, 2021 at 13:42
  • 3
    @41686d6564 I disagree with that approach, especially since tags like [swiftui-list] exist among these generic tags. Making an automated process that would create additional tags like [(programming language)-array] based on some requirements would be a nicer approach to solve this problem. I know that string algorithms exist that are specifically about strings, but wouldn't it be more logical to tag the specific algorithm there? Aug 16, 2021 at 13:44
  • 19
    I've seen many worse tags than this. Aug 16, 2021 at 13:56
  • 2
    @RobertHarvey and they still exist today :( (looks at web nervously).
    – Braiam
    Aug 16, 2021 at 14:26
  • What makes readme any different from text-files processing-wise? If it's about situation, when readme file is a part of documentation/distribution/protocol system, then it's enough to use that system tag, e.g github.
    – Sinatr
    Aug 16, 2021 at 14:32
  • @Sinatr there's nothing special about the structure of a readme file (unless it's .md, .rst, etc.).
    – Braiam
    Aug 16, 2021 at 14:35
  • There should be an exclusive Stack Exchange site for README.md and generally for markdown because markdown isn't considered a programming language but a formatting/markup language instead. Aug 18, 2021 at 16:28
  • @NStavrakoudis that's ridiculous. You can't suggest that without suggesting all formatting and markup language questions go on a separate site. JSON, YAML, XML, HTML, HCL, INI... the list goes on. The fact is that markdown is very common in the documentation space, and documentation is very important in the software development lifecycle.
    – codewario
    Aug 19, 2021 at 16:12

4 Answers 4

41

Yeah... this tag doesn't have any utility, and should be removed. At only ~230 questions, it shouldn't take too much of an effort either.

Tag Stats

Top Mutually-Used Tags (Query)

# Tag Times Used w/ Percent Usage
1 139 62%
2 70 31%
3 21 9%
4 20 9%
5 19 9%

Scores (All time, with deleted posts; Query)

Type Quantity Median Post Score Posts Scored ≤0
Questions 228 1 97 (42.5%)
Answers 339 1 109 (32.2%)

Answered/ Accepted Rates

  • Answered Rate: ~78%
  • Acceptance Rate: ~53%

Based on what I've seen looking through questions with this tag, the vast majority of them are about (usually basic) Markdown syntax, which don't benefit from this tag. There's nothing special about Markdown used in Readme's over that which is used in any other Markdown file.

We already have adequate tags for these questions:

At the end of the day, I just don't see this tag as being a useful category for bringing experts to questions. We have much better, more specific tags available, that are more related to the actual problems at hand, than .

I vote burn away 🔥.


Addendum

The 3 most popular questions in this tag, and also 8 of the top 10 by votes, are specifically about the GitHub Readme, whether syntax, features, locations, etc. These are genuinely useful questions, but they don't warrant the existence of this generic tag.

The way I see it, this tag is essentially akin to a or tag, where the file itself is included in many projects, but content is always different, and 99% of the questions regarding such files are generic to the file type. I don't think it should stick around, attracting questions that largely boil down to poorly labeled duplicates.

9

I disagree with burnination. I believe this tag is useful. It does not fail all the burnination criteria -- the OP acknowledged it fails the first one.

Per the Burnination criteria, since the tag doesn't fail all the criteria, it should not be burninated.

Further discussion seems to fly in the face of this standard. But should you wish to ignore the burnination criteria and judge the tag on its merits as if there were no such criteria, read on.

It means the same thing in all common contexts

The OP acknowledged, and @Peter-Mortensen elaborated in the comments, that the README file (with various extensions) is a longstanding key element of coding. When I first started teaching myself to compile others' code, I knew to go to that file for usage instructions to get started, even if it just told me which other files to read in which order.

It doesn't mean anything else, at least in a programming context. It's unambiguous.

It (helps to) describe the contents of the question

I disagree with the second comment that it doesn't describe the contents. It very specifically identifies that a user is concerned with the content of a very specific file that the user knows others will interact with when attempting to use their software.

The README file is unique. It's like the first page of a book, where a tag generic to all pages wouldn't apply.

The "Desktop" folder on various operating systems is equally special. Questions relating to folders in general do not have the same context surrounding a folder that, by name and specific location, has a uniquely special interpretation and has unique questions with an associated tag.

The tag by itself is insufficient; there are multiple flavors. Combining it with or using might almost suffice, except that the README is a unique file which prompts unique questions including (from a brief scan of the first page of results):

  • Forcing uncached content so users will always see the newest content (a versioning concern)
  • Where to locate the file to achieve particular results (a concern with customized rendering using software conditionals)
  • Configuring software that auto-generates this file

That's just the first page.

There are sites devoted to best practices for Github READMEs, and templates for READMEs that show content important to programmers that goes far beyond basic Markdown.

It's not just about GitHub

Not all readme questions are github specific. There's questions for Docker Hub, Nuget, Gitlab, pub.dev, npmjs and more.

It adds meaningful information to the post

It is useful to know whether we are asking about the entry page or Markdown in comments, issues, FAQs, or other pages.

It is possible to be an expert

It looks like @VonC has answered 14 questions. @Chris has answered 11 including this one that I doubt a non-expert could answer. What other tag is appropriate for that specific question?

I personally have used the tag to search

As an open source project maintainer I have repeatedly searched for how to do things in Markdown on the front page of my site that hundreds of people read every day. I doubt I am the only one who has done so. There are high-quality questions and answers in the tag.

The tag is not harmful

The OP admits the tag is not harmful, generally treated as replacing other, more relevant tags. Very few of the tagged questions used the full quota of tags.

The OP's "but..." statement that it is not useful, however, is wrong.

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  • 19
    It only shows that VonC is a GitHub expert rather than a readme expert.
    – user202729
    Aug 17, 2021 at 2:51
  • 1
    @user202729 See the specific answer by Chris that I linked and tell me what tags would apply to that expert-level knowlege. The github and markdown tags by themselves are insufficient. Aug 17, 2021 at 3:07
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    I agree with @user202729. If I want to rename my README.md file to DONOTREADME.md file, it's going to be the exact same file. If GitHub expects a specific name, then the github tag is what should be used, since it's a GitHub question specifically. Aug 17, 2021 at 9:06
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    What in the world would constitute expert-level knowledge specifically of README files? What is there to know about them that is neither context dependent nor characteristic of the format in which they are written? Aug 17, 2021 at 12:06
  • 8
    There's only 77 questions with accepted answers with positive score. Kinda a stretch to say there's many high-quality questions and answers.
    – Passer By
    Aug 17, 2021 at 12:47
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    It's kinda a stretch to say "this tag doesn't have any utility" and it's kinda a stretch to say that it's "irrelevant" that a file a special file designed to be the front page of github site. Aug 17, 2021 at 16:19
  • 2
    @DanielWiddis it's only special on Github. On my desktop is nothing more than an ASCII text file.
    – Braiam
    Aug 17, 2021 at 18:00
  • @braiam "On your desktop" means "In your Desktop folder on your filesystem." Which is just a folder, nothing special about it. It's only special on your operating system. No need for desktop tag at all. Aug 17, 2021 at 20:48
  • @DanielWiddis I respect that the GitHub Readme use-case for this tag is a valid one; I also just don't see any other great use-cases where [readme] would add anything of note. One good usage doesn't necessitate a tag of its own, and this tag isn't specific to the GitHub case anyway. If categorizing questions about the GitHub-specific Readme file was useful, then we should have a [github-readme] tag; at the moment [readme] doesn't usefully describe the vast majority of questions that use it.
    – zcoop98
    Aug 17, 2021 at 21:13
  • 3
    The readme tag adds no useful information to the majority of the questions currently tagged with it. Most of them are questions of how to use markdown, or how to do something with a text file that just happens to be a readme file, but in most (if not all) cases the fact that the file in question is a README is irrelevant.
    – Herohtar
    Aug 17, 2021 at 21:29
  • @DanielWiddis no, on the most common operative system in the world and how every program sees it: application/text: ASCII. If it had .md at the end, it would be a markdown file. If it had rst it would be a reStructuredText format. README files are no different from any text file. That's the point. Github being helpful and showing you any README\.?(md|rst|etc. file formatted is something that is unique to github. If I was using git-web, I wouldn't get that.
    – Braiam
    Aug 17, 2021 at 21:53
  • 1
    I'm talking about the file. The readme file, which isn't a readme file, but a text file which name happens to be readme (said name set by metadata of the filesystem, btw).
    – Braiam
    Aug 18, 2021 at 0:57
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    You contradict yourself, it is ambiguous. the linked questions regarding different platforms all ask some platform-specific problem, none of which bears similarity other than the name "readme".
    – Passer By
    Aug 18, 2021 at 8:52
  • 4
    By itself, the readme tag tells me nothing certain about the question. It could be related any number of things: github, a repository, some software, etc. And there is no formal standard that says a readme file has to be markdown. Even the wiki tag is extremely broad: "...a file that contains information about something that should be read...". Burnintate it.
    – Connor Low
    Aug 18, 2021 at 17:57
  • 3
    "What other tag is appropriate for that specific question?"... github, and only that tag. It requires an expert on GitHub to explain where GitHub looks for a specific file (which just happens to be README in this case). An "expert in READMEs" (whatever that is) wouldn't be able to answer it.
    – Herohtar
    Aug 18, 2021 at 19:44
1

Playing devil's advocate here, the tag has several uses:

Firstly, let me establish that having a readme file is standard practice, and a good one at that. It is also a common default on GitHub as we know.

We will have several questions from newbie programmers about READMEs and about md (markdown) files. They are simple questions to answer, but the question then becomes does SO want to have these simple questions, and I would argue yes, SO does want to encourage newbies to ask questions. If they're not popular, they won't rise to the top, people won't waste their time on them, but if they are useful, then others will get to see them; it's the evolution of a forum website.

As for the tag itself, people asking questions about readmes may not know what tag to use, and this tag may fit best.

Additionally, it's a valid tag for questions about what to include in a readme file in general which are completely valid questions, just like code review and best practices, or documentation are valid questions.

I generally think the tag is useless, but may as well have a discussion with valid counterpoints. I think the last point I listed that there are potential valid questions for the tag is a strong one.

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  • 5
    "for questions about what to include in a readme file in general which are completely valid questions" Actually no, they sound like open-ended / opinion-based / discussion-type questions, which are off-topic for SO. See stackoverflow.com/help/dont-ask. It's not that SO doesn't want simple questions, but more of some questions don't work well with SO's format. Aug 18, 2021 at 14:01
  • 1
    @GinoMempin exactly, and those are exactly the questions you would just type into google and take the first 2-4 guides that pop up. Instead of going to SO. Aug 18, 2021 at 14:09
  • 4
    To Gino's point above, "just like code review and best practices" questions aren't on-topic on SO, so that diminishes that point. I don't think questions about Readme's have to be basic necessarily, and SO doesn't (shouldn't) have anything against "basic" questions as long as such questions otherwise fit our guidelines (mainly being detailed, specific, & answerable). There are undeniably some great questions in this tag, the problem is that those questions are categorized together simply because they deal with a file that has the same name, and nothing else.
    – zcoop98
    Aug 18, 2021 at 14:15
-2

While not technically a programming topic, README files very much have a place within the software development lifecycle.

First, they serve as documentation and have a use for documentation-related questions. Yes, there is the markdown tag but not all README files are in markdown format. It may not be a common tag but it does have a use, classification, and purpose. README files also often have considerations for content as they ideally should not be very long or serve as complete documentation.

Second, does it meet the burnination criteria?

  1. Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous? Yes. Even if a question is more about markdown than the README itself, it gives some additional context around the question in a visible way which is consistent with Stack Overflow's content classification standard.

  2. Is the concept described even on-topic for the site? Yes, as stated README files are a specific area of documentation and very much play a role in the software development lifecycle.

  3. Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post? Yes. A question tagged as both [readme] and [markdown] tells me the asker is intending to use markdown to format a README file. Omitting readme could mean the asker is asking about using markdown in another context and as such formatting considerations specific to a README context may not be considered in my answer. The same logic can be applied to readme when paired with other tags as well.

  4. Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts? Inarguably, yes. I can't think of more than one definition of a README file as it pertains to software development, or even across general computing. It is an information document which should be reviewed prior to operation, often (but not exclusively) summarized with redirection to more complete documentation.

I will agree readme is often, if not always, going to overlap with other categories. But I feel it does not meet the criteria for burnination nor do I feel this is a shortcoming with the burnination criteria itself. It's not a common tag, but it has its place.

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