Quick Summary
I was looking at some of my badge progress tags and noticed two peculiar tags. One is regression and the other is linear-regression. I didn't find anything immediately on their difference on the Meta, so I tried taking a look at their descriptions. For regression, I found this:
Sounds reasonable enough. Yet here is the description for linear-regression:
Necessary?
Both seem fairly generic yet also seem to be handling the same thing. Looking at the burnination guide, I saw these metrics for tags:
- Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous? I would say linear-regression is fairly generic despite its counterpart being the better catch-all for questions (see below).
- Is the concept described even on-topic for the site? Yes I would say so for both.
- Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post? One does but certainly not both.
- Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts? I think this is another place where I would ding [linear-regression]. There are also non-linear regressions and the other tag seems to be a much better catch all in that respect.
Is there a reason there are two separate tags? I wasn't sure if this qualified for burnination, but I've tagged this question for it in case its relevant. I apologize if this question has already been beaten to a pulp here and feel free to delete it if you think it's just more mindless banter on tags. I think my main beef for selfish reasons was having my score divided up by tags that accomplish basically the same thing.
Edit
Based on the comments this seems more a disambiguation problem than a burnination problem. I have retagged the question accordingly.
regression
questions that are about regression tests can be retaggedregression-testing
; others can be retaggedregression-analysis
, andlinear-regression
would also be a synonym forregression-analysis
.regression-testing
tag. Many seem to be mistagged, e.g., questions that don't seem to have anything to do with regression testing (tags fillers).)linear-regression
as a separate tag.