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Quick Summary

I was looking at some of my badge progress tags and noticed two peculiar tags. One is and the other is . I didn't find anything immediately on their difference on the Meta, so I tried taking a look at their descriptions. For , I found this:

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Sounds reasonable enough. Yet here is the description for :

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Necessary?

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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.

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    "Regression" has an important secondary meaning; I would wager that a substantial number of questions with this tag are about test regressions, not mathematical ones, in spite of the tag description. (A quick scroll through the questions with regression and "test" reveals fewer than I thought, but on the order of 5-10%)
    – tripleee
    Commented Oct 4, 2022 at 6:46
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    Tags having the same meaning are more of a case for tag synonyms rather than burnination. In this case tag disambiguation might be more appropriate given tripleee's comment Commented Oct 4, 2022 at 7:15
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    Proposed disambiguation: regression questions that are about regression tests can be retagged regression-testing; others can be retagged regression-analysis, and linear-regression would also be a synonym for regression-analysis. Commented Oct 4, 2022 at 7:30
  • (There are 220 questions in the 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).) Commented Oct 4, 2022 at 13:14
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    Mathematically, not all regression analysis is linear regression (see e.g. polynomial regression), but as Stack Overflow is a programming site rather than a maths/stats site, this distinction probably doesn't matter enough to have linear-regression as a separate tag.
    – kaya3
    Commented Oct 6, 2022 at 12:38

1 Answer 1

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"Regression" refers to two totally different ideas in programming: a generalization of linear regression (i.e. a mathematical technique), and a failure in a regression test (i.e., code that worked before, stopped working). So that tag is ambiguous as is. Per the comments, there are a significant fraction of questions trying to use the tag in the latter way.

Meanwhile, I don't see a particularly good reason to single out linear regression vs. other forms.

So: let's retag questions with regression-analysis when they're about the math (we can let linear-regression be a synonym), and use regression-testing for the questions about testing.

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