In my experience (over a dozen years of developing in and reading and answering thousands of questions about .NET), it's time to reorganize. Developers, recruiters and managers all over the world have been in a babylonian confusion for long enough.
An oversimplification of what .NET is, or rather, what most questions about .NET are about: an ever evolving class library, along with a runtime specification.
What we have
- .NET Framework: goes from versions 1.0 to 4.8, the latter being supported as long as it comes with Windows, i.e. it's not gone yet.
- .NET Core: has versions 1.0 through 3.1, all out of support per December 2022.
- .NET: since version 5, it's just called .NET, and currently version 7 is about to be released.
- .NET Standard: a kind of in-between layer of interfaces, implemented by .NET Framework, .NET Core and .NET.
All of this falls under the nomenclature of ".NET". .NET Framework, .NET Core, .NET Standard and .NET have a massive overlap in APIs, especially in what most questions are about.
Then there are ASP.NET Core and Entity Framework Core: new versions of old components, which will keep "Core" in their name for the foreseeable future to prevent confusion with the .NET Framework variants of the same packages.
What I think should happen:
- Make it very clear (in the tag description) that the .net tag is about the current and previous versions of .NET, and that for older questions it may mean .NET Framework. Remove "Do NOT use for questions about .NET Core or .NET 5+ - use [.net-core] instead." from the tag description.
- If a newly asked question is (or presents itself to be) about specific variants (meaning: not applicable to the current (LTS?) version), let users (asker or editor) tag questions with .net-framework, .net-core or .net-standard (plus version-specific ones for both), in addition to .net.
Motivation:
The .NET Framework is not quite dead, but it's rather frozen in time and won't receive large feature updates anymore, at least not at the same pace as current .NET will.
Because .NET is and will ever be deriving from .NET Framework, and .NET Core is no more being developed. The current name of .NET is .NET, and not .NET Core.
Some parts won't be ported from .NET Framework to .NET, some new parts from .NET will never be backported to .NET Framework.
So assume when people say ".NET", they mean ".NET 5+", unless otherwise specified.
As long as new questions are about the common denominator, i.e. functionality present in all frameworks, it's fine to tag with .net, as .NET 5+ is not .NET Core. It has more APIs and a different name.
.NET 7
, Microsoft doesn't refer to it as anything else, outside of perhaps the GitHub repository. Microsoft has entire blog posts about the changes to .NET Core and the "next" version of .NET Framework being .NET 6 submitted a few years ago..net
tag refers to .NET Framework. Yes, it is correct that most of the questions were probably created at a time when .NET Core didn’t exist. But at the same time, ask yourself the question: Are these questions specific to .NET Framework, or do they apply to all of .NET? I’d assume that a vast majority are not about .NET Framework and still apply to .NET Core. So.net
is all of .NET, including old (Framework) versions and more recent versions (.NET Core and .NET 5+).