Several times, I wondered if adding a notion of inheritance between tags would be useful. And I think so.
This would majorly make sense with versions. Let's take a few examples:
- css and css3
- html and html5
- eclipse and eclipse-3.2 eclipse-3.3 eclipse-3.4 eclipse-3.5 eclipse-3.5.1 eclipse-3.6
- twitter-bootstrap and twitter-bootstrap-2 twitter-bootstrap-3
- ruby-on-rails and ruby-on-rails-2 ruby-on-rails-3 ruby-on-rails-3.1 ruby-on-rails-3.2 ruby-on-rails-3.2.1 ruby-on-rails-4 ruby-on-rails-4.0.2 ruby-on-rails-4.1
- and so on...
When someone open a new question, he/she almost always combine both for visibility, plus a few other tags. This system mainly cause two problems today:
- Questioner side: You only have five tags allowed, and must use two of them for the same subject
- Answerer side: You must add every "sub-tag" in your favorites to get a full overview of the subject
Here's how inheritance could work:
- Add the main tag (eclipse) if your question is not version-related (as now)
- Add a sub-tag only (eclipse-3.5.1) if your question is version-related
The system would automatically consider both question as eclipse questions, but only the second one as an eclipse-3.5.1 question.
This change doesn't require much work on front-end, maybe just a little visual change:
Use eclipse
(3.5.1) instead of eclipse-3.5.1
to signify its a sub-tag.
In fact, it would mainly induce modifications in the engine and on tags pages.
What are your thoughts about this?
perl
(meaning Perl 5.x) andperl6
(meaning the semi-hypothetical Perl 6 language) would be two very different languages. A lot of what applies in Perl 5 would not apply in Perl 6; most of what applies in Perl 6 would not apply to Perl 5. The dichotomy here is much larger than the gap between Python 2.x and Python 3.x (though that too is substantial).