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Today, I saw a question dealing with sessions timing out too fast that was tagged with . I thought to myself, that sounds pretty generic, as many things can "expire."

Looking through the 109 questions that have been tagged at some point, there is a wide variety of types of questions employing the tag. I decided perhaps I would put together a tag wiki for it to make it more understandable for what the tag deals with. After much deliberation in my head, I came to the conclusion that this tag is way too ambiguous.

The tag has been used in at least the following cases:

  • Session expiration
  • Cache expiration
  • Cookie expiration
  • Header expiration
  • Date/Time expiration
  • The Redis command EXPIRE

While the majority of these deal with "data" expiring, they all have much more descriptive tags they could be using (most of which already are), e.g. , , , , and . The only exception is the Redis EXPIRE command, which is an actual, documented command. However, using the generic for it is likely to be used incorrectly, which could exactly be what happened here.

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  • I agree. 109 questions aren't that much.. Should be doable. Commented Jan 21, 2014 at 14:30
  • @MartijnPieters Regarding rejected edit: wouldn't adding those tags to the title help if in the future someone will be searching for them?
    – BartoszKP
    Commented Jan 25, 2014 at 0:14

2 Answers 2

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I've retagged all 109 questions. Along came 60-something questions with the same problem - so I took the liberty of removing these tags also.

When I was about to have a feeling of accomplishment I've irresponsibly run a query for the tag which revealed that there are still 179 questions to go. I'll leave this for tomorrow, in case no one else would like to have some retagging fun.

Update 1:

I've removed the tag from 179 questions, and I was about to have a feeling of accomplishment. Unfortunately, I've irresponsibly run a query for the tag which revealed that there are still 192 questions to go. I'll leave this for tomorrow, in case no one else would like to have some retagging fun.

Update 2:

I've removed the tag from all questions, and I was about to have a feeling of accomplishment. Unfortunately, I've irresponsibly read Jonathan Hobbs's answer to learn that there are also 65 tags to go (now 64 because one was together with in one question). I'll leave this for tomorrow!

Update 3:

I've removed the tag from all but one questions. I was about to have a feeling of accomplishment before editing this last question, however it was merged and it cannot be edited. As suggested in this meta thread I've flagged it for moderation, and asked for the extermination of the last one of the species.

Update 4:

The last tag was removed :-) Mission accomplished!

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  • 7
    Awesome! So I guess you could say these tags are now... *puts on sunglasses* ...expired. Commented Jan 23, 2014 at 21:36
  • I've removed some of them (like 4) and I'm already bored :D There's some job with expiry also! Commented Jan 23, 2014 at 21:57
  • The retagging effort is awesome. Thank you for spending time doing this. However, I have a question, are these tags being blocked from future use? Or will we just get back into an expiration rut in another few months? Commented Jan 23, 2014 at 22:05
  • @MichaelIrigoyen From what I've read in tag topics here usually there is no need for that - after the tag is unused it disappears, so it won't be available in popup in tag text box. In some cases, when a tag keeps reappearing I think it is possible to blacklist it. I've seen some tags (sorry, can't remember examples) that have wiki saying "Don't use this tag, it's ambiguous". I presume this is the case, then tag's usage is beyond few hundred questions.
    – BartoszKP
    Commented Jan 23, 2014 at 22:12
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    I've added expire/d/s to my list of 170 tags I keep dead daily. expiration and the +100 bounty are for tomorrow...
    – Charles
    Commented Jan 23, 2014 at 22:23
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For the record: a search for [expir*] (or a filter of 'expir' on the tag list) returns the following tags:

× 65

× 188

and the ones already taken care of by BartoszKP: × 0

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