header has the following wiki:
The portion of a data block, cell, frame, or packet that precedes the text field or payload and provides information such as the source address and destination address. The header often includes synchronization bits that serve to synchronize the operations of the transmit and receive devices across the link.
Please do not use this tag to categorise questions around user-interface and/or UX related issues. Within such a context it is ambiguous and has no specific taxonomic meaning on a programming site.
Reasonable, right?
There are 6,642 questions with that tag.
By votes:
#2 HTML5 best practices; section/header/aside/article elements
#3 How to use HTML to print header and footer on every printed page of a document?
#4 What is the common header format of Python files?
#6 In Node.js, how do I "include" functions from my other files?
#7 Should Jquery code go in header or footer?
#8 Xcode 4 can't locate public header files from static library dependency
#9 Where does gcc look for C and C++ header files?
#10 Tool to track #include dependencies
#11 How should I detect unnecessary #include files in a large C++ project?
#12 Why has it failed to load main-class manifest attribute from a JAR file?
#13 C++ Redefinition Header Files (winsock2.h)
#14 Javascript Include Tag Best Practice in a Rails Application
#15 Tool for adding license headers to source files?
...and so on. Not even close to the wiki description.
The problem is that "header" is vague, and has many possible meanings.
The incorrect uses of header should have had header-files, html-head, html-header, table-header, or no header-like tag at all. (Okay, html-header and table-header don't exist yet, but they probably would if header weren't an option.)
The vast majority of questions are mislabeled. The best thing is to remove the tag and use more specific tags, like http-headers or email-headers where header could have been (correctly) used.