These are useful tags. They refer to a specific, very common, algorithmic problem which beginners often need help with. Combining this tag with a tag for the name of a language is probably a useful thing to do if you don't know how to calculate max and min in that language. Similarly there is a tag for 'sorting'.
Max and min probably seem trivial if you have written them a few times, but there are several places someone could go wrong with edge cases (empty lists), hidden assumptions (that values fall in a certain range) or special cases (max over weird containers, values which aren't obvious to order, eg null
).
The fact that there are a large number of questions for these tags suggests that they are worth keeping. The fact that they have a small number of followers doesn't prove much - their main purpose is search rather than catering to 'max enthusiasts' and 'min aficionados'.
max
atm.max
is the negative of a problem withmin
.[minmax]
is a separate topic, in which someone certainly can be an expert.select
. Maybe a generalsql-aggregate
tag might be all right to help people find questions but I don't think each aggregate needs its own tag.