This is a fairly young idea, but I'd love to see some way of implementing "tag antonyms" in addition to synonyms. They wouldn't be strictly enforced, but for instance, if a user typed both mysql and sql-server, it could pop up and give the definition of each, suggesting that user reconsider. It's just that I see a lot of people tagging their MySQL- or Oracle-related questions with sql-server even though it specifically says in its preview definition that it's for use purely with Microsoft's SQL Server. I correct them when I come across them, but it'd lighten the load on reviewers and probably get people better answers faster.
There are times, I'm sure, when you might legitimately want to include both tags, so again it should only be a passive warning system. It'd just be nice to have something, because I'm sure very few of these mean to tag maliciously. An example of a time when this would need to be passive is here, where there's clearly good reason to tag both.
I haven't noticed other examples personally, so maybe this is a super isolated topic, where the tag-name of sql-server just confuses people innately others don't, but it seems like the kind of thing that would pop up here and there with other tags, and again it would just serve to organize the site better and help people get better answers.
Although it could also be nice on versions. For instance, and this is a SQL Server question but it could just as easily be anything else, this question has all the versions of SQL Server tagged, even though the question is really just about SQL Server in general.
And I suppose it hadn't really occurred to me when I first wrote this, but there are strange times when you come across people who just tag every language they can think of. "Oh, I'm asking a question about C#? Well, anyone who knows C++ should be able to answer that! c#, c++, c, java" and it's just silly. I'm not sure whether a warning would actually deter people from doing that, but it could help. And here I am a couple hours later noticing this.
I've seen a ton of these particular cases today. This one wasn't the exact same, in fact this feature wouldn't even have helped, but it's a good, extreme example. I saw a post wherein a person asking about computed column syntax. She tagged her post with sql, sql-server, and I believe it was concatenation (she wanted to have a computed column that concatenated two other fields, but that's not my point). I answered her question within a minute of posting with the proper syntax for T-SQL, since I assumed that's what she was referring to with that tag. She tried it and got an error, and the only way I even came to the knowledge that she was using anything other than SQL Server was when she gave me the error text and it looked nothing like something SQL would say. When I asked her the edition, she said "SQL Developer 4.[something]," and when I looked that number up it brought me straight to Oracle's site. After learning she was using Oracle SQL Developer, that made it a whole lot easier to, you know, use the syntax of the language we were actually talking about.
Now, again, that's not a great example for here (the great examples are a lot less climactic, since it's really more of a head-banging "really? Are you really using sql-server AND oracle-sqldeveloper at the same time? Or do you just not read tag descriptions?" moments). But you can see how this could be a useful feature to have in there. Just some sort of test to make sure the person actually knows that they're tagging things that don't make sense together. Perhaps I'm just moving for a tag renaming of sql-server to ms-sql-server or something like that. But I do think there are other applications a feature like this could have.
Edit:
Oh hey, a day later, after all that, I just came across this post. I had looked around for something on SO Meta, but it didn't occur to be to check SE Meta. I still think this deserves some support, though. It'd be such a useful feature, particularly for new users, and I think as far as feature implementations go, it'd be relatively "easy" to do.
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