During a routine burninate request, someone raised the tag 4clojure, which identifies questions derived from a popular interactive clojure tutorial.
Other tags identifying similar learning resources you may recognize came up, railstutorial.org and project-euler.
Given the rapidly increasing scope of this request, I think it's important to take a non-burnination oriented look at the issue.
They look a lot different than Jeff's canonical examples of meta tags:
beginner best-practices subjective
They're in a different class than corporate meta tags:
They're much more descriptive, and much narrower.
Everything that we do here is about creating the best resource on the web for professional and enthusiast programmers. It is my belief that these three tags, and any similar ones, are unique enough that they don't belong among the useless meta tags.
They do several of the things the help center says a good tag should do:
- describe the topic of the question
- sort questions into specific, well-defined categories
- connect experts with questions
- help you identify questions that are interesting or relevant to you
They connect these questions together in a useful way that language tags alone cannot.
My justifications aside, let me ask: Do these tags create any value? Are they legitimately in a different class than the useless meta tags? Would StackOverflow be an improved resource if they were gone?