I can't see how a question like this would not end up being closed as "opinion-based". While some choices would elicit unanimous agreement as being terrible (e.g. asdfasdf
), the set of acceptable choices is generally too large. So everybody could submit their preferred choice and there would be little that would make one answer better than the other.
I would not put much weight into the existence of the tags naming and naming-conventions when it comes to deciding whether a new question asking about how to name a programming construct (variable, class, etc.) would fare today. Why?
Some questions that fit under these tags are not about choosing names at all. For instance, someone could ask a question regarding something they do not understand about the Hungarian notation, or about how Python's PEP8 specifies a naming convention for this or that. Such questions are likely to not be opinion-based.
Some of the questions under these tags are old. A 2008 question about choosing names that has gained many upvotes and has not (yet) been closed is not good evidence that the same question if posted now would not be very quickly closed and downvoted.