13

I just stumbled across the tag, which looks like a pile of execrable garbage. How can one be an expert in success unless you are Jon Skeet?

It's a meta-tag, doesn't add any value to any question its tagged on, and it should be a fairly easy job because there are only 270 questions tagged .

Sure, the question might be talking about a problem in a success case, but that should be obvious from the question itself, and doesn't really add value when trying to search for it. Don't we all secretly hope that every bit of code we write is a success?

15
  • 32
    success adds little relevant information to a question that can't already be covered within the body; it should be burninated.
    – royhowie
    Commented Jun 20, 2015 at 7:50
  • 4
    meta.stackoverflow.com/a/293773/17034 Commented Jun 20, 2015 at 9:17
  • 6
    No, we don't need the tag success. I've successfully removed it from one question that had only the success tag — it now sports a nice angularjs tag instead. There are a number of old (2008, 2009 era) questions about success of projects in one shape or another. Such questions which aren't already closed should usually be closed with 'too broad' or 'primarily opinion based'. Most of the others should simply successfully lose their success tag, but many of them need other (often major) surgery to bring them up to some semblance of an OK standard for a question. Commented Jun 20, 2015 at 23:30
  • 4
    @royhowie The purpose of tags is not to add information not already in the body; it is to summarize the body extremely briefly. Commented Jun 22, 2015 at 11:35
  • 1
    As for success, then yes, I do.
    – nicael
    Commented Jun 22, 2015 at 14:34
  • 6
    It is an un[success]ful tag Commented Jun 22, 2015 at 14:54
  • The other purpose of success is to help with searching and filtering. It seems unlikely that anyone would select success as a favorite or hidden tag.
    – Barmar
    Commented Jun 22, 2015 at 14:59
  • 4
    @HelloGoodbye Tags exist to categorize questions, not to summarize them. The number of questions that are summarized by their tags could probably be counted on the fingers of one hand. And in many cases, tags allow for some context not to be explicitly stated in the body; which DMBS, which version of a library, etc.
    – Air
    Commented Jun 22, 2015 at 15:51
  • 6
    I want to complete this...
    – rene
    Commented Jun 22, 2015 at 17:40
  • 1
    burn it , burn it with fire!
    – deW1
    Commented Jun 22, 2015 at 20:04
  • @AndrewGrimm, yes it looks like it is, though I did not see it when posting, but the main question is - why that [success] was still in use after 4 months after posting that question.
    – dav
    Commented Jun 23, 2015 at 5:30
  • @Air Fair enough. Commented Jun 23, 2015 at 14:46
  • @dav Burnination complete.
    – durron597
    Commented Jun 24, 2015 at 16:53
  • Blacklisting is the key to success.
    – durron597
    Commented Jun 26, 2015 at 13:39
  • I love Jon Skeet jokes. He's basically the Chuck Norris of Stack Overflow.
    – Nat Riddle
    Commented Aug 10, 2021 at 14:33

3 Answers 3

6

This tag has been completely burninated.

  • now has 153 questions, and someone more familiar with it should give it a tag wiki.
  • I also created a tag for those questions about the magento success page. There are 11 questions with this tag.

The tag will automatically be deleted at the next tag cleanup, which I believe happens at 0300 UTC.

36

We don't need no replacement for , nor the tag as-is.
The tag itself is useless (what is or isn't successful?), and as Hans Passant noted in another answer, building the product of two bags of tags is rarely a good idea, especially if the base tags stay.

3
  • 9
    Maybe it should be renamed to ajax-success (since it's a method in ajax, and doing so will mostly stop mis-tagging)?
    – AStopher
    Commented Jun 21, 2015 at 9:18
  • 2
    @cybermonkey: The mistagging identified is using the tag at all, not choosing the wrong tag. Commented Jun 22, 2015 at 20:13
  • Blacklisting is the key to success.
    – durron597
    Commented Jun 26, 2015 at 13:40
3

As the related tags hint, success() is the name of a method on the return value of jQuery.ajax(). It's currently deprecated in favor of more standard methods, but still in use by some folks using or just used to older versions of jQuery.

Apparently it's also a bit of a thing in Magento.

5
  • Yes, the jQuery/AJAX related usage seems like an important topic. Maybe a cleanup and rename to [jquery-success]? Commented Feb 19, 2015 at 20:39
  • .success() is deprecated in jQuery, so I'm not thrilled at the idea of a tag for it. Maybe a combination of jquery promise (or a new tag for that combination) would be better? Commented Feb 20, 2015 at 2:34
  • Promise already exists as a tag, @kevin.
    – Shog9 Mod
    Commented Feb 20, 2015 at 2:40
  • Right @Shog9, I couldn't tell if you were advocating retagging jquery + success questions as jquery + promise, or if we are going to want to start the disambiguation process early by creating something like javascript-promise (or use jquery-deferred, the jQuery equivalent). Commented Feb 20, 2015 at 2:43
  • Now that success has been burninated, can it be blacklisted like error has been?
    – durron597
    Commented Jun 25, 2015 at 16:38

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .