So there was a bit of a kerfluffle about this earlier today. A [swift1.2] tag had been created by a higher-rep user on one of their questions. Another user then proceeded to mass-edit that tag into everything that had "Swift" and "1.2" within it. Particularly egregious were the cases where [swift] was removed as a tag in favor of [swift1.2], actually making questions less visible.
This got completely out of hand, so I got to try out our fancy new ability to temporarily ban editors in order to stop this before it got worse. I then rejected the dozens of outstanding edits that injected this tag. Almost all of the questions with that tag got it because of this one user.
With that context, is this a good tag to have on its own? I'm thinking no, which is why I made [swift1.2] a synonym of [swift].
While Swift is an evolving language, is anyone going to need to have a solution for something in "Swift 1.0" in six months? You'll note that there are no [swift1.0] or [swift1.1] tags in existence on the site. People will just be using Swift. We don't want questions to get lost because someone only tagged them with [swift1.2], which far fewer people will watch than [swift].
Look at what happened with "Objective-C 2.0". Back in 2006, Apple branded all the enhancements they had made to Objective-C that year as "Objective-C 2.0" (properties, fast enumeration, class extensions, etc.). Today, we just refer to that as Objective-C. You don't tag something involving properties as [objective-c2.0], you tag it [objective-c].
Apple likes giving iterative improvements to languages grand-sounding version numbers like this, but they aren't clean breaks in the language and eventually everyone just uses whatever is the latest iteration on the language. Also, if you look at what happened with "Objective-C 2.0", you'll note that Apple stopped giving the language version numbers after that, even though they kept adding features. It's all just "modern Objective-C" now.
There really isn't a compelling reason to refer to an older iteration of one of these languages, so I don't see the need for separate version tags.