I'm not entirely sure what the force-download tag is actually useful for. I guess that it is for "forcing" something to download, but this is used for all kinds of things, and kind of useless.
Should it be burninated ?
I'm not entirely sure what the force-download tag is actually useful for. I guess that it is for "forcing" something to download, but this is used for all kinds of things, and kind of useless.
Should it be burninated ?
The questions in force-download seem to mostly involve php users who cannot figure out how to set the Content-Type
of their page to application/octet-stream
and set the downloaded file name.
The top five questions (by votes):
Now, most questions that I saw (after briefly looking through the list) appeared to be asking about forcing a file to be downloaded instead of streaming it.
So, let's answer the questions from When to burninate:
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
While the tag is lacking any wikis, I would say that the questions under the tags are for situations involving forcing a download ("Save file to...") dialog to appear instead of returning a standard request. The tag name is pretty clear and appears to fit the collection of questions well.
Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
Yes. Determining how to fix an issue with their logic is on topic for the site.
Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
Now this is always the debatable question. Some would say that trying to force a response to be downloaded instead of streamed is a common enough issue that it deserves its own tag. Others would say that the issues tend to revolve around a few central issues, and it would be better combined into a single FAQ-style post that could be used as a duplicate target.
Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
There appears to be two distinct situations where this tag is used.
So do I think we should burninate it? No. It has a somewhat clear meaning, it is on-topic for the site, and nobody appears to be using the tag for their force-downloading plugin that they developed.
But maybe it should be cleaned up? Definitely. A lot of the questions are some variation of "I copied this PHP code that doesn't work, why?" and I think they could be combined into a central duplicate target. Making a file be downloaded instead of streamed by a browser can be tricky, and most of the questions share a few common problems.