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There are two tags that refer to deleting rows in SQL:

, described as:

The DELETE statement removes one or more records from a table. A subset may be defined for deletion using a condition, otherwise all records are removed. Some DBMSs, like MySQL, allow to delete rows from multiple tables with one DELETE statement (this is sometimes called multi-table DELETE).

And , described as:

The deletion can be achieved by using the DELETE statement of the SQL language.

I don't have enough rep in either tag to propose either as a synonym of the other, but it seems as though they obviously are. Could one of the mods, or users with enough rep in those tags start the ball rolling?

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    I'm not so sure about this. I did a cursory glance over delete-row and it appears that a lot of those have nothing to do with SQL. There would need to be significant clean-up before these should be made synonyms.
    – Taryn
    May 8, 2015 at 19:12
  • @bluefeet alternatively, all SQL-related questions could be migrated to sql-delete (to follow the convention of sql-insert and sql-update, and a new description could be written for this tag
    – Mureinik
    May 8, 2015 at 19:42
  • My first thought about the delete-row tag is it was related to html and javascript and not sql.
    – Joe W
    May 8, 2015 at 20:53
  • @JoeW mine too - until I read the tag's excerpt
    – Mureinik
    May 9, 2015 at 7:24

1 Answer 1

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enter image description here

That describes quite well what happened with these tags. Back in August 2014, users set out to set the New Standard and retagged [sql] + [delete] questions to [sql] + [sql-delete]. Same treatment on [sql] + [insert]. Producing bizarre tautologies that questioners don't actually like to use.

So now we have:

  • 168 questions tagged [sql] + [sql-delete]
  • 164 questions tagged [sql-delete]
  • 574 questions tagged [sql] + [delete]
  • 486 questions tagged [sql] + [sql-insert]
  • 627 questions tagged [sql-insert]
  • 1954 questions tagged [sql] + [insert]

Folks, this is not useful.

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