TL;DR
My proposal is to split merge, replace it with subject-related tags and burninate.
Answering the burninate manual:
- Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous? No, no.
- Is the concept described even on-topic for the site? Yes, each particular-subject-merge is on-topic.
- Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post? No, it confuses user about the post contents.
- Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts? As I show further, not at all.
Update
Why git-merge is good and gitcommandmerge is bad: https://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/266254/2790048
Long story short long.
Top questions
The tag merge is currently used on several unrelated categories of questions:
- Merging in version control systems:
- Git merge, where a specified git-merge exists. This is the majority of merge-tagged questions.
- Subversion merge: Why am I getting tree conflicts in Subversion?
- Mercurial merge: How to correctly close a feature branch in Mercurial?
- Merging arrays and other collections array-merge:
- Merging (which is actually concatenating) strings: How can 2 strings be concatenated?
- Merging entities in JPA: JPA EntityManager: Why use persist() over merge()?
- Merging data in a database with SQL: sql-merge Insert, on duplicate update in PostgreSQL?
- Merging files: filemerge, merge-file Merge / convert multiple PDF files into one PDF
- Merging source code: Any decent text diff/merge engine for .NET?
- Merging something in android-layout: How to get RelativeLayout working with merge and include?
- Functional programming (it seems to me): Adding code to a javascript function programmatically
And that is just the first two pages of most upvoted questions. These questions were viewed tens of thousands of times. Why is this tag still in such disorder?
New questions
Now, let's look at the new questions on merge:
- Merging in geospatial information software: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/30979213/
- bash: count lines with different conditions using awk
- Merging audio and video streams:
- Merging json data: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/30937813/
- Merging ontology'es in owl-api: How to properly merge 2 ontologies with OWL API 4 or 3.5
- To be continued.
Isn't this too mush for one tag?
Usage attempts
Say, I want to understand merging in Git better. I'm a rational person, so I open the git-merge top voted questions. But I have no idea about merge questions, which are also good. Does the tag help me find them?
Now, I want to know about merging in SQL. I open the merge, which has 8697 questions and not sql-merge, which has just 54. Guess what I see? Almost nothing on my topic.
By the time you read this post half of the new questions will probably be deleted. This is because their authors just picked the first tags that came at sight; maybe they were also unattentive to the question contents. The only thing that merge allows me to do is filter questions, written with less attention than required. Wow!
merge
... i see what you did there.