There are a couple of points that would be useful importing from the previous discussion.
Against the use of [tables] along SQL (and any databases context):
We should probably not create database-specific "table" tags, using purely database-table. TBH I expect that the tag would be just noise on most of those questions anyway ("how can I select this from that table?" doesn't need a freaking *table tag) - Charles
Very true. Using any sort of database implies using a "database table" so any sort of table tag related to a database is useless. Just tag it with the database schema you're using and be done with it. – animuson♦
Against the use of [tables] in a R context:
I just looked through a couple of pages of the 'r'+'table' questions and they are all over the place. Some refer to the table() function or the various libraries that deal with tables, but many are about other r data structure (matrix, data frame) that are wrongly called tables in the question. - John Paul
Against the use of [tables] in an HTML context:
There were tidbits in every quote, so I decided not to repeat it again.
Against the use of [tables] itself:
How can you be an expert on "tables" when the term "tables" covers so many different things depending on what type of table you're actually referring to? Sure, you could be an expert on HTML tables and Lua tables, but both of those tables are different things that you can be an expert in, not one. According to the lua-table tag wiki, Lua tables aren't even remotely similar to standard tables and implement associative arrays. – animuson♦
Still others are are about reading or writing an html table or database table in R. Certainly many of these should be re-tagged. As for keeping table vs. breaking it up into dozens of tags - does anyone really just search on table? On its own it means very little. Is making many new tags so bad? – John Paul
It really has nothing to do with searching. It has to do with the purpose of tags. They're there to categorize things into a single topic that you can be an expert on. While tables may be a "single" yet very, very broad topic, it's impossible to be an expert on tables because there are so many different tables that require vastly different knowledge. If table meant the same thing everywhere, then there wouldn't be any problem, but database tables are extremely different from HTML tables, extremely different from Lua tables, and extremely different from Android table layouts. – animuson♦
I think these points are enough to say that [tables] lay down, without replacement of any kind (or at least, none of the currently discussed here). It may be a question that deserve being further categorized using [*-tables]
(if there's a library to create tables on Android, for example), but on HTML, R, and databases doesn't merit this kind of arrangement.