Looks to me like the custom-error-pages tag is pretty superfluous. It doesn't really describe any particular technology, how to make "custom error pages" is completely different depending on what context you're talking about, and hence I have a hard time seeing how this tag would benefit anyone. Even its wiki is empty. Let's burninate!?
-
4Your request is noted and I assume our room will help...– reneAug 17, 2015 at 8:30
-
what should we have instead? Are you suggesting we should have technology specific custom error page tags? Because I'm not sure if that's good either.– eisAug 17, 2015 at 9:55
-
19@eis How about nothing? "Custom error pages" are always coupled with something else: Apache, .NET, AwesomeFrameworkOfTheWeek2.0, whatever. Those tags should be enough IMO.– deceze ModAug 17, 2015 at 9:57
-
1Using the same logic, there's also [custom-error-handling] and especially [error-handling], which seem to be even more dependant on the context. However, when combined with a technology/language tag they start having real meaning, just like custom-error-pages. Removing all those would leave the questions quite bare. (However, like I said, I am really unsure what would be the best approach. I guess I'm just thinking aloud here.)– eisAug 17, 2015 at 10:14
-
7Also thinking out loud: custom-error-pages or custom-error-handling seems too specific and at the same time too wishy-washy to be of much use. "Too wishy-washy" because, as mentioned, by itself it doesn't mean anything. While when paired with another tag, it seems to be overly specific to be really useful as a category. "I'm using C# and I'm interested in implementing a custom error handler" – that as a question title should be fine. Will anyone really ever search for this topic as tag? I'm doubtful.– deceze ModAug 17, 2015 at 10:36
-
Brief Google search suggests that custom error pages would most commonly refer to custom "404 not found" web pages. So I suppose the tag http-status-code-404 is better to use for such questions.– LundinAug 17, 2015 at 13:10
-
4@Lundin again, how you implement those are dependent of something else, which could be webserver, application, language, etc. That context should be on the title/body of the question, is not useful as tag categorization, unless somehow we get a http-status-code-404 course when studying something else...– BraiamAug 17, 2015 at 13:18
-
3@Lundin: I disagree. You can have 500 error pages or assorted other status codes. Rather than giving each one its own tag, it seems reasonable to lump them together. I expect that the mechanism for each error page is similar, except for the code itself.– MichaelAug 17, 2015 at 13:48
-
@Lundin Others would disagree about the usefulness of tags for HTTP status codes.– Kevin Brown-SilvaAug 17, 2015 at 14:06
-
6Looks like most "custom-error-pages" question talk about web sites and it is quite common term for web development. I think the term itself is reasonably well defined (never seen it mentioned outside web context), but indeed can't stand as only tag on the questions. I think in current state questions are tagged reasonably - so from my point of view burination of the tag should be done only if it violates some policy about tags.– Alexei LevenkovAug 18, 2015 at 2:29
-
2To me it certainly seems reasonable for someone wanting to read about how custom error pages are implemented in <some web platform> (or quirks related to said implementation) to search for [some-web-platform] + [custom-error-pages]. I don't think "custom error pages" is really an overly specific topic.– reirabAug 18, 2015 at 21:55
Add a comment
|
1 Answer
The tag has 90% .NET questions. Surely, what this tag mostly means is ASP.NET custom errors. "Custom errors" is the official name of the feature. The tag appears to be misnamed.
I think the questions should be split into two groups:
- .NET questions should have the tag replaced by custom-errors.
- All other questions should have the tag removed.
- custom-errors should be renamed
asp.net-custom-errors
.
The tag should be banned because it is too unspecific.
-
2Having a tag named [custom-errors] is just asking for disambiguation later, solve the problem and look for a more specific term.– BraiamAug 19, 2015 at 13:21
-