There was a question about a problem with a SQL query which didn't include any tags for a specific database, just the generic sql tag.
The question did however include a specific error message:
At least one of the result expressions in a CASE specification must be an expression other than the NULL constant.
As I've seen this before in MS SQL Server (it's the error 8133 in sys.messages) I added a tag for sql-server.
This was subsequently rolled back (by another use, not the OP) with the reason that what I thought was the relevant tag was irrelevant and only what the OP states is the only thing that matters.
On a side note neither MySQl or Postgresql would throw that error and a quick Google search didn't show any results suggesting anything else than MSSQL (not even Sybase which might use the same messages based on shared history).
My question is if I were wrong to add the tag I inferred?
And in general if this practice is fine (as the source of many error messages can be traced back to a specific system, compiler, database or whatever).
Of course I can't be 100% certain of my choice but to me it seems very likely that the specific database was indeed one in the MSSQL family.