I've recently edited a question which was incorrectly referring to overloading instead of overriding. When replacing the tag as well, I found I have a rather wide selection to choose from; too wide, in fact. There's:
- override, with ~3.6k questions, and a two-paragraph wiki distinct from its excerpt.
- overriding, with ~600 questions, excerpt identical to override, and no wiki.
- method-overriding, with ~280 questions, excerpt identical to override, and no wiki.
- overrides, with ~90 questions, and a two-paragraph wiki where the first one is a copy of the excerpt.
- function-overriding, with ~70 questions, no excerpt, and no wiki.
This doesn't look coherent, or really usable, to me. In my view, the best solution would be to:
- Introduce a synonym
overriding
->override
- Re-tag
method-overriding
,function-overriding
, andoverrides
tooverride
.
I prefer override
as the master version because it a) has the largest number of questions, and b) matches the spelling of the related keyword in C++ and other languages.
At the same time, overriding
seems used enough to warrant its existence as a synonym, and I've already suggested it as such.
Is this a sensible course of action?
override
indeed is what the tag is called in most languages. However, then one might sayoverloading
should be changed tooverload
, which seems wrong. In that regard, I would preferoverriding
.