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The situation is this:

should be

Radio is the transmission of signals through free space by electromagnetic radiation of a frequency significantly below that of visible light, or a device for doing the same. Radios are typically used for communication including voice, video and data. This includes Wi-fi, Bluetooth, Mobile phones, GPS, Radar, some remote control devices and near field communication devices (NFC) such as contactless smartcards.

But it should not be used for the radio button GUI element (there's the tag for that).

However, searching for [radio] is:question yields ~1,300 results at the moment, and when you just try to remove all results that include tags that make it very probable OP should have used instead, you just get around 420 results, still including plenty candidates.

So, we have a tag that is probably 80%-90% of the time abused; yet, looking at the "correctly" tagged question it is a useful tag.

What does one do in such a situation? I don't feel like ing this, because there's too many "good" questions tagged . Is there a way to batch-retag, e.g. only all questions with tags ?


Clarification: I'm well aware that maybe using something clearer like in the future would be a good idea™, but it won't "rescue" the "correctly" tagged questions, nor would it avoid ambiguity in the future – people that should use will continue to use (it's curious that people interested in basic UI elements are bad at using the Stack Exchange UI :D ).

I especially doubt doing something along modifying the excerpt to start with "DON'T USE THIS TAG FOR RADIO BUTTONS" would help -- people who use wrongly probably simply did not read the tag description at all.


I asked for tag renaming here and for community support in manual retagging, too.

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  • 4
    "Abuse" is a big word, it is just clumsy tag entry by the questioner. They use [radio][button] instead of typing the dash. And don't notice that it rearranges to [button][radio] after posting :) It is merely a decent contextual tag, about every language runtime and operating system has them so its selective power is zilch. [Button] is already enough to summon somebody that knows UI in the primary tag. Just fix it whenever you run into it. Oct 18, 2015 at 11:06
  • 1
    @HansPassant: They don't use radio button, they just radio in 90% of cases (use my excluding search, and remove the button element from the list of excludes). In fact, there's but about 300 questions radio button! Oct 18, 2015 at 22:07
  • 1
    Yes, but if you synonym radio to radio-transmission then retag every question that isn't about radio-transmission, then you end up with two unambiguous tags and radio never to be used again. That is basically what the answer below says.
    – user4639281
    Oct 18, 2015 at 22:21
  • @TinyGiant: good point! I didn't consider inventing a new tag to synonym it to radio so far; however, I personally can't check / retag 1300 questions, so adding a tag synonym now would just extend the problem to the new tag, right? Oct 18, 2015 at 22:32
  • If there are truly 1300 questions in that tag that refer to radio-buttons instead of radio-transmissions, then yes it is a daunting (but not impossible) task. But the first step IMO would still be to create the synonym in order to stop new posts from adding that tag. Moderators can synonym tags relatively easy. Then a retag effort can be made, you can enlist the help of other users to do this. Often asking in chat can help.
    – user4639281
    Oct 18, 2015 at 22:36
  • Hm, I just tried that, it says I need 5 rep on the tag -- of course, I first retag before I answer, and of course, I added the software-defined-radio tag to disambiguate those questions about SDR (which is a special area of radio technology), so I don't have 5 rep, @TinyGiant :(. Oct 18, 2015 at 22:38
  • To propose a synonym request using the mechanism yes, but if you make a post on meta about it (or adapt this one) then a moderator can do it. Of course, before a moderator will do that it needs to show a considerable amount of support from the community.
    – user4639281
    Oct 18, 2015 at 22:40
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    The tag excerpt for radio is a big part of the problem, and needs to be cleaned up. It is a technical definition of "radio", but contains no usage guidance. A good excerpt would be short, and quickly describe what sort of question the tag should be used on.
    – Mogsdad
    Oct 19, 2015 at 18:05
  • Not trying to go supernegative on SE here, but It is a rather telling statement about the SE UI that even the UI people are bad at using the SE UI.
    – Aaron
    Oct 20, 2015 at 0:02
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    @Aaron Not really. There are lots of novices designing UIs out there. I think I was about 12 when I started tinkering with them.
    – reirab
    Oct 20, 2015 at 4:44
  • @Mogsdad Yet, the fact that it describes what radio is should probably be a pretty big clue that questions tagged with that should actually be about radio. Of course, this is assuming that people actually read the tag wiki, which seems rather unlikely in most of these cases.
    – reirab
    Oct 20, 2015 at 4:46
  • @reirab Right - even a good tag wiki excerpt won't get read by all users. But the current radio tag fails pretty much every measure of what a tag wiki excerpt should contain.
    – Mogsdad
    Oct 20, 2015 at 13:12
  • You're right about the futility--people label javascript as java routinely. Jan 2, 2016 at 11:31

1 Answer 1

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Ideally people would read the tag excerpt and realize the correct usage, but since that is not happening, then best option is to try to eliminate the confusion.

So people type in and since they think it could be the right tag, they select it, so you need to provide more information in the tag itself to discourage misused. Renaming to would likely accomplish your goal. Renaming is a moderator only function, but would eliminate all of the potential issues and future ambiguity except the existing questions.

As a side note, in my experience, the term "radio" generally refers to the physical transmitter/receiver hardware and not the electromagnetic waves used to carry the signal, so the terminology in the tag name is probably more accurate as well.


To address your other question, there is no bulk update utility available to users or moderators. The retagging will have to be manually (devs obviously have access to the database, so it theoretically could be done, but isn't normally done and this doesn't seen to be the type of issue that would justify this step).

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  • Well, I do agree. But: adding a new tag radio-frequency now won't help the 420 good radio questions, nor will it avoid ambiguity of using radio in the futute; so I don't think your answer actually solves the issue of the existence of the radio tag. Oct 18, 2015 at 22:11
  • @MarcusMüller He does address it, the retagging has to be done manually. Basically everything currently tagged with radio will have to be changed to radio-button, radio-transmission or have the tag removed altogether. Usually this occurs after someone post an answer specifically stating this and it garners enough votes to show that the community agrees. At that point various people usually start to help to do the retagging. Once the retag is done, the tag will disappear.
    – Dijkgraaf
    Oct 19, 2015 at 0:21
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    @MarcusMüller I never said "add a new tag". I said rename "radio" (that is a moderator only function). That solves every problem except the existing questions, which need to get done manually. Oct 19, 2015 at 0:46
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    Opened tag rename request: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/308320/… Oct 19, 2015 at 7:01
  • I just wanted to explain that I didn't favor radio-transmission over radio-frequency for anything but the fact that radio-transmission describes what the radio tag's description currently does. I do agree that radio-frequency is a broadly used term, but it only describes a single specific detail of radio technology. Oct 19, 2015 at 18:36
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    @MarcusMüller I think radio-transmission is much superior to radio-frequency. For programming, the frequency itself is probably not a topic that needs its own tag; it would best be considered one aspect of making the transmission.
    – jpmc26
    Oct 19, 2015 at 19:48
  • IMHO "radio" is the topic. "radio-waves" are the propogated electromagnetic signal. "radio-frequency" is the frequency band
    – Bohemian Mod
    Oct 20, 2015 at 0:23
  • I agree that radio-transmission is much better than radio-frequency (which describes a band of the e-m spectrum, not the concept of communicating, scanning, etc. with signals in that band,) but I also completely agree with Bohemian that just 'radio' is really the correct name for this topic.
    – reirab
    Oct 20, 2015 at 4:52

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