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I saw that some questions use the tags and .

However, the description says should only be used for something about relational databases. In fact, among the more than 900 questions in , only twenty-something had the tag too. This made me think these questions are wrongly tagged.

Therefore, I decided to create the tag, and retag the questions.

I didn't ask it in meta at first because there were so few questions. My fault, I should had.

While doing the retagging, I saw that some of these tags in questions were added by BoltClock ♦. I guess a moderator knows more than me, so now I'm not sure whether I was doing something wrong?

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  • There was no Wiki for the tag until 2012, maybe the usage was ambiguous before then? Commented Mar 4, 2016 at 1:52
  • Downvoter, do you disagree with the retag? Please explain your opinion in an answer, then.
    – Oriol
    Commented Mar 4, 2016 at 9:04

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That was so long ago I don't even remember adding that tag to those questions. Looking at it now I don't think I would be comfortable having that tag around because it is ambiguous. The wiki that was added serves to reinforce the ambiguity.

I think your decision to create a more specific tag was good. If nothing else it corresponds to the css-cascade specification.

I will retag the rest of the CSS questions. As there are 900 other questions with the tag I'm not going to touch the rest.

(In the next episode: should and be merged? Many, many questions conflate the two terms when in reality they mean completely different things, but is keeping them separate useful?)

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    What is the advantage of having the redundant [css-cascade] prefix? Are there really questions that will get the [css-cascade] tag but will not be tagged [css]?
    – Cody Gray Mod
    Commented Mar 4, 2016 at 7:17
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    @Cody Gray: No, but the word [cascade] alone has multiple meanings and the community doesn't seem to like having overloaded tags, or tags that depend on other tags for context.
    – BoltClock
    Commented Mar 4, 2016 at 8:24
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    That is a silly position. What word doesn't have multiple meanings? I guess that explains why people keep answering my [android] questions with some nonsense about mobile phones.
    – Cody Gray Mod
    Commented Mar 4, 2016 at 9:18
  • @CodyGray The advantage is that some people (e.g me) may know CSS Cascading but without having a clue about the cascading in relational databases. Now these people can e.g. favorite css-cascade and track questions in their area of expertise. The reasoning of having tags is that they allow to classify questions, they aren't useful if they aren't specific enough.
    – Oriol
    Commented Mar 4, 2016 at 16:45

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