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I use to move around the javascript tag, and I found the tag. I think that we can't have a tag for every method in every language. In the tag description it says.

getElementByID is an essential method commonly used in JavaScript in the browser to retrieve a particular element node in a HTML or XML document by its ID.

How is determined that is an essential method? I know is a common method but it is just too broad. Other tags referencing methods:

(*) this has just 6 question, and the method is querySelectorAll if it's referencing the javascript method

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    Related meta.stackoverflow.com/q/320569/792066
    – Braiam
    Commented Apr 20, 2016 at 16:06
  • I don't think this is a duplicate. I asked about tags referencing methods, not about a specific tag like the question you are pointing. Commented Apr 20, 2016 at 16:52

1 Answer 1

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Why? What harm are they doing?

Folks ask plenty of questions about them, they certainly don't suffer from being ambiguous... If they're not actively causing harm then don't worry about them.

See also: When to burninate

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    They do cause harm meta.stackoverflow.com/a/320723/792066
    – Braiam
    Commented Apr 20, 2016 at 16:06
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    Nope. Finding poorly-asked questions in a tag isn't evidence that the tag is bad unless you can demonstrate that the topic represented by the tag is itself inappropriate for the site (or the tag is misleading enough to suggest a different topic to new users).
    – Shog9
    Commented Apr 20, 2016 at 16:16
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    Sometimes I get the idea that y'all would be happier with a one tag per question limit and a set of maybe a dozen tags so broad they covered everything possible on the site. "Look! Nothing can possibly be mistagged because tags are now meaningless!"
    – Shog9
    Commented Apr 20, 2016 at 16:18
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    Well, users not having the best possible answer because a poor selection of tags is worse, ah, and in that case, tags are effectively meaningless.
    – Braiam
    Commented Apr 20, 2016 at 16:33
  • Yeah... Compare the "unanswered rate" between questions in more specific tags vs. tags like javascript or c# and tell me you're making a good bet forgoing specificity, @Braiam. Yes, you reach a much larger audience... But so do thousands of other people every day. If your question sucks, you're gonna have issues no matter what. Ideally, you use all applicable tags to get both breadth and specificity... And savvy askers know this.
    – Shog9
    Commented Apr 20, 2016 at 16:56

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