Many of us have read the blog post where tag excerpts were compared to elevator pitches:
The excerpt is the elevator pitch for the tag. You only have ~500 plain text characters for the excerpt, so don't feel obligated to cover everything in it! Save that for the 30,000+ character Markdown tag wiki. The excerpt should define the shared quality of questions containing this tag -- boiled down to a few short sentences.
The problem is: if I was on an elevator with some of our tag excerpts, I'd see about getting off as soon as I could.
They're just too long. This seems to affect all of the big tags.
According to some random website, elevator pitches can range from anywhere from a few seconds up to 90 seconds. Here's one of the guidelines:
The 30 seconds or less pitch includes pitches from just a few seconds to half a minute. These pitches are often a person’s or group of people’s first interaction with the person, business, product or service.
That just about sums up what tag excerpts are for. They are supposed to make it easier to tag things, especially for non-experts.
What's crazy is that these tag "excerpts" are longer than the average post made by a new user (if you exclude their huge dump of code, of course)!
I suspect that even when new users realize that something special happens when they roll over tags, they don't have the attention span to read it (I usually don't).
The excerpts seem to be too long for the system, too: Allowed length of tag excerpt in static box is too short compared to one in excerpt popup
Many of these tag excerpts dedicate precious space to things that I don't consider to be very important (for a tag excerpt). Let's look at java:
Java is a general-purpose object-oriented programming language designed to be used in conjunction with the Java Virtual Machine (JVM). "Java platform" is the name for a computing system that has installed tools for developing and running Java programs. Use this tag for questions referring to Java programming language or Java platform tools. (Note that Java is not to be confused with JavaScript)
By the time I reach the hyphen (after the fourth word), my attention is already lost. How does reading that first sentence help me ask a Java question? Same with the second one. It's not until the THIRD line that there is any usage guideline.
Here's regex:
Regular expressions provide a declarative language to match patterns within strings. They are commonly used for string validation, parsing, and transformation. Since regular expressions are not fully standardized, all questions with this tag should also include a tag specifying the applicable programming language or tool.
I could have asked and answered an entire question about regexes in the space that the excerpt takes up. I also find it incredibly dense and challenging to read despite the fact that I am a native English speaker with an interest in regexes.
I suspect that part of the problem is that many of these tag excerpts are either plagiarized off Wikipedia or the company's website, or they are written in such a way that they might as well have been plagiarized.
I can't be the only one getting off at the next floor, right? Shouldn't we do something about this? Or am I misunderstanding something about how tag excerpts work?