I came across letter tag that should be burninated, because there's no sense in being an expert in letters. Questions do not even seem like they're from the same category.
1 Answer
Most of these questions use letter synonymously with character. One question surely means typography instead. Yet another question was vastly confused and used "letter" to mean email, but I ended up editing the entire question; it had nothing to do with email/letters at all, so I changed all the tags.
I also suggest that we look at letters. It has a little more tagged with it, but it is just as horrible, so it should go too. In total, there are 388 questions between the two.
I will see about going ahead and retagging some questions that certainly be tagged with a different, better tag.
I'd also like to point out that we may benefit from a new tag, unicode-letter, which would be used for precisely one thing: the regex construct that matches letters (\p{L}
in some flavors).
Important notice: I see someone created letters-and-numbers, presumably to replace letter. NO. Please consult us before proposing a new tag to replace the one undergoing burnination. I would have told you that alphanumeric already exists if you had.
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6unsure about unicode-letter, otherwise agree. wouldn't that encourage also letter coming back, and how would you deduct from tag name that it is about a regex construct?– eisMay 30, 2016 at 18:48
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I created letters-and-numbers. Although there may be some overlap with alphanumeric, I think there's also enough distinction to warrant a different tag. I also created projects-and-solutions long ago to fuse questions tagged with projects with those tagged solutions and that seemed to do well. May 31, 2016 at 15:00
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4@MarkCidade Out of the 10 questions currently tagged letters-and-numbers, half of them seem to have nothing to do with the usages specified. Are you sure this is a good idea?– beakerMay 31, 2016 at 22:25
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@beaker Converting between letters and numbers is one usage, the other simply being about letters and numbers in general (where they were originally tagged letters and numbers). I think that combining them into one tag is a good idea, but we can also separate the usages into the existing alphanumeric and a converting letters to/from numbers tag. May 31, 2016 at 22:50
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1@MarkCidade You need to consider a bit more about how tags are used. Not all keywords should be tags, only those that provide meaningful classification. I think that existing tags, such as alphanumeric and cipher sufficiently cover either definition.– LaurelMay 31, 2016 at 22:58
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They don't cover everything. Alphanumeric implies a string that has letters and digits. Cipher implies encryption. Someone may ask a question that may very well be answered by mentioning alphanumeric strings or encryption ciphers, but they may also be asking for a regular expression, or some details about the Unicode standard without knowing it. All they know is that is has something to do with letters-and-numbers and together like that, it's not as ambiguous as either letter or number, in the same way projects-and-solutions makes sense but a project or solution is too vague. Jun 1, 2016 at 1:26
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1@MarkCidade I don't see any situation in which I would search for that tag, follow it, or use it in any meaningful way. I don't want to highjack this question, but if you'd care to open a new discussion to present your case then we can see what others think about it. Otherwise, imo it's just more fuel for the burnination fire.– beakerJun 1, 2016 at 23:34
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@MarkCidade I agree with beaker about letters-and-numbers. There are some things that don't make good tags. Otherwise we would have a code tag and it would be on 90% of the questions here.– LaurelJun 1, 2016 at 23:36
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Code is too vague. code-and-cookies-and-cream provides sufficient context. I don't expect letters-and-numbers to be as successful as, say, projects-and-solutions but it fills a niche. Jun 2, 2016 at 5:14
Burn this [letter] after reading
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