There is an issue with narrowly defined tags duplicating the content of topics from broader tags. This is visible in places where a framework will show up as being documented in both the language it was written in, and also in its own tag. This was largely solved with the consensus being to place all of the content in the framework tag.
However, while that solution is good for frameworks, it does not work well with language features; for example, LINQ. The documentation in the C# tag for LINQ is fairly high quality at the moment, but unfortunately there is another LINQ topic that is very low quality. Not only does this tag have duplicate content with regards to naming, but the examples are often flat out incorrect in their description of the feature.
Moreover, language features tend to be rather narrow in their scope. While language feature tags work well at Stack Overflow, in Documentation using them to create examples seems to be problematic, especially in this instance.
Unfortunately there is nothing that can be done as a user, even with all of the privileges unlocked, to address this tag (or this situation in general).
What approach should we be using to address these types of situations in Documentation? Do we need additional tools (features) for assist in fixing this problem, or is the existing toolset sufficient?
select
(C#),Select
(VB.NET),Aggregate
(VB.NET) for example -- that leverage specific LINQ signatures / features. These need to be under the language tag.var
waaaay to often when the actual type should be used. There is no prose, and the final example doesn't even demonstrate deferred execution. This is just one example. The entire set of content there suffers from these same types of problems.var
waaaay too often Are stylistic conventions a reason to dismiss examples as low quality, especially when those coding conventions are not universally accepted, to put it mildly?var
as it allows focusing on what the code is trying to do instead of getting hung up on the types involved. This is admittedly my own person preference. But the vaunted high-quality C# LINQ documentation also usesvar
about half the time, and not for anonymous types, but for things likevar chars = new List<string>() { "a", "b", "c", "d" };
using
(although your usage of "connection threads" to mean both ADO.NET connections and HTTP requests is rather odd) and it has been fixed (I initially didn't want to detract from the simplicity of the example).