As the use of Python3 becomes more widespread and Python2 approaches its EOL, I find the use of the python-3.x tag being less and less relevant and more synonymous with the python tag.
I wonder if it would be prudent to make the python-3.x tag a synonym for python. My hunch is the answer is 'no' here, but I'm interested in the reasoning there.
I was also thinking it may be useful if we update the tagging recommendations for both tags. My suggestion would be that we only encourage the use of the python-3.x tag when version is central to the question. That is to say, just because the content happens to include some python3-specific feature, doesn't mean it should necessarily be tagged python-3.x.
I feel with this stricter guideline, the tag would have a more useful distinction from questions simply tagged with python.
python-2.x
tag is little used today.[python-3.x]
is certainly useful to indicate Python 3 specific issues, but yes[python]
tag should also be present, see meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/364993/… and meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/265844/…python-3.x
tag is overused, but I'm not sure if it's appropriate to remove it some cases. For example, a python3-specific feature might be used, but the core concept of the question really isn't version-specific. Especially given that python2 will fall out of use, there's hardly a distinction being made when people use thepython-3.x
tag today.