I stumbled upon a question having overcommit tag. Currently there are 25 questions and it has no description.
From what I can gather, the questions are about evenly split between two completely different concepts:
- A Ruby tool for managing Git hooks
- Memory overcommitment - trying to grab more memory than is available.
I'm not even sure but it's possible there are two variations of the second thing - trying to allocate memory in, say C using something like malloc
and memory in virtual machines. Although I'm not even sure if those are two separate topics but it seemed a bit like it.
At any rate, what is [overcommit]
about - the library that deals with Git or to do with memory? And should there be a different tag for the other topic(s)?
[arrays]
- an array in C, in Java and JavaScript can behave differently but, broadly, they are about the same thing. If one understands the concepts behind an array, they'd be able to understand it in almost any context. But if you know all about memory overcommitment, you may not even understand Git and vice versa. Are there other tags that are completely different and have no transferable knowledge between different contexts?[arrays]
even in different languages. Similarly[functional programming]
will use the same ideas across different languages, so one fluent in that paradigm can answer most questions regardless of context. Who is the target audience for[overcommit]
- people who deal with Git or people who deal with memory management? Or are you suggesting it's both? And again I ask - are there other examples of tags that have completely separate audiences that are in wide use?[overcommit]
seems like a clear case of that.1. If the tag can’t work as the only tag on a question
- it absolutely cannot.2. If the tag commonly means different things to different people
it absolutely does. You've confirmed both with your own words. So, how come this tag which is at odds with how tags should work is fine according to you? Unless, again, you have examples of such tags being widely accepted