The scene tag currently has 783 questions. Its own tag Wiki condemns it:
'scene' can refer to various things. Please combine this tag with other tags to put your question into perspective.
"Can refer to various things" and "must be combined with another tag to be meaningful" are both reasons to remove the tag.
I literally have no idea what this tag is even supposed to mean.
A few examples of what this tag is being used for:
- JavaFX scenes
- Unity scenes
- Movie/video players "in general"
- Spritekit scenes
- Corona
- MoviePy
- OpenGL
And that's just on the first page. Who's to say that one of those uses is more "correct" than any of the others?
I'm not convinced that these are sufficiently similar to merit keeping this tag around. To begin with, I don't see much evidence that understanding what a scene is in one framework will automatically lend itself to understanding what a scene is in another framework.
For reference, here's a definition of what a JavaFX scene is:
The JavaFX Scene class is the container for all content in a scene graph.
A scene graph is defined as:
A scene graph is a tree data structure, most commonly found in graphical applications and libraries such as vector editing tools, 3D libraries, and video games. The JavaFX scene graph is a retained mode API, meaning that it maintains an internal model of all graphical objects in your application. At any given time, it knows what objects to display, what areas of the screen need repainting, and how to render it all in the most efficient manner. Instead of invoking primitive drawing methods directly, you instead use the scene graph API and let the system automatically handle the rendering details. This approach significantly reduces the amount of code that is needed in your application.
By contrast, for Unity
Scenes contain the environments and menus of your game. Think of each unique Scene file as a unique level. In each Scene, you place your environments, obstacles, and decorations, essentially designing and building your game in pieces.
As you can see, these are quite different concepts. I don't see evidence that understanding one would make you more likely to know about the other one.
To address the criteria:
- It's so vague and ambiguous that it says nothing useful about the actual content of the question.
- I have no idea if it's even on-topic because it doesn't mean anything.
- It doesn't add any useful information whatever because it's so vague.
- It does not mean the same thing in all common contexts.
Can we burninate this?