There's been an increasingly unhelpful amount of Angular answers showing up for AngularJS questions, and visa versa (similarly with JavaScript and TypeScript). Many people at the company I work for (including myself) have resorted to using "-angularJS", "-JavaScript", or "-stackoverflow" in searches because so many questions that only relate to one of the technologies are tagged with both.
While I understand there are plenty of questions that do actually regard both technologies, this is the rare occurrence. For the case of Angular and AngularJS, there are over 3,000 questions tagged with both, yet it seems like 1-2 in 10 actually applies to or includes both.
What I am wondering is if it's possible to have a "needs review" check on tag combinations to help mitigate this kind of incorrect tagging? This could be applied for a good amount of misused tag combinations, but still allow the ones that actually need both though. Many of these tags directly say they shouldn't be used to refer to one or the other, but they still get included, throwing off search accuracy and helpfulness (and possibly spamming tag watchers with unrelated questions).
Here is a quick list of both tags as needed:
- Checking the Angular/AngularJS version
- Asking for equivalents
- Tagging both JS and TS, but not specifying in code
- Specifies Angular and a specific version, as well as other relevant libs
And here is a quick list of what might be improper use of tag combinations:
- No reference to AngularJS in the question, specifies Angular 5
- Seems to just throw all the tags on there - specifies Angular version in the code. With that, it's most likely TS as well.
- Asks specifically for TS, but still tags JS.
- Seems specific to types and TS, but is also tagging JS and AngularJS
Note: There are plenty of other tags this applies to; this is just the area I am personally the most familiar with.
angularjs
tag to your list of ignored tags and never see them... And as far as TypeScript goes, valid JavaScript is valid TypeScript, so I'm not sure why you'd want to rule JavaScript questions out.