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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:

And here is a quick list of what might be improper use of tag combinations:

Note: There are plenty of other tags this applies to; this is just the area I am personally the most familiar with.

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    Many such combinations exist. matlab and octave are commonly combined by people asking Octave questions thinking they’ll get a larger audience, though the tag excerpts explicitly state not to. — It’ll be nice to have a system where such tag combinations are queued for review. Feb 14, 2019 at 1:44
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    It would really help to just give like three examples here of content which is problematic in order to help clarify the problem you are observing for those of us not in the "people at the company you work for" group.
    – Travis J
    Feb 14, 2019 at 1:48
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    Thanks @TravisJ! I added some examples of what I believe are both good and bad usages of the tags (specific to my realm). Please let me know if I should add anything else. @CrisLuengo - thanks for the feedback and more examples where this can be beneficial.
    – user10747134
    Feb 14, 2019 at 2:55
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    Isn't the answer to this to just correct the tagging as and when. Tags are always added incorrectly/mistagged in all technologies. The only solution is to fix what you find. I've lost count of the amount of java tags I've had to remove on javascript questions
    – Liam
    Feb 14, 2019 at 11:20
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    @OneLunchMan thanks, but I would argue that if a deeper review is needed over such large collection of questions, then I'd like to have more than 3-4 bad examples. May you give 10 bad examples in need of retagging?
    – Cœur
    Feb 14, 2019 at 11:21
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    @Cœur I included a more general search to avoid a massive question of just examples. If a general consensus is that I add more, I easily can. "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."
    – user10747134
    Feb 14, 2019 at 11:27
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    The naming AngularJS and Angular does not help and adds to confusion. Even when it was AngularJS people would, reasonably, just call it Angular. Now I tend to reference Angular 2, just to distinguish from the earlier version. For the novice it is even trickier to recognise the distinction, and so the doubling of tags is not going to go away. Who would have the time and commitment to keep modding this?
    – Andy G
    Feb 14, 2019 at 11:52
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    @TravisJ the problem is, at least in this instance, that the review queues are already overflowing with *-JS questions. I'm not sure adding another one would necessarily help? Feb 14, 2019 at 13:33
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    It seems that the crux of this argument is that people don't know how to tag their questions. This hasn't changed for almost ten years, and I'm not sure I see it changing anytime soon - especially with Angular. Realistically speaking, I would believe the best thing we can do is interdict and fix the issue where and when it becomes an issue.
    – Makoto
    Feb 14, 2019 at 17:03
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    @JaredSmith - I believe you pinged the wrong user. But since you asked, is the current set of reviews really prohibitive to more? Unsure.
    – Travis J
    Feb 14, 2019 at 18:59
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    @TravisJ yes, meant that for someone else. That's what I get for using my phone instead of PC. Feb 14, 2019 at 21:24
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    @AndyG "Who would have the time and commitment to keep modding this" well some do :) I agree with the original post, this is getting out of hand. I don't know if it's possible, but maybe prohibit the creation of a subject with the two tags ? The OP would have to ask for moderation on his post to add both tags. That would greatly reduce the amount of modding needed, because as said, questions regarding both tags are OVNIs.
    – user4676340
    Feb 15, 2019 at 11:11
  • I mean, when I search on Google, I frequently search using "angular -angularjs". I'm not sure why it would be any different on SO. On SO, at least, you can add the 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. Feb 15, 2019 at 17:15
  • Yeah, this is kindof a fuzzy mess and a hit or miss. With questions that are for "Angular" and have the "AngularJS" tag, the search excluding AngularJS ends up excluding possibly viable results just because of incorrect tagging. "Valid JS is valid TS", by this I assume you mean without the type checks in the way (referencing the ability to have the compiler ignore type errors)?
    – user10747134
    Feb 15, 2019 at 17:24
  • I think you're missing the underlying fact, it is certainly a very unpleasant one. You are racking up technical debt by being stuck on such an ancient Angular version. Taking a dependency on Google code is risky, you have to be just as "nimble" as they are to keep up. Not nearly as free as it looks. Feb 15, 2019 at 23:16

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