Yes, this is about the never ending Angular madness, and I will briefly explain the fundamental issues of the naming problem (since it was not our fault). The objective with this is to get a broader community base (all our tagging experts) involved. If you already know about the mess, feel free to skip the introduction.
Introduction
Google started to develop this framework with the name of "AngularJS" and with the release of "AngularJS 2" they actually presented a different frame work (architectural, language, expression syntax, etc). Fundamentally if you were searching for a solution in "AngularJS 2" a solution in "AngularJS" would not do you much good, but instead only increase your confusion.
Google soon realized that "JS" was not a good description, probably since with the new framework developers now used TypeScript to write the components?, they dropped the "JS", and it became "Angular 2".
but but, now that we are developing Angular 2 version 3....
Well, that's a mess so they dropped the 2 and the frameworks are now named AngularJS and Angular.
Stack Overflow finally found peace on the main tags, angularjs and angular. Additional to these tags developers can add version tags:
angularjs has angularjs-1.5, angularjs-1.6,angularjs-1.7 etc
Let me smile some when considering what version they will invent after 1.9
Naming strategy for related libraries
I will give as example a few major with the intent to find a common strategy.
angular-material
This is a component library (datepickers, etc.) built with Angular that still suffers from the 2 issue. For AngularJS the official naming is material and for Angular it is material2, in fact we have angularjs-material, angular-material, angular-material2, angular2-material and then since now we are really confused angular-material-5, angular-material-6, etc. The version tags of material2 as I see it have no sense; it's probably just a side effect of the confusion (I'm using Angular7 not 2, not realizing that the library named material2 currently is in version 7 :)).
angularfire
The official binding for firebase, same problems as material, AngularJS version is angularfire and for Angular guess what? angularfire2, so we have angularfire, angularfire2, angularfire5?? But not angularjsfire.
angular-bootstrap
For AngularJS that would be UI Bootstrap and for Angular ng-bootstrap. Ooh great they are named differently angular-bootstrap, angularjs-bootstrap, ng-bootstrap, angular-ui-bootstrap, and bootstrap-ui.
My considerations choosing different naming strategy.
Remove all reference in the tag to AngularJS or Angular, hence for example we would only keep [angular-material] and [angularfire]. The additional tag [angularjs] or [angular] will tell which one it is.
- Update tag wikis to state that they need to add if
angular-js
orangular
- We need to search and fix question that may not have the additional tag
- Moderators will create synonyms to this single tag.
- User can no more filter for example [angular-material2] they will need to add additional tag.
- How do we handle if library have different name? as in bootstrap example?
- Update tag wikis to state that they need to add if
Use js to indicate the difference, hence keep two tags [angularjs-material] and [angular-material],[angularjs-fire] and [angular-fire], [angularjs-bootstrap] and [ng-bootstrap].
- We need to some extensive manual retagging since for example now the [angular-fire] is currently referenced to [angularjs]
- Moderators will create synonyms to these two tags.
- The name does not correspond with library name a diligent user may notice that they are using [angular-material2] not [angular-material] which can be confusing.
Keep the original library names [angular-material] and [angular-material2], [angularfire], and [angularfire2]. [angular-ui-bootstrap] and [ng-bootstrap].
- Well, this is the correct name.
- Users will continue with the confusion (I'm using version 7 of Angular, not 2 or add angular-material to an Angular question since they missed the 2 name), but we edit and try to create synonyms as we go.
This mess is even deeper with tons of directive tags, etc., but for now let's start with a strategy for these libraries. After that maybe it's easier to find a strategy for those that are not burnations, but synonyms which is much more practical from a community perspective (one moderator click vs. 100 of hours of community users reviewing).
[angular]
, it's version[angular-x]
and then only the library name[material]
. I would read such tags as angular with version x and using the library material. Or are there mutliple library versions per angular major version