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I recently came across to the tag which has 369 questions at the time of writing. I just saw its description (emphasis mine):

Please do not use this tag. The / character ("forward slash", or just "slash") is a directory separator in URLs and in many operating systems including Linux (Windows uses \ (backslash) but many applications and APIs also accept /). It is also the division operator in many languages, and marks closing tags in XML/HTML. In some languages, / characters delimit regular expressions.

and decided that it is completely useless.

Burnination criteria:

  1. Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?

No. This is a little bit similar to which is being burninated now. This depends heavily on the language used and sometimes the tag is used just because the question contains /.

  1. Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?

Questions about slashes themselves aren't on-topic here — although I haven't found any question about slashes themselves.

  1. Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?

No. Questions about the use of slashes in a language are about the language and of it. With other words, questions about the use of semicolons in x, should be tagged and if x = language, questions should be tagged also with .

  1. Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?

No. As mentioned, the meaning differs. Language must be specified.

This has been proposed earlier for the same symbol, different named where it was mentioned that [*slash]es tags should also be burninated. See it here.

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  • Related: the pod wiki excerpt also starts with a do-not-use disclaimer, which has sparked a lot of confusion here and there
    – Nino Filiu
    Commented Mar 26, 2019 at 14:01
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    Note that the comma, colon, backslash, caret, dollar-sign, ampersand, parentheses tags are lurking in the wings, awaiting their turn for burnination. I suspect double-quotes and single-quotes and maybe quotes are also burninatable. Maybe braces and curly-braces and curly-brackets (these two don't appear to be synonyms) and square-bracket too. The sets of questions with the tags right-angle-bracket, underscore and double-underscore are small enough that formal burnination isn't really needed. Commented Mar 26, 2019 at 22:05
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    Cant we merge the hell out of all those into special characters or smth?
    – Luuklag
    Commented Mar 27, 2019 at 15:56
  • @JonathanLeffler Looks like underscore has more than 5k questions. Seems like a bit large for not burninating. (N.B. The tag is synonymised to underscore.js though, and doesn't seem to say anything about the _ character. It's on a whole different league compared to those other tags.)
    – TrebledJ
    Commented Mar 27, 2019 at 16:23
  • Typo on my part. The tag I meant was underscores, plural — referring to a character and not the JS. I’d seen the underscore.js tag and that’s fine. I’d not noticed the synonym. Commented Mar 27, 2019 at 16:25
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    @JonathanLeffler the underscores tag was cleaned up some time ago and the burninate request was declined. Commented Mar 27, 2019 at 16:27
  • Then the request for burninating underscores should be revisited, IMO. I don't think that it was was a good decision to retain it. It doesn't add anything to the question: the question titles refer to underscores so there's no searchability benefit to it. Commented Mar 27, 2019 at 16:36

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