Related to the [var] burniantion proposal. I first noticed the tag thanks to this important JavaScript question
let (about 500 questions)
In Lisp-like and functional languages, introduces a list of local variables, each (possibly optionally) with its initial value.
As far as I can tell, let
is simply a variable declaration syntax, much like its cousin var
. More importantly, only 39 are also tagged lisp, which means the excerpt is wildly wrong (128 are JS questions). Just like the [use] burnination, this appears the be a syntax tag only, meaning that
- Most questions could be retagged syntax
- Some JS questions could be tagged scope (this is scoping syntax in that language)
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
Not necessarily. I don't think that LISP, Haskell and JS use it exactly the same way
Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
Scope and syntax are on topic
Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
No. Take this Lisp question. There's no "prog" tag because that's simply syntax. syntax would be more appropriate here, and also eliminates the need for [let]
Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
Again, no. JS is the newcomer here and it doesn't seem that JS uses it exactly the same way other languages do.
property let
, and more.let{ }
extension functionlet
keyword. It's clear, unambiguous, on-topic, and adds value to the question. I see no reason to get rid of it.let
andvar
? (var actually seems worse)