I just encountered a suggested edit which added the automation tag to a C#/Selenium question.
This left me wondering: What is the intent of that tag?
I started by searching for a definition of "automation". Wikipedia says:
Automation, or Labor-saving technology is the technology by which a process or procedure is performed with minimal human assistance.
IMHO, this is a quite broad definition, which, even when restricted to programming, covers lots of possible applications. This view is supported by the tag wiki, which also points to several sub tags:
- build-automation: 1781 questions
- ole-automation: 86 questions
- automated-tests: 10125 questions
- ui-automation: 2889 questions
Checking out the automation tag shows 17087 questions, with a wide range of topics, for example:
- Passing an argument to a PowerShell script
watch
command in OS X- Typing keys in Selenium
- Formatting numbers in PHP
- Creating file shortcuts with C#
- Auto-deleting old rows with a stored procedure in MySQL
- Converting .doc files to .pdf files using Python
There are exactly 100 questions which have automation as their only tag. Some of those are off-topic/too broad, and for others there are better tags.
I don't think that the general automation tag adds much value: Automation is merely a concept, with a broad range of possible applications, as the above question links show. I could argue for all of those questions, why the notion "automation" would fit there (so the tag isn't actually wrong). However, I could also argue for most other programming questions, why those are about "automation" in one way or another.
To solve this, I propose to
- use the more specific sub tags wherever appropriate,
- and get rid or at least discourage the use of the general automation tag.