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I just saw we have a tag which looks like a quite broad tag and has no description.

We already have which is for any API provided by Google.

I believe we could merge both tags together. Each Google Javascript API that I know of already have their own tag (Google Maps, Roads, Places, Directions, Geocoding, Visualization, etc.)

Edit: Following the discussion in the comments, it was pointed out that we have a , a tag, and other similar tags for the different clients.

If we find out or believe the tag was created for questions related to the Google API Client Library for JavaScript then we should probably rename that tag to google-api-javascript-client.

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  • Would there be subject matter experts on the Google-API that are only interested in answering Google-javascript-api questions? Is that concept even a thing? There is also a google-api-python-client, maybe that was also meant for the tag that is being discussed? I could find other popular language clients.
    – rene
    Jul 1, 2020 at 10:16
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    That's an interesting one - I agree. google-javascript-api tends to be used with google-api regardless. Plus, I thought we had sort of a consensus for these tags: api + language + [ api-specific tag ]. For what its worth, I think it should be: javascript google-api Jul 1, 2020 at 10:18
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    @OlegValter I agree. Each specific API has its own tag AFAIK. I personally wouldn't tag a question specific to one of their APIs with google-api and that tag itself is questionable IMO. But a combination of google-api and javascript tags seems appropriate for (too?) broad questions on any Google JS API.
    – MrUpsidown
    Jul 1, 2020 at 10:29
  • @MrUpsidown - hope you won't respark one-tag / two-tags discussion :) That said, I also agree with rene's concern - that language-specific API libraries tags exist. I think if you are ready to defend the position, a broader discussion for consensus can be started. Otherwise, the tag can be safely retagged and then synonymized / removed - no one even bothered to give it a wiki (while the opposite is true for Python library) Jul 1, 2020 at 10:38
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    Whether a tag has a wiki or not shouldn't be a reason to keep it or delete it. If the tag makes sense, we should keep it. If it needs a wiki, we should write one. The python client related tag points to a specific API client. If the tag I mentioned was supposed to exist for the JS client, then I believe it should be renamed to google-api-javascript-client and point to github.com/google/google-api-javascript-client.
    – MrUpsidown
    Jul 1, 2020 at 10:46
  • @MrUpsidown - well, I just meant that since it does not even have a wiki and you have a valid point of the purpose of the tag better served by other means - the tag could be dealt with without much opposition (by renaming / retagging / merging / deleting - whatever the decision is). My thoughts are that it was indeed intended to represent API language-specific client library, so a rename + tag wiki creation would be a good idea (I would create one myself, but I have 5 pending already and cannot add another) Jul 1, 2020 at 10:57
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    For reference of readers: google-api-php-client, google-api-python-client, google-api-ruby-client, google-api-java-client, google-api-go-client, google-api-dotnet-client. Google Apps Script has advanced services as a stand-in Jul 1, 2020 at 11:01
  • It would also be great if we had a reference to these language-specific tags in the wiki of the main [google-api] tag, just like we do with google-sheets and a lot of other tags Jul 1, 2020 at 11:07
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    @OlegValter agreed and I'll be happy to do it once we have done the proposed changes.
    – MrUpsidown
    Jul 1, 2020 at 16:41
  • @MrUpsidown - btw, I got a couple of slots freed up, so working on it - wanted to visually separate deprecated APIs + provide links to guides / references for the listed APIs for quite some time Jul 2, 2020 at 11:57

1 Answer 1

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Proposal

As per discussion and given the fact that JavaScript API client library is the only one deviating from the convention (see , , , , , for reference),

It is proposed to adopt the following course of action:

  1. Renaming to as this is how it is named in the repo or to as referenced in API-specific guides (see Sheets, Calendar, Gmail).
  2. Creating tag wiki and excerpt with a reference to API library and its repository
  3. Including "related tags" section in tag wiki
    (using built-in "related tags" feature would require duplication with adding tag)
  4. Add relevant "use for" and "do not use" sections to tag wiki with clarifications about using the tag for non library-specific issues with Google APIs

An alternative thanks to MrUpsidown's find that we do have a tag with a wiki and appx. 2e2 questions would be to:

  1. Rename to
  2. Merge with as the former has only 55 questions so far and no wiki
  3. Synonymize with since this is the second naming convention for the library

The rest of the points that do not conflict with the alternative still apply.

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    There should be two, really, [google-api-javascript-client] (or [google-api-browser-client], which would be more accurate) and [google-api-node.js-client]. I've already seen questions confusing the two clients (trying to use the Node.js client in a browser, for instance). Jul 1, 2020 at 12:00
  • @HereticMonkey - hm, that's a very good point - and it is officially named that way. It may indeed reduce confusion about Node.js and JavaScript libraries. Maybe even like this: rename to google-api-browser-client, then synonymize [google-api-javascript-client] to it (in case questions creep up) Jul 1, 2020 at 12:04
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    We should be careful about that, as there is the NodeJS client (which is obviously also written in JavaScript, but differently)... Jul 1, 2020 at 14:23
  • The "officially named" link you provided (developers.google.com/sheets/api/quickstart/js) is about the Google Sheets API which is another thing. The main JS API client is Google API Client Library for JavaScript which should be google-api-javascript-client if we keep the same naming convention.
    – MrUpsidown
    Jul 1, 2020 at 16:40
  • @MrUpsidown - well, I guess I worded it very poorly... I meant this is how it is referenced in API-specific pages: Calendar API, for example. That said, I also understand that this it is named as you mentioned I am worried about what Heretic Monkey pointed out - potential to confusion with Node.js. But I am also for keeping the convention, so I am torn on the matter. Jul 2, 2020 at 1:23
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    @OlegValter Got you. I don't think it would be really confusing if we had [google-api-javascript-client] and [google-api-node.js-client]. We need tag wikis though. I just found out though that we also have google-api-js-client which seems to be yet another naming for that same Google API Client Library for JavaScript. Do we want "js" or "javascript"? I don't know what's the naming convention. I would choose "javascript".
    – MrUpsidown
    Jul 2, 2020 at 9:15
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    At some point, I think we should take a decision on what tags we want to have and a real naming convention towards these Google-related tags. I have other requests in the pipe for Google APIs... The point is, Google provides dozens of APIs. Many can be accessed as web services, and with client libraries. Also Google has renamed some of those APIs over the time. I believe all these points have lead to the current situation with inconsistent naming. Also some tags were obviously created with no real naming convention in mind. Do we want to harmonise everything?
    – MrUpsidown
    Jul 2, 2020 at 9:29
  • @MrUpsidown - good find, looks like there is another venue given what you found: rename google-api-js-client to google-api-javascript-client, then add google-api-browser-client as synonym and if google-api-js-client still creeps up, make it a synonym as well. I would also choose JavaScript (not sure about the consensus either, but my guideline always was: use the name given by creator where possible). Jul 2, 2020 at 13:30
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    @MrUpsidown - re: convention - I would say we should, after all, that what meta is for - if we can coordinate the effort, the better of we will be when answering (I am personally tired of removing google-sheets-api from questions about google-sheets, for example). Chit-chat aside, one thing is consistent, though: there are client libraries, APIs, and products. Currently, we have all three sort of mixed in one pot... We are already trying to get things straight with Google Apps Script part of things, so it would be a good idea to cleanup the bigger picture as well Jul 2, 2020 at 15:43
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    I am not too familiar with such tasks. Should I create a separate support request here and list all what I think needs to be done? I know probably all their Maps / Places related APIs but definitely not all Google APIs and I don't know to what extent the related tags need some work. In short, how should we approach that "cleanup" task?
    – MrUpsidown
    Jul 2, 2020 at 16:32
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    I am currently working on improving the APIs wiki to include references, separate deprecated APIs from current, group them by product where possible, etc. Google APIs is a confusing topic indeed - there are so many of them... As @CodyGray mentioned - it is preferred to keep merge / delete / rename requests by-task separate, but the overall effort could be coordinated in a separate Q&A (we did just that and it seems to be more or less working) Jul 2, 2020 at 16:37
  • Btw, if anyone knows for sure what happened to these APIs listed please ping me while I am still editing, these are the ones I could not find any info concrete info on: - Enterprise Audit API - Google App State API - Google OAuth2 API (does this refer to Google Sign In?) - Google Play MDM API (there is a EMM API, but I need a domain expert to cust judgement) Jul 2, 2020 at 18:50
  • Oh, god, I am done. Tag wiki update for Google APIs finished (sort of - there are still tags missing, tags named disregarding convention, confusing APIs, etc, etc, etc. I will make a separate post about it when ready). Edit is now pending: stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/26575793 Jul 3, 2020 at 1:34

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