Currently, gas tag refers to gnu-assembler. However, it can also be inferred as relating to google-apps-script, a scripting solution to automate Google products such as Google sheets.
New users frequently tag gas to refer to Google apps script. This creates the tag editing burden on the community.
Current data shows that 200 questions in gas was mistagged and retagged later to google-apps-script. Given that gas has only 756 questions, this represents 20% of all gas questions , if they were not mistagged.
Data shows ~1800 questions in google-apps-script has the word "gas" in either the title or the body, compared with ~300 questions in gas. Relative to total questions in each tag(33k vs 0.7k), it can be argued that "gas"'s accuracy is high in gas, but "gas" is meant to mean "google-apps-script" 6 times more than "gnu-assembler" in absolue numbers(1800 vs 300) and therefore much more common.
google-apps-script is around 40 times popular than gas by number of questions(33000 vs 756).
gas currently has
Relatively, google-apps-script has
The declining trend after 2016 and low absolute popularity of gas, compared to google-apps-script ,would mean mistagged questions remain mistagged for a long time rather than if it were the other way around. More users would mean easy and efficient fixing of mistagged questions. At 20% of the total questions in gas, this is a significant burden on the tag editors.
The previous proposals and discussions can be found here and here, but none seems to have gained any traction.
Kindly suggest better or efficient solutions to the problem and how to accelerate any action that needs to be taken as the issue is dormant for almost a year now.
My suggestion:
- Rename gas to gnu-assembler(same as previous requestors) and either
- Make gas a synonym of google-apps-script OR
- Ban gas outright to prevent ambiguity
But at this point, any action is welcome.
gas
oras
, and that is a valid pointgas
to mean Google Apps Script, not against. It's expected that people will call it this. People inherently do not like change, but much like spoken language, when a word becomes so synonymous with a new concept, the old meaning starts to be overshadowed. While gas is commonly used to mean both, the use cases are clearly reflected by the popularity of one meaning over the other, and Stackoverflow should reflect this.[gas]
+[google-sheets]
gave a warning, or[gas]
without[assembly]
gave a warning. I don't follow the GAS or NASM tags specifically, justassembly
andx86*
, because I expect people to tag "assembly" for question about assembly languages. IDK, maybe I should follow them as well, but I'm more interested in the machine / ISA than the asm syntax.git
). I mentioned it since gnu-assembler will perfectly fit in line with other GNU-linked tags. Even though we debate the gas part, the rename to gnu-assembler is not in dispute, it would be a good solution given the very limited abilities we have now[mars]
(some library) is commonly mistagged for[mars-simulator]
(the MIPS simulator). The GAS case sounds worse than most.gnu-gas
orgnu-assembler
are better thangas
, rename away by me.