I recently stumbled on a question with the code-design tag. I thought it was off-topic. A brief scan of the 159 questions with this tag reveals a majority of opinion-based questions (in my opinion, of course.)
The answer to Can I ask design-related questions on Stack Overflow? is:
In general - no. Such questions are beyond the scope of Stack Overflow
The code-design tag has no usage guidance. Some of the questions are also tagged with design-principles (274 questions, previous synonym-request, usage guidance "ideas that guide developers toward certain goals in software design.") which would seem to have a similar conclusion.
Which brings me to software-design with 1566 questions which, if it's on topic, would be a good synonym target for code-design. It was previously mentioned here with a comment suggesting burnination.
Its guidance:
the activity of deciding what ... [is] required in order to create an effective piece of software.
This is a key part of the Systems Development Life Cycle which is the primary context of Software Engineering Stack Exchange.
Proposal
At a minimum I would think code-design and design-principles should be synonyms for software-design.
More importantly, the tag wiki for these design-related tags should discourage (if not outright prohibit) their future use.
At the maximum, the tags should be removed and the off-topic/opinion-based questions closed.
Are the tags causing active harm?
The code-design tag has only been used 10 times in the last year. However, software-design and design-principles are actively attracting off-topic questions on a regular basis.
My evaluation of the burnination criteria, applied in general to all three of the above tags:
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
Broadly, it describes the context. However, it is so broad that it is ambiguous. It attracts opinion-based questions on ethics, preferences, starting from scratch, thesis advice, tool recommendations, and more.
Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
As cited above, "In general - no."
Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
No. On-topic questions would have to be related to a specific design principle, with code. "How do I apply the X design to this code" gains no information with a design-related tag.
Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
Broadly, yes. But the common context of code design/software design/design principles is not an appropriate context for questions on this site.
theory
(1671 questions) into the discussion as well. I actually like that tag (and the others) but don't like many of the questions there...burninate
means, so maybe that is the current suggestion.