I'm no definitive source on this, but I'm gonna throw my hat into the "no" camp.
The 4 tests of deciding burnination:
- Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
- Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
- Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
- Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
Unambiguity
The entire tag wiki reads:
nice is a program found on Unix and Unix-like operating systems such as Linux.
It directly maps to a kernel call of the same name. nice is used to invoke a utility or shell script with a particular priority, thus giving the process more or less CPU time than other processes. A niceness of −20 is the highest priority and 19 or 20 is the lowest priority. The default niceness for processes is inherited from its parent process, usually 0.
Source: Wikipedia
For questions about the Nice programming language, use nice-language.
The tag clearly applies to a very specific context and usage. It also specifically differentiates itself from another usage, directing users to a separate tag to maintain clarity and consistency.
On-Topic-ness
A question regarding a specific call in Unix most certainly does not fall outside the bounds of on-topic on SO. If presented in an otherwise well structured question regarding "a specific programming problem" or similar, it would definitely be on-topic here.
Meaningful Addition
If a question revolves around a specific call, whether about how it works, using it in a given context, or otherwise, then I can definitely see this tag having value attached to a question. If I happened to be an expert with this call, then searching for questions using this tag could very well be useful.
Meaning in Common Contexts
I was not familiar with this call prior to this post, so this is the one test that could be suspect. However, I'm also not aware of a lot of competing uses or contexts for "nice" in programming either, leading me to believe that there isn't a lot of confusion here.
Final Thoughts - Does it Cause Harm?
In the burnination FAQ post, the most significant criterion trumps and guides the previous:
...the ultimate criterion for burnination is whether the tag is actually causing harm
There are only 90 total questions using this tag as of this moment, and the majority of them (as far as I can personally tell) are about, or at least make use of, the call described by the tag wiki. There's certainly a swath of the usual low-quality posts with few details and few tags that fall through the cracks in here too, but I don't believe that's specific to or a fault of this tag.
All that said, I think this seems like a poor candidate for burnination, and not worth the resources required to do so.
nice
rather than just using it incidentally, so the tag makes perfect sense there.print
function in python, should I tag it as print?print
if it's specifically important to the question at hand. I think the same logic applies here tonice
too. The tag has a specific meaning in it's intended context, and I'm not aware of a large swath of off topic uses calling their questions "nice".