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The tag doesn't seem to quite fit the four requirements for deletion:

  1. Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous? yes it applies, but ambiguously
  2. Is the concept described even on-topic for the site? yes, I believe [git] is on topic
  3. Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post? no, I don't think so
  4. Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts? no it's ambiguous, but it could just be [git]

personally I don't see adding anything that doesn't already give you

from its wiki:

This is a generalized tag for git commands such as git diff, git merge, git commit etc.

there are 128 questions tagged , of those 122 are tagged (6 are missing [git])

I don't think a synonym is quite appropriate here. My proposal is to retag those 6 missing and remove

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  • The git-commands tag appears to have been burned before, although I cannot find a meta discussion for it. A related, but more general, question discusses all of the then-current "git" related tags. Oct 24, 2020 at 4:08
  • "personally I don't see git-commands adding anything that git doesn't already give you" - Well, you could argue that it makes a distinction between editing the .gitconfig file or installing git and such, and things that actually requires git commands. But I agree. It does not add much.
    – klutt
    Oct 24, 2020 at 6:55

1 Answer 1

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personally I don't see adding anything that doesn't already give you

Agreed; the tag was a useless, pseudo-synonym of . It is now a real synonym of . All questions that were previously tagged have been merged into the questions tagged .

Here are those 6 questions you mentioned that originally had the tag without the tag:

All clearly needed the tag, and none benefitted in any way from a unique tag.

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