I wondered if it makes sense to tag, for example, JavaScript, when you have a problem like "How can I change the Bresenham circle algorithm to get filled rings instead of circles with as few overlap as possible?" and you tried some things and used JavaScript for that. If you want to write a ring algorithm, it probably doesn't matter too much that you use JS instead of, let's say, Python. But it might be useful if the reader of the question has some JS knowledge so they can understand your example code. I just don't quite know - if you search for a JS question, do you expect any question that is somehow related to JS or do you more expect something like "What is truthy and what falsy in JS?" or "How can I set the class of an element with JS?", questions that are really related to the language?
For example, here on my question, I added the tag "processing" and I also wanted to add "assembly" but I could only have 5 tags. Should I do that? My problem wasn't really related to the coding structure of processing, it was about circle algorithms and I just wrote my code used to generate the circles in processing. I just tagged it because I didn't know what else to tag.
So I don't know if it's a good idea to tag languages in such a situation. Should you? Should there be a way to indicate a question about the coding structure of a language and not just somehow related to that language?
So in other words, should you use a language tag as a way to say "You need lots of knowledge on that language to answer my question" or more like a "There is an example for my algorithm in that language but I guess it doesn't matter if you don't know that language since it's totally obvious what it does"?
[language-agnostic]
(or no language tag) is still fine. You can present the algorithm as pseudo code as well, if you wish and say "and here it is implemented in X" if you want to showcase its working (JS has the benefit of snippet support) but not require an answer in the same language. Just please don't tag multiple unrelated languages.