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It seems to me that is, at best, pointless; it could even be considered harmful. Here are my assessments of the formal burnination criteria:


Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? And is it unambiguous?
I would say it seldom (or even never) describes a question's content (though it may be relevant). Its terse tag-wiki offers some disambiguation (i.e. it's about geometry rather than, say, a reward given in a game) but there is still a number of different scopes in which it can be used: a point in actual space, a point on a graph, etc.

Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
In my opinion: No, it isn't. The concept as described in the wiki would maybe work on Math.SE (or other sites) but it's not a core programming issue.

Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
Not really; there are (or could be) far better tags to use, which would serve both as better search targets and as more suitable 'fields' in which answerers could earn badges. On this issue, maybe also see the discussion about the points tag.

Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
Notwithstanding the disambiguation provided by the tag's wiki, a brief search through its newest posts reveals quite a variety of meanings.

  • Here it is about a language-specific data type.
  • Here it about the 1/72" unit used for font sizes.
  • Here it's about pointers. (OK - that one's a cheap stab at a usage mistake, but I thought I'd throw it in to the mix, anyway.)

As the tag currently as over 1,000 questions (1,782 at the time of posting), it is also customary to ask:

Is the tag causing a fairly large amount of harm?
I would answer: Yes - both potentially, by discouraging askers from using one or more better tags, and actually, by taking up the fifth tag slot, thus precluding a better tag - as here.

Another question that is often asked when considering tag burnination is, "Can one be an expert in this tag?" To answer this, I would like to quote the comment posted by Makyen♦, in a preliminary discussion we had in SOCVR, prior to my posting this:

Ok. Then, I think a pointed argument could be made that the tag really doesn't match the criteria for a tag. Can someone really be an expert on point? Well, yes, an expert can be on point, but that's not the point. sigh I guess we'll just have to go through it point-by-point.

So, other than serving as a ripe punning-target, does serve any purpose, or should we feed it to Trogdor?

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  • 8
    If the tag is specifically for geometry points then perhaps it would be better named geometry-point? Certainly it would make it less ambiguous. Though I agree that I don't really see the point in the tag.
    – Thom A
    Dec 10, 2020 at 10:36
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    Oh my goodness, this could be the question with the most terrible puns. Anyway, you are right, that tag has too many different meanings and is so generic that it doesn't make sense to keep. Just sayin', it only has 66 watchers, so as you can see, it's not a tag you would actually search for because it's weird and generic and who cares.
    – user14699696
    Dec 10, 2020 at 11:43
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    The harm part is a bit of a stretch imo. Every pointless tag possibly took the place of a better one, but honestly, there are very many bad tags to choose from. If it was actively causing confusion in some way, e.g. a significant portion of the questions that should be tagged pointer got tagged point, you'd have a stronger case. Questions rarely need the full 5 tags.
    – Erik A
    Dec 10, 2020 at 12:06
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    A point is a well defined geometric object. If we get rid of point, then we should also clean [line] (5.4k Qs), rectangles (1.2k questions, plural?), plane (0.3k Qs) and potentially do something with cube and cubes. Dec 10, 2020 at 12:25
  • 1
    @Trilarion I already had the [line] tag in my sights! I was waiting to see how this request went down, before tackling that (and the others you mention). Dec 10, 2020 at 12:27
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    @jps Get rid of [point] and you cannot have a [line]. Get rid of that and you cannot have any geometric shape. With those out, you just have an empty plane.
    – VLAZ
    Dec 10, 2020 at 14:22
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    @VLAZ I think your last point is out of line: please be more careful, or we could have a pundemic on our hands. Dec 10, 2020 at 14:57
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    Maybe the [point] of the [plane] tag is to easily [line] up aircraft software. Some of that really needs to be [square] in the [center] of the [path] to avoid anything being [folded] or [flattened].
    – Scratte
    Dec 10, 2020 at 16:06
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    But wait, now I get it, @Trilarion: If we don't have points, then we don't have lines, and that's a serious problem, because if we don't have lines, how should this be on-line?
    – user14699696
    Dec 10, 2020 at 16:07
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    I don't think it would be particularly on-topic for Math.SE either. There's really nothing that can be said about points themselves; they're always boring, but exist within some more-interesting context.
    – dfeuer
    Dec 10, 2020 at 20:09
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    There's no point to this tag. Let it burn as a navigational aid. Dec 11, 2020 at 2:25
  • 3
    Amazing. How much time wasted on meta-thinking instead producing something meaningful that matters. Tag no tag color no color font no font- Questions-Answer-Learn-Repeat
    – Joker
    Dec 11, 2020 at 9:33
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    @Scratte Why tags aren't clickable in your comment? That's one of the biggest disappointment of my week (year?)
    – Pac0
    Dec 11, 2020 at 16:23
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    You can make automatic quick-links to tags with [tag:name]. That works in posts and in comments. In posts, it will apply the actual tag formatting, but that doesn't happen in comments: they just turn into a bare link. So I like to insert the brackets to make them look a bit more like a tag: [[tag:name]]. This achieves the same effect of distinguishing tags from the running text, plus adds the link, without being nearly as annoying as the code formatting. Now you know and can do as I do. :-) (cc @Pac0 — glad you're having a great year) Dec 11, 2020 at 23:17
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    @Pac0: The canonical is Add data.SE style “magic links” to comments (slightly misleading title). The tags part is in sub section "Supported magic links in comments". Dec 12, 2020 at 19:53

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