Previously on Meta: .NET 5.0 and ASP.NET Core 5.0 tags.
The tl;dr is that going forward, Microsoft has decreed that ".NET Core" shall be called simply ".NET" to indicate it is the future path of that ecosystem. What was previously called ".NET" will be renamed to ".NET Framework" to reflect that Framework is a discrete and legacy product.
This creates a problem around the various .NET tags on Stack Overflow - for example, the .net tag with over 300,000 questions has existed forever and is currently used to refer to the .NET ecosystem as a whole, not the new hotness.
I propose the following as a possible way to sort out this mess:
- Un-synonymize .net and .net-framework so that the former is left with all 307k questions, while the latter is empty.
- Rename .net to .net-platform; this will encompass the .NET ecosystem as a whole (.NET, .NET Core, .NET Framework). Update tag description to this effect. (This will also ensure that everyone who is currently watching .net will now be watching .net-platform instead.)
- Create a new .net that's only to be used for questions relating to the current and future versions of .NET (i.e. 5, 6, and whatever comes next). Add usage guidance to this effect.
- Add usage guidance to .net-core to indicate it should be used only when the question applies to .NET Core 1.x, 2.x, 3.x.
- Add usage guidance to .net-framework to indicate it should be used only when the question applies to a version of the .NET Framework.
- Add related tags to .net-platform: .net, .net-core, .net-framework.
- Apply these tags sanely going forward.
Unless I've grossly misunderstood something and/or the Stack Overflow platform doesn't support the above, the only downside will be that browser history and bookmarks that currently point to the .NET ecosystem will now point to "new" .NET. Not a biggie, in my books.
.net
tag to talk about .NET 5, when currently the tag is only intended to .NET Framework..net
to talk about anything related to various versions of the frameworks, so I'd agree with everything except .net-platform for the generic platform, that seems like an unrealistic dream..net
was, is and will remain worthless anyway; you can do with it what you like as long as you don't make the mistake of thinking it's successfully going to refer to anything specific. In particular not .NET Coreframework/Frameworkcore 5+.