The ignore tag has the following wiki:
Many source control systems have an "ignore"-file mechanism that specifies files that should not be committed or tracked in version control.
The only guidance for when to use this tag is in this sentence:
For VCS-agnostic questions, such as whether certain types of files should be checked into source control, use this tag.
So the tag is supposed to be used similarly to the gitignore and svnignore tags, but for questions which aren't specific to git, svn or another specific version control system. But the tag is mostly not used for this:
- There are 993 questions tagged ignore.
- Of these, 158 are also tagged git plus another 9 that are tagged gitignore but not git.
- 101 are also tagged svn, plus another 3 that are tagged svnignore but not svn.
- Only 26 are also tagged version-control, and some of these are also tagged git or svn.
- The remaining questions are almost all about "ignoring" something else in some other context; usually they are questions about how to get part of some data and ignore the rest. Here are some representative examples:
- Get only numeric part from column data SQL - about "ignoring" non-numeric parts of strings.
- Laravel: method parameter bypass - about "ignoring" some parameters to a method.
- Reading coordinate file with ifstream while ignoring headers and writing to array - about "ignoring" some parts of a file that is being read.
As another data point, the tag only has 6 watchers.
Should the ignore tag be burninated? Here's my opinion.
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
No, the tag wiki does not accurately describe most of the questions to which the tag is applied, and the tag is used ambiguously for more than one meaning of the word "ignore".
Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
The concept of ignoring some files in a version control system is on-topic, but the generic concept of taking part of some data and "ignoring" the rest is too broad to be on-topic.
Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
For most questions it doesn't, because "ignoring" part of some data is too basic and generally a question along these lines is about how to get the part of the data you do want, not how to not get the parts you don't want. Of the smaller number of questions which use the tag correctly, most are about git or svn, so they could be retagged gitignore or svnignore.
Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
If the tag were used correctly (according to the tag wiki) then it might, but in reality the tag is not used to mean the same thing in all questions.
skip
) Tag is still there, ah-ah...! Then that doesn't "sound" good for getting rid of theignore
Tag then, I would think... (Just had a (VLQ) Thread/Qt in the Tag I answer yesterday (mis)using it, that's why I mentioned it...)ignore-git
is better thangitignore
, because if you typeignore
it would offer to complete intoignore-git
, but notgitignore
? The existence ofignore-git
would also reduce people addingignore
. Alternatively, rename toignore-source-control
and strip out the non-source-control ignore tagging.