I recently made some updates to the c# tag wiki, and discovered that a lot of the resources are stale, if not out-of-date. For example, Sean Sexton's 2,000 Things You Should Know About C# blog hasn't been updated in seven years. This is especially notable in the books section, where new editions have been appended, not replaced, and some relate to previous versions of the language:
Books
- Head First C# (3rd Edition, 4th Edition)
- The C# Programming Language (3rd Edition, 4th Edition)
- Framework Design Guidelines (2nd Edition, 3rd Edition)
- Essential C# (6.0 (5th Edition), 7.0 (6th Edition), 8.0 (7th Edition))
I should note that I've contributed to this practice myself, in my recent edit, since I wanted to maintain consistency with the status quo (see Chesterton's Fence).
Question
I know we have editorial guidelines for writing a tag wiki. But do we have any established thresholds for when resources should be removed? Acknowledging that some books remain relevant for years (e.g., those related to software architecture), while others are much more time-limited (e.g., those that are version specific).
Notes
While I'm using c# as an example, ideally this would apply to any tag. That said, I browsed the top 20 tags, and most seem much better maintained. I'm happy to cleanup the c# tag, but I wanted to check with the community before bulk removing old blogs and book editions. I'll leave my proposal as an answer, so it can be voted on independently of the broader question.