As far as I know MS dropped the year flavored numbering for SSMS when it was no longer bundled with SQL Server. SQL Server had a 2016 version, but SSMS broke away into being just v16. I think a lot of people carried on calling it SSMS 2016 because of the coincident numbering with SQLS, but increasingly (and especially with v17) people started talking about it in terms of minor versions like v17.2 which helped split it away from year numbering. Calling it SSMS 2017 sort of lingered on a little because of the 2017 / v17 coincidence
I see we have a tag ssms-2018 but to my knowledge there has never been any SSMS related to 2018 - it's SSMS v18 and is related to SQL Server 2019, but it doesn't carry the year as a version indicator. I think this ssms-2018 tag was probably created in error by confusion with v18 (which was released in 2019, btw)
I think ssms-2018 tags on questions should be replaced with ssms-18 and the ssms-2018 tag should be deleted. A similar thing should happen for ssms-2017. It would perhaps make sense to make ssms-2016 and ssms-16 synonymous because it was the transitional point in people's minds (even though the actual transition was 2014->16) but I'm unsure whether ssms-2017 should be a synonym of ssms-17 or whether ssms-2017 should be flagged as "use ssms-17 instead"..
Any thoughts?
productnamehere-yearofrelease -> productnamehere-version
all over the place for MS.. and what when a product has a major update mid way through a year?) All in, i think we've enough isssues managing tags for things that do exist without creating more for things that don't/wouldn't if people just operated with a modicum of precision/looked in help-about before they post...