CUE is "an open source language, with a rich set of APIs and tooling, for defining, generating, and validating all kinds of data" (to quote https://cuelang.org/). I asked a question about CUE a few weeks ago; yesterday I noticed that the tag cue that I had originally used has been replaced with cuelang. There are currently 4 questions with this tag. But since the name of the programming language is CUE, I think the tag should be cue as well? After all, we don't have golang, rustlang, phplang etc. etc., so why cuelang?
1 Answer
I did it in an attempt to disambiguate the cue tag before it's too late.
There were 39 questions with the tag,
- 4 of them were about cuelang,
- 7 of them were about cue-sheets,
- and 12 of them were about cue-points.
I retagged those. The rest were about stuff that don't warrant new tags, so I removed the tag from them.
In short, it's cuelang because cue is ambiguous.
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1Ok, thanks for the clarification! Makes sense, "Cue" is more ambiguous (not to mention less well-known) than "Go", "Rust", "PHP" etc.. Maybe they should have taken an example from the band R.E.M. and called it C.U.E. - after all the name stands for "Configure Unify Execute"...– rob74Oct 12, 2021 at 7:48
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14Shouldn't it be called
cue-lang
instead of cuelang? To be coherent with the existing nim-lang, crystal-lang or logo-lang (c.f. Zoe comment on the question).– mrBenOct 12, 2021 at 14:03 -
4I also agree with changing it to
cue-lang
, since it's a language, and the name of the language itself isn't "Cuelang". I did a quick peek at*lang
tags, and it looks like the tags which don't have a hyphen generally are actually named xlang, which isn't the case here.– zcoop98Oct 12, 2021 at 14:55 -
@rob74, the vast majority of acronyms don't have period separators. Laser, LED, modem, TWAIN, PHP, and probably millions more. So why would the makers of Cue even think about putting in periods? Just to disambiguate on SE? Not to mention that most people don't put the periods in REM when referencing the band, rather than the medical term with the same meaning. Oct 12, 2021 at 15:00
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cue
immediately sounds like a tag that's gonna be misused for anything involving the physical cue object, the abstract concept of a cue, as well as cue cards, etc. to avoid that, it's better if the cue language tag is called cuelang. There's also a couple examples of this in practice as well, including nim-lang, crystal-lang, and logo-lang