Stack Overflow has a qa tag (with the synonym quality-assurance) with almost 1400 questions, out of which around 9% are closed.
From a quick look over the questions, there seems to be a bit of everything there - some good technical questions about frameworks and tools used for software testing (like Selenium or Cypress), some overly broad "how can I test XYZ" questions and even some questions about manual testing.
The technical questions should be considered on their own merit, and don't seem to gain anything from having the qa tag applied to them. At the end of the day, using Selenium to get the value of an element is a programming question, whether you're a software engineer, a QA engineer or a sparkly unicorn. Lumping these questions together under a single tag doesn't seem to serve any purpose.
As for the off-topic questions - they should be closed (and possibly deleted). Having such a tag may only encourage new users who aren't familiar with SO to think that they may be legitimate questions here.
To make a long story short - can we burninate the qa tag and its quality-assurance synonym?
EDIT #1:
Following up on Braiam's comment regarding the close rate for this tag, Oleg Valter created an SEDE query. The query shows that more than 44% of the questions with this tag were deleted. If we take the deleted questions into account, almost 29% of them have been closed. IMHO, these numbers further support the case for removing this tag.
EDIT #2:
Following up on Oleg Valter's comment:
For the general audience: the most important part to discuss is if there are valid questions tagged qa but for which no other more specific tag applies (i.e. testing framework/methodology-specific)
I've created an SEDE query for the question that have only the qa tag. At the point of writing this text, there are only 29 such questions, 14 of which are already closed.
I've gone over all the open questions, retagged two, and voted to close the others. In other words, I see no valid questions that have only the qa tag.
EDIT #3:
As suggested, an analysis of the preliminary tests:
- Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
qa does not describe the contents of the question - it describes, it very vague terms, why the question is asked ("in order to test a piece of software"). It does not, however, describe the content of the question - the question may be about testing some HTTP-based API, some desktop GUI, a library in Rust or what have you. All of these are valid scenarios to test ("to perform qa on"), but all are wildly different. The presence of the qa tag does nothing to inform the reader on the content of the post. An extension of this notion is that searching by it (or excluding it) will also not yield any meaningful result. - Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
Probably not. The tag defines qa as "Quality assurance, or QA for short, is the systematic monitoring and evaluation of the various aspects of a project, service or facility to maximize the probability that minimum standards of quality are being attained by the production process". Generally speaking, I believe it's agreed that Stack Overflow focuses on the technical areas of how some task is achieved or problem solved, not the processes around them, which are probably better suited for https://softwareengineering.stackexchange.com/ - Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
Again, I believe it doesn't. As suggested in the linked MSE post, a good test is whether this tag is superfluous in most (or at least many) cases. Most of the on-topic questions with this tag, are about a specific technical issue (e.g., "How do I use Selenium to check XYZ"). For those type of questions, the tag is superfluous - the question is technical, and the reason some technology is used to achieve some goal is inconsequential. - Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
Not really. As noted above, qa can mean a wide array of practices, from writing code to interface with a system, manually clicking on buttons and observing the responses, or even "humanly" evaluating if a certain flow is intuitive to a new user or not.