There are currently just over 1,000 questions tagged with tail. This tag is, IMHO, both (extremely) ambiguous and (mostly) unnecessary. Should we remove it?
Assessment of the formal burnination criteria:
1. Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? And is it unambiguous?
Even the tag Wiki (and excerpt) offer two different meanings (part of a linked-list and a Unix/Linux file-system command), and many of the questions using it refer to completely different things, such as a type (brand?) of USB device. So: No, it is not unambiguous.
2. Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
That depends on which of the concepts you consider. Unix/Linux commands are arguably off-topic, as are questions about specific device types.
3. Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
I would argue that, in the potentially valid use-case (i.e., as part of a linked-list), the tag is irrelevant and serves no real purpose in terms of clarification of the question or when searching for help.
4. Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
Most certainly not! In addition to the uses already mentioned, it also appears on a number of questions about the Python/Pandas .tail()
function.
So, should we remove the tag, or possibly (somehow) disambiguate it and/or its usage guidelines?
tail
off"tail-recursion
tag.[tail][recursion]
can be simply retagged to[tail-recursion]
, but that's just down 32 questions. lot and lots more to gotail
in bash or csh or ksh. As such I think it might add useful information to a scripting question. Maybe we need a tail-command for legit scripting use cases?[unix-head]
tag that would be appropriate for disambiguating the command in your other question. There is not a corresponding[unix-tail]
tag, however.