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has no tag guidance or description, and has nearly 500 questions.

  1. Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?

    No. This "levels" can apply to many different things, and is very ambiguous.

  2. Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?

    No. Even if this is related to programming, it doesn't help much at all.

  3. Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?

    No.

  4. Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?

    No! It can be levels of a game, levels of a set etc., depending on how the OP views it as.

    Some questions don't even have anything to do with "levels", and are using the tag wrongly.

Let's burn these [levels] shall we?

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    There seem to be an awful lot of r questions. Maybe an SME in that area could take a look and see if there's any useful subgroup that could be disambiguated out from the other various meanings. I don't immediately see one, but it's also well outside my area of expertise.
    – Ryan M Mod
    Commented Nov 5, 2022 at 5:22
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    @RyanM good catch, see stackoverflow.com/a/46831313/13629335 Commented Nov 5, 2022 at 5:26
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    I think probably an [r-levels] tag is in order, and then the rest can go unless someone else finds another trend. Burnination can include retagging a subset. Alternately, we could remove everything except the [r-levels] ones and then just have a mod rename the tag.
    – Ryan M Mod
    Commented Nov 5, 2022 at 5:28
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    For [pandas] some seem to be borrowing the term from [r] which might make a [r-levels] tag overly specific if [pandas] is going to use it as well. There are others in [pandas] which seem to be dealing with index levels in a MultiIndex. In most of those cases this should be re-tagged [multi-index].
    – Henry Ecker Mod
    Commented Nov 9, 2022 at 0:00
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    @RyanM the "levels" referred to in R are less particular to the programming language as to the statistical concept of Design of experiments where different factors have different levels. Probably want to discuss the factors tag as well. Perhaps both could be merged into experimental-design? Commented Nov 9, 2022 at 6:26

1 Answer 1

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A brief scan of the first dozen questions indicates they nearly all refer to of in an . More detail here that I have spent way too many years of my life studying.

These are statistical concepts which aren't specifically programming-related, but it looks like questions tagged as such are in languages which focus on data science applications.

Certainly the tags themselves ought not to exist on their own; I initially thought to propose and as synonyms of , but then saw that is intended for integer factoring, and there's a separate tag which is supposed to be used. Which implies might be appropriate, but we need fewer tags, not more.

I still think merging a lot of things into is the right way to go.

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    I've got quite some R experience, and imo adding questions about levels to r-factors makes total sense (a level is always a property of a factor, r-levels sounds redundant) but merging them into experimental-design doesn't make sense at all (factors can be used for a variety of purposes, some of which are related to experimental design, but some aren't. For example, a factor can be a nice way to represent which categories should be present in a plot)
    – Erik A
    Commented Dec 9, 2022 at 9:21

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