Despite the similarities, it would be incorrect to assume that followers of an itertools
tag would be interested in following all of the Python package, the Rust crate, not to mention whichever library comes around for a different technology. Not to mention that a subject matter expert of one kind of itertools will definitely not make that user an expert in the other.
While it is true that the itertools
Rust crate emerged many years later, possibly inspired by itertools
Python package, they differ enough to be tracked independently in the site's tag system.
Merging both libraries here was a mistake. I have already proposed to resolve this with a tag edit.
With that said, at the time of writing there are:
- 2,954 questions in total tagged itertools
- 15 questions tagged both itertools and rust.
- 210 questions tagged itertools with neither python nor rust, but they are mostly Python questions which do not have the python tag.
- only 1 question happens to have the three (itertools, python, rust), where the asker probably means the Python package and one of the answers happens to use the
itertools
crate.
Moving forward, I believe that the best course of action is edit all Rust questions to remove itertools and possibly add a rust-itertools tag. We should also turn itertools into a synonym of python-itertools, thus helping break this ambiguity.