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Recently, I had a question related to Google Chat API. When I created that question I chose and for the tag.

After that, someone commented on my question, and he advice me to ask a Google Chat support expert. So I visited that link, but unfortunately no support information for the google chat. They are only for other services if using the link that was given by the commentator. But I searched online and found https://developers.google.com/chat/support .

In that link, Google itself recommend us to ask on Stack Overflow using tag. That makes me confused. Google Hangouts was renamed to Google Chat, right? Why still use the "hangouts-chat" term?

There are also other similar tags, , , and

Should we merge all of these tags?

Since Google Hangouts is upgraded to Google Chat, I think we should move all Google Hangouts tags to the Google Chat tag. And also maybe ask Google itself to change the tag on the chat support page?

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  • "Google Hangouts was renamed to Google Chat, right" - Not exactly. There was the old chat functionality that existed inside the old Google Hangouts, and now there is Google Chat. The old platform appears to have breathed it's last on January 1, 2023. They co-existed for a while though.
    – 9072997
    Feb 24 at 14:34

1 Answer 1

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This is in progress. I still need some feedback before proceeding any further.

What I have done so far:

  1. I've merged and into after confirming that they did indeed refer to the same thing. (This cannot be undone)
  2. I've created a synonym from to . I have not merged these tags; I do not know if there is some meaningful difference between the API for hangouts and the hangouts product itself. I would assume the answer is "no," but I wanted to give some more time for someone to raise an objection.
  3. I've created a synonym from to , but have not merged for the same reasons as and .

(The synonyms can be undone if needed)


I have not merged or synonymised and tags. Since a merge is something that cannot be undone, I want to give some more time for input either in favour of merging or arguments against it.

I can certainly see a valid argument that keeping the historical/deprecated Hangouts tags separate from the modern Google Chat API tags makes it easier for researchers to discover the modern solutions and exclude those that are deprecated. As an example, searches like [google-chat] -[google-hangouts] are possible as long as the tags remain separate, but would become impossible if the tags were synonymised/merged.

Having said that, I have almost no knowledge of the topic and do not know anything about how much overlap there is between the technologies to determine if the distinction is helpful or not in practice. Considering how frequently all of these tags appeared on the same questions [google-hangouts] [google-chat], I'm not sure how useful the distinction is currently but, if needed and with some disambiguation, we could probably get to a reasonable state.

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  • "As a note, I cannot create a synonym..." Sure you can. Create the synonym in the direction that the system forces you to create it, based on the number of questions, and then "swap" it on the Tag Synonyms page.
    – Cody Gray Mod
    Feb 22 at 7:57
  • @CodyGray I've had trouble with that myself. Swapping works, but it's like the system doesn't respect it. Tried waiting out the caches, but didn't work Feb 22 at 9:36
  • Are you sure they're synonymous? Hangouts used to include video right? But then that got moved to the Meet branding. So, there might be older google-hangouts questions about video that shouldn't be merged. Feb 24 at 3:29
  • @SteveBennett are you suggesting having a separate google-hangouts-video and google-hangouts-chat tags? That distinction did not exist in the previously existing tags. The previous tags google-hangouts and hangout did refer to all of chat, video, and API in actual use.
    – Henry Ecker Mod
    Feb 24 at 3:47
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    Though I would agree that hangouts-chat is perhaps an overly specific name and that google-hangouts would probably be a better for the entire group of tags as it refers more to the product than the feature. That'd be an easy change to make if that's a better name.
    – Henry Ecker Mod
    Feb 24 at 3:48

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