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The tag on Stack Overflow has 414 questions at the time of posting, but the topics it seems to cover vary wildly.

There are questions about regex modifiers, Android Jetpack Compose, Swift, Java, C#, JavaScript, the list goes on...

This is because the term "modifier" is very general. It can be applied to problems in all kinds of topics; as such, the tag adds pretty much zero meaning to any post with it.


Going through the Burnination criteria:

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

A question can be about some kind of modifier, but this tag does nothing to describe what kind of modifier is in question and is 100% ambiguous.

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

One could argue that the term "modifier" can be on topic in pretty much any field, and therefore is less on-topic here. (Not sure this is the greatest justification)

Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?

No—as stated above, "modifier" can be applied to a variety of topics, so it doesn't help explain what the question is about.

Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?

No.

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  • Disagree, as long as its not the ONLY tag, it helps refine what the question is about. Pairing it with, say, regex, indicates that a regex modifier is relevant.
    – Paulie_D
    Jun 3 at 16:55
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    @Paulie_D: "Pairing it with, say, regex, indicates that a regex modifier is relevant." - Tags are not just words which could be joined into a phrase. A tag is expected to reflect a concept, which is common among all questions to which that tag is applied. Such concept could have some properties, which varies between different languages, frameworks, libraries, but in all of those applications the core of the concept should be the same. I don't see any common concept in questions about regex modifiers and, say, final modifier in Java.
    – Tsyvarev
    Jun 3 at 19:43
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    It should be burninated, but largely by retagging where a relevant tag exists or should exist. For example, perhaps Jetpack Compose modifiers should have their own tag (disclosure: I worked on Jetpack Compose; just using it as an example since I'm familiar with the concepts).
    – Ryan M Mod
    Jun 4 at 1:20
  • Nobody could be expected to be an expert in modifier questions. It's a good candidate for removal. Jun 10 at 14:21

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