I came across the tag mismatch today, which seems to not really be in line with normal tagging guidelines. Its usage guidance already implies it's ambiguous, which is normally a great early indicator it doesn't belong:
Mismatch refers to a failure to correspond or match. This can be ambiguous. More-specific tags such as type-mismatch or inputmismatchexception may be more appropriate.
The wiki goes on to give the Oxford Dictionary definition and then states again that it's ambiguous:
The Oxford Dictionary defines mismatch:
- (n) A bad match; a failure to correspond or match, a discrepancy.
- (v) To match (in various senses) badly, unsuitably, or incorrectly.
This term applies to computing in many senses that are consistent with the definition of the word, so as a tag it is ambiguous.
Where appropriate, a more specific tag should be used. For example:
I suggest that the tag be burninated.
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
Not really, no. A mismatch could be about anything such as a types, colours, values, behaviour, etc. It's ambiguous and the tag's own content agrees.
Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
On its own, no. A type mismatch error would be on topic (though that has its own tags), but it could be used in many contexts where the subject matter isn't about programming.
Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
No, as it's ambiguous and could be off-topic.
Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
No, because anything could mismatch, and how those are handled can be wildly different.