A recent meta post drew my attention to the composable tag. There are 171 questions, but no usage guidance whatsoever.
I think this is a straightforward candidate for burnination, per the usual criteria:
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
No. In a generic computer science sense, "composable" means something like "permitted to be a component of something that has components, such as a(n instance of a) product type or record type". But that's the default expectation for anything that could be called an object.
It seems like this tag is being applied to questions about frameworks that use some kind of decorator named "composable"; but there are multiple such frameworks apparently for different languages (at least JavaScript and Kotlin, it appears). It's not evident to me that these tools do fundamentally the same thing in each such language, or how to describe that thing.
Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
No; it doesn't describe a concept clearly enough in the first place to judge the topicality of that concept.
Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
Certainly not. It's not clear what the frameworks mentioned above do without knowing that particular framework; but then one is an expert in the framework, not in things that are "composable".
Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
No (already explained).
This tag also causes clear potential harm to the site: several of these questions end up with a full set of five tags but no programming language tag, and it seems likely to attract mis-tagged questions that are about the general computer-science technique of composition and how to apply it - i.e., the composition tag.