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I was reading "How do I format my posts using Markdown or HTML?" and saw a section on tags. It said:

To talk about a tag on this site, , use

See the many questions tagged [tag:elephants] to learn more.

The tag will automatically be linked to the corresponding tag info page."

Why did they choose "elephant"?

As far as I know, that is not even a tag, and there is nothing on any websites related to Stack Overflow that talk about elephants.

I know it isn't a big deal, but it just seems off.

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    That brings me back. A while back I was writing some tests which checked if the security setup was correct, testing response codes from URLs and such. So I added tests where a non-existent user was used, and named that user "FLAARP". Because that user is definitely not going to exist. I got a review comment. "What is FLAARP?". Although I did do a facepalm because you really have to be reviewing without understanding what is going on, still lesson learned: don't use random garbage names. I changed it to "DefinitelyWrongUserName".
    – Gimby
    Commented Mar 21 at 9:58
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    Do you have the slightest idea how offensive "flaarp" is in Common Katari? Consider yourself lucky you didn't get cancelled. Commented Mar 21 at 18:25
  • @user4581301 oof, didn't think about that. Even more reason not to use random names. You just get yourself into trouble that way. Always stay on topic.
    – Gimby
    Commented Mar 22 at 9:33

1 Answer 1

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It is an illustrative example. It is supposed to illustrate.

Arguably, linking to an existing tag would be more distracting to the purpose of the example.

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  • Not convinced: "Arguably, linking to an existing tag would be more distracting to the purpose of the example." I also remember finding this Section on that Help-Page completely confusing and finding the example on the contrary completely distracting, rather than using a real high-volume Tag like js/php/perl/whatever... // For Syntax Highliting, they do use ```lang-js as example and not stg like ```lang-elephant-squeak...!?
    – chivracq
    Commented Mar 20 at 20:55
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    There aren't syntax highlighting rules for the language elephant squeak. Thus there would not be a very useful illustrative example. As it won't illustrate anything.
    – VLAZ
    Commented Mar 20 at 21:03
  • Yep, that's the point, like-this and elephants are also fake Tags...
    – chivracq
    Commented Mar 20 at 21:05
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    But [tag:elephants] does illustrate what how the tag formatting works regardless whether or not the tag exists.
    – VLAZ
    Commented Mar 20 at 21:07
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    I do note that these help-pages are the same across all sites, even Stack Apps has elephants: stackapps.com/help/formatting. Moderators can't edit these pages, so we can't replace them with an existing tag. On the other hand: Why wouldn't we just create the tag? There are enough elephants in the room ...
    – rene
    Commented Mar 20 at 21:43
  • "But elephants does illustrate what how the tag formatting works regardless...": Beh no, that was the reason I reacted to your Answer, an example in some Help-Section calling more questions than explaining stg is not a very good example... I had understood it (2 or 3 years ago) only because I already had 20-30 Answers on 'SO' (and struggled often enough with Formatting), I can now 3 years later completely understand that some fairly new User could find that Section rather confusing and buggy... (But that was my mini-Feedback, I was not looking for a complete 'Discussion'...)
    – chivracq
    Commented Mar 20 at 23:05
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