I'll play devil's advocate here.  Though clearly this is not a popular tag, these are some examples of ways in which it could be useful (mostly copied from comments on the linked discussion).  Possible uses of the language-identification tag:

 - I have inherited a code base to maintain, with little to no support--what OTS do I need to install to get this working?
 - What technology do I need to learn to understand this system? (E.g.: some mysterious includes in an HTML page).
 - I failed a computer-related certification test and need to know what to study to pass next time. (This example in question was a business education certification test, in which my wife was surprised to find computer code on the test, and I was like "well, what language was it?" and she was like "how should I know?")

All of these are real-world examples experienced by me, coworkers, or my wife.

> Okay, so, given that you just inherited a code base, how do you expect
> to find this SO question with it's similar code in the same language?
> How do you know that it's the same language and not a similar, but
> slightly different language?

*(Props to [@Servy][1] for the counter-point comment)*

Context or a larger snippet would definitely help. Sure, this may never be a slam-dunk, and you're right, trial-and-error (in the inherited code base example) may be the only way to figure it out for sure. But other than pulling your hair out or giving up in frustration, relevant content somewhere on the internet beats no content anywhere, and something like Symbolhound might get you close (And thanks [@Thomas Yates][2] for figuring out in the discussion that `"{% extends "_layouts/default" %}" site:stackoverflow.com` in Google easily found the SO question under discussion [...now deleted]).

Is SO the place for such content to find a home? Well, I guess that's we're trying to figure out.


  [1]: https://meta.stackoverflow.com/users/1159478/servy
  [2]: https://meta.stackoverflow.com/users/5557841/thomas-yates