There is no such standard text or consensus that I am aware of. Maybe because generally speaking, such text is redundant and doesn't need to be part of a tag's usage guidance. I mean, the first sentence of [the tour](https://stackoverflow.com/tour) is:

> Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers

If you're here it's because you want to ask (or answer) something about programming. Further clarification in tags *shouldn't* be necessary. 

Of course, off-topic questions are still going to be asked. That's why we have a specific close reason for general computing, and even one for networking. But honestly, if someone posts a question on Stack Overflow that is *not* even about programming, I really doubt that a warning in a tag description is going to change anything. 

But if you really feel that a tag is being constantly misused and such text *might* somehow help, I would say that any kind of phrase like these in a tag guidance is acceptable:
- *"For programming questions about ..."*
- *"... general use questions are off-topic ..."*
- If there is a relevant Stack Exchange site, something like *"For non-programming questions see site.se"*, like [tag:android] does.

But again - the very need of those phrases is a [red herring](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_herring). Instead, before adding such phrase to a tag guidance, consider if it could maybe benefit more from a disambiguation, a rename, or maybe even a burnination if the majority of questions are simply off-topic.