My general rule of thumb is if the first result when you Google the tag name is what the tag describes and the excerpt adds no other useful information (usage guidance), then the excerpt isn't actually doing anything of use
Somewhat similar to the circular tag definition reject reason
That said, as long as you're not approving plagiarism you're at least safe from my flags :p
@DanielWiddis Honestly, I'm in agreement with you here. I see "stm32h7" and have no idea what the heck that means. If a tag excerpt would be fine with "Use this tag for questions about...", it's useful in my book. But clearly that's not how the system is designed based on that reject reason...I usually skip those.
But honestly I'd rather that reject reason go away.
@DanielWiddis Actually... Yeah, what @RyanM said. It's better to have some description there than nothing. Yes, someone could Google it, but they may not.
However, I think the rejection reason in general is good, appropriate in many cases, and I definitely don't want to get rid of it.
But, in this case, that is an adequate tag wiki.
It could be made better, of course, which I've now done.
@CodyGray My problem is that I struggle to imagine when a filled-out tag wiki would be worse than nothing. I think the larger issue is that a lot of tag wikis with definitions are...very poor definitions. Like "$software is an easy-to-use solution to solve $problem, preferred by 50 of the Fortune 500" or whatever
@RyanM "My problem is that I struggle to imagine when a filled-out tag wiki would be worse than nothing." That was my general thought. I considered either "approve" or "reject and edit" to be the only realistic options. Not a big deal, though. I do hope someone comes along and adds a proper summary there, though.
I think we (SO in the whole) have no real idea why we want tags and how they should be used, and have stopped short a few times of writing a long screed on Meta of how we should scrap the whole system.
@DanielWiddis I've also found that having something there gives people who use the tag a starting point. Someone who uses the tag notices the excerpt and goes "huh? no it should say..." Which prompts improvement, where nothing often stays nothing.
Usage guidance is still preferred, but I agree that when the usage guidance is simply "for programming questions about...", then it's reasonable to omit it.
Honestly, I would prefer that the system just added that implicitly, rather than having to put it in every freaking tag wiki excerpt. But, since it doesn't, I add it myself to each one.
@DanielWiddis I realize you jest, but that won't do... Most of our tags don't necessarily mean what the most popular definition is.
That's why some sort of definition is useful. Especially in the case of these libraries (ever popular with the Python and JS folks) that are named with some common noun.
bash Use this tag for questions about destroying office equipment when annoyed at your employer's restructuring plans. Also, you must use the tps-report tag with this.