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Welcome to the staging ground for new communities! Each proposal has a description in the "Descriptions" category and a body of questions and answers in "Incubator Q&A". You can ask questions (and get answers, we hope!) right away, and start new proposals.

Are you here to participate in a specific proposal? Click on the proposal tag (with the dark outline) to see only posts about that proposal and not all of the others that are in progress. Tags are at the bottom of each post.

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Meta How many tags should incubator Q/A questions get?

I think it is useful to add in tags that the question might actually have on the community when launched. It makes a more realistic "sandbox", which means that we start to figure out how we want t...

posted 1y ago by Moshi‭

Answer
#1: Initial revision by user avatar Moshi‭ · 2023-06-13T08:28:15Z (over 1 year ago)
I think it is useful to add in tags that the question might actually have on the community when launched.

It makes a more realistic "sandbox", which means that we start to figure out how we want to organize tags, and what tags we find useful and not for the proposed community. For instance, Software has gone through [numerous tag refinements and discussions](https://software.codidact.com/categories/39/tags/3327) ([example](https://software.codidact.com/posts/287635), [example](https://software.codidact.com/posts/278791)). Or on Linguistics, we discussed [whether we want to have topic tags](https://languages.codidact.com/posts/279453).

As more questions come in, tagging will also provide an in-direct measure of scope. While written on-topic advice is always helpful, *having a tag for the topic* gives users a tangible scope to work with. And if the tag is unclear, then that's another point in favor of refining either the tag or the scope.

Tagging could even potentially lead to realizing that hey, this tag might actually work as an entire category on the new site! Such as for [the Gaming proposal](https://meta.codidact.com/posts/282240), which encompassed both design/development and strategies. We might use tags to differentiate questions on each topic and find that they are disjoint to the point we might want categories for them. Or we might find some questions that are tagged as both, and reconsider. By tagging early, we can start to address these issues from before the community gets a full launch.