run is absolutely useless. We should get rid of it.
3 Answers
There's no point in running...
I'll kill you eventually.
-
13If only answers could be tagged separately from questions; this one is just begging for [cat] + [kill]. :-) Commented Oct 22, 2014 at 21:22
-
We had a [murder] tag on Arqade back in the bad (good?) ol' days :-P– RobotnikCommented Oct 24, 2014 at 4:30
-
Here's why I think run is not necessarily a bad idea. Since the question didn't specify why run is a bad idea, I'm forced to speculate that it's because it's ambiguous. Here are some arguments for the tag:
- Many new
linux
users struggle with the execution of binaries. This ranges from the need tochmod
the files to prefixing./
. A user who doesn't know how to execute a binary isn't going to know that they should tag the question with, for example, chmod. - Executing a binary in
windows
is often not trivial. There can be a range of issues from compatability and missing libraries to permissions issues. Users might not always know what is causing the problem so expecting them to correctly tag the question with the specifics of the solution is unrealistic (If a user knew that the problem related to a compatability issue they'd have solved 80% of the problem in many cases).
As to why it is a bad idea; well it is ambiguous and run could mean just about anything. In this regard I don't think Gaurav's suggestion of a binary-execution tag is a bad one; it removes the ambiguity and lets users still tag the question when the specifics of the root cause are unknown to them.
Conclusion: I agree with the OP that the usefulness of run is limited. Let's replace it with something useful, like binary-execution.