The reference-request tag is currently described as: “this tag is used if a reference is needed in a paper or textbook on a specific result.”
I have found current usage of this tag too broad to be meaningful (and therefore liked François Dorais’s question about tag issues). In particular,
- if this tag applies to any post that says “references welcome”…
- if this tag applies whenever someone does not know if good references exist…
- if this tag applies to any question which might be well answered by an existing reference…
then it applies to almost all questions, and is not useful. Nonetheless the tag is often used for these reasons.
I propose to redefine this tag more specifically about requests for references as opposed to requests for mathematical results:
Requests for references on results which are already known to the person asking the question, e.g.:
- results which have been used elsewhere without comment,
- results which seem like simpler variants of results elsewhere,
- results which you have proved and suspect have been proved elsewhere.
Would other people here want to describe the tag like this? And if so, how might we remove the incompatible prior uses of the tag? Or would others have comments in favor of the current description, or other proposals?
reference-request
tag in my question here: mathoverflow.net/q/431216/148766 was inappropriate? Link for context, but basically I'm asking a question and also asking if there's any good expository readings related to my question, since I couldn't find any in google. My hope is that I can get an answer to my immediate question plus some grad-student level resources -- motivated by the "teach me how to fish" adage :) Was this an incorrect use of the tag? $\endgroup$looking-for-a-reference
, or perhaps something narrower likeliterature-reference-request
? Both of these would, I think, rule out the "looking for a proof but a reference is fine" interpretation. $\endgroup$