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The way tags have been traditionally used on other sites (including this meta) is to have a hyphen:

for questions about the Apple II

for questions about the Apple IIgs

for questions about Apple, the company (not sure if on-topic)

This allows searching for tags in a clear manner, with wildcards. For example this search for [apple-*]this search for [apple-*] looks for all apple products. If we used , as suggested in another answer, the corresponding search would be for [apple*] which would include but also , , etc.

See also , , etc. for more examples on this standard.

The way tags have been traditionally used on other sites (including this meta) is to have a hyphen:

for questions about the Apple II

for questions about the Apple IIgs

for questions about Apple, the company (not sure if on-topic)

This allows searching for tags in a clear manner, with wildcards. For example this search for [apple-*] looks for all apple products. If we used , as suggested in another answer, the corresponding search would be for [apple*] which would include but also , , etc.

See also , , etc. for more examples on this standard.

The way tags have been traditionally used on other sites (including this meta) is to have a hyphen:

for questions about the Apple II

for questions about the Apple IIgs

for questions about Apple, the company (not sure if on-topic)

This allows searching for tags in a clear manner, with wildcards. For example this search for [apple-*] looks for all apple products. If we used , as suggested in another answer, the corresponding search would be for [apple*] which would include but also , , etc.

See also , , etc. for more examples on this standard.

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Sklivvz
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The way tags have been traditionally used on other sites (including this meta) is to have a hyphen:

for questions about the Apple II

for questions about the Apple IIgs

for questions about Apple, the company (not sure if on-topic)

This allows searching for tags in a clear manner, with wildcards. For example this search for [apple-*] looks for all apple products. If we used , as suggested in another answer, the corresponding search would be for [apple*] which would include but also , , etc.

See also , , etc. for more examples on this standard.