Misplaced Pages

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Overview of the guidelines, requirements, suggestions for the newbie editor "WP:1ST" and "WP:FIRST" redirect here. For other uses, see Misplaced Pages:1st (disambiguation). Writing an article Learn how you can create a Misplaced Pages article.


This page in a nutshell: Shortcuts
New here?

Creating an article is one of the more difficult tasks on Misplaced Pages, and you'll have a higher chance of success if you help out with other tasks first to learn more about how Misplaced Pages works. You can always come back to create an article later; there is no rush!

Article creation
Introductory
Suggested articles
Concepts and guidelines
Development processes
Meta tools and groups

Welcome to Misplaced Pages! Creating a new article is one of many ways to contribute to the encyclopedia, but can be difficult for new editors. Please take the time to read through this guide. Also consider looking at our introductory tutorials or contributing to Misplaced Pages to learn the basics about editing. Working on existing articles is a great way to learn Misplaced Pages's protocols and style conventions; see the Task Center or your homepage for articles that need your assistance and tasks you can help out with.

Once you are familiar with the basics of Misplaced Pages editing, this page will guide you through the process of creating your first article! Specifically, you will learn how to:

  • Determine whether Misplaced Pages should have a new article on the given subject
  • Identify and use reliable sources to support assertions in the article
  • Create a draft of the article
  • Submit the draft for publication into the encyclopedia itself

The basics

Further information: Misplaced Pages:Simplified ruleset, Misplaced Pages:Reliable sources, Misplaced Pages:Verifiability, Misplaced Pages:Citing sources, and Help:Find sources

All new articles start by researching a topic using high-quality, published sources. Even an expert on a topic cannot directly use their knowledge; published sources are needed. High-quality sources include books by reputable publishers, respected newspapers, peer-reviewed scientific and academic journals, and other sources with a reputation for fact-checking and accuracy. This may include some high-quality websites, but excludes personal and company websites, blogs, social media, and any site where the public can contribute, like forums and even Misplaced Pages itself.

We summarize such high-quality, published sources in Misplaced Pages articles. That is all we do! Please make sure that everything you write on Misplaced Pages is based on such sources, and be sure to include inline citations along with the content you write. While primary sources can be used, they should be used sparingly and carefully, usually only to support basic facts. Primary sources do not contribute to establishing notability.

Before you start writing

Are you connected to the article topic?

Further information: Misplaced Pages:Plain and simple conflict of interest guide and Misplaced Pages:Paid-contribution disclosure

If you have a personal or professional relationship with what you want to write about, it is best if you do not create the new article yourself. Editing with a conflict of interest, regardless of whether you feel you can do so neutrally, gives the appearance of bias and undermines public confidence in Misplaced Pages. If you create an article despite your conflict of interest, you should disclose your relationship and make sure that it is reviewed by another editor. If you have a financial conflict of interest in the topic (for example if you have been paid to edit it) you must make the required paid-contribution disclosure and abide by the community's restrictions on paid editing.

Search for an existing article

Further information: Help:Searching

The English Misplaced Pages already has 6.9 million articles. Before creating a new one, try to make sure there is not already an article (or a Draft in development) on the same topic, perhaps under a different spelling, or even a different name.

Search for articles (or drafts) that already exist:


Note: Articles are in "Main" space, and drafts are in "Draft" space.

If you're sure that there is no article or draft available for your topic, then there is just one big task to do before you start writing your first article: you have to gather sources about the topic in order to establish its notability.

Gather sources

Further information: Help:Find sources

As described above in § The basics, Misplaced Pages articles are written based on published sources. If you need some help finding sources, see this helpful guide.

For some common sources, you may find these assessments by the Misplaced Pages community helpful. Please note these assessments certainly do not list all possible sources: if a source is not listed, that only means it has not met the criteria for listing. If a source meets the reliable source criteria, you are welcome to use it. If you have questions, please do ask at the Teahouse.

Notability – should this topic have an article?

Notability
General notability guideline
Subject-specific guidelines
See also
Main page: Misplaced Pages:Notability

Your topic must be notable, as Misplaced Pages uses the term, in order to warrant an article. Misplaced Pages has articles on many topics, but not every topic. Notability is tricky to define, but in a nutshell, if there are multiple published reliable sources about a topic, then it may be notable. A topic is not notable if there aren't sufficient reliable sources about it. (Important: unreliable ones like blogs, social media, and websites anyone can edit don't count!). The General notability guideline gives more details on how to tell if a topic is notable or not. If you're not sure if your topic is notable, ask for help at the Teahouse.

A notable topic is one that has reliable sources that each meet all three of the following criteria:

  • Secondary. A secondary source provides thought and reflection based on primary sources, generally at least one step removed from a topic. It contains analysis, evaluation, interpretation, or synthesis of the facts, evidence, concepts, and ideas taken from primary sources.
  • Independent of the subject. This means that nobody involved in writing or publishing the source has a financial or other connection to the subject. A source is not independent of the subject if any of the following are true:
  • Significant coverage. The sources must discuss your subject in depth, in multiple paragraphs. A mention in one or two sentences or the appearance of your subject in a table or list is not enough to help establish notability. The special notability guideline for businesses has lots of good examples of what is considered significant.

Round exclamation point icon If you discover the topic is not notable, stop here. Non-notable topics do not qualify for a separate article. Consider expanding a relevant existing article related to the topic or select a new topic. If you are stuck, ask for guidance at the Teahouse.

Look at similar articles

See also: Help:Introduction to the Manual of Style

It's a good idea to look at several existing Misplaced Pages articles on subjects similar to yours to see how such articles are formatted. The quality of our existing articles varies and lower quality articles should not be used as a model. The Talk page of the article may have a quality rating in the shaded box at the top. If an article has been assessed as B-class, or as a Good Article or Featured Article, it is safe to use as an organizational template for your article. You can also consult Misplaced Pages's Manual of Style for guidance on how to structure an article.

Writing your draft

Further information: Misplaced Pages:Writing better articles

Once you've verified that there § isn't already an article out there about your topic, § gathered your sources, and § established notability, you're ready to start writing!

What editing tool to use

Edit tab in desktop view
Edit pencil in mobile view
Further information: Help:Introduction, Help:Wikitext, and Help:VisualEditor

Misplaced Pages provides various editing tools, and you have a choice of what tool best suits your needs:

Editing interface selector
  • Source editor – edits the wikitext of the article, which uses some special characters, like adding ] to create a link to another page, or asterisks to make bullet points.
  • Visual Editor – a tool similar to a word processor, for editing articles without the need to understand any special codes or markup.

Visual Editor is the default. To switch your default editing interface, select an option from the "Editing mode" menu in your preferences.

Users of mobile devices are automatically redirected to the official mobile version of Misplaced Pages at en.m.wikipedia.org. If you don't want to use the mobile version, tap the Desktop link at the bottom of any page to switch to the desktop version at en.wikipedia.org.

Where to start writing

Further information: Misplaced Pages:Drafts and Misplaced Pages:About the sandbox

Where will you develop your draft? You have several options:

  • in "Draftspace" – this is a special area of Misplaced Pages dedicated to creating new articles, and is a good choice because other editors can find your draft here and help out.
  • in your sandbox – this is a page you can always easily find, by clicking 'Sandbox' at the top of any page at Wikipediaby tapping the user icon in the top right corner to show the menu linking your sandbox. Downside: you can only create one article at a time there, and it's not so easy for other editors to find.
  • in a user subpage. You can find more information about subpages here.

The easiest way is with the Article Wizard, which will create your article in Draft space and guide you through the steps of creating a draft.

Create your draft with the Article Wizard!

How to create content

Further information: Help:Editing, WP:Neutral point of view, and WP:Verifiability

Writing a Misplaced Pages article:

Citing sources

Further information: Misplaced Pages:Citing sources, Help:Find sources, Help:Referencing for beginners, and Help:Introduction to referencing with VisualEditor
Abstract graphic depicting referencing

Sources are the published books, academic articles, reputable magazines and newspapers, and other locations where you find the information you will be writing about. You will need to find sources before you start writing, because all content in articles at Misplaced Pages must be verifiable—that is, backed up by reliable sources.

The best way to demonstrate verifiability, is by creating a citation to a reliable source that you found, and embedding it in-line as you write your article.

The best sources tend to have some form of editorial oversight and a reputation for fact-checking and accuracy. Some websites are reliable; many are not. If you're not sure about the reliability of a website, you can read what editors think about them. It's okay to use non-English sources, offline sources, and subscription-only or fee-based sources, as long as they are reliable.

Dos and don'ts

Main pages: Misplaced Pages:What Misplaced Pages is not and Misplaced Pages:Avoiding common mistakes

Here are some "Do"s and "Don't"s, to highlight some of the most important points about writing your first article:

Dos and don't
Great ways to contribute Things to avoid

Publish your draft

When your draft is ready, you have two options for publishing it: you can do so directly yourself, or ask another editor to review it first. If you don't have an account, if your account is not yet confirmed, or if you have a conflict of interest with the article topic, you will have to ask for a review. Otherwise, the choice is up to you. In either case, you should take some time to double check that the draft is ready first.

Pre-publication checks

Take another look at your draft to see if it meets the criteria required for a Misplaced Pages article. Make sure that:

Publish directly

Main page: Misplaced Pages:Drafts § Moving drafts to mainspace

If you are sure your draft is ready, and you do not have a § conflict of interest with the topic, you can publish it directly by moving the page from the draft namespace to the main article namespace. To do so, follow the instructions in how to move a page.

Ask for a review

Further information: Misplaced Pages:Articles for creation

Alternatively, ifIf you think your article is ready but would like another editor to check it, you can submit it for review by an experienced editor by clicking the Submit the draft for review! button at the top of your draft. If the button isn't there, you can instead add {{subst:submit}} to the top of the draft. A reviewer will then look at your draft and either publish it or give you feedback on how to improve it. You may continue to edit the page, even while waiting for a review. This may take some time (maybe weeks); please have patience, we are all volunteers.

Congratulations!

Congratulations, you've created your first article! We have some suggested next steps at Help:After your first article, but do pat yourself on the back. Not many people have successfully created an article on Misplaced Pages!

Help is available!

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