Misplaced Pages

:RulesToConsider/Establish Context: Difference between revisions - Misplaced Pages

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editContent deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 15:51, 25 February 2002 editConversion script (talk | contribs)10 editsm Automated conversion← Previous edit Latest revision as of 02:17, 24 January 2022 edit undoEthanGaming7640 (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users17,055 edits Modifying redirect categories using Capricorn ♑ 
(9 intermediate revisions by 8 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
#REDIRECT ]
Almost every entry in the Misplaced Pages should begin with a line or two that establishes context. These opening lines should include the most basic facts about the subject.


{{Redirect category shell|
An article on Charles Darwin should not begin with "Darwin created controversy with the publication of the Origin of Species...." It should begin with "Charles Darwin was a 19th century biologist who proposed the modern theory of evolution."
{{R to project namespace}}

{{R to subpage}}
An article on Scotland should not begin with "Scotland retains its identity despite political dominance by the English..." It should begin by stating what Scotland is, where it is, etc.: "Scotland is part of the United Kingdom, located in the northern end of the British Isles..."
{{R from subpage}}

{{R from CamelCase}}
In other words, it is helpful, especially for long articles, to put a short description/definition at the beginning of the article.
}}
----
Note that this practice also facilitates uplinks--i.e., links to the more general topic of which the present page is a subtopic. For example, "] is a ] ] based on..."

Disagreeing with this...as I sorta put into practice before noticing this line...but I put warnings and had no complaints and some encouragement. Doing this gives us uplinks, but it prevents us from making subpages when they really matter, and forces us to use the alternate brackets thing, destroying much hope of accidental linking (] vs ], ], etc)

Elaborate, please, Josh, I don't understand. :-) -- ]

I'm not sure I understand either, but I do very much agree with Joshua that we should watch out for excessive sub-paging making for difficult accidental linking. Of course, one answer is to very simply have lots and lots of REDIRECT pages. ] can redirect to ], so that accidental links work out o.k. --]

Redirect pages are nice to have (] to ]) -- but I think that they shouldn't be made necessary. Since pages would always want to use the word "daffodil", then everyone would either have to go through the needless redirect from ] to ] or change the referring page to use the name with a different link, as ] (what I somehow meant by alternate bracket thing). That's a lot of wasteful typing, if you ask me (which you did, this time at least :).

Another problem, of course, is that many subjects have more than one potential top-level category -- do ]s belong under games, or cards? And conversely, every subject has at least one heading it belongs to, but it would be awful to have all of ] as subpages of the categories listed on the main page, with billions of redirects to send links to them. So I would avoid subpages for subcategories altogether, and use them for items that have no meaning outside of a context (like characters in a novel), and things like ], ], ], ], ], and so forth. -- ]

:''See also :'' ]

Latest revision as of 02:17, 24 January 2022

Redirect to:

This page is a redirect. The following categories are used to track and monitor this redirect:
  • From a subpage: This is a redirect from a subpage. In a page title, a subpage name appears after a forward slash (/); for example, "Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Cricket/Articles", which is a subpage of "Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Cricket", redirects to Template:CricketRecentChanges. Not all articles or other pages with "/" in their titles are subpages (e.g. CP/M).
  • From a camel case title: This is a redirect from a camel case page name. In the initial versions of Misplaced Pages, all links had to be "CamelCase", i.e., words that used medial capitals; they are "two-humped" like a Bactrian camel. These are kept as redirects to maintain edit history and to avoid breaking links that may have been made externally.
When appropriate, protection levels are automatically sensed, described and categorized.