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{{press |org='']'' |date=November 5, 2015 |author=Dewey, Caitlin |title=The most fascinating Misplaced Pages articles you haven’t read |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-intersect/wp/2015/11/05/the-most-fascinating-wikipedia-articles-you-havent-read/}}<!-- | |||
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== Can we remove the "And finally" section? == | |||
== Misplaced Pages is not... == | |||
...a knot to be tied up in arguments ;o)--] (]) If you're not taking any flak, you're not over the target. 23:29, 23 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
:You're wrong! You're wrong! Get the rope, boys.--] (]) 04:37, 24 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
== Lists == | |||
===Policy amendment request - addition to what Misplaced Pages is not === | |||
A list has no place in an ecyclopaedia unless it actually conveys information other then its entries. Without the standard encyclopaedic entry, '''a list is called a catalogue'''. | |||
I am going to suggest that all lists in Misplaced Pages must have, like all other articles: | |||
*an introduction | |||
*a definition | |||
*a statement of scope | |||
*a statement of notability | |||
*the encyclopaedic purpose (what does it inform the reader) | |||
'''Misplaced Pages is not a catalogue'''--] (]) If you're not taking any flak, you're not over the target. 05:13, 24 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
:What type of "lists" are you talking about? There's a lot of different interpretations. Also, consider that many lists are completely appropriate breakouts per ] that many not necessarily alone have all these parts (relying on the parent article to do that). Also check ] which already mentions some no-nos in list formation. --] 13:48, 24 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
*This change is neither desirable nor needed. The lists we have created under current rules are just fine, but there is always room for improvement (the same as with all WP articles). Having this new rule would just prompt a new round of mass deletion of information from WP. Information includes the relationship of one article to another in whatever order the list maker has placed the articles. ] (]) 19:02, 24 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
{{policylist}} | |||
*No need for this. Lists are just another info presentation format. Just like images, tables, charts, diagrams, bullet points, tables of contents, "see also" sections, paragraphs, sentences, etc.. List policies and guidelines are already covered in detail in various guideline and policy pages. Much of the deletionist frenzy concerning lists comes from groups of rude (see ]) tendentious spam fighters and their closely-associated admins. A simpler solution to spam is to make a policy forbidding unregistered users from adding external links to the external link sections of articles, or to lists. Then all registered users could enforce the policy, and control of articles would go back to the registered editors of the articles. Misplaced Pages as a whole, and especially admins outside spam central, need to step in and rein in this spam-fighting group of tendentious tag-team disrupters on wikipedia. They parachute into many articles and disrupt carefully worked-out consensus agreements, and/or delete large sections of articles that took years to create. There needs to be some sort of equivalent to ]. Something like ]. ] and ] seem to get frequently deleted from articles by spam fighters in their evident support of ] and other "notable" monopolies or commercial software. All info in articles has to meet[REDACTED] guidelines. See the table to the right. Lists shouldn't have to meet a higher standard arbitrarily set up and enforced by outlaw spam admins and their followers. It took multiple ] rulings, and ], to finally control several outlaw admins, and those who followed their example, in that topic area. --] (]) 22:49, 24 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
:I would have though that with improvement in mind, the articles that contain only a list would need to be expanded by adding these sections. Lists are not ] expansions pear definition there. As an example, ] seems to be a catalogue that conveys no other information then how to reach articles of these particular individuals. What is the purpose of this list? I appreciate that the individuals are notable for some other achievement, but is their location of birth in some way relevant to their notability? Can this list teach humanity something? Does being born at sea contribute to any field of knowledge? None of these issues were considered when it was discussed as an article for deletion ]. | |||
:The ] is similar. Everyone had to be born somewhere! The cut off dates reflect Danzig being a part of Germany (1308, it was overrun by the Teutonic Order - 1945, end of the Third Reich). Is the scope restricted to German births? Clearly not, so why stop with 1945. Has it been determined that no one notable is going to be born in the city now that it reverted to Polish sovereignty and changed names? This article was a compromise based in a very contentious conflict which took a year to resolve. So much for consensus! No notable person born in the city after 1945 can be listed even if they were born in the same building as someone notable born in it in 1944! The only thing the list teaches humanity is overt discrimination! | |||
:"Bare bones" lists are not like "Just like images, tables, charts, diagrams, bullet points, tables of contents, sections, paragraphs, sentences" because all these are elements of a standard article, and support article content. Lists have no content to speak of other then the single sentence incorporating its title. | |||
:Are you suggesting (assuming) I am a "deletionist frenzy concerning lists comes from groups of rude (see ]) tendentious spam fighters"? That seems fairly uncivil from where I stand! I have nowhere made a delete suggestion! I advocate expansion of existing lists, if they are indeed encyclopaedia material. Please remember that an encyclopaedia is not a dump for any and all data, but is a reference work for conveying information contextualized in terms of human knowledge. If a list has this context, why can't it be presented in the article? Are there "carefully worked-out consensus agreements" in lists? Have a look here ]! What on Earth is the purpose of the ]?! It seems to discriminate against notable people who had atheist parents, or maybe a parent who was an accountant, or notable people who were orphaned! This entire Category:Playboy Lists is only useful as a catalogue for Playboy collectors! The only notability of ] (aside from publication of her photographs) is that she did not become aware of her own notability for over two decades! Maybe a starter for ]? | |||
:In any case, it is very clear that views expressed by Timeshifter are based on personal experiences, and are not very objective in terms of approach to my proposal. | |||
:Consider mentioning that there needs to be some sort of equivalent to ], twice! However, this represents a political view if I'm not mistaken. | |||
:Here is an example of what I mean by my proposal. | |||
:Thake the list ]. | |||
:Current contents are | |||
:*"This is a list of explorers, trappers, guides, and other frontiersman of the American frontier known as "Mountain Men" from 1807-1848." | |||
:*The list. | |||
:The rest of the information on the ] is elsewhere in an article that is by no means long, and contains: | |||
* 1 History | |||
* 2 Mode of living | |||
* 3 Notable figures | |||
* 4 Further reading | |||
* 5 See also | |||
* 6 External links | |||
:Why can't the list be included in the Notable figures section? After all, if they deserve to be in the list, they must be notable! | |||
:Another example is ]. Surely the subject of exploration is closely related to the area being explored?! So why have an alphabetic list when numerous articles already exist here ]? Do you think anyone will want to know how many explorers who had a name which started with K ever lived? This occurred because no scope for the article was ever shown! Subsequently the article is owned by the | |||
:'''Portugal Portal''' | |||
:List of explorers is part of WikiProject Portugal, a project to improve all Portugal-related articles. If you would like to help improve this and other Portugal-related articles, please join the project. All interested editors are welcome.!!! | |||
:This is because the Geography Portal found this list useless! Clearly someone in Portugal though it was a great way to promote Portuguese explorers, but is this encyclopaedic for an English language encyclopaedia? I would make a wager that every Portuguese ship captain that sailed outside of the Mediterranean during the 15th - 17th centuries is listed in this article. Since during this period all commercial ventures to find new trade markets and commercial goods were sponsored expeditions, virtually every such sailing venture qualifies! | |||
:Speaking of the sea, here is a "goodie" ]. It says "The era of European sea explorations began in the late 15th century and lasted for a little more than three full centuries." Not surprisingly it is also "List of maritime explorers is part of WikiProject Portugal, a project to improve all Portugal-related articles."! And guess what, the talk page says that "Just to state that this list is part of the paralel (sic.) goal of the WikiAward for Greatest Sea Explorer of the period of the discoveries." submitted by the author who commented "Have fun, see the results, watch Misplaced Pages grow..."--Gameiro Pais 04:34, 27 Aug 2004 (UTC) This ] is unsurprisingly a Portuguese editor! The statement above is COMPLETELY erroneous and CLEARLY bias towards Portugal! The era of European sea exploration begun with ] who were the first to sail in the Mediterranean, having established colonies on the European coast. European sea and ocean exploration is still ongoing! There are numerous articles that relate to the many commercial and scientific vessels that explore the coastal areas of the planet, and the seas and oceans themselves. | |||
:Had the article included | |||
*an introduction | |||
*a definition | |||
*a statement of scope | |||
*a statement of notability | |||
*the encyclopaedic purpose (what does it inform the reader) | |||
:the list would have never existed in this shape and form. | |||
:This state of affairs with a clear intent to misinform, and a national bias (not even a POV) would not have been possible. As it stands now, the authoring of lists is clearly subject to exploitation. :The lists guidelines are obviously inadequate. | |||
:I look forward to further comments.--] (]) If you're not taking any flak, you're not over the target. 23:45, 24 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
::Your questions are mainly about the notability of various articles that contain lists, or consist solely of lists. I suggest you bring up those various articles at ], or ]. --] (]) 02:08, 25 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
::More generally, most of what you're advocating here seems to be style recommendations, and should go in ]. Furthermore, we already have WP:NOT#DIR, which I believe covers the "catalog" phenomenon you're complaining about.--] (]) 02:26, 25 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::My point is not that the list articles are lacking notability. They are obviously dealing with notable subjects. My point is that their existence is not justified in terms of encyclopaedic content. Without this justification it is impossible to judge the article notability. | |||
:::There are not very many lists in history before 20th century. A notable list is one found in the Genesis showing line of descent. It had a purpose, a context, and a scope. Lists of Roman emperors existed. That served the purpose of the Roman calendar. Lists of commissioned officers existed...do determine rank seniority. When people make lists, they serve a purpose. In Misplaced Pages, currently, anyone can create a list that serves their own purpose. Its a POV by other means! --] (]) If you're not taking any flak, you're not over the target. 04:15, 25 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::Notability applies to the topic, not to the article. If the list is introducing a new "topic" then arguably yes, you need to provide why that new topic is notable. However, if a list is an article that supports a topic that is already notable, there is no reason to require all the excess weight that is already outlined in a parent article. --] 04:24, 25 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::::Yes, well. The above mentioned list of births is at least linked to the notable subject of the international law on ]. However, that discussion is only about the post-1961 implications in the adoption of international law on reduction of statelessness. All the subjects of the list on births at sea were born before 1961, and mostly in the 19th century! Indeed, since 1961 the concern of being born on an aircraft has become more dominant, so properly the list ought to be called ]! So, the list has no relationship to the parent article aside from the word ]. It would be more appropriately linked to ] & ] (history of?) if there was any greater significance to being born at sea prior to 1961. This is largely because the guideline on the introductory section to the article is not followed. In this case the topic is notable, but the article, bearing to relationship to the topic, is irrelevant to it. Its only notability is to list people who were born at sea. Because travel by sea was the only way to get around before air travel, and because it took substantially longer, the chances of being born at sea were very good for many notable persons. In fact, it was not a rare event. It was not notable.--] (]) If you're not taking any flak, you're not over the target. 04:54, 25 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::Explain how ] is non-neutral.--] (]) 05:03, 25 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::::This list is just not relevant to the parent article. Other lists have different "issues" which is why my proposal has several points to it.--] (]) If you're not taking any flak, you're not over the target. 07:13, 25 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
A list is not simply a catalogue. A list can serve many purposes beyond the purposes of a catalogue. | |||
In wikipedia, lists can serve as a useful means for navigation, especially browsing. At the moment, navigation is one of wikipedia’s weak points. Search functions, and google searches of[REDACTED] are fine if you know what you are looking for. It’s when you don’t that things like lists, tables and categories become particularly useful. We need more of these things, not less. | |||
Such lists, tables and categories that exist for content navigation should be reserved for existing content, or content that needs to be added. In this respect, notability is not an issue, because everything in the list relates to other content. The feared catalogue phenomenon, and related fears of spam attacks, occurs where the lists contain external links. Such lists are a different matter. | |||
Most of mrg3105’s comments, where he has a point, relates to the need to improve lists. Often stuff in a list belongs in an article. However, that doesn’t mean that it doesn’t also belong in the list. There is going to have to be redundancy. The explorers name will need to occur on multiple pages. Zero redundancy is very user unfriendly. Too much redundancy is also bad. The encyclopaedic content about the explorer should belong in one place, with summaries located elsewhere being relatively brief. --] (]) 05:56, 25 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
:I never said that lists are catalogues, but only that some become catalogues. "Lists, which usually have linked terms in them, naturally serve as tables of contents and indexes of Misplaced Pages." A table of content is an introduction to a topic; and index is a way to find something in a large body of content. In both cases the "lists" are defined by the content. Generating a list because it "sounds like" it belongs to a topic or another structured article is not really the intent behind the lists as I understand it. If the proposal is not useful, then maybe I should just go around tagging for deletion any list that can't be linked to anything in Misplaced Pages? In any case, it seems to me the Wikilistomania is a bit out of control. I have looked at several lists now, and I'd say that I could spend 24/7 on commenting on what's wrong with them in terms of encyclopedic suitability, never mind content of which there is usually none aside from the bare links.--] (]) If you're not taking any flak, you're not over the target. 06:18, 25 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
::“Lists that can’t be linked to anything in wikipedia”? These are not the lists I have in mind. Do you have some examples? I haven’t encountered wikilistomonia. --] (]) 06:45, 25 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::No, I am not getting into a list-by-list discussion here. Please comment the proposal. Again, if the proposal is opposed, then I will take the earlier advice and tag ] as I come across them--] (]) If you're not taking any flak, you're not over the target. 06:50, 25 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::I was actually just about to ask for a list-by-list discussion. If you want to press for a rule that disallows a certain type of list, we will need to discuss several examples of "that type of list" to make our own assessments. Unless you can demonstrate a large-scale problem, we will consider a large-scale solution to be unnecessary (and destructive).--] (]) 07:02, 25 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::::Ok, how many lists do you need? It will have to be a reasonable sample, but I have no idea how many list there are. You can pick portals or categories; I don't care. By reasonable, I mean something I can handle without spending several days on it, ok? | |||
:::::Meanwhile, can you comment on the examples above?--] (]) If you're not taking any flak, you're not over the target. 07:13, 25 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::::I looked at the list examples you already provided. I can see your point, but think you are overreacting. There is a lot of room for improvement, but I think that neither AfD nor a WP:NOT draconian rule that facilitates deletions at AfD is the way to go. I suggest that, rather than writing top-down rules, you fix some lists, and if you succeed, write a guideline on how to fix bad lists. You mentioned lists “that can’t be linked to anything in wikipedia”. I would like to see one or two of these, or were you exaggerating? --] (]) 00:03, 26 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
== Commenting on list examples (arbitrary break) == | |||
(commenting on the examples) Here's how I'd assess each: | |||
* ] - The general subject of being born at sea has some historical importance; a quick turns up 770 references to it. Looking at several of the individuals on the list turns up the interesting phenomenon that many of them were born to immigrant parents (in the act of immigration). In the long term, the list should explain why being born at sea is some kind of notable phenomenon. I won't presume that it isn't, and won't delete it on the basis of that presumption. ]. | |||
* ] - There's an ongoing debate on Misplaced Pages on when something should be handled by a category and when by a list. Misplaced Pages's implementation of categories is still very rudimentary -- there's no way to browse entries from all the subcategories of a parent category, there's no way to provide any contextual information along with the link to the article, and few if any options for sorting and searching. You can't even choose to view more than 200 entries at a time. So even though there is a ], it's a worse navigation tool at this time than a list can be. Same for ]. The existence of a category doesn't invalidate having a list crafted by a human editor, and vice-versa. | |||
* ] - That's a list that needs sorting, expanding, prettifying. To accomplish that, you need to do the work, not write some legislation somewhere. And if you do mandate that people write better lists, how will you enforce it? By deleting lists that need fixing? Wrong approach. ] is a good example of what the maritime list ''could'' look like.<br />The edits you made to ] didn't fix it up at all; it's now five sections worth of ], ] ("the use of force is not considered a reason for exclusion"), unsourced assertions ("A maritime explorer is the noted leader of the expedition"), followed by a list that still needs someone to wade in and ''improve the thing''. | |||
:(Oh, wait, you did start sorting the list as well -- that's a definite improvement.)--] (]) 02:21, 26 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
* ] - These are each completely appropriate for something that would appear in, say, an ''Encyclopedia of Playboy''. Misplaced Pages ''is'' an encyclopedia of ''Playboy''. And an encyclopedia of physics. And of the state of Alabama. And steam railroads. And video games. And that's a good thing. If the ''Playboy'' articles bother you so much, you don't have to read them. <small>And let's face it, nobody reads Playboy for the articles.</small> | |||
* ] - The opening sentence does provide a reasonable declaration of scope, but the individual entries could do more to explain how the connection influenced the lives of the listed individuals. There's work to be done on that list. Legislation is not some magic bullet. People have to roll up their sleeves and do that work.--] (]) 02:13, 26 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
::Ok, well, I can only repeat that I did not initially advocate deletion as a solution. The entries I made in the list of maritime explorers are not self-referenced. Since individuals and not expeditions are name in the list, by definition the individuals are the leaders of the expeditions, which is their source of notability. I would agree that list can be improved in the same way other articles are, but how? There are no guidelines for improving lists!--] (]) ♠♣♥♦ 03:07, 26 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
it has no place in[REDACTED] and it shouldn't even exist in the first place ] (]) 12:35, 4 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::] or ]. As I've said before, you might get a better response if you were proposing these changes for those list-specific guidelines, not for WP:NOT. You are probably getting a lot of "deletion is not the answer" responses here because NOT's purpose is to specify types of content that should always be deleted, regardless of how it is formatted.--] (]) 03:31, 26 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
:makes no sense to remove. It's a catchall that NOT cannot enumerate everything WP is not. ] (]) 13:00, 4 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::Ok, thank you for comments. I will take the proposal to those two and see what reaction I get. I would rather see the articles evolved into something more reference-like then left as is or deleted.--] (]) ♠♣♥♦ 03:46, 26 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
::its just unfunny jokes if you checked it out, humorous essays shouldn't be part of main policies ] (]) 16:45, 4 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::Not sure about removing the whole "And finally" section, since it has been on this page for at least a decade now (though I don't think anything of value will be lost if the section does get removed). But I agree that policy pages shouldn't link to "humorous" essays or essays that haven't been thoroughly vetted by the community, so I've removed the links from that section. ] (]) 00:22, 5 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
== Notice of a requested redirect from ] to here == | |||
===Use them as a Table of Contents=== | |||
Why not just change the title. Instead of "List," call it "Misplaced Pages References"? And don't allow Red Links, which by their very nature are Not Notable. Sincerely, ] (]) 01:59, 26 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
The redirect request can be found on ]. ] (]) 03:45, 26 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:That is only one specialized type of list. Take a look at Misplaced Pages's ] and see how few of them fit that role. Further, redlinks are not "by their nature" non-notable; see ].--] (]) 02:17, 26 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
== Request for comments: in cases of a large numbers of religious celebrations in a religious calendar (e.g., feast day of saints), can they all be listed in a non-list WP article? == | |||
== FORUM-only accounts? == | |||
<!-- ] 19:01, 7 February 2025 (UTC) -->{{User:ClueBot III/DoNotArchiveUntil|1738954866}} | |||
I don't want to name names, but I have occasionally come upon user accounts that could rightly be called "forum-only" in that the only edits they make are forum-style comments on Talk pages. A warning and pointer to ] occasionally crops up, but nothing is really done. This is not the kind of thing people get blocked for. But it kinda annoys the crap out of me ;) --] (]) 22:21, 26 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
{{rfc|reli|policy|rfcid=7AD77A3}} | |||
This RfC concerns the ] and ] policies. | |||
:: Or write whole articles of OR on their talk pages, possibly as a place to store and then publicise them.--] (]) 12:24, 10 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
Presently, there are numerous WP articles of religious calendars that list the full list of celebrations, feast day of saints, etc., without those articles being ]. | |||
== Length of a plot summary == | |||
The pages concerned, from what I have found, are: ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ] (and ). | |||
Is there a Misplaced Pages policy on how long a plot summary should be? Recently I had a discussion about the length of the plot summary in ], see ]. I maintained that the rules for the length of a plot summary are the same as those for any other section; and ] maintained instead that plot summaries must be very short. Strangely we both claimed that ] supported our position. Can somebody clarify this point? And could the policy be amended to make it clear? ] (]) 13:49, 27 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
*Looking at that, I think the plot section is clearly too long. ''Misplaced Pages articles on published works (such as fictional stories) should contain <u>real-world context and sourced analysis, offering detail on a work's development and historical significance, not solely a detailed summary of that work's plot.</u> This applies to both stand-alone works and series. A <b>brief plot summary</b> may sometimes be appropriate as an aspect of a larger topic.'' So ] is largely correct. The plot should only be as long as required to provide a reader with the necessary context for the real-world significance that should be the focus of the article. Currently, the plot description exceeds that purpose. ] (]) 14:19, 27 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
:There's no bright-line rule. For films, you're looking at 10 words per minute, for TV, the rule is around 500 for up to 45 minutes, and 10 for each minute after. For books, 20-25 words a chapter should suffice, I think. ''']''' <sup>(])</sup> 15:05, 27 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
My question for which I request comments is: is putting these long lists of religious feasts in those articles a violation of ] or ], and if it so happens that they are a violation then what should be done with these lists? ] (]) 18:25, 3 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
:As average Misplaced Pages articles go, the ratio of commentary to plot in ] is pretty high, actually. My feeling is that anything beyond a very general description of plot (one or two paragraphs) should be accompanied by commentary specifically relating to the additional details provided. That's clearly not the approach we're taking now, but I do hope we adopt something like it eventually.--] (]) 22:21, 27 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
::Blood Meridian looks about two paragraphs too long to me. — ''']]''' 22:29, 27 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
<br /> | |||
'''suggested wording tweak''' | |||
change ''brief'' to ''concise'' There can be reasonable argument about how brief a summary should be, but I think everyone would agree that it ought to be "concise". As a policy page, this should not be over-specific. I'm trying to find a minimal change that would be generally acceptable and would meet at least some of the problems raised.''']''' (]) 16:13, 28 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
* I agree. "Brief" is one of those words with many different interpretations (just ask a lawyer), but concise covers the point. ] (]) 16:14, 28 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
**I'm going to be bold and make the change. — ''']]''' 17:02, 28 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
**Good Heavens! I actually agree with ]. There must be a rift in the ]. ] (]) 20:00, 28 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
*'''Comment'''. In my opinion, this isn't a significant problem. It looks to me (I haven't checked every page listed) like the pages are about encyclopedic topics that are reliably sourced. They are not unreasonable when viewed as ], as opposed to standalone list pages. As long as there is also paragraph-based text that is sufficiently sourced to establish notability, and to provide a context for the information that is listed, that takes those pages out of the realm of stuff that is simply an indiscriminate list of information of unclear encyclopedic relevance. I see that some of them have only a very brief lead section, and are tagged for needing improvements; these are the most problematic, but they can likely be fixed by further editing. (Those should either be revised into actual list pages, or be revised with more context in the form of paragraph text.) --] (]) 23:18, 3 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
===On closer inspection, these are loafers=== | |||
*Can't really see a problem. They are certainly list-like, and could be converted to lists, but what's the gain? I don't see either policy being breached. ] (]) 04:35, 4 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
"''A concise plot summary may be appropriate as part of a larger topic.''" | |||
*They are functionally lists based on their current content. They don't have to have "List" in the title. ] (]) 07:51, 4 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
:Problem in search of a solution per others. Not sure what needs/supposedly needs to be “fixed” here if anything. ] (]) 10:19, 19 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*''A concise plot summary is appropriate in coverage of a work of fiction and elements within that work.''? --] 23:28, 28 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
**Definitely. I think the section needs a complete rewrite; it just reads funny IMO. Ideally, I'd like it to read something like "In articles on works of fiction, a plot summary should be concise and balanced with real-world details, such as the work's development and impact. This applies to both stand-alone works and series." — ''']]''' 23:53, 28 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::I prefer Masem's shorter wording. Once you get into details it becomes more for the guidelines. His wording, in particular, allows for the existence of subarticles which contain the plot primarily. I'll vote for his over mine, as I usually do. I think its certainly an improvement over the present. Policies should be concise. :).''']''' (]) 22:52, 1 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::Actually, my version would be the ''entire'' rewritten bullet. Masem's wording just covers that sentence. — ''']]''' 04:22, 3 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
<br>''It is appropriate to provide a concise plot summary as part of the larger coverage of fictional works.'' | |||
==Addition to WP:NOTDICTIONARY== | |||
Thank you everybody for your clarifications. However, I find the formulation still unclear: saying that an article should be "not solely a detailed summary of that work's plot" doesn't exclude that it could be a detailed summary with lots of real world content as well (the adverb "solely" allows a weak interpretation of the statement. Similarly, "may" in the next sentence doesn't enforce that the summary must be concise. Apart from that, how does one judge when something is concise? Setting a fixed chapter/words limit seems too procrustean: different books have chapters of different size and some don't have chapters at all. We should stress that the summary must also give a good outline of the plot: there may be articles with long summaries, because they contain irrelevant details, but still missing some key plot elements. I think this is the case with ] and this is my main issue with that article: some parts of the summary give minimal details while others, chiefly about the last part of the book, completely skip entire chapters. Shouldn't we stress the quality of the summary rather than simply its shortness? And if it is deemed too long, shouldn't a more selective policy be in place, rather than deleting any new addition because the article is already too long? ] (]) 17:11, 2 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
I propose to add the following bullet (4) to the ] entry: | |||
*No, you are missing the point. The main focus of Misplaced Pages's content should be on the <u>real-world impact and significance of the work in question</u> and that applies to Hamlet, Don Quixote or For Whom the Bell Tolls as much as more obscure works. That a single narrow formulation cannot cover all potentialities is obvious. But general language advising concision is clear enough. The real place for this in specific application then is at the talk page of the work or works in question where a consensus can be derived that satisfies the best practices advised by the guideline. Per our standards, the Blood Meridian plot outline is currently too long and detracts from the encyclopedic nature of the article. ] (]) 17:33, 2 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
* Misplaced Pages is not a multilingual dictionary. Articles should not include lists of translations of the topic into multiple languages, whether the topic is an object (apple = French pomme), a concept (wisdom = French sagesse), a culinary dish, or a proverb (You can't have your cake and eat it = French Vouloir le beurre et l'argent du beurre). If there is something encyclopedic to say about the different versions, such as etymology, then of course the name in other languages is relevant. Variants of the ''meaning'' should not be grouped by language, but by meaning. If a culinary preparation has no common name in English (e.g. ]), then it is reasonable to include the variant names in the lead. | |||
Discussion? --] (]) 19:55, 5 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
:To some extent this seems to stand in contradiction to ], which would suggest that we should list the names for places in languages significant to that place as a gazetteer would be expected to do. —] (]) 20:23, 5 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
I would also like to call your attention to the fact that there are featured articles with plot summaries longer than the one in ]. Especially articles about video games tend to have detailed descriptions of the storyline. Take for example ]. It has a plot summary that is longer than Blood Meridian (and it is made even longer by using the ''References'' section to quote verbatim several dialog fragments. Am I wrong in saying that either both Blood Meridian and Final Fantasy VIII violate policy or they both respect it? ] (]) 18:07, 2 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
::I've never met a gazetteer, and I guess I should be glad I don't, right? There's also ], but both are essays anyway. ] (]) 02:49, 6 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*]. Deal. You asked a question and every editor who has weighed in on the question has suggested the plot summary of Blood Meridian is too long. It seems like rather than accept this response, you are fishing around until you get an answer that is more amenable to your personal preference, which is unlikely to happen. I don't think continuing the discussion here is fruitful. It needs to be worked out on the article talk page. If it helps, I'll weigh in there in favour of reducing the plot summary based on your query here. ] (]) 18:27, 2 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::I think maybe you're thinking of a ]? —] (]) 03:06, 6 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
**] is about articles for deletion. We are not talking about that here. And my "what about article x" argument cited an FA, not a just created article: so I am justified in assuming that it respects policy. OK, my query about Blood Meridian has been answered clearly. Now I am asking a new question: is the plot summary of ] too long? The discussion above clearly suggest yes. ] (]) 19:00, 2 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
::I don't see a contradiction with ], which is about what ''places'' to mention. But ] is relevant for place''names''. It says that we should include "significant alternative names", although that isn't elaborated on there (I think it is somewhere else, though). The significant names certainly include the name of a place in its own language (Deutschland), the name of the place under significant previous rulers (the Ottoman Turkish names for most places in Greece and the Balkans), and the name of the place in the languages of large populations which have lived there in the past (e.g. the South Slavic and Judeo-Spanish names of ]). On the other hand, we don't include the German names for Poland (Polen) or Greece (Griechenland) despite Germany's occupation (and partial annexation in the case of Poland) of those countries during WWII. | |||
***''Final Fantasy VIII'' is a 40+ hour RPG with over a dozen hours of cutscenes and hundreds of thousands of words of dialogue, as well as a complex story involving time travel and whatnot; it has a 800-word plot summary as a result. I wrote most of the FF8 plot summary as an ''example'' of an appropriate plot summary. It's a case by case basis, hence my wording above. — ''']]''' 04:24, 3 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
::In any case, those policies are about ''placenames''. For other topics, other approaches make more sense. For example, the ] section mentions local names ''along with'' the local variants in Brazil etc. In the ], article, we say (I admit that I wrote this): "The image of the last drop is also found in many other languages", leaving the exact words to the sources in the several footnotes. This contrasts with ], where ] -- correctly in my view -- a long list of translations or equivalents of the expression (many without sources). --] (]) 21:02, 5 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
:::Are there any examples showing how this change would have a practical effect? I presume the aim is to limit text appearing in an article? Or is to limit what articles should exist? There can't be a policy that lists every bad idea. ] (]) 01:22, 6 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
:::I'd agree the removal on You can't have your cake..., but I disagree with the Beef Stroganoff example. Discussion the various national varities of a dish - as long as its sourced - seems completely appropriate, and in line of talking about those, the local name that the dish goes back makes sense. It would be a problem if we just has a list of translated names without any discussion of the unique aspects of the national variety, as was the case with the You can't have your cake... article. ] (]) 01:37, 6 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
::::Yeah, I think the content in Beef Stroganoff makes more sense, even if poorly sourced. An obvious difference is of course that Beef Stroganoff deals with an actual physical topic and Cake deals with words--precisely the thing a dictionary should treat, which is why I directed the latest disruptor (who I suspect of being a sock of an earlier SPA in that article) to Wiktionary. I think I agree with the proposal, mostly--though I think that if we didn't have ] already, a section in the ] article makes sense. But then, as {{U|Masem}} indicated for Beef Stroganoff, there's much more there than just a translation of a word. ] (]) 02:49, 6 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
== Should ] be more specific about phone numbers, etc.? == | |||
**** I wasn't criticizing FF8, on the contrary, I was citing it as an example of a good article with a long plot summary. By the way, I find your formulation of the policy clearer than the present one, it should be adopted. I accept the fact that these things have to be decided case by case and that the policy can give only a vague indication, so I will not bother you anymore with my questions. ] (]) 08:42, 3 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
*I'd suggest that the proposed ''It is appropriate to provide a concise plot summary as part of the larger coverage of fictional works.'' is a solid replacement. Does anyone object? ] (]) 05:37, 4 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
** No, obviously ;) ] (]) 05:43, 4 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
**Ah, okay. Sorry if I came across as hostile; I wrote a couple responses here after a 12-hour Sunday work shift. 150+ dollars is nice, but not when you have to blow it the next day on a new brake system :) — ''']]''' 17:05, 4 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::I'd gladly accept that wording of Hobit's also. ''']''' (]) 02:17, 6 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
I came across an {{tl|Infobox school}} recently that was misusing free text parameters to list the school's phone number. "As we all know", {{tq|contact information such as phone numbers, fax numbers and e-mail addresses is not encyclopedic}}, so I removed it "per ]". This prompted me to look if there were more cases of such misuse, and indeed there were dozens. I was going to remove them with the same explanation, but unfortunately I took time to read through ] before doing that... and I don't think I can use it as my basis, because I don't see anything in the text explicitly forbidding this. There used to be an unambiguous statement (the green one), but it was removed almost exactly three years ago (]], ]]). Right now, anyone could argue "''None of this applies to me. I'm not replicating any listings, it's just one phone number. Nor am I conducting business, we're talking about a school here.''" and I haven't been able to find anything in current policy wordings to definitively counter this (the BLP ban obviously doesn't apply to institutions). Am I missing something obvious (entirely possible :) ), or should the wording be changed (back) to remedy this? I'm tempted to be bold and just add it back, but it's probably better to double-check the consensus on this first. ] (]) 13:40, 6 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
== Question about concert tour pages == | |||
:It still states contact information is to be avoided under #6. ] <small>(])</small> 04:42, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
::Yes, but the way that's framed, it seems to be limited to the context of "conducting business", which arguably wouldn't apply to something like a school. And even if we say it does apply, It would still be helpful to spell this out more explicitly, as "phone or fax number and e-mail" would be clearer for non-native speakers than "contact information", and a more obvious search term. ] (]) 05:02, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
:::That makes sense, and the search term angle is compelling. ] (]) 23:34, 9 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
:NOTDIRECTORY #6 is already too long. Making it longer will not aid compliance. ] already says {{tq|school_number Official number (not for phone number).}} and {{tq|information (do not enter phone numbers or email addresses).}} Are those notes unsatisfactory? ] is, I think, mainly used to advance deletion opinions at ] intended to have the strength of policy over mere ] notability guidance. What, in your view, should happen to ]? Take care that changes to policy do not have unintended consequences. ] (]) 16:18, 11 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
::Adding {{tq|(such as phone numbers, fax numbers, and e-mail addresses)}} is hardly a substantial increase, and if it makes it easier to search for our policy on phone numbers then that's a plus. ] (]) 19:25, 11 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
::{{tq|#6 is already too long will not aid compliance}} This doesn't have to be in #6, the statement I quoted in the opener was in a different place. In any case, a slight increase in length is less of a consideration compared to better clarity and findability, which could in fact improve compliance.<br /> | |||
::{{tq|Are those notes unsatisfactory?}} Perhaps, since people are using yet other parameters to still include phone numbers. But my question here, although prompted by it, is not limited to the context of {{tl|Infobox school}}. Since the phone number thing applies globally, it makes sense to specify is centrally. And I think WP:NOT is an overall content policy, it's not just about article deletion criteria.<br /> | |||
::{{tq|911 changes to policy}} How would "contact information" expanded with examples make a difference for 911 compared to the current version, which is supposed to implicitly include the very same cases? This is not a policy change, and the clarification ''has been present'' in the past without affecting things like 911. ] (]) 05:58, 12 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
==RfC on WP:NOT and British Airways destinations== | |||
I noticed that Misplaced Pages does not have any pages for past concert tour information. It seems that a page like this wouldn't break any of the guidelines, if it included an explanation of the tour, events that occurred on tour, a list of tour stops, setlists, additional touring band members, etc. Can anyone think of a reason why a page like this would go against the[REDACTED] guidelines?] (]) 22:03, 28 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
<!-- ] 01:01, 12 February 2025 (UTC) -->{{User:ClueBot III/DoNotArchiveUntil|1739322068}} | |||
: What you describe sounds like directory information to me. Depending on the tone and timing, it could also come across as advertising rather than proper encyclopedic content. <br> Since you're not talking about the music or the artist but are talking about the narrow economic activity of delivering the product to a particular audience, I think any article about the tour would best be governed by ]. The kinds of detail you describe would definitely not meet those guidelines. Only the most exceptional tour would normally survive as a stand-alone article. The rest should be discussed in the article about the artist who is touring. ] <small>]</small> 22:37, 28 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
{{rfc|econ|rfcid=4A58B81}} | |||
Do the following violate ]? A) ], and B) ]. | |||
*'''Option 1''': Only A violates WP:NOT | |||
*'''Option 2''': Only B | |||
*'''Option 3''': Both A and B | |||
*'''Option 4''': Neither A nor B | |||
] (]) 00:26, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
===Context=== | |||
*A-type lists: In ] some people proposed a new RfC. | |||
**I chose to do an RfC here at WT:NOT to focus on whether this policy applies. This is not meant to serve as a ]. | |||
*B-type lists: ] closed as no consensus, and some argued to relist the RfC with a different question. | |||
*No prior discussion has jointly addressed the two types of lists. | |||
*RfC planning done ]. I acknowledge that I've begun many discussions on this topic, but I hope this one clarifies the main dispute about NOT which has arisen in debates going back to ]. | |||
] (]) 00:28, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
:This description of the context in itself is not quite undisputed; see the '''Discussion''' subsection ''infra''. I think that the list of five older partly contradictory RfA's given by {{ping|Liz|prefix=|p=}} in her (later endorsed) closure of the original AfD also is a highly relevant part of the context; as is that AfD itself. ] (]) 00:09, 10 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
===Survey=== | |||
== QUESTION:How not to be deleted pls see my talk page] (]) 03:46, 3 March 2008 (UTC) == | |||
*'''Option 3'''. The lists of current destinations and routes from Heathrow have lots of references, which is fine, though you could just as well cite BA's website for each city. It's a reliable source for this info, and indeed has already been cited for most of the current destinations in list A. Sites like and organize the data more conveniently and could be used as well. So there is no problem with verifiability here, but just because info is verifiable, doesn't mean it should be on Misplaced Pages. We aren't supposed to host a ], or a ] reorganized from flight databases.<p>In regard to past destinations, I agree with discussing the development of BA's route network over time. For example, in ], people have written about the impact of a 1970s government policy, and the Heathrow-New York route on Concorde. On the other hand, recording every place that BA no longer flies to, from its maiden flight 50 years ago up to today, strikes me as ]. ] (]) 00:28, 8 January 2025 (UTC)</p> | |||
*'''Option 3'''. Basically, listcruft is listcruft is listcruft. We want notable information, not indiscriminate information. - ] ] 01:13, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
**The destinations currently flown is a narrowly-defined, discriminate list. Most destinations are covered in reliable sources so it's notable, though notability applies to articles, not specific facts. ]<sup>]</sup> 05:08, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*:'''Option 4''' None of them violates ], these are not indescriminate information, they are related to the topic of the article and shouldn't be removed, in my opinion I would support merging them into the airline article rather than be kept as a whole separate article ] (]) 06:41, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''3'''. We just had a lengthy but conclusive RfC about this, with a ] conclusion. There is no reason to make an exception for a particular airline or airport. <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] 😼 </span> 01:27, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Neither''' Neither of these violate ]. This is an absolutely ridiculous evergreen proposal. ] ''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:top;">]</span>''·''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:bottom;">]</span>'' 01:55, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*:I'm actually livid right now. Putting this at ] is just another tactic to try to ensure that completely valid encyclopedic information cannot be included anywhere on the site. ] ''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:top;">]</span>''·''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:bottom;">]</span>'' 01:57, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*::In order to violate ], the information must not be encyclopedic. This is the flaw in the argument of those who are trying to rid our encyclopedia of this encyclopedic information. | |||
*::In terms of the airline destination lists, there is no need to specifically exclude them under ]. Analysis under ] should be just fine, as it is for all other lists. Some airlines do have long histories with well documented historically flown routes or destinations. Looking at the British Airways list shows a well sourced article, and some air routes have been the subject of discussion as early as . | |||
*::The airports table especially is one of the things I use most on the site. There are many wiki gnomes who keep them up to date. Almost all routes are be announced in the press, are easily verified, and do not need to rise to the level of notability to be included. They also do not violate ] per all of my arguments at other RfCs. The thing I specifically use them for the most is to determine how an airport or region is linked to the rest of the world, similar to how you can see which passenger routes operate from a given train station. I've seen the argument that yes, but rail infrastructure is fixed - it does not matter, the air routes can also be properly sourced. The information is also encyclopedic - for instance, one of the most important things in the history of a commercial airport is which routes were served first. Other airports have routes which are subject to academic analysis such as . | |||
*::This entire attempt to rid the website of this information is based on a complete misunderstanding. NOTDB? It's not a database, it's a list! NOTDIR? It's not a directory, these aren't simple listings without encyclopedic merit - otherwise we wouldn't have list articles at all! NOTTRAVEL? It's not a travel guide! If this passes, it will make Misplaced Pages worse, and there likely won't be any going back. And I'm exhausted from trying to defend this over and over again, year after year... ] ''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:top;">]</span>''·''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:bottom;">]</span>'' 02:26, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*:Same here, these list of destinations do not violate <nowiki>]</nowiki> ] (]) 06:35, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 3''' Same for others, we want to have information from both past destinations and the present destinations, '''but''' if only provides a reliable reference if that route is existed in the past, or else removed it automatically. ] (]) 02:02, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
**This comment does not address the two different things asked about here and further indicates that reliable sources would justify inclusion, not that the content is inherently a violation. ]<sup>]</sup> 05:08, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*:<s>'''Option 3''' Same for others, we want to have information from both past destinations and the present destinations, but if only provides a reliable reference if that route is existed in the past, or else removed it automatically</s> | |||
*:<br> | |||
*:Changing to '''Option 4''' plus '''Neither''' vote, my comment is ridiculous but, I must say, both of them are not violates ], both of the pages do have reliable reference given to it (some of them have not). For some users always keep the page up-to-date with reliable reference that it given, for example: AeroRoutes, as it's the most (idk if that is reliable) used reference for starting/ending dates. | |||
*:<br> | |||
*:As for the airport pages, it can say but for some airline (with separate destinations lists), we can merge to the main airline page. ] (]) 12:20, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Neither'''. These tables have been around for a long time and should remain as they are. However, I believe we can discuss the criteria for including or excluding a destination in the table, specifically '''airport articles''', as this is the part that often causes confusion among editors. ] (]) 02:25, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 4'''. These lists provide a way for readers to understand the connectivity of an airline or airport in a way that a vague summary does not. They could certainly be improved to add more context, e.g. by adding maps, more sourcing, or more discussion, but they can be very informative and are not inherently listcruft. ] ~ <small>]</small> 02:29, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 3'''. NOTDIR failures do not belong on the site, regardless of what the airline is. Locations merely being verified in primary sources do not constitute BALASP coverage. ] (]) 02:34, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
**BALASP refers to balancing viewpoints in order to maintain a neutral point of view. In no way are destinations reached from an airport minor aspects of an airport nor do they represent an imbalance in views or content weight. ]<sup>]</sup> 05:08, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
* '''Neither''' of these are inherently policy violations. This is not a case of {{xt|a directory of everything in the universe that exists or has existed}}. It's not a case of {{xt|Simple listings without contextual information}} or {{xt|loosely associated topics}} or anything else. It's not a case of {{xt|an indiscriminate collection of information}} or {{xt|Excessive listings of unexplained statistics}}. There is no policy violation here, and I suspect that if people had to quote the exact sentence that supported their claims, instead of waving at a potentially misleading ] shortcut, they would be hard pressed to justify claims of a policy violation. ] (]) 02:40, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 3''' I will simply repost what I said in the 2023 RfC with edits to be more generally applicable: | |||
:{{tq|], ] ... ] exists ... there is no reason cannot be created and maintained there with a cross-wiki link in the enWiki article (i.e. <nowiki>]</nowiki>). I presume the purpose of Wikivoyage is to serve as the very travel guide enWiki is not supposed to be.}} | |||
:— ] ⚓ ] 02:46, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
**This is not a feasible argument because no lists like this exist on Wikivoyage and there is no indication the community there seeks to maintain them, certainly not as well as the community here does. ]<sup>]</sup> 05:08, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
**:The English Wikivoyage talked about this a few years ago, and said that they did not feel that they had enough editors to maintain such lists, and were glad that the English Misplaced Pages did. (Also, they would only track current routes, not historical ones.) ] (]) 18:10, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 4 (Neither)'''. I can somewhat understand how airport destinations may be problematic under ] but I've never understood why airline destinations fall under the same criteria. Firstly, as Whatamidoing pointed out, none of the ] criterias are able to cover the airline destinations. Secondly, if I want to go somewhere, I will already have that somewhere in mind. I don't need to figure out that somewhere on Misplaced Pages before buying the ticket (even though that is entirely possible through the airport article, which is why I can put a weak support for option 2, but that’s very unlikely). Thirdly, even travel guides like Lonely Planet don’t list the airlines that fly to and from a city (usually they do have the airport, but even that’s covered under the #Transport/Transportation sections of almost every major city in the world). So this isn’t even a travel guide because travel guides don’t do that. Fourthly, when I look at the airline destinations article, I know where they fly to, but from where? China Eastern, for example, has flights from Wuhan (focus city) to Singapore, but not from Ningbo (also a focus city) to Singapore. The airline destination pages do not tell me that. There’s no way this can be used as a travel guide without knowing the exact flights from where to where, so why are we worried about this becoming a travel guide? ]<sup>]</sup> 03:06, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 4 (Neither)'''. This area has been discussed ad nauseam and I share the same frustration as {{u|SportingFlyer}}. It is the second large scale discussion initiated by Sunnya343 on the same page in 9 months and a thinly disguised ]. "AfD discussion didn't go the way I wanted? Let's try Deletion Review. Oh no the community endorsed the closure? Off we go RFC!" By my count, we have discussed this area 8 times (in various venues) since 2016, most of which were initiated by the same individual. We really need to put these discussions onto ] and stop wasting community members' time. After this RfC finishes, I intend to start a TBAN discussion on Sunnya343's forumshopping behaviour. ]] 03:37, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 4''' and '''suggest withdrawal''' per below discussion. Discussing two types of lists simultaneously without a strong rationale for doing so is not conducive to a productive discussion. In my view, the destinations tables for airports are exceedingly notable due to their coverage as both a group ''and'' individually when routes are announced/launched/dropped/delayed. The major newspaper of a given metropolitan area will have dozens of articles about these route changes. To fulfill Misplaced Pages's goal of being comprehensive, one cannot remove a critical element from an airport article, lest readers believe that planes simply stop at an airport and fly off into the void. ''']]''' 05:12, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 4''' Neither. I see people have raised a few points about NOTDB, NOTDIR, or NOTTRAVEL. But I think those policies are pretty clear. NOTTRAVEL pertains specifically to travel guides with some explanation of what that means, and these very much are not such a beast. Also, these lists are not indiscriminate collections of information, and in fact are very specific in what they cover; these lists also have context to explain what the information means. Train stations and lines are vital to rail travel. Highways to automotive. Similarly routes and destinations are vital to air travel. There is no commercial air travel without routes and destinations, so it would be a mistake for us to exclude it simply because it's presented as a list. —]]] 05:30, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 3 (both).''' Both lists appear (to me) to fall under the category of {{tq|an indiscriminate collection of information}}. I think maybe the telltale sign here is that the information (data) is taken from primary sources, instead of from secondary sources that should {{tq|discriminate}} for us and summarize the essence and what's important in the data (e.g. hypothetically "British airways has 850 destinations, the most out of any airline, spanning all 7 continents" and then a reference to that source). There is infinite data on most of anything, and it is the secondary source's job to determine what in the data is of essence, and it is our job as a tertiary source to summarize what extracted essence is so emphasized by secondary sources that it becomes notable enough to write about here. Adding these lists here bypasses this filtering structure and just feels arbitrary (hence {{tq|indiscriminate}}). ] (]) 05:32, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
**Every airport ''has'' these lists, which are clearly a finite and managable amount of data, without any arbitrary determinations made. Countless users have already determined it is of essense and included it in an organized manner. Moreover, besides the fact that independent sources do regularly cover airline routes, there is no reason to exlude primary or non-independent sources (which were regularly incorrectly conflated in the last discussion); while primary sources must be used with care to ensure NPOV and that there is not original research, interpretation, or synthesis of the source, that is not a concern for straightforward noncontroversial facts such as an airline flying a particular route. I would support continued work to add sources to these lists, but not removal on flimsy grounds. Saying so little that a major airline flies to 5 continents is an insult to readers who use this (though, again, A and B are very different). ]<sup>]</sup> 05:48, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
**:Replying to these in order: 1. {{tq|every airport has these lists}} Just because something similar was done before doesn't make it an argument to continue doing it. The purpose of this RFC is to explicitly assess in a centralized fashion if the above lists violate NOT or not, and that's what we should address. 2. {{tq|Countless users have already determined it is of essence}} My argument is exactly that it is not for them to decide, but for reliable secondary sources to do so. Regardless, a centralized community consensus here would override a distributed, more local consensus in separate articles. 3. {{tq|not a concern for straightforward noncontroversial facts}} I can find you terabytes of database information containing various straightforward noncontroversial facts on British airlines. Why is this bit of data more important than the other bit of data? My point is that secondary sources should answer this, and not us. 4. {{tq| Saying so little that a major airline flies to 5 continents is an insult to readers}} well (a) I just gave that as an example. We should just say what reliable secondary sources decide is notable/important about this data. (b) Maybe it would be insulting for the reader to get giant tables of indiscriminate data when they deserve encyclopedic content that summarizes knowledge. Either way, they shouldn't feel insulted, we're just volunteers. ] (]) 06:16, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
**::1. Every airport having these lists does show that that information is not "infinite data" or "arbitrary" but rather something well-curated and overseen to ensure that it is not indiscriminate. It's not one person creating a mass of pages for their own narrow interest without oversight. 2. I don't believe this talk page is truly a centralized community consensus that should override the edits made on thousands of pages by thousands of users who find this valuable and encyclopedic. 3. There are plenty of independent sources that do in fact answer the question that airline/airport destinations are important and of interest. I just added from today's paper to the relevant article. 4. Sure, we can provide summaries, but that's no reason to delete this consistent information. More sources should be added but they do in fact find airline routes notable and important. ]<sup>]</sup> 16:49, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
**:::Being useful is not a reason to keep information. Having been edited by many editors is not a reason to keep information | |||
**:::WP is meant to be a summary work of what reliable sources give, and an exhaustive list of destinations for an airline (which can be changed frequently) seems exactly the type of info that is not a summary. It does make sense to say which major cites BA serves, or which major destination cities Heathrow Li KS to, which I am sure can be documented in secondary coverage of both topics, but not a complete and exhaustive listing. ] (]) 17:01, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
**::::Well... according to this policy, which says {{xt|the written rules themselves do not set accepted practice}}, "Having been edited by many editors" is probably a reason to assume that the result is "accepted practice". When accepted practice and the written rules diverge, it's the written rules that we're supposed to change. ] (]) 18:16, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
**:::::Even if we assume that this is "accepted practice", in the context of this RFC this practice is a series of editorial decisions in a very specific topic area, and isn't evidence at all that a global English Misplaced Pages policy like NOT should be changed. If policy written based on global consensus (NOT) and accepted practice in a narrow topic area diverge, the latter is supposed to change. ] (]) 00:41, 9 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
**::::::Why do you say this? This policy literally says that the written rules, including NOT, do not set the accepted practice, and the accepted practice is supposed to win. | |||
**::::::Have you actually read the policy? Here's a relevant part: | |||
**::::::"Although ], the written rules themselves do not set accepted practice. Rather, they document already-existing community consensus regarding what should be accepted and what should be rejected. | |||
**::::::While Misplaced Pages's written ] should be taken seriously, they can be misused. Do not follow an overly strict interpretation of the ] of policies without considering their ''principles''. If the rules truly prevent you from improving the encyclopedia, ]. Disagreements are resolved through ] discussion, not by tightly sticking to rules and procedures. Furthermore, policies and guidelines themselves ] to reflect ]." | |||
**::::::] says "Technically, the policy and guideline ''pages'' are not the policy and guidelines in and of themselves. The actual policies and guidelines are behaviors practiced by most editors." | |||
**::::::In other words, if a policy page (e.g., NOT) and accepted practice diverge, the policy page is the one that needs to change. ] (]) 18:31, 9 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
**:::::::I have indeed read the policy. I'm of the opinion that the tables above are not part of a practice that is accepted at a wide enough level to warrant ignoring the policy when this practice and NOT diverge. Obviously I understand that it is not exactly clear how to determine that, and it's basically for the community to decide where the line is drawn here (whether IGNORE applies). Based on the votes in this RFC, it looks like some in the community may agree with this idea (e.g. "ignore because it's a common practice and useful to the project"). I'll leave it to the closer to figure out what to do in this situation (genuinely curious to see how the arguments will be weighted here). ] (]) 03:50, 10 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
**::::::::I'm not sure that narrowly defined lists are at all an unusual practice. Consider discographies, of which we appear to have more than 10,000. I see no inherent difference between "List of the places this group flies to" and "List of the albums this group made". The difference between "airports the airline flies to" and "train stations the train company drives to" seems particularly artificial, and yet we have ], ], ], and many others. Someone says that airlines can change their list of destinations, which is true, but ] indicates that this is also true for rail, as does ], ], and many others. | |||
**::::::::In terms of ], I might prefer a plain "list of airlines" and a plain "list of destinations", rather than a table that tells me which destinations each airline goes to, but IMO neither of them violates WP:NOT. ] (]) 07:48, 13 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
**:::::::::Yeah, looking at it again, I'm inclined to agree with your overall assessment about the ubiquity of such lists. Both can be true at the same time: I personally think that many of these lists (including the ones linked in this RFC) do fall under "indiscriminate collections of information", which violate NOT as it's currently written (for the same reasons mentioned before). At the same time, I do now agree that this pattern is wide enough to warrant seriously considering IGNORE in this case, and maybe even adjusting the policy towards some middle ground with a formal RFC that explicitly examines the matter. I'm becoming increasingly convinced that such an RFC would result in policy change. ] (]) 01:49, 14 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
**:::::Just because there exists articles that may be from long standing practice doesn't mean that they are still within policy. There are ''lots'' of walled gardens of content on WP that we sometimes need to tear down the walls to bring the content more in line with what an encyclopedia covers (particularly as there is a sister project, Wikivoyage, far better suited for this information). We had to do that recently with sports athletes, for example, and its still taking a way to work through the walled garden of barely-notable athletes. ] (]) 01:05, 9 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Neither – Option 4''' It's poor faith to suggest that "This is not meant to serve as a deletion venue" when – after having initiated numerous counterproductive RFCs – the nominator clearly seeks to subsequently delete content from thousands of articles. I share the concerns of {{u|SportingFlyer}} and {{u|OhanaUnited}} that this attempt to conflate and delete two different types of articles/sections is unnecessary. It's clear that the innumerable users and readers who contribute and read this content find it to be encyclopedic. Even if third-party websites also present the information in convenient ways, it's an important part of these articles for navigation and understanding. No part of this information is indiscrimate – they are narrowly defined lists that provide context to how an airport and its tenants operate. The airport destinations show to what extent an airport is a hub that serves its city's residents and those who travel through, and they show how it is connected to the region or world, with links to such connections that define the very purpose of the airport. Major newspapers and other reliable sources regularly include content about flights and what the airlines do at airports. This content isn't a directory like "the white or yellow pages", "loosely associated topics", or "A resource for conducting business". This content isn't "Summary-only descriptions of works", "Lyrics databases", "unexplained statistics", or "Exhaustive logs of software updates". This content isn't an instruction manual or travel guide that instructs people how to book a flight or includes overly specific descriptions of how or when each flight is flown. It does not violate NOT and is welcome to continue to be included in the encyclopedia without detriment to writers and readers. ]<sup>]</sup> 05:48, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*:This is a very strict reading of NOT's examples, but it skips the opening line under "Encyclopedic content": {{tq|Information should not be included solely because it is true or useful. An article should not be a complete presentation of all possible details, but a summary of accepted knowledge regarding its subject.}} This is why we don't blast the reader with all information about everything, and instead just summarize secondary sources on the matter. The argument that people find it useful and major newspapers regularly include this content are not at all relevant the question of whether the information should be included here, in an encyclopedia. This is exactly what NOT attempts to convey. Frankly (as a reader), I'd argue that a lot of the information in these tables '''is''' useless, but maybe I'm missing something important hidden in the data. If the goal is to give the reader important ''impressions'' about the data found in these tables, then cite reliable secondary sources that make these impressions instead of pasting the entire table here and leaving it to the reader to figure it out for themselves. ] (]) 13:23, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*::Sure, and this summarizes sources by only naming the destinations, rather than including the flights' frequency or schedules, aircraft used, service history, or other details. These tables are by no means "everything" or only included because it's true, but because it's a key aspect of the subject covered by a variety of sources. While this information has not always been the best-referenced (such as including a source for a start or end date but removing it when the route actually begins), it's something that is being improved upon with both specific and general sources. ]<sup>]</sup> 16:37, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Neither - Option 4''' per ] and ]. –] ] ] 06:54, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 3 (Both)''' (NOTE: I was alerted to this RfC by an announcement on my talk page.) I don't see the usefulness of these two articles; providing this detailed of information is getting into the weeds. IMHO, it would be far more useful if the information in these two articles were presented in a gif file, which would present the ebb & flow of BA routes in a manner far more useful to the casual reader. If a user consulting this article wanted more detailed information, then they can consult the sources cited to create these two gif files. -- ] (]) 07:04, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*:So this ''is'' useful, valid, encyclopedic content, you'd just rather see it as a map or image that still provides the details rather than a list. Of course, there have been several discussions about whether to include maps, which often take up more space, are harder to keep up to date (a gif would be much harder), and don't include navigational links or an easy way to provide sources. ]<sup>]</sup> 14:35, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
* ] violates ] and ], because it is an indiscriminate collection of information, primarily collected from research on the website of British Airways and other primary sources. Indeed, it is practically impossible to source this kind of information from anyone ''but'' the airline, either directly or indirectly. It should also be said that this type of list typically does not survive AFD. ] (]) 07:16, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*:@], for clarity, can you elaborate on why you think ] is "haphazard, random", made "without care or making distinctions, thoughtless"? That's the dictionary definition, but I wonder if that's really what you mean. ] (]) 18:22, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*::If you'd prefer a more concrete question, then maybe explain why ] can qualify for ] but a list of places where an airplane goes can't even qualify to exist. ] (]) 18:25, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*:::Easy answer is that rail stations and tracks are effective permanent fixture (though specific train routes may not be), while airlines can readily change flight offerings on a dime. As such, the infrastructure of raillines tends to get more detailed coverage in secondary sources that airlines routes. ] (]) 18:30, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*::::Basically this. A listing of airline services necessarily means an exhaustive listing of ephemera that changes week-to-week. They are not comparable to listings of fixed infrastructure. ] (]) 16:57, 9 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*:::::Do you honestly think that airlines add and remove destinations week to week? That's not consistent with my experience. The individual flight schedules may change, but the part about "Does this airline fly to New York at all?" is pretty stable. ] (]) 20:04, 9 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*::::::As shown by the sourcing on the BA list article, new routes are introduced or removed near daily, not for any one airline but as a whole. It's very mutable. | |||
*::::::But you second point is actually something that we should document, what airlines serve a specific airport; for major airports, that is pretty immutable (in that, it is rare when an airline completely removes themselves or adds themselves to an airport because of the infrastructure costs to set up offices and support services) and that is usually documented in non routine news. But that's far different as a list of all connecting cities since those can change on a whim. ] (]) 20:17, 9 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*:::::::We document plenty of ephemera on this website, from sports squads to breaking news. Just because something gets updated frequently does not mean we need to exclude it. ] ''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:top;">]</span>''·''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:bottom;">]</span>'' 20:59, 18 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*::::::::{{ping|SportingFlyer}} Essentially, I agree. However, it may be a reason to focus more on lists of all connections that ever have existed, rather than on lists of just the current connections. (Actually, the fact that a certain connection existed for a given time but then was discontinued sometimes may be more interesting than the fact that another connection extsted and still exists; especially when we can add (sourced) reasons for the discontinuation.) ] (]) 20:08, 20 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Neither - Option 4''' per ] and ]. No need to reiterate again.] (]) 07:35, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 3'''. For both airlines and airports, an extensive list, generally compiled from primary sources only, provides no encyclopedic value. Whether the lists are presented in standalone articles (as is the case for some airlines) or as a section within an overall article (as is the case for other airlines and most airports) is irrelevant to the question at hand. ] (]) 07:50, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*:One thing I'll note is that it's historically been common for announced routes to be added with a start date and source (e.g. ) then after that date for both the date and source to be removed to limit footnote clutter (e.g. ) as the airline's cited timetable continues to verify the content – timetables were endorsed as an acceptable source for verification in an WP:AIRPORTS RFC. I believe this practice should be changed and the individual sources, often independent, be kept, but that's why they appear to be compiled that way. ]<sup>]</sup> 16:58, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Neither (option 4)'''. Airports and airlines are important nodes and connections of a major part of transportation infrastructure. What destinations an airport connects to is just as relevant as to what destinations a railway station connects to, event though the lack of roads or rails makes the list more dynamic and in greater need of constant update. Likewise, where an airline flies is a major part of understanding an airline's scope, outreach and market impact. ] ] 07:52, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 4'''. The current list of British Airways destinations does have most cities listed with references. The deleted ones can inform the reader of where BA use to fly to. On the Air NZ list it has even more details of what year when a former destination started by the airline. | |||
:The current list of BA cities served at Heathrow has an immediate impact for the reader to visualize what is happening at that airport and is kept up to date. ] (]) 08:27, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
== Keep it short == | |||
*'''Option 1'''. The first page is a page solely for the destinations served by British Airways, which is not a notable topic by itself and does not strike me as a particularly encyclopedic list. But the second page is, in fact, ''']'''; the British Airways stuff is one fact in one row of a table on that article -- which is, again, the article for Heathrow Airport, and not a list. Like... am I missing something here? Or is everyone else? Because Option 1 is clearly not going to be consensus, my second choice is '''Option 4''', mainly because the presentation of the two pages is misleading -- they are both styled to appear like lists, despite only one article actually being one -- and because "this is not meant to serve as a deletion venue" is the least believable thing I have read all year. ] (]) 08:37, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 4''' neither, as these kind of lists are also published elsewhere, and so are not original research. However I will say that a current destination list is more useful. But for a major airline, the Misplaced Pages lists are not so useful as they could be very big and changing all the time. For small airlines, their destinations will be more constant, and be more stable, and could be included in the airline article. ] (]) 08:58, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 4''', or maybe 1. Per OhanaUnited. This feels like another attempt to relitigate the same thing. ] (]) 09:37, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 3 (Both violate ND)''' per {{u|SMcCandlish}}. No need to flog each horse when the whole herd is dead. — Cheers, ] (]) 10:18, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Neither (option 4)''' Neither, as Misplaced Pages is cited accross several (non)-aviation plattforms exactly because it inherits a consistently reliable list of airlines and destinations for actually almost every airport. In my opinion these are very comparable to railway station articles that also cite the exact railway connections of a station, and here in most cases even without any source. ] (]) 10:42, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 4 (neither)'''. Multiple people have said why above better than I can, but in short these are notable topics presented in encyclopaedic context. ] (]) 11:36, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 3 (both violate)''' The bulk of sourcing on both articles are questionable; the first uses mostly BA's own pages about itself, making it primary coverage, while the second uses an independent blog that doesn't give any indication of wider notability to the route changes. If these lists were dominated by proper third party reliable sources like newspaper coverage, that would be different, but as they stand, these violate the nature of the the prior RFC on airline routes. --] (]) 13:00, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*:So this is a sourcing question, not a general NOT question, applied specifically to this airline/article, not the concept as whole. There are certainly more newspaper sources that can be added. ]<sup>]</sup> 14:38, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*::Using a bunch of routine business news to announce roylutes would still be a problem, as you now start getting into synthesis in the complication of these lists. If this is not stuff covered in secondary sources discussing the bulk of these routes, it's still a sign it fails WP:NOT. This basically feels like a form of trainspotting, which we don't document on WP. ] (]) 17:04, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*:::Of course there is also ], which tracks specific aircraft. We are not doing that, just stating the general routes operated without complication or hobbyist details. How is there possibly synthesis here? I can't conceive of how original research can be involved in identification of a route. ]<sup>]</sup> 19:17, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*::::It's not a single route, it's effectively the entire network for one airline or in the case of the airport, all the spokes that airport connects to. Have reliable sources discussed that aspect as a whole, not just piece parts? If not, then we are getting into synthesis territory. ] (]) 19:26, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*:::::WP:SYNTH implies {{tq|Do not combine material from multiple sources to state or imply a conclusion not explicitly stated by any of the sources.}} I have absolutely no clue how listing destinations would possibly violate ], as we are presenting facts, not conclusions. ] ''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:top;">]</span>''·''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:bottom;">]</span>'' 20:20, 9 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 4''' Concerns about primary sourcing are misapplied. Primary sourcing is fine for supporting basic statements of objective fact so long as it's not interpretive. They don't speak to notability, but then again, notability in this case is about the suitability of the articles existing, not inclusion criteria. As for the idea that the existence of such charts on dozens of article for a great many years now is somehow not a true consensus, I just laugh. Clearly there's consensus for their existence, else they wouldn't exist for so long in so many places, edited by dozens if not hundreds of editors. The idea that a handful of commenter who have never even contributed to these articles on an obscure project talk page (and spare trying to say it's not obscure) can dictate they shouldn't exist in obvious contravention to the clear long-standing consensus is just back door ]. Claiming this isn't intended as a deletion discussion is disingenuous. ] (]) 13:28, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*:Primary sources are fine to use as the mortar to fill in the information gaps left by secondary and third-party sources, but when the bulk of the information is coming from primary sources, that's a problem per WP:NOT, WP:V and WP:N. And the remaining arguments are variations of WP:ATA (been around a long time, edited by lots). ] (]) 13:39, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*::If that's the case that we can't have things coming from primary sources, we'd have to get rid of a lot of geography infoboxes, sports statistics, most academics... ] ''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:top;">]</span>''·''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:bottom;">]</span>'' 17:02, 9 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Delete''' I know that's not an explicit option but it is implicit, and I support the deletion (or prevention of addition) under consistency and rationalizing coverage across articles. I might support a more nuanced or rational class carve-out from the general prohibition, but not one airline, or one airport (treating either of those 2 things in issue here as ''sui generis'' leads to only confusion, not encyclopedic coverage). ] (]) 14:50, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 4 (neither)''' As all the reasons other people have stated above. Removing this information collected over years would be detrimental to the aims of an encyclopedia.] (]) 16:13, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Neither'''. Perhaps the most important information in understanding an airline or airport is where they fly, which these lists provide. --] <sup>(])</sup> 18:22, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 4, neither''' per SportingFlyer. The places to which airlines fly from an airport are paramount to the importance of said airport and therefore paramount to our coverage of that airport. ''']]''' ‡ <sup>]</sup> 04:16, 9 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 4''' Neither as they represent long established practice per ]. But this poll seems vexatious and contrary to other sections of ] ... ]🐉(]) 17:28, 9 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
* '''Option 4''' — My straightforward reading of this portion of WP:NOT seems decisive: "there is nothing wrong with having lists if their entries are relevant because they are associated with or significantly contribute to the list topic." Knowing where an airline has flown is a straightforward element of understanding it. Knowing where an airport is connected to is a significantly contributes to understanding its current utility. These are standard elements of rail station pages on Misplaced Pages and rightly so.--] (]) 17:31, 9 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*:There's nothing wrong to identify the major hubs that a airline uses (to not mention Heathrow with respect to British Airways, or Atlanta with Delta, would clearly be missing key info), but what becomes a problem is when are the small regional airports that a airline might serve one year and drop the next, which pretty much is only going to be documented in primary sources. Similarly, it makes sense to say what destinations the majority of flights out of Heathrow reach (eg that it serves as a major international hub for Europe, the Americas, Africa, and Asian nations) but listing all the smaller airports, which can change rapidly based on how the airlines change their routes, is a problem. We should be looking to see how RSes summarize an air line's reach or the connectivity of an airport, not trying to be exhaustive about it. ] (]) 18:38, 9 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*::The opposite may actually be true - if a smaller airport loses flights, that is typically of note in that community. ] ''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:top;">]</span>''·''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:bottom;">]</span>'' 20:21, 9 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
* '''Option 4''' - I disagree that these ''inherently'' violate WP:NOT (of course, individual cases can be argued), and I supported keeping them back in the 2023 RfC. But I think it's also important to consider that while the 2023 RfC leaned towards "remove these unless clearly WP:DUE", these sections have mostly stayed in articles without significant pruning or alteration, suggesting ''de facto'' consensus is a bit broader than the RfC suggested. In that situation, it seems strange to have another RfC to try and tighten restrictions further? ] (]) 18:40, 9 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 4 (neither)'''; but mainly as a 'vote' in the "hidden underlying" discussion. This RfC was actually more or less motivated by a fairly broad encouragement to reopen ] from January, 2018; so my 'vote' is for formally revoking that decision (taken by a fairly limited consensus). (Actually, it is already at least partially contradicted by several later RfC's; although it also could be considered as being more or less upheld in some older AfD's. See the discussion section.) ] (]) 00:09, 10 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 3''' There is a place in WP articles to include some places an airline flies, but to include an exhaustive list gives ] weight to locations that are merely represented on the airline's reference website, as opposed to locations that were actually met with ] by the media when announced. We have to remember that just because something can be verified does not mean it is notable. Let's review the policy on notability: {{tq|"Misplaced Pages's concept of notability applies this basic standard to avoid indiscriminate inclusion of topics. Article and list topics must be notable, or 'worthy of notice'."}} | |||
:All of that being said, we're not having this conversation on the airline's talk page, we're having it on the policy page. So where else does this issue come into play? Surely there are hundreds of lists currently on WP that could be considered exhaustive and not notable if debated individually. Where do we cross the line? I'm curious, editors who have voted Option 3, generally, how would you respond to this question? When is a list merited and when is it extraneous? ] (]) 13:30, 10 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
::] and this quotation refers to standalone articles as a whole, not individual facts within an article. There's no understating how many facts across articles are only based on a single source, often one that's not independent of something. ]<sup>]</sup> 16:48, 12 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Neither''', and any consensus here is unsuitable for a deletion discussion of airline destination lists (which needs to be properly notified on the articles itself) per ]. Airport connectivity is an important and encyclopaedic part of what an airport is (the 1911 Britannica's articles about some seaports similarly list the main destination ports). In some cases there may be better presentations than a complete list, but just the fact that some list is accurate and complete should not be a reason to remove it. —] (]) 17:37, 10 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*:Key is the "main destination ports", not every possible port. There's little question that we shouldn't include major destinations that Heathrow serves, but we do not need the exhaustive list of every possible destination airport, particularly the regional ones, that it supports, since that particularly depends on a great deal of use of primary sourcing. ] (]) 17:51, 10 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*::Again, we are allowed to use primary sources when ''writing'' articles, and this would introduce bias - for instance, Aer Lingus flies to Knock from Heathrow, which you might consider a "regional" airport, but that is a very important flight for understanding how Knock Airport is connected to the world commercially. Your proposal here doesn't make sense. ] ''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:top;">]</span>''·''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:bottom;">]</span>'' 18:30, 10 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*:::Knowing how Knock Airport is connected absolutely makes sense on that airport page, but it a drop in the water of information for an article about Hearthow. The problem with airport and airline information is that the value of that information absolutely depends on context, in part due to there being many many more airports than there are airlines. Knowing, on an airport page, what airlines have historically and currently serve it seems absolutely valuable, more-than-useful information and the type of info I see in secondary coverage of airports, but the reverse, knowing every airport an airline serves, seems to be indiscriminate information, since this list can be extremely large for airlines with large international presence, and rarely fully documented without turning to primary sources. ] (]) 18:39, 10 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*::::I completely and wholeheartedly disagree with you on this. You have also fallen into the trap of what is indiscriminate information and what isn't. A complete listing of all destinations is definitionally not indiscriminate since it is complete. ] ''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:top;">]</span>''·''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:bottom;">]</span>'' 18:45, 10 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*:::::A complete, finite list can still be indiscriminate. For example, when we list casts of films, we do not include even every single name that appears as cast in the credits list (which is typically limited to around 50 or so names), but only stick to the principle ones as this follows how RSes cover that information. In the case of airlines, barring small regional carriers that only serve a few airports, a full list of airports they serve is not regularly documented in reliable sourcing on airlines, so that should also be considered indiscriminate. There's a lot of calls for "it's useful" , which is not an aspect that WP considers for retaining information. ] (]) 19:18, 10 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*::There is a massive difference between "we don't need X" and the proposal of "we should make a rule that prohibits X". In the case at hand, I am strongly opposed to prohibiting the inclusion of complete lists but expect that a higher level summary might sometimes be better (possibly with the complete list moved to a subarticle). Option 4 gives us the most flexibility. —] (]) 18:30, 10 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Neither''' per Kusma. ] (]) 18:13, 10 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*Just as "is this person notable" isn't appropriate for an RfC at ], this is a question for AfD. — <samp>] <sup style="font-size:80%;">]</sup></samp> \\ 20:05, 12 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 4''' - Destinations are a key aspect of the operations of airlines and airports. A list of destinations served by one of the world's largest airlines is appropriate, as it serves to show the scope and history of that airline's operations over the years. Including it on the main page would cause excessive clutter, and it is appropriate for it to have its own list. Same for an airport...the places that are directly served by that airport is a key piece of information on the airport's operations and provides, at a glance, how it "plugs in" with the rest of the world. Three notes: | |||
:1) I agree that this would be better served as separate RfCs; | |||
:2) I do NOT think it's an AfD discussion, as the Heathrow/BA are being use as examples of a type of article versus a discussion on deleting the individual articles; | |||
:3) and, though it's not specifically called out here in the RfC it has been a topic of discussion lately, so I'd like to note that I think using timetables, press releases, route maps, and other primary sources to populate these pages is an appropriate use of primary sources per ] and shouldn't be discouraged. Those arguing that only secondary sources can be used need to review the policy. ] (]) 13:21, 13 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
::However PRIMARY also states {{tq|<strong>Do not</strong> base an entire article on primary sources, and be cautious about basing large passages on them.}} ] (]) 18:53, 16 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
* '''Option 4, neither''' - There has not been, and should not be, any policy banning such lists. ] (]) 10:38, 14 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
* '''Option 4''' as an editor who often edits airport articles. ] (]) 01:47, 16 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 3''' This is the closest thing to my actual position which is that the articles should not exist and that that decision is influenced by degree of lack of compliance with wp:not. A list of a company's past and present products is what this is. <b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 03:02, 16 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*'''Option 4: Neither''' - ] is not the key factor for these articles. ] by way of ] is. Is the list discussed as a list in reliable sources? Yes? Well then it meets our criteria for being a worthwhile topic of consideration. If this RFC were to be closed for any of the other 3 options, it would not be a valid cause to delete articles anyway, per ], so this RFC is practically moot. ] (]) 23:54, 21 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*:Wow, so there is quite a lot of guidelines content for lists when they are part of a stand-alone articles (e.g. ] literally says: "Some Wikipedians feel that some topics are unsuitable by dint of the nature of the topic. Following the policy spelled out in WP:NOT, they feel that some topics are trivial, non-encyclopedic, or not related to human knowledge. If you create a list like the "list of shades of colors of apple sauce", be prepared to explain why you feel this list contributes to the state of human knowledge."). | |||
*:However, this RFC is about how NOT applies to lists as content within the articles (including articles that are not stand-alone lists), which is an important distinction. That said, there does seem to be a pretty big overlap here. I hope that the closer writes an essay explaining their decision. ] (]) 02:50, 22 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
===Discussion=== | |||
I agree with Rosami's latest edit. ''What do you read, my lord? Words, words, words.'' In gratitude to the wisdom of William Shakespeare, your friend and fellow editor, ] (]) 06:39, 5 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
Jointly discussing these two types of lists is ridiculous, by the way. They are two separate pieces of information. The first focuses on airlines - many airlines will not be eligible for stand-alone articles, but especially historical airline routes have been the subject of study and discussion: or books such as Mapping the Airways. If the list or article passes ], there is absolutely no reason we cannot have that on Misplaced Pages as it's encyclopedic information. The second focuses on current routes served at airports, which almost always will have some sort of article when new service is announced or dropped. These are two completely separate topics, both are encyclopedic, and both require their own RfCs. ] ''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:top;">]</span>''·''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:bottom;">]</span>'' 02:14, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
:The Wikivoyage argument is also completely wrong, considering travel guides do not normally include lists of destinations. ] ''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:top;">]</span>''·''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:bottom;">]</span>'' 02:50, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
Regarding , Rossami, I think my edit did explain why these policies are there. --] (]) 06:47, 5 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
:I tend to agree with Sportingflyer that it is silly to discuss these two lists together. They are different types of list. ] (]) 07:02, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
: As I tried to say in the edit summary (and probably did not say well enough), I don't disagree with anything that you added. The content is all true. But I also didn't think that it added any explanation or meaning to the page that wasn't already there. This page is already longer than ideal. When we get too wordy, our new editors simply stop reading the page. Not only do they fail to get the benefit of the subtle nuances of the discussion, they miss out on the core content that is central to the page. We need to keep this and all our policy pages as short and concise as possible. ] is a real and continuing problem for us. <br> If you really think that your changes were a material improvement to the page and would help reader understanding more than the added bulk would inhibit them, please explain it here so the rest of us can also understand. Thanks. ] <small>]</small> 15:14, 5 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
:They're not even "two types of lists"! One is a list, and one is an individual row on a table of the ''''']''''' article. People are actually out here trying to apply GNG to ''individual facts within an article'' when the first sentence of GNG explicitly states it is about "'''stand-alone''' articles or lists." If it weren't for the apparently deep lore of this discussion, I would honestly believe that the reasoning for including #2 in this RfC was simply "row big." ] (]) 16:36, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
Object to Malformed RFC. In one case we have standalone articles, in the other case we have sections of articles, and the information is presented, maintained, organized, and sourced differently. We already have comments that seem to address one or the other, making it harder to respond specifically or to determine a useful consensus. Following previous discussions, there was also an understanding that yet another RFC would be discussed first. The proposer needs to make productive edits besides proposing to delete this informative content from Misplaced Pages over and over and over at various venues – it's poor faith to indicate this has "arisen in debates" when he is the one constantly trying to get rid of it. Hundreds of users contribute this content for hundreds of thousands to read, who are interested in this encyclopedic content. ]<sup>]</sup> 04:54, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
== Request for comments: removing information for medical reasons == | |||
:{{ping|Reywas92}} Malformed or not; I think that this RfC is strange in several ways. <small>(I should add that I haven't edited any airport or airline destination articles, and am new to ''this'' particular discussion; whence I may have misunderstood things. I ''do'' edit a few railway line and station articles, and consider those issues fairly parallel to these, though.)</small> The proposal to which {{ping|Sunnya343|prefix=|p=}} refers above actually was to reconsider a RfC from January 2018 (item 2. below), in order either to revoke or to confirm it, before proceeding to further AfD's or alternatively restorations of deleted lists. It seems a bit hard to get a consensus on these matters; and I think that is one reason for an advice to Sunnya343 to list a specific case for RfC instead of inviting to a general discussion. I'm not criticising Sunnya343 for first asking about formulations for an RfC, and then more or less following the outcome of the resulting discussion; but, IHMO, the outcome of this attempt shows that that advice was not quite optimal. | |||
(this is a discussion started at ], but moved here for lack of replies) | |||
:In fact, the article A was up to an AfD yielding no consensus, according to a summary by ]. Sunnya343 didn't like the outcome, and 'appealed' in favour of deletion (mainly arguing by decision 2., I'd say). However, apart from the weak majority for '''keep''', Liz noted that there were a number of relevant RfC's, and that in fact taken together they did not support deletion. | |||
I am wondering if some editors who are interested in the topic of ] could comment on a discussion which has happenend several times already, without apparent consensus. I don't think this has been mentioned here before, sorry if I missed it. | |||
:The following are the five RfA's listed by Liz, but reordered in chronological order. (Liz presented them as ''a selection'' of the RfA's over, more or less, this subject.) | |||
:1. ] (December, 2016); | |||
:2. ] (January, 2018); | |||
:3. ] (end of January, 2018); | |||
:4. ] (March, 2018); and | |||
:5. ] (November, 2023). | |||
:To this I think we should add the very AfD Liz closed; as Liz seems to have guessed, it was getting a markedly broader participation than any of the aforementioned RfC's: | |||
:6. ] (April, 2024). | |||
:My preliminary conclusions are | |||
Suppose that a medical procedure requires that a patient does not know some particular detail (in this case, an image) for the procedure to work. Should we take steps to hide the image on Misplaced Pages (or remove the information altogether), so as not to spoil the procedure for a patient who may see this information without wanting to know about it ? | |||
::'''that''' the decision 2. in practice already has been overturned or at least superceeded; | |||
::'''that''' the present RfC in practice also involves trying to overturn the (clear and endorsed) '''non consensus''' summary of 6. one more time; and | |||
::'''that''' both counted by argument strengths or by numbers there is no good hope of achieving a consensus about these kinds of lists in the forseeable future <small>(exept possibly by the detestable means of 'sneaking' a decisions by a rather limited number of participants all already being ''pro'' or ''contra''; I'm happy that Sunnya343 seems to guard against such abuse.)</small>. ] (]) 00:09, 10 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
:::There's also the ], that is missing on your list, which endorsed the closure of the AfD in the same month. ]] 03:03, 10 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
::::{{ping|OhanaUnited}} This was the outcome of the 'appeal' of RfC 6; and I therefore didn't list it separately. Perhaps you'd like to add it as No. 6a? ] (]) 21:43, 13 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
*Why is this RFC being held here? Talk pages for policies are not noticeboards and are not really the appropriate place to hold RFCs about the content of individual articles. The previous discussions raise ] concerns as well. --] (]) 17:59, 15 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
===Notifications=== | |||
If you want the details of the discussion, they are ]. Policy and guidelines have been cited countless times in the discussion, so I thought posting here could potentially bring either some new contributors to the discussion, or some clarifications to the guidelines, helping to solve the problem in one way or another. Cheers, ] (]) 21:27, 3 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
*A-type lists: Participants in the ], ] | |||
:What header would that be under ].? Puzzled, ] (]) 08:45, 6 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
*B-type: Participants in the ] | |||
Well, I would be tempted to say "the whole page", since this is a discussion that has dragged for a long time and involved many headings, but ] is the one that seems most involved with discussion on policy. ] may also be of interest; both sections are quite long though. ] (]) 09:00, 6 March 2008 (UTC | |||
*], ] | |||
:None of those links helped. So many words. There seems to be a "hidden image" somewhere, perhaps an ink blot on a page dealing with the Rorschach test, but how can an image be "hidden"? What's the gist of the argument? Why can't we have a link to this "hidden image"? Sorry I can't help; maybe somebody else wants to take it on. Sincerely, ] (]) 18:22, 6 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
] (]) 01:33, 8 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
:: Having read through most of the discussion dealing with this one particular example, I think it would actually be a very bad idea to try to make a policy decision just because of this one case. As several lawyers have told me at different times, cases at the margins invariably make bad precedent. Laws passed because of a single incident, no matter how notorious, are almost always bad laws (though we pass a lot of them because it's so easy to play to the notoriety of the one case). I think you have a very similar situation here. <br> There are too many issues which are very specific to this one inkblot example to try to make a general rule about all spoilers. Only once there are several different cases all attempting to address the same issue will the community have a decent chance of identifying the core issue(s) and finding the right long-term policy answer. In the meantime, I think this is a good forum to advertise the Talk page discussion and to gain more comments and opinions which can focus on the very specific issues of the one case. ] <small>]</small> 18:52, 6 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
For posterity, I counted 12 !votes for option 3, 28 for option 4, and 1 for option 1. While I believe the combined questions resulted in a muddled RFC and justified the early withdrawal, there appears to be a decent preliminary consensus that neither lists of airline destinations nor destinations from airports violate NOT. I hope this has been enough discussions on the topic and these can be improved in format or sourcing rather than charged with removal again. ]<sup>]</sup> 05:07, 11 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
== Plot == | |||
:I'm obviously involved, but I agree with Reywas92's analysis, and I'm concerned that the early withdrawal was because consensus was so overwhelmingly against both, and there will be another attempt to forum shop in the near future. ] ''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:top;">]</span>''·''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:bottom;">]</span>'' 05:31, 11 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
::involvement aside, why do experienced editors continue referring back to vote count in the context of determining consensus? Isn't the first thing that new editors learn about consensus is that it's not a vote? I don't understand this. ] (]) 05:40, 11 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
:::We all know very well that when 70% of people agree on something, that ''is'' at least a "preliminary consensus". You might not like the supermajority's reasoning, but there are still valid points made and it would be inappropriate to close it another way. This page does not say "flight destinations are a forbidden directory", so it's merely an opinion that these !votes are any more "firmly based". ]<sup>]</sup> 22:02, 11 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
::Many of the Option 4 arguments fall within ] and while there were some that alluded to policy, the Option 3 !votes were more firmly based there. Thus, I would not take the vote count as a means to judge this for the future. ] (]) 05:50, 11 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
:::This wasn't a deletion discussion, it was a discussion about whether the content is encyclopedic. ] ''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:top;">]</span>''·''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:bottom;">]</span>'' 05:52, 11 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
::::If it wasn't encyclopedic, it wouldn't likely be kept or remain in that same format. I would think that because that's basically a step from deletion, the same ATA issues would apply. (And in general, many of the points in ATA apply to any other content disputes absent a deletion discussion such as ], as pointed out in the 3rd lede paragraph) There's also ], which many of the Option 4 !votes fell in line with, particularly the "it's useful" aspect. ] (]) 05:58, 11 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
:::::We must be reading completely different discussions then. ] ''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:top;">]</span>''·''<span style="font-size:small; vertical-align:bottom;">]</span>'' 06:06, 11 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
::::::(involved party) I also challenge this "withdrawal" by Sunnya343 and let someone else close this discussion, because there is clear consensus reached for option 4.]] 15:54, 11 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
:I also agree that the RFC should not have been withdrawn. I think the community was heading for consensus and by withdrawing the RFC, this unresolved question could be forum shopped. --] (]) 18:00, 11 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
::I'm also involved, but my feelings match those of OhanaUnited and Enos73 - there appears to be a clear consensus for option 4 and the withdrawal could be read as an attempt to avoid that. I'm assuming that this wasn't Sunnya's intention, but it would preferable for someone uninvolved to formally close the discussion - even as no consensus - to avoid the appearance of avoiding a consensus they were not advocating for. ] (]) 19:53, 11 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
:::I have been editing these for years adding references too. There has been a long history of debating to get these lists removed from Misplaced Pages going back as far as 2007. So this won't be the last one more will come. ] (]) 02:33, 12 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
:As an uninvolved editor, I've 'unwithdrawn' the RfC per the discussion above so that a closer can evaluate whether it reached consensus for anything. (I don't have time to evaluate that myself right now, so I'm hoping someone else will do that part.) ] (]) 03:21, 12 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
In response to Pixelface's removal of the plot section with edit summary "this contradicts ]": Allowing primary sources doesn't contradict disallowance of certain material from them or with specifying some rules for how they should be presented. <small style="font:bold 10px Arial;display:inline;border:#009 1px dashed;padding:1px 6px 2px 7px;white-space:nowrap">] ]/] ''12:07, 10 Mar 2008 (UTC)''</small> | |||
::Imagine if there was a proposal to ban all list of songs by artists with all of the effort in finding all of the information. There would be a huge number of people upset especially with all of the historical content of chart positions etc. Once you try to remove one set of list articles it can lead to others becoming vulnerable and potentially being removed from Misplaced Pages as well. ] (]) 19:08, 15 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
:Yes, that was my thought when I reverted. There's no logical connection between allowing primary sources (now and then), and permitting articles to be wholly plot summaries with no real-world context! ] (]) 12:18, 10 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::now I am wondering, when will we be reaching consensus, I think a lot of people have already spoken. ] (]) 14:06, 17 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
::Primary sources like books and films are acceptable sources per ]. Articles sourced from those works often will be nothing but a detailed summary of that work's plot early after the article is created — and even much later after the article is created. However, such articles do not make Wikipdia an indiscriminate collection of information. Any recommendations on what else the article needs can be explained in ]. Articles like are not against Misplaced Pages policy. --] (]) 19:08, 10 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::RFCs typically run for at least 30 days. ] (]) 18:55, 17 January 2025 (UTC) | |||
:::IIRC, it's been held that <s>large</s> plot summaries are derivative works. {{red|We have short, if not no plot summary at all, to comply with fair use restrictions (talking about it scholarly, e.g. {{la|Voyage of the Damned (Doctor Who)}} (which is B-class), and continues to talk about how that episode was made and what people thought about it.)}} ''']''' <sup>(])</sup> 19:10, 10 March 2008 (UTC), modified 19:13, 10 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::] "Copyright law only governs creative expressions that are "fixed in a tangible medium of expression," not the ideas or information behind the works. It is legal to reformulate ideas based on written texts, or create images or recordings inspired by others, as long as there is no copying (see plagiarism for how much reformulation is necessary)." And ] doesn't mention derivative works at all so I doubt that's why it's included under ]. --] (]) 19:17, 10 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::And last month ] contacted ] who said "plot summaries, in general, are not taken to be copyright infringement so long as they do not include any great degree of the original creative expression." --] (]) 19:43, 10 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::::So the issue can't be argued on a legal basis (at least, at this time). Nonetheless, giving a lengthy plot summary without any form of additional commentary doesn't make for a particularly good encyclopedia article.--] (]) 22:55, 10 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::::Well I think there's a difference between an article that's not good and an article that violates policy. --] (]) 23:00, 10 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::::: A bad article is (or at least, ought to be) against some policy or another. The whole point of our policy is to help us write better encyclopedia articles. Like an article that is mere plot summary, a page that is nothing more than a mere dictionary definition is also an example of "an article that's not good" but might be repairable and ]. I don't see them as mutually exclusive. Being a policy violation just means we have to fix it. ] <small>]</small> 23:15, 10 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Misplaced Pages has over 2.2 million articles and many of them are bad. An article being bad isn't against policy, because Misplaced Pages ]. Being a policy violation is more often than not used as an excuse for deletion. Bad articles just need to be cleaned up. How do articles like , that are simply plot summaries, make Misplaced Pages an indiscriminate collection of information? --] (]) 20:28, 11 March 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::::::That is fair; Pixelface raises a valid question as to whether or not WP:PLOT belongs in ] or if it should be a subsection of ]. This is more a style issue than a content issue, so the appropriate place for it is arguably in a guideline, not in a content-exclusion policy. I wouldn't be surprised if WAF didn't exist back when WP:PLOT was added to this page, so maybe it's time to rethink where we should be offering this guidance. | |||
:::::::Alternatively, I would welcome a guideline dealing with issues of plot only. Our approach to (excessively long) plot summaries in general is in bad need of reevaluation, and WP:PLOT isn't doing the trick.--] (]) 23:28, 10 March 2008 (UTC) |
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Can we remove the "And finally" section?
it has no place in[REDACTED] and it shouldn't even exist in the first place 37.210.71.142 (talk) 12:35, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
- makes no sense to remove. It's a catchall that NOT cannot enumerate everything WP is not. Masem (t) 13:00, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
- its just unfunny jokes if you checked it out, humorous essays shouldn't be part of main policies 37.210.71.142 (talk) 16:45, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
- Not sure about removing the whole "And finally" section, since it has been on this page for at least a decade now (though I don't think anything of value will be lost if the section does get removed). But I agree that policy pages shouldn't link to "humorous" essays or essays that haven't been thoroughly vetted by the community, so I've removed the links from that section. Some1 (talk) 00:22, 5 December 2024 (UTC)
- its just unfunny jokes if you checked it out, humorous essays shouldn't be part of main policies 37.210.71.142 (talk) 16:45, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
Notice of a requested redirect from Misplaced Pages:Misuse of Misplaced Pages to here
The redirect request can be found on Misplaced Pages:Articles for creation/Redirects#Redirect request: Misplaced Pages:Misuse of Misplaced Pages. 67.209.128.136 (talk) 03:45, 26 December 2024 (UTC)
Request for comments: in cases of a large numbers of religious celebrations in a religious calendar (e.g., feast day of saints), can they all be listed in a non-list WP article?
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This RfC concerns the WP:NOTDIRECTORY and WP:NOTGUIDE policies.
Presently, there are numerous WP articles of religious calendars that list the full list of celebrations, feast day of saints, etc., without those articles being WP:Stand-alone lists.
The pages concerned, from what I have found, are: Tridentine calendar, General Roman Calendar, General Roman Calendar of 1954, General Roman Calendar of 1960, Institutional and societal calendars of the Roman Rite, National calendars of the Roman Rite, Personal jurisdiction calendars of the Roman Rite, Calendar of saints (Lutheran), Calendar of saints (Episcopal Anglican Church of Brazil), Calendar of saints (Anglican Church of Australia), Calendar of saints (Anglican Church of Canada), Calendar of saints (Church in Wales), Calendar of saints (Scottish Episcopal Church), Calendar of saints (Armenian Apostolic Church), Calendar of saints (Hong Kong Sheng Kung Hui) (and previously Mysterii Paschalis).
My question for which I request comments is: is putting these long lists of religious feasts in those articles a violation of WP:NOTDIRECTORY or WP:NOTGUIDE, and if it so happens that they are a violation then what should be done with these lists? Veverve (talk) 18:25, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
- Comment. In my opinion, this isn't a significant problem. It looks to me (I haven't checked every page listed) like the pages are about encyclopedic topics that are reliably sourced. They are not unreasonable when viewed as embedded lists, as opposed to standalone list pages. As long as there is also paragraph-based text that is sufficiently sourced to establish notability, and to provide a context for the information that is listed, that takes those pages out of the realm of stuff that is simply an indiscriminate list of information of unclear encyclopedic relevance. I see that some of them have only a very brief lead section, and are tagged for needing improvements; these are the most problematic, but they can likely be fixed by further editing. (Those should either be revised into actual list pages, or be revised with more context in the form of paragraph text.) --Tryptofish (talk) 23:18, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
- Can't really see a problem. They are certainly list-like, and could be converted to lists, but what's the gain? I don't see either policy being breached. Johnbod (talk) 04:35, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
- They are functionally lists based on their current content. They don't have to have "List" in the title. Adumbrativus (talk) 07:51, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
- Problem in search of a solution per others. Not sure what needs/supposedly needs to be “fixed” here if anything. Dronebogus (talk) 10:19, 19 January 2025 (UTC)
Addition to WP:NOTDICTIONARY
I propose to add the following bullet (4) to the WP:NOTDICTIONARY entry:
- Misplaced Pages is not a multilingual dictionary. Articles should not include lists of translations of the topic into multiple languages, whether the topic is an object (apple = French pomme), a concept (wisdom = French sagesse), a culinary dish, or a proverb (You can't have your cake and eat it = French Vouloir le beurre et l'argent du beurre). If there is something encyclopedic to say about the different versions, such as etymology, then of course the name in other languages is relevant. Variants of the meaning should not be grouped by language, but by meaning. If a culinary preparation has no common name in English (e.g. kashk), then it is reasonable to include the variant names in the lead.
Discussion? --Macrakis (talk) 19:55, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- To some extent this seems to stand in contradiction to Misplaced Pages:Gazetteer, which would suggest that we should list the names for places in languages significant to that place as a gazetteer would be expected to do. —David Eppstein (talk) 20:23, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- I've never met a gazetteer, and I guess I should be glad I don't, right? There's also Misplaced Pages:Misplaced Pages is not a gazetteer, but both are essays anyway. Drmies (talk) 02:49, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
- I think maybe you're thinking of a gazebo? —David Eppstein (talk) 03:06, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
- I don't see a contradiction with WP:Gazetteer, which is about what places to mention. But MOS:ALTNAME is relevant for placenames. It says that we should include "significant alternative names", although that isn't elaborated on there (I think it is somewhere else, though). The significant names certainly include the name of a place in its own language (Deutschland), the name of the place under significant previous rulers (the Ottoman Turkish names for most places in Greece and the Balkans), and the name of the place in the languages of large populations which have lived there in the past (e.g. the South Slavic and Judeo-Spanish names of Thessaloniki). On the other hand, we don't include the German names for Poland (Polen) or Greece (Griechenland) despite Germany's occupation (and partial annexation in the case of Poland) of those countries during WWII.
- In any case, those policies are about placenames. For other topics, other approaches make more sense. For example, the Beef_Stroganoff#Around_the_world section mentions local names along with the local variants in Brazil etc. In the Straw that broke the camel's back, article, we say (I admit that I wrote this): "The image of the last drop is also found in many other languages", leaving the exact words to the sources in the several footnotes. This contrasts with You can't have your cake and eat it, where User:Drmies removed -- correctly in my view -- a long list of translations or equivalents of the expression (many without sources). --Macrakis (talk) 21:02, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
- Are there any examples showing how this change would have a practical effect? I presume the aim is to limit text appearing in an article? Or is to limit what articles should exist? There can't be a policy that lists every bad idea. Johnuniq (talk) 01:22, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
- I'd agree the removal on You can't have your cake..., but I disagree with the Beef Stroganoff example. Discussion the various national varities of a dish - as long as its sourced - seems completely appropriate, and in line of talking about those, the local name that the dish goes back makes sense. It would be a problem if we just has a list of translated names without any discussion of the unique aspects of the national variety, as was the case with the You can't have your cake... article. Masem (t) 01:37, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
- Yeah, I think the content in Beef Stroganoff makes more sense, even if poorly sourced. An obvious difference is of course that Beef Stroganoff deals with an actual physical topic and Cake deals with words--precisely the thing a dictionary should treat, which is why I directed the latest disruptor (who I suspect of being a sock of an earlier SPA in that article) to Wiktionary. I think I agree with the proposal, mostly--though I think that if we didn't have Oliebol already, a section in the Doughnut article makes sense. But then, as Masem indicated for Beef Stroganoff, there's much more there than just a translation of a word. Drmies (talk) 02:49, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
- I've never met a gazetteer, and I guess I should be glad I don't, right? There's also Misplaced Pages:Misplaced Pages is not a gazetteer, but both are essays anyway. Drmies (talk) 02:49, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
Should WP:NOTDIRECTORY be more specific about phone numbers, etc.?
I came across an {{Infobox school}} recently that was misusing free text parameters to list the school's phone number. "As we all know", contact information such as phone numbers, fax numbers and e-mail addresses is not encyclopedic
, so I removed it "per WP:NOTDIRECTORY". This prompted me to look if there were more cases of such misuse, and indeed there were dozens. I was going to remove them with the same explanation, but unfortunately I took time to read through WP:NOTDIRECTORY before doing that... and I don't think I can use it as my basis, because I don't see anything in the text explicitly forbidding this. There used to be an unambiguous statement (the green one), but it was removed almost exactly three years ago (, ). Right now, anyone could argue "None of this applies to me. I'm not replicating any listings, it's just one phone number. Nor am I conducting business, we're talking about a school here." and I haven't been able to find anything in current policy wordings to definitively counter this (the BLP ban obviously doesn't apply to institutions). Am I missing something obvious (entirely possible :) ), or should the wording be changed (back) to remedy this? I'm tempted to be bold and just add it back, but it's probably better to double-check the consensus on this first. Gamapamani (talk) 13:40, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
- It still states contact information is to be avoided under #6. Espresso Addict (talk) 04:42, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Yes, but the way that's framed, it seems to be limited to the context of "conducting business", which arguably wouldn't apply to something like a school. And even if we say it does apply, It would still be helpful to spell this out more explicitly, as "phone or fax number and e-mail" would be clearer for non-native speakers than "contact information", and a more obvious search term. Gamapamani (talk) 05:02, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- That makes sense, and the search term angle is compelling. JoelleJay (talk) 23:34, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
- Yes, but the way that's framed, it seems to be limited to the context of "conducting business", which arguably wouldn't apply to something like a school. And even if we say it does apply, It would still be helpful to spell this out more explicitly, as "phone or fax number and e-mail" would be clearer for non-native speakers than "contact information", and a more obvious search term. Gamapamani (talk) 05:02, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- NOTDIRECTORY #6 is already too long. Making it longer will not aid compliance. Template:Infobox school already says
school_number Official number (not for phone number).
andinformation (do not enter phone numbers or email addresses).
Are those notes unsatisfactory? WP:NOT is, I think, mainly used to advance deletion opinions at WP:AFD intended to have the strength of policy over mere WP:N notability guidance. What, in your view, should happen to 911 (emergency telephone number)? Take care that changes to policy do not have unintended consequences. Thincat (talk) 16:18, 11 January 2025 (UTC)- Adding
(such as phone numbers, fax numbers, and e-mail addresses)
is hardly a substantial increase, and if it makes it easier to search for our policy on phone numbers then that's a plus. JoelleJay (talk) 19:25, 11 January 2025 (UTC) #6 is already too long will not aid compliance
This doesn't have to be in #6, the statement I quoted in the opener was in a different place. In any case, a slight increase in length is less of a consideration compared to better clarity and findability, which could in fact improve compliance.Are those notes unsatisfactory?
Perhaps, since people are using yet other parameters to still include phone numbers. But my question here, although prompted by it, is not limited to the context of {{Infobox school}}. Since the phone number thing applies globally, it makes sense to specify is centrally. And I think WP:NOT is an overall content policy, it's not just about article deletion criteria.911 changes to policy
How would "contact information" expanded with examples make a difference for 911 compared to the current version, which is supposed to implicitly include the very same cases? This is not a policy change, and the clarification has been present in the past without affecting things like 911. Gamapamani (talk) 05:58, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- Adding
RfC on WP:NOT and British Airways destinations
|
Do the following violate WP:NOT? A) List of everywhere British Airways has flown over its history, and B) list of everywhere it flies from Heathrow Airport as of today.
- Option 1: Only A violates WP:NOT
- Option 2: Only B
- Option 3: Both A and B
- Option 4: Neither A nor B
Sunnya343 (talk) 00:26, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
Context
- A-type lists: In this deletion review some people proposed a new RfC.
- I chose to do an RfC here at WT:NOT to focus on whether this policy applies. This is not meant to serve as a deletion venue.
- B-type lists: This RfC closure review closed as no consensus, and some argued to relist the RfC with a different question.
- No prior discussion has jointly addressed the two types of lists.
- RfC planning done here. I acknowledge that I've begun many discussions on this topic, but I hope this one clarifies the main dispute about NOT which has arisen in debates going back to 2007.
Sunnya343 (talk) 00:28, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- This description of the context in itself is not quite undisputed; see the Discussion subsection infra. I think that the list of five older partly contradictory RfA's given by Liz in her (later endorsed) closure here of the original AfD also is a highly relevant part of the context; as is that AfD itself. JoergenB (talk) 00:09, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
Survey
- Option 3. The lists of current destinations and routes from Heathrow have lots of references, which is fine, though you could just as well cite BA's website for each city. It's a reliable source for this info, and indeed has already been cited for most of the current destinations in list A. Sites like Flightradar24 and FlightsFrom.com organize the data more conveniently and could be used as well. So there is no problem with verifiability here, but just because info is verifiable, doesn't mean it should be on Misplaced Pages. We aren't supposed to host a directory of airline routes, or a repository for data reorganized from flight databases.
In regard to past destinations, I agree with discussing the development of BA's route network over time. For example, in History of British Airways, people have written about the impact of a 1970s government policy, and the Heathrow-New York route on Concorde. On the other hand, recording every place that BA no longer flies to, from its maiden flight 50 years ago up to today, strikes me as airline trivia. Sunnya343 (talk) 00:28, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 3. Basically, listcruft is listcruft is listcruft. We want notable information, not indiscriminate information. - UtherSRG (talk) 01:13, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- The destinations currently flown is a narrowly-defined, discriminate list. Most destinations are covered in reliable sources so it's notable, though notability applies to articles, not specific facts. Reywas92 05:08, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 4 None of them violates WP:NOT, these are not indescriminate information, they are related to the topic of the article and shouldn't be removed, in my opinion I would support merging them into the airline article rather than be kept as a whole separate article Metrosfan (talk) 06:41, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- 3. We just had a lengthy but conclusive RfC about this, with a WP:NOT#DB conclusion. There is no reason to make an exception for a particular airline or airport. — SMcCandlish ☏ ¢ 😼 01:27, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Neither Neither of these violate WP:NOT. This is an absolutely ridiculous evergreen proposal. SportingFlyer T·C 01:55, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- I'm actually livid right now. Putting this at WP:NOT is just another tactic to try to ensure that completely valid encyclopedic information cannot be included anywhere on the site. SportingFlyer T·C 01:57, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- In order to violate WP:NOT, the information must not be encyclopedic. This is the flaw in the argument of those who are trying to rid our encyclopedia of this encyclopedic information.
- In terms of the airline destination lists, there is no need to specifically exclude them under WP:NOT. Analysis under WP:NLIST should be just fine, as it is for all other lists. Some airlines do have long histories with well documented historically flown routes or destinations. Looking at the British Airways list shows a well sourced article, and some air routes have been the subject of discussion as early as 1933.
- The airports table especially is one of the things I use most on the site. There are many wiki gnomes who keep them up to date. Almost all routes are be announced in the press, are easily verified, and do not need to rise to the level of notability to be included. They also do not violate WP:NOT per all of my arguments at other RfCs. The thing I specifically use them for the most is to determine how an airport or region is linked to the rest of the world, similar to how you can see which passenger routes operate from a given train station. I've seen the argument that yes, but rail infrastructure is fixed - it does not matter, the air routes can also be properly sourced. The information is also encyclopedic - for instance, one of the most important things in the history of a commercial airport is which routes were served first. Other airports have routes which are subject to academic analysis such as .
- This entire attempt to rid the website of this information is based on a complete misunderstanding. NOTDB? It's not a database, it's a list! NOTDIR? It's not a directory, these aren't simple listings without encyclopedic merit - otherwise we wouldn't have list articles at all! NOTTRAVEL? It's not a travel guide! If this passes, it will make Misplaced Pages worse, and there likely won't be any going back. And I'm exhausted from trying to defend this over and over again, year after year... SportingFlyer T·C 02:26, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Same here, these list of destinations do not violate ] Metrosfan (talk) 06:35, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- I'm actually livid right now. Putting this at WP:NOT is just another tactic to try to ensure that completely valid encyclopedic information cannot be included anywhere on the site. SportingFlyer T·C 01:57, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 3 Same for others, we want to have information from both past destinations and the present destinations, but if only provides a reliable reference if that route is existed in the past, or else removed it automatically. Drcarrot.phd (talk) 02:02, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- This comment does not address the two different things asked about here and further indicates that reliable sources would justify inclusion, not that the content is inherently a violation. Reywas92 05:08, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
Option 3 Same for others, we want to have information from both past destinations and the present destinations, but if only provides a reliable reference if that route is existed in the past, or else removed it automatically- Changing to Option 4 plus Neither vote, my comment is ridiculous but, I must say, both of them are not violates WP:NOT, both of the pages do have reliable reference given to it (some of them have not). For some users always keep the page up-to-date with reliable reference that it given, for example: AeroRoutes, as it's the most (idk if that is reliable) used reference for starting/ending dates.
- As for the airport pages, it can say but for some airline (with separate destinations lists), we can merge to the main airline page. Drcarrot.phd (talk) 12:20, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Neither. These tables have been around for a long time and should remain as they are. However, I believe we can discuss the criteria for including or excluding a destination in the table, specifically airport articles, as this is the part that often causes confusion among editors. Cal1407 (talk) 02:25, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 4. These lists provide a way for readers to understand the connectivity of an airline or airport in a way that a vague summary does not. They could certainly be improved to add more context, e.g. by adding maps, more sourcing, or more discussion, but they can be very informative and are not inherently listcruft. CapitalSasha ~ talk 02:29, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 3. NOTDIR failures do not belong on the site, regardless of what the airline is. Locations merely being verified in primary sources do not constitute BALASP coverage. JoelleJay (talk) 02:34, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- BALASP refers to balancing viewpoints in order to maintain a neutral point of view. In no way are destinations reached from an airport minor aspects of an airport nor do they represent an imbalance in views or content weight. Reywas92 05:08, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Neither of these are inherently policy violations. This is not a case of a directory of everything in the universe that exists or has existed. It's not a case of Simple listings without contextual information or loosely associated topics or anything else. It's not a case of an indiscriminate collection of information or Excessive listings of unexplained statistics. There is no policy violation here, and I suspect that if people had to quote the exact sentence that supported their claims, instead of waving at a potentially misleading WP:UPPERCASE shortcut, they would be hard pressed to justify claims of a policy violation. WhatamIdoing (talk) 02:40, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 3 I will simply repost what I said in the 2023 RfC with edits to be more generally applicable:
WP:NOTDATABASE, WP:NOTTRAVEL ... Wikivoyage exists ... there is no reason cannot be created and maintained there with a cross-wiki link in the enWiki article (i.e. ]). I presume the purpose of Wikivoyage is to serve as the very travel guide enWiki is not supposed to be.
- — Jkudlick ⚓ (talk) 02:46, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- This is not a feasible argument because no lists like this exist on Wikivoyage and there is no indication the community there seeks to maintain them, certainly not as well as the community here does. Reywas92 05:08, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- The English Wikivoyage talked about this a few years ago, and said that they did not feel that they had enough editors to maintain such lists, and were glad that the English Misplaced Pages did. (Also, they would only track current routes, not historical ones.) WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:10, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- This is not a feasible argument because no lists like this exist on Wikivoyage and there is no indication the community there seeks to maintain them, certainly not as well as the community here does. Reywas92 05:08, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 4 (Neither). I can somewhat understand how airport destinations may be problematic under WP:NOTTRAVEL but I've never understood why airline destinations fall under the same criteria. Firstly, as Whatamidoing pointed out, none of the WP:NOT criterias are able to cover the airline destinations. Secondly, if I want to go somewhere, I will already have that somewhere in mind. I don't need to figure out that somewhere on Misplaced Pages before buying the ticket (even though that is entirely possible through the airport article, which is why I can put a weak support for option 2, but that’s very unlikely). Thirdly, even travel guides like Lonely Planet don’t list the airlines that fly to and from a city (usually they do have the airport, but even that’s covered under the #Transport/Transportation sections of almost every major city in the world). So this isn’t even a travel guide because travel guides don’t do that. Fourthly, when I look at the airline destinations article, I know where they fly to, but from where? China Eastern, for example, has flights from Wuhan (focus city) to Singapore, but not from Ningbo (also a focus city) to Singapore. The airline destination pages do not tell me that. There’s no way this can be used as a travel guide without knowing the exact flights from where to where, so why are we worried about this becoming a travel guide? S5A-0043🚎 03:06, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 4 (Neither). This area has been discussed ad nauseam and I share the same frustration as SportingFlyer. It is the second large scale discussion initiated by Sunnya343 on the same page in 9 months and a thinly disguised forum shopping. "AfD discussion didn't go the way I wanted? Let's try Deletion Review. Oh no the community endorsed the closure? Off we go RFC!" By my count, we have discussed this area 8 times (in various venues) since 2016, most of which were initiated by the same individual. We really need to put these discussions onto Perennial proposals page and stop wasting community members' time. After this RfC finishes, I intend to start a TBAN discussion on Sunnya343's forumshopping behaviour. OhanaUnited 03:37, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 4 and suggest withdrawal per below discussion. Discussing two types of lists simultaneously without a strong rationale for doing so is not conducive to a productive discussion. In my view, the destinations tables for airports are exceedingly notable due to their coverage as both a group and individually when routes are announced/launched/dropped/delayed. The major newspaper of a given metropolitan area will have dozens of articles about these route changes. To fulfill Misplaced Pages's goal of being comprehensive, one cannot remove a critical element from an airport article, lest readers believe that planes simply stop at an airport and fly off into the void. SounderBruce 05:12, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 4 Neither. I see people have raised a few points about NOTDB, NOTDIR, or NOTTRAVEL. But I think those policies are pretty clear. NOTTRAVEL pertains specifically to travel guides with some explanation of what that means, and these very much are not such a beast. Also, these lists are not indiscriminate collections of information, and in fact are very specific in what they cover; these lists also have context to explain what the information means. Train stations and lines are vital to rail travel. Highways to automotive. Similarly routes and destinations are vital to air travel. There is no commercial air travel without routes and destinations, so it would be a mistake for us to exclude it simply because it's presented as a list. —siroχo 05:30, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 3 (both). Both lists appear (to me) to fall under the category of
an indiscriminate collection of information
. I think maybe the telltale sign here is that the information (data) is taken from primary sources, instead of from secondary sources that shoulddiscriminate
for us and summarize the essence and what's important in the data (e.g. hypothetically "British airways has 850 destinations, the most out of any airline, spanning all 7 continents" and then a reference to that source). There is infinite data on most of anything, and it is the secondary source's job to determine what in the data is of essence, and it is our job as a tertiary source to summarize what extracted essence is so emphasized by secondary sources that it becomes notable enough to write about here. Adding these lists here bypasses this filtering structure and just feels arbitrary (henceindiscriminate
). spintheer (talk) 05:32, 8 January 2025 (UTC)- Every airport has these lists, which are clearly a finite and managable amount of data, without any arbitrary determinations made. Countless users have already determined it is of essense and included it in an organized manner. Moreover, besides the fact that independent sources do regularly cover airline routes, there is no reason to exlude primary or non-independent sources (which were regularly incorrectly conflated in the last discussion); while primary sources must be used with care to ensure NPOV and that there is not original research, interpretation, or synthesis of the source, that is not a concern for straightforward noncontroversial facts such as an airline flying a particular route. I would support continued work to add sources to these lists, but not removal on flimsy grounds. Saying so little that a major airline flies to 5 continents is an insult to readers who use this (though, again, A and B are very different). Reywas92 05:48, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Replying to these in order: 1.
every airport has these lists
Just because something similar was done before doesn't make it an argument to continue doing it. The purpose of this RFC is to explicitly assess in a centralized fashion if the above lists violate NOT or not, and that's what we should address. 2.Countless users have already determined it is of essence
My argument is exactly that it is not for them to decide, but for reliable secondary sources to do so. Regardless, a centralized community consensus here would override a distributed, more local consensus in separate articles. 3.not a concern for straightforward noncontroversial facts
I can find you terabytes of database information containing various straightforward noncontroversial facts on British airlines. Why is this bit of data more important than the other bit of data? My point is that secondary sources should answer this, and not us. 4.Saying so little that a major airline flies to 5 continents is an insult to readers
well (a) I just gave that as an example. We should just say what reliable secondary sources decide is notable/important about this data. (b) Maybe it would be insulting for the reader to get giant tables of indiscriminate data when they deserve encyclopedic content that summarizes knowledge. Either way, they shouldn't feel insulted, we're just volunteers. spintheer (talk) 06:16, 8 January 2025 (UTC)- 1. Every airport having these lists does show that that information is not "infinite data" or "arbitrary" but rather something well-curated and overseen to ensure that it is not indiscriminate. It's not one person creating a mass of pages for their own narrow interest without oversight. 2. I don't believe this talk page is truly a centralized community consensus that should override the edits made on thousands of pages by thousands of users who find this valuable and encyclopedic. 3. There are plenty of independent sources that do in fact answer the question that airline/airport destinations are important and of interest. I just added from today's paper to the relevant article. 4. Sure, we can provide summaries, but that's no reason to delete this consistent information. More sources should be added but they do in fact find airline routes notable and important. Reywas92 16:49, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Being useful is not a reason to keep information. Having been edited by many editors is not a reason to keep information
- WP is meant to be a summary work of what reliable sources give, and an exhaustive list of destinations for an airline (which can be changed frequently) seems exactly the type of info that is not a summary. It does make sense to say which major cites BA serves, or which major destination cities Heathrow Li KS to, which I am sure can be documented in secondary coverage of both topics, but not a complete and exhaustive listing. Masem (t) 17:01, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Well... according to this policy, which says the written rules themselves do not set accepted practice, "Having been edited by many editors" is probably a reason to assume that the result is "accepted practice". When accepted practice and the written rules diverge, it's the written rules that we're supposed to change. WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:16, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Even if we assume that this is "accepted practice", in the context of this RFC this practice is a series of editorial decisions in a very specific topic area, and isn't evidence at all that a global English Misplaced Pages policy like NOT should be changed. If policy written based on global consensus (NOT) and accepted practice in a narrow topic area diverge, the latter is supposed to change. spintheer (talk) 00:41, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
- Why do you say this? This policy literally says that the written rules, including NOT, do not set the accepted practice, and the accepted practice is supposed to win.
- Have you actually read the policy? Here's a relevant part:
- "Although some rules may be enforced, the written rules themselves do not set accepted practice. Rather, they document already-existing community consensus regarding what should be accepted and what should be rejected.
- While Misplaced Pages's written policies and guidelines should be taken seriously, they can be misused. Do not follow an overly strict interpretation of the letter of policies without considering their principles. If the rules truly prevent you from improving the encyclopedia, ignore them. Disagreements are resolved through consensus-based discussion, not by tightly sticking to rules and procedures. Furthermore, policies and guidelines themselves may be changed to reflect evolving consensus."
- Misplaced Pages:Policies and guidelines says "Technically, the policy and guideline pages are not the policy and guidelines in and of themselves. The actual policies and guidelines are behaviors practiced by most editors."
- In other words, if a policy page (e.g., NOT) and accepted practice diverge, the policy page is the one that needs to change. WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:31, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
- I have indeed read the policy. I'm of the opinion that the tables above are not part of a practice that is accepted at a wide enough level to warrant ignoring the policy when this practice and NOT diverge. Obviously I understand that it is not exactly clear how to determine that, and it's basically for the community to decide where the line is drawn here (whether IGNORE applies). Based on the votes in this RFC, it looks like some in the community may agree with this idea (e.g. "ignore because it's a common practice and useful to the project"). I'll leave it to the closer to figure out what to do in this situation (genuinely curious to see how the arguments will be weighted here). spintheer (talk) 03:50, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- I'm not sure that narrowly defined lists are at all an unusual practice. Consider discographies, of which we appear to have more than 10,000. I see no inherent difference between "List of the places this group flies to" and "List of the albums this group made". The difference between "airports the airline flies to" and "train stations the train company drives to" seems particularly artificial, and yet we have List of streetcar lines on Long Island, List of streetcar lines on Long Island, List of California street railroads, and many others. Someone says that airlines can change their list of destinations, which is true, but List of high-speed trains#High-speed trains no longer in service indicates that this is also true for rail, as does List of California railroads#Defunct railroads, List of former transit companies in Dallas, and many others.
- In terms of Heathrow Airport#Airlines and destinations, I might prefer a plain "list of airlines" and a plain "list of destinations", rather than a table that tells me which destinations each airline goes to, but IMO neither of them violates WP:NOT. WhatamIdoing (talk) 07:48, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
- Yeah, looking at it again, I'm inclined to agree with your overall assessment about the ubiquity of such lists. Both can be true at the same time: I personally think that many of these lists (including the ones linked in this RFC) do fall under "indiscriminate collections of information", which violate NOT as it's currently written (for the same reasons mentioned before). At the same time, I do now agree that this pattern is wide enough to warrant seriously considering IGNORE in this case, and maybe even adjusting the policy towards some middle ground with a formal RFC that explicitly examines the matter. I'm becoming increasingly convinced that such an RFC would result in policy change. spintheer (talk) 01:49, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
- I have indeed read the policy. I'm of the opinion that the tables above are not part of a practice that is accepted at a wide enough level to warrant ignoring the policy when this practice and NOT diverge. Obviously I understand that it is not exactly clear how to determine that, and it's basically for the community to decide where the line is drawn here (whether IGNORE applies). Based on the votes in this RFC, it looks like some in the community may agree with this idea (e.g. "ignore because it's a common practice and useful to the project"). I'll leave it to the closer to figure out what to do in this situation (genuinely curious to see how the arguments will be weighted here). spintheer (talk) 03:50, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- Just because there exists articles that may be from long standing practice doesn't mean that they are still within policy. There are lots of walled gardens of content on WP that we sometimes need to tear down the walls to bring the content more in line with what an encyclopedia covers (particularly as there is a sister project, Wikivoyage, far better suited for this information). We had to do that recently with sports athletes, for example, and its still taking a way to work through the walled garden of barely-notable athletes. Masem (t) 01:05, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
- Even if we assume that this is "accepted practice", in the context of this RFC this practice is a series of editorial decisions in a very specific topic area, and isn't evidence at all that a global English Misplaced Pages policy like NOT should be changed. If policy written based on global consensus (NOT) and accepted practice in a narrow topic area diverge, the latter is supposed to change. spintheer (talk) 00:41, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
- Well... according to this policy, which says the written rules themselves do not set accepted practice, "Having been edited by many editors" is probably a reason to assume that the result is "accepted practice". When accepted practice and the written rules diverge, it's the written rules that we're supposed to change. WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:16, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- 1. Every airport having these lists does show that that information is not "infinite data" or "arbitrary" but rather something well-curated and overseen to ensure that it is not indiscriminate. It's not one person creating a mass of pages for their own narrow interest without oversight. 2. I don't believe this talk page is truly a centralized community consensus that should override the edits made on thousands of pages by thousands of users who find this valuable and encyclopedic. 3. There are plenty of independent sources that do in fact answer the question that airline/airport destinations are important and of interest. I just added from today's paper to the relevant article. 4. Sure, we can provide summaries, but that's no reason to delete this consistent information. More sources should be added but they do in fact find airline routes notable and important. Reywas92 16:49, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Replying to these in order: 1.
- Every airport has these lists, which are clearly a finite and managable amount of data, without any arbitrary determinations made. Countless users have already determined it is of essense and included it in an organized manner. Moreover, besides the fact that independent sources do regularly cover airline routes, there is no reason to exlude primary or non-independent sources (which were regularly incorrectly conflated in the last discussion); while primary sources must be used with care to ensure NPOV and that there is not original research, interpretation, or synthesis of the source, that is not a concern for straightforward noncontroversial facts such as an airline flying a particular route. I would support continued work to add sources to these lists, but not removal on flimsy grounds. Saying so little that a major airline flies to 5 continents is an insult to readers who use this (though, again, A and B are very different). Reywas92 05:48, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Neither – Option 4 It's poor faith to suggest that "This is not meant to serve as a deletion venue" when – after having initiated numerous counterproductive RFCs – the nominator clearly seeks to subsequently delete content from thousands of articles. I share the concerns of SportingFlyer and OhanaUnited that this attempt to conflate and delete two different types of articles/sections is unnecessary. It's clear that the innumerable users and readers who contribute and read this content find it to be encyclopedic. Even if third-party websites also present the information in convenient ways, it's an important part of these articles for navigation and understanding. No part of this information is indiscrimate – they are narrowly defined lists that provide context to how an airport and its tenants operate. The airport destinations show to what extent an airport is a hub that serves its city's residents and those who travel through, and they show how it is connected to the region or world, with links to such connections that define the very purpose of the airport. Major newspapers and other reliable sources regularly include content about flights and what the airlines do at airports. This content isn't a directory like "the white or yellow pages", "loosely associated topics", or "A resource for conducting business". This content isn't "Summary-only descriptions of works", "Lyrics databases", "unexplained statistics", or "Exhaustive logs of software updates". This content isn't an instruction manual or travel guide that instructs people how to book a flight or includes overly specific descriptions of how or when each flight is flown. It does not violate NOT and is welcome to continue to be included in the encyclopedia without detriment to writers and readers. Reywas92 05:48, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- This is a very strict reading of NOT's examples, but it skips the opening line under "Encyclopedic content":
Information should not be included solely because it is true or useful. An article should not be a complete presentation of all possible details, but a summary of accepted knowledge regarding its subject.
This is why we don't blast the reader with all information about everything, and instead just summarize secondary sources on the matter. The argument that people find it useful and major newspapers regularly include this content are not at all relevant the question of whether the information should be included here, in an encyclopedia. This is exactly what NOT attempts to convey. Frankly (as a reader), I'd argue that a lot of the information in these tables is useless, but maybe I'm missing something important hidden in the data. If the goal is to give the reader important impressions about the data found in these tables, then cite reliable secondary sources that make these impressions instead of pasting the entire table here and leaving it to the reader to figure it out for themselves. spintheer (talk) 13:23, 8 January 2025 (UTC)- Sure, and this summarizes sources by only naming the destinations, rather than including the flights' frequency or schedules, aircraft used, service history, or other details. These tables are by no means "everything" or only included because it's true, but because it's a key aspect of the subject covered by a variety of sources. While this information has not always been the best-referenced (such as including a source for a start or end date but removing it when the route actually begins), it's something that is being improved upon with both specific and general sources. Reywas92 16:37, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- This is a very strict reading of NOT's examples, but it skips the opening line under "Encyclopedic content":
- Neither - Option 4 per User:S5A-0043 and User:Reywas92. –Aaronw1109 06:54, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 3 (Both) (NOTE: I was alerted to this RfC by an announcement on my talk page.) I don't see the usefulness of these two articles; providing this detailed of information is getting into the weeds. IMHO, it would be far more useful if the information in these two articles were presented in a gif file, which would present the ebb & flow of BA routes in a manner far more useful to the casual reader. If a user consulting this article wanted more detailed information, then they can consult the sources cited to create these two gif files. -- llywrch (talk) 07:04, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- So this is useful, valid, encyclopedic content, you'd just rather see it as a map or image that still provides the details rather than a list. Of course, there have been several discussions about whether to include maps, which often take up more space, are harder to keep up to date (a gif would be much harder), and don't include navigational links or an easy way to provide sources. Reywas92 14:35, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- List of British Airways destinations violates WP:NOTDB and WP:NOT, because it is an indiscriminate collection of information, primarily collected from research on the website of British Airways and other primary sources. Indeed, it is practically impossible to source this kind of information from anyone but the airline, either directly or indirectly. It should also be said that this type of list typically does not survive AFD. FOARP (talk) 07:16, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- @FOARP, for clarity, can you elaborate on why you think List of British Airways destinations is "haphazard, random", made "without care or making distinctions, thoughtless"? That's the dictionary definition, but I wonder if that's really what you mean. WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:22, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- If you'd prefer a more concrete question, then maybe explain why a list of places where a train goes can qualify for Misplaced Pages:Featured lists but a list of places where an airplane goes can't even qualify to exist. WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:25, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Easy answer is that rail stations and tracks are effective permanent fixture (though specific train routes may not be), while airlines can readily change flight offerings on a dime. As such, the infrastructure of raillines tends to get more detailed coverage in secondary sources that airlines routes. Masem (t) 18:30, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Basically this. A listing of airline services necessarily means an exhaustive listing of ephemera that changes week-to-week. They are not comparable to listings of fixed infrastructure. FOARP (talk) 16:57, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
- Do you honestly think that airlines add and remove destinations week to week? That's not consistent with my experience. The individual flight schedules may change, but the part about "Does this airline fly to New York at all?" is pretty stable. WhatamIdoing (talk) 20:04, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
- As shown by the sourcing on the BA list article, new routes are introduced or removed near daily, not for any one airline but as a whole. It's very mutable.
- But you second point is actually something that we should document, what airlines serve a specific airport; for major airports, that is pretty immutable (in that, it is rare when an airline completely removes themselves or adds themselves to an airport because of the infrastructure costs to set up offices and support services) and that is usually documented in non routine news. But that's far different as a list of all connecting cities since those can change on a whim. Masem (t) 20:17, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
- We document plenty of ephemera on this website, from sports squads to breaking news. Just because something gets updated frequently does not mean we need to exclude it. SportingFlyer T·C 20:59, 18 January 2025 (UTC)
- @SportingFlyer: Essentially, I agree. However, it may be a reason to focus more on lists of all connections that ever have existed, rather than on lists of just the current connections. (Actually, the fact that a certain connection existed for a given time but then was discontinued sometimes may be more interesting than the fact that another connection extsted and still exists; especially when we can add (sourced) reasons for the discontinuation.) JoergenB (talk) 20:08, 20 January 2025 (UTC)
- We document plenty of ephemera on this website, from sports squads to breaking news. Just because something gets updated frequently does not mean we need to exclude it. SportingFlyer T·C 20:59, 18 January 2025 (UTC)
- Do you honestly think that airlines add and remove destinations week to week? That's not consistent with my experience. The individual flight schedules may change, but the part about "Does this airline fly to New York at all?" is pretty stable. WhatamIdoing (talk) 20:04, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
- Basically this. A listing of airline services necessarily means an exhaustive listing of ephemera that changes week-to-week. They are not comparable to listings of fixed infrastructure. FOARP (talk) 16:57, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
- Easy answer is that rail stations and tracks are effective permanent fixture (though specific train routes may not be), while airlines can readily change flight offerings on a dime. As such, the infrastructure of raillines tends to get more detailed coverage in secondary sources that airlines routes. Masem (t) 18:30, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- If you'd prefer a more concrete question, then maybe explain why a list of places where a train goes can qualify for Misplaced Pages:Featured lists but a list of places where an airplane goes can't even qualify to exist. WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:25, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- @FOARP, for clarity, can you elaborate on why you think List of British Airways destinations is "haphazard, random", made "without care or making distinctions, thoughtless"? That's the dictionary definition, but I wonder if that's really what you mean. WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:22, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Neither - Option 4 per User:S5A-0043 and User:Reywas92. No need to reiterate again.Axisstroke (talk) 07:35, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 3. For both airlines and airports, an extensive list, generally compiled from primary sources only, provides no encyclopedic value. Whether the lists are presented in standalone articles (as is the case for some airlines) or as a section within an overall article (as is the case for other airlines and most airports) is irrelevant to the question at hand. Rosbif73 (talk) 07:50, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- One thing I'll note is that it's historically been common for announced routes to be added with a start date and source (e.g. ) then after that date for both the date and source to be removed to limit footnote clutter (e.g. ) as the airline's cited timetable continues to verify the content – timetables were endorsed as an acceptable source for verification in an WP:AIRPORTS RFC. I believe this practice should be changed and the individual sources, often independent, be kept, but that's why they appear to be compiled that way. Reywas92 16:58, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Neither (option 4). Airports and airlines are important nodes and connections of a major part of transportation infrastructure. What destinations an airport connects to is just as relevant as to what destinations a railway station connects to, event though the lack of roads or rails makes the list more dynamic and in greater need of constant update. Likewise, where an airline flies is a major part of understanding an airline's scope, outreach and market impact. Sjakkalle (Check!) 07:52, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 4. The current list of British Airways destinations does have most cities listed with references. The deleted ones can inform the reader of where BA use to fly to. On the Air NZ list it has even more details of what year when a former destination started by the airline.
- The current list of BA cities served at Heathrow has an immediate impact for the reader to visualize what is happening at that airport and is kept up to date. CHCBOY (talk) 08:27, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 1. The first page is a page solely for the destinations served by British Airways, which is not a notable topic by itself and does not strike me as a particularly encyclopedic list. But the second page is, in fact, Heathrow Airport; the British Airways stuff is one fact in one row of a table on that article -- which is, again, the article for Heathrow Airport, and not a list. Like... am I missing something here? Or is everyone else? Because Option 1 is clearly not going to be consensus, my second choice is Option 4, mainly because the presentation of the two pages is misleading -- they are both styled to appear like lists, despite only one article actually being one -- and because "this is not meant to serve as a deletion venue" is the least believable thing I have read all year. Gnomingstuff (talk) 08:37, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 4 neither, as these kind of lists are also published elsewhere, and so are not original research. However I will say that a current destination list is more useful. But for a major airline, the Misplaced Pages lists are not so useful as they could be very big and changing all the time. For small airlines, their destinations will be more constant, and be more stable, and could be included in the airline article. Graeme Bartlett (talk) 08:58, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 4, or maybe 1. Per OhanaUnited. This feels like another attempt to relitigate the same thing. Stifle (talk) 09:37, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 3 (Both violate ND) per SMcCandlish. No need to flog each horse when the whole herd is dead. — Cheers, Steelpillow (Talk) 10:18, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Neither (option 4) Neither, as Misplaced Pages is cited accross several (non)-aviation plattforms exactly because it inherits a consistently reliable list of airlines and destinations for actually almost every airport. In my opinion these are very comparable to railway station articles that also cite the exact railway connections of a station, and here in most cases even without any source. Der HON (talk) 10:42, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 4 (neither). Multiple people have said why above better than I can, but in short these are notable topics presented in encyclopaedic context. Thryduulf (talk) 11:36, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 3 (both violate) The bulk of sourcing on both articles are questionable; the first uses mostly BA's own pages about itself, making it primary coverage, while the second uses an independent blog that doesn't give any indication of wider notability to the route changes. If these lists were dominated by proper third party reliable sources like newspaper coverage, that would be different, but as they stand, these violate the nature of the the prior RFC on airline routes. --Masem (t) 13:00, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- So this is a sourcing question, not a general NOT question, applied specifically to this airline/article, not the concept as whole. There are certainly more newspaper sources that can be added. Reywas92 14:38, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Using a bunch of routine business news to announce roylutes would still be a problem, as you now start getting into synthesis in the complication of these lists. If this is not stuff covered in secondary sources discussing the bulk of these routes, it's still a sign it fails WP:NOT. This basically feels like a form of trainspotting, which we don't document on WP. Masem (t) 17:04, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Of course there is also planespotting, which tracks specific aircraft. We are not doing that, just stating the general routes operated without complication or hobbyist details. How is there possibly synthesis here? I can't conceive of how original research can be involved in identification of a route. Reywas92 19:17, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- It's not a single route, it's effectively the entire network for one airline or in the case of the airport, all the spokes that airport connects to. Have reliable sources discussed that aspect as a whole, not just piece parts? If not, then we are getting into synthesis territory. Masem (t) 19:26, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- WP:SYNTH implies
Do not combine material from multiple sources to state or imply a conclusion not explicitly stated by any of the sources.
I have absolutely no clue how listing destinations would possibly violate WP:SYNTH, as we are presenting facts, not conclusions. SportingFlyer T·C 20:20, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
- WP:SYNTH implies
- It's not a single route, it's effectively the entire network for one airline or in the case of the airport, all the spokes that airport connects to. Have reliable sources discussed that aspect as a whole, not just piece parts? If not, then we are getting into synthesis territory. Masem (t) 19:26, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Of course there is also planespotting, which tracks specific aircraft. We are not doing that, just stating the general routes operated without complication or hobbyist details. How is there possibly synthesis here? I can't conceive of how original research can be involved in identification of a route. Reywas92 19:17, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Using a bunch of routine business news to announce roylutes would still be a problem, as you now start getting into synthesis in the complication of these lists. If this is not stuff covered in secondary sources discussing the bulk of these routes, it's still a sign it fails WP:NOT. This basically feels like a form of trainspotting, which we don't document on WP. Masem (t) 17:04, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- So this is a sourcing question, not a general NOT question, applied specifically to this airline/article, not the concept as whole. There are certainly more newspaper sources that can be added. Reywas92 14:38, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 4 Concerns about primary sourcing are misapplied. Primary sourcing is fine for supporting basic statements of objective fact so long as it's not interpretive. They don't speak to notability, but then again, notability in this case is about the suitability of the articles existing, not inclusion criteria. As for the idea that the existence of such charts on dozens of article for a great many years now is somehow not a true consensus, I just laugh. Clearly there's consensus for their existence, else they wouldn't exist for so long in so many places, edited by dozens if not hundreds of editors. The idea that a handful of commenter who have never even contributed to these articles on an obscure project talk page (and spare trying to say it's not obscure) can dictate they shouldn't exist in obvious contravention to the clear long-standing consensus is just back door WP:IDONTLIKEIT. Claiming this isn't intended as a deletion discussion is disingenuous. oknazevad (talk) 13:28, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Primary sources are fine to use as the mortar to fill in the information gaps left by secondary and third-party sources, but when the bulk of the information is coming from primary sources, that's a problem per WP:NOT, WP:V and WP:N. And the remaining arguments are variations of WP:ATA (been around a long time, edited by lots). Masem (t) 13:39, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- If that's the case that we can't have things coming from primary sources, we'd have to get rid of a lot of geography infoboxes, sports statistics, most academics... SportingFlyer T·C 17:02, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
- Primary sources are fine to use as the mortar to fill in the information gaps left by secondary and third-party sources, but when the bulk of the information is coming from primary sources, that's a problem per WP:NOT, WP:V and WP:N. And the remaining arguments are variations of WP:ATA (been around a long time, edited by lots). Masem (t) 13:39, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Delete I know that's not an explicit option but it is implicit, and I support the deletion (or prevention of addition) under consistency and rationalizing coverage across articles. I might support a more nuanced or rational class carve-out from the general prohibition, but not one airline, or one airport (treating either of those 2 things in issue here as sui generis leads to only confusion, not encyclopedic coverage). Alanscottwalker (talk) 14:50, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 4 (neither) As all the reasons other people have stated above. Removing this information collected over years would be detrimental to the aims of an encyclopedia.FlyingScotsman72 (talk) 16:13, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Neither. Perhaps the most important information in understanding an airline or airport is where they fly, which these lists provide. -- Tavix 18:22, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 4, neither per SportingFlyer. The places to which airlines fly from an airport are paramount to the importance of said airport and therefore paramount to our coverage of that airport. J947 ‡ 04:16, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 4 Neither as they represent long established practice per WP:NOTLAW. But this poll seems vexatious and contrary to other sections of WP:NOT ... Andrew🐉(talk) 17:28, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 4 — My straightforward reading of this portion of WP:NOT seems decisive: "there is nothing wrong with having lists if their entries are relevant because they are associated with or significantly contribute to the list topic." Knowing where an airline has flown is a straightforward element of understanding it. Knowing where an airport is connected to is a significantly contributes to understanding its current utility. These are standard elements of rail station pages on Misplaced Pages and rightly so.--Carwil (talk) 17:31, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
- There's nothing wrong to identify the major hubs that a airline uses (to not mention Heathrow with respect to British Airways, or Atlanta with Delta, would clearly be missing key info), but what becomes a problem is when are the small regional airports that a airline might serve one year and drop the next, which pretty much is only going to be documented in primary sources. Similarly, it makes sense to say what destinations the majority of flights out of Heathrow reach (eg that it serves as a major international hub for Europe, the Americas, Africa, and Asian nations) but listing all the smaller airports, which can change rapidly based on how the airlines change their routes, is a problem. We should be looking to see how RSes summarize an air line's reach or the connectivity of an airport, not trying to be exhaustive about it. Masem (t) 18:38, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
- The opposite may actually be true - if a smaller airport loses flights, that is typically of note in that community. SportingFlyer T·C 20:21, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
- There's nothing wrong to identify the major hubs that a airline uses (to not mention Heathrow with respect to British Airways, or Atlanta with Delta, would clearly be missing key info), but what becomes a problem is when are the small regional airports that a airline might serve one year and drop the next, which pretty much is only going to be documented in primary sources. Similarly, it makes sense to say what destinations the majority of flights out of Heathrow reach (eg that it serves as a major international hub for Europe, the Americas, Africa, and Asian nations) but listing all the smaller airports, which can change rapidly based on how the airlines change their routes, is a problem. We should be looking to see how RSes summarize an air line's reach or the connectivity of an airport, not trying to be exhaustive about it. Masem (t) 18:38, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 4 - I disagree that these inherently violate WP:NOT (of course, individual cases can be argued), and I supported keeping them back in the 2023 RfC. But I think it's also important to consider that while the 2023 RfC leaned towards "remove these unless clearly WP:DUE", these sections have mostly stayed in articles without significant pruning or alteration, suggesting de facto consensus is a bit broader than the RfC suggested. In that situation, it seems strange to have another RfC to try and tighten restrictions further? Andrew Gray (talk) 18:40, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 4 (neither); but mainly as a 'vote' in the "hidden underlying" discussion. This RfC was actually more or less motivated by a fairly broad encouragement to reopen this old RfC from January, 2018; so my 'vote' is for formally revoking that decision (taken by a fairly limited consensus). (Actually, it is already at least partially contradicted by several later RfC's; although it also could be considered as being more or less upheld in some older AfD's. See the discussion section.) JoergenB (talk) 00:09, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 3 There is a place in WP articles to include some places an airline flies, but to include an exhaustive list gives undue weight to locations that are merely represented on the airline's reference website, as opposed to locations that were actually met with notability by the media when announced. We have to remember that just because something can be verified does not mean it is notable. Let's review the policy on notability:
"Misplaced Pages's concept of notability applies this basic standard to avoid indiscriminate inclusion of topics. Article and list topics must be notable, or 'worthy of notice'."
- All of that being said, we're not having this conversation on the airline's talk page, we're having it on the policy page. So where else does this issue come into play? Surely there are hundreds of lists currently on WP that could be considered exhaustive and not notable if debated individually. Where do we cross the line? I'm curious, editors who have voted Option 3, generally, how would you respond to this question? When is a list merited and when is it extraneous? Penguino35 (talk) 13:30, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- WP:N and this quotation refers to standalone articles as a whole, not individual facts within an article. There's no understating how many facts across articles are only based on a single source, often one that's not independent of something. Reywas92 16:48, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- Neither, and any consensus here is unsuitable for a deletion discussion of airline destination lists (which needs to be properly notified on the articles itself) per WP:LEOPARD. Airport connectivity is an important and encyclopaedic part of what an airport is (the 1911 Britannica's articles about some seaports similarly list the main destination ports). In some cases there may be better presentations than a complete list, but just the fact that some list is accurate and complete should not be a reason to remove it. —Kusma (talk) 17:37, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- Key is the "main destination ports", not every possible port. There's little question that we shouldn't include major destinations that Heathrow serves, but we do not need the exhaustive list of every possible destination airport, particularly the regional ones, that it supports, since that particularly depends on a great deal of use of primary sourcing. Masem (t) 17:51, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- Again, we are allowed to use primary sources when writing articles, and this would introduce bias - for instance, Aer Lingus flies to Knock from Heathrow, which you might consider a "regional" airport, but that is a very important flight for understanding how Knock Airport is connected to the world commercially. Your proposal here doesn't make sense. SportingFlyer T·C 18:30, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- Knowing how Knock Airport is connected absolutely makes sense on that airport page, but it a drop in the water of information for an article about Hearthow. The problem with airport and airline information is that the value of that information absolutely depends on context, in part due to there being many many more airports than there are airlines. Knowing, on an airport page, what airlines have historically and currently serve it seems absolutely valuable, more-than-useful information and the type of info I see in secondary coverage of airports, but the reverse, knowing every airport an airline serves, seems to be indiscriminate information, since this list can be extremely large for airlines with large international presence, and rarely fully documented without turning to primary sources. Masem (t) 18:39, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- I completely and wholeheartedly disagree with you on this. You have also fallen into the trap of what is indiscriminate information and what isn't. A complete listing of all destinations is definitionally not indiscriminate since it is complete. SportingFlyer T·C 18:45, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- A complete, finite list can still be indiscriminate. For example, when we list casts of films, we do not include even every single name that appears as cast in the credits list (which is typically limited to around 50 or so names), but only stick to the principle ones as this follows how RSes cover that information. In the case of airlines, barring small regional carriers that only serve a few airports, a full list of airports they serve is not regularly documented in reliable sourcing on airlines, so that should also be considered indiscriminate. There's a lot of calls for "it's useful" , which is not an aspect that WP considers for retaining information. Masem (t) 19:18, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- I completely and wholeheartedly disagree with you on this. You have also fallen into the trap of what is indiscriminate information and what isn't. A complete listing of all destinations is definitionally not indiscriminate since it is complete. SportingFlyer T·C 18:45, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- Knowing how Knock Airport is connected absolutely makes sense on that airport page, but it a drop in the water of information for an article about Hearthow. The problem with airport and airline information is that the value of that information absolutely depends on context, in part due to there being many many more airports than there are airlines. Knowing, on an airport page, what airlines have historically and currently serve it seems absolutely valuable, more-than-useful information and the type of info I see in secondary coverage of airports, but the reverse, knowing every airport an airline serves, seems to be indiscriminate information, since this list can be extremely large for airlines with large international presence, and rarely fully documented without turning to primary sources. Masem (t) 18:39, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- There is a massive difference between "we don't need X" and the proposal of "we should make a rule that prohibits X". In the case at hand, I am strongly opposed to prohibiting the inclusion of complete lists but expect that a higher level summary might sometimes be better (possibly with the complete list moved to a subarticle). Option 4 gives us the most flexibility. —Kusma (talk) 18:30, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- Again, we are allowed to use primary sources when writing articles, and this would introduce bias - for instance, Aer Lingus flies to Knock from Heathrow, which you might consider a "regional" airport, but that is a very important flight for understanding how Knock Airport is connected to the world commercially. Your proposal here doesn't make sense. SportingFlyer T·C 18:30, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- Key is the "main destination ports", not every possible port. There's little question that we shouldn't include major destinations that Heathrow serves, but we do not need the exhaustive list of every possible destination airport, particularly the regional ones, that it supports, since that particularly depends on a great deal of use of primary sourcing. Masem (t) 17:51, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- Neither per Kusma. Senior Captain Thrawn (talk) 18:13, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- Just as "is this person notable" isn't appropriate for an RfC at WT:N, this is a question for AfD. — Rhododendrites \\ 20:05, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 4 - Destinations are a key aspect of the operations of airlines and airports. A list of destinations served by one of the world's largest airlines is appropriate, as it serves to show the scope and history of that airline's operations over the years. Including it on the main page would cause excessive clutter, and it is appropriate for it to have its own list. Same for an airport...the places that are directly served by that airport is a key piece of information on the airport's operations and provides, at a glance, how it "plugs in" with the rest of the world. Three notes:
- 1) I agree that this would be better served as separate RfCs;
- 2) I do NOT think it's an AfD discussion, as the Heathrow/BA are being use as examples of a type of article versus a discussion on deleting the individual articles;
- 3) and, though it's not specifically called out here in the RfC it has been a topic of discussion lately, so I'd like to note that I think using timetables, press releases, route maps, and other primary sources to populate these pages is an appropriate use of primary sources per WP:PRIMARY and shouldn't be discouraged. Those arguing that only secondary sources can be used need to review the policy. nf utvol (talk) 13:21, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
- However PRIMARY also states
Do not base an entire article on primary sources, and be cautious about basing large passages on them.
JoelleJay (talk) 18:53, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
- However PRIMARY also states
- Option 4, neither - There has not been, and should not be, any policy banning such lists. Thincat (talk) 10:38, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 4 as an editor who often edits airport articles. LibStar (talk) 01:47, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 3 This is the closest thing to my actual position which is that the articles should not exist and that that decision is influenced by degree of lack of compliance with wp:not. A list of a company's past and present products is what this is. North8000 (talk) 03:02, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
- Option 4: Neither - WP:NOT is not the key factor for these articles. WP:NLIST by way of WP:GNG is. Is the list discussed as a list in reliable sources? Yes? Well then it meets our criteria for being a worthwhile topic of consideration. If this RFC were to be closed for any of the other 3 options, it would not be a valid cause to delete articles anyway, per WP:LEOPARD, so this RFC is practically moot. Fieari (talk) 23:54, 21 January 2025 (UTC)
- Wow, so there is quite a lot of guidelines content for lists when they are part of a stand-alone articles (e.g. WP:SALAT literally says: "Some Wikipedians feel that some topics are unsuitable by dint of the nature of the topic. Following the policy spelled out in WP:NOT, they feel that some topics are trivial, non-encyclopedic, or not related to human knowledge. If you create a list like the "list of shades of colors of apple sauce", be prepared to explain why you feel this list contributes to the state of human knowledge.").
- However, this RFC is about how NOT applies to lists as content within the articles (including articles that are not stand-alone lists), which is an important distinction. That said, there does seem to be a pretty big overlap here. I hope that the closer writes an essay explaining their decision. spintheer (talk) 02:50, 22 January 2025 (UTC)
Discussion
Jointly discussing these two types of lists is ridiculous, by the way. They are two separate pieces of information. The first focuses on airlines - many airlines will not be eligible for stand-alone articles, but especially historical airline routes have been the subject of study and discussion: or books such as Mapping the Airways. If the list or article passes WP:GNG, there is absolutely no reason we cannot have that on Misplaced Pages as it's encyclopedic information. The second focuses on current routes served at airports, which almost always will have some sort of article when new service is announced or dropped. These are two completely separate topics, both are encyclopedic, and both require their own RfCs. SportingFlyer T·C 02:14, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- The Wikivoyage argument is also completely wrong, considering travel guides do not normally include lists of destinations. SportingFlyer T·C 02:50, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- I tend to agree with Sportingflyer that it is silly to discuss these two lists together. They are different types of list. FOARP (talk) 07:02, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- They're not even "two types of lists"! One is a list, and one is an individual row on a table of the Heathrow Airport article. People are actually out here trying to apply GNG to individual facts within an article when the first sentence of GNG explicitly states it is about "stand-alone articles or lists." If it weren't for the apparently deep lore of this discussion, I would honestly believe that the reasoning for including #2 in this RfC was simply "row big." Gnomingstuff (talk) 16:36, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
Object to Malformed RFC. In one case we have standalone articles, in the other case we have sections of articles, and the information is presented, maintained, organized, and sourced differently. We already have comments that seem to address one or the other, making it harder to respond specifically or to determine a useful consensus. Following previous discussions, there was also an understanding that yet another RFC would be discussed first. The proposer needs to make productive edits besides proposing to delete this informative content from Misplaced Pages over and over and over at various venues – it's poor faith to indicate this has "arisen in debates" when he is the one constantly trying to get rid of it. Hundreds of users contribute this content for hundreds of thousands to read, who are interested in this encyclopedic content. Reywas92 04:54, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
- @Reywas92: Malformed or not; I think that this RfC is strange in several ways. (I should add that I haven't edited any airport or airline destination articles, and am new to this particular discussion; whence I may have misunderstood things. I do edit a few railway line and station articles, and consider those issues fairly parallel to these, though.) The proposal to which Sunnya343 refers above actually was to reconsider a RfC from January 2018 (item 2. below), in order either to revoke or to confirm it, before proceeding to further AfD's or alternatively restorations of deleted lists. It seems a bit hard to get a consensus on these matters; and I think that is one reason for an advice to Sunnya343 to list a specific case for RfC instead of inviting to a general discussion. I'm not criticising Sunnya343 for first asking about formulations for an RfC, and then more or less following the outcome of the resulting discussion; but, IHMO, the outcome of this attempt shows that that advice was not quite optimal.
- In fact, the article A was up to an AfD yielding no consensus, according to a summary by Liz. Sunnya343 didn't like the outcome, and 'appealed' in favour of deletion (mainly arguing by decision 2., I'd say). However, apart from the weak majority for keep, Liz noted that there were a number of relevant RfC's, and that in fact taken together they did not support deletion.
- The following are the five RfA's listed by Liz, but reordered in chronological order. (Liz presented them as a selection of the RfA's over, more or less, this subject.)
- 1. Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject Airports/Archive 15#Request for comments on the Airlines and destinations tables (December, 2016);
- 2. Misplaced Pages:Village pump (policy)/Archive 140#Should Misplaced Pages have and maintain complete lists of airline destinations? (January, 2018);
- 3. Misplaced Pages:Administrators' noticeboard/Archive296#Mass deletion of pages - question of protocol (end of January, 2018);
- 4. Misplaced Pages:Village pump (policy)/Archive 141#RFC: Should Misplaced Pages have lists of transportation service destinations? (March, 2018); and
- 5. Misplaced Pages:Village pump (policy)/Archive 187#RfC on the "Airlines and destinations" tables in airport articles (November, 2023).
- To this I think we should add the very AfD Liz closed; as Liz seems to have guessed, it was getting a markedly broader participation than any of the aforementioned RfC's:
- 6. Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/List of British Airways destinations (April, 2024).
- My preliminary conclusions are
- that the decision 2. in practice already has been overturned or at least superceeded;
- that the present RfC in practice also involves trying to overturn the (clear and endorsed) non consensus summary of 6. one more time; and
- that both counted by argument strengths or by numbers there is no good hope of achieving a consensus about these kinds of lists in the forseeable future (exept possibly by the detestable means of 'sneaking' a decisions by a rather limited number of participants all already being pro or contra; I'm happy that Sunnya343 seems to guard against such abuse.). JoergenB (talk) 00:09, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- There's also the Deletion review in April 2024, that is missing on your list, which endorsed the closure of the AfD in the same month. OhanaUnited 03:03, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- @OhanaUnited: This was the outcome of the 'appeal' of RfC 6; and I therefore didn't list it separately. Perhaps you'd like to add it as No. 6a? JoergenB (talk) 21:43, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
- There's also the Deletion review in April 2024, that is missing on your list, which endorsed the closure of the AfD in the same month. OhanaUnited 03:03, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
- Why is this RFC being held here? Talk pages for policies are not noticeboards and are not really the appropriate place to hold RFCs about the content of individual articles. The previous discussions raise WP:FORUMSHOP concerns as well. --Aquillion (talk) 17:59, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
Notifications
- A-type lists: Participants in the 2018 RfC, Mar 2024 AfD
- B-type: Participants in the 2023 RfC
- WT:AIRPORTS, WT:AIRLINES
Sunnya343 (talk) 01:33, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
For posterity, I counted 12 !votes for option 3, 28 for option 4, and 1 for option 1. While I believe the combined questions resulted in a muddled RFC and justified the early withdrawal, there appears to be a decent preliminary consensus that neither lists of airline destinations nor destinations from airports violate NOT. I hope this has been enough discussions on the topic and these can be improved in format or sourcing rather than charged with removal again. Reywas92 05:07, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- I'm obviously involved, but I agree with Reywas92's analysis, and I'm concerned that the early withdrawal was because consensus was so overwhelmingly against both, and there will be another attempt to forum shop in the near future. SportingFlyer T·C 05:31, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- involvement aside, why do experienced editors continue referring back to vote count in the context of determining consensus? Isn't the first thing that new editors learn about consensus is that it's not a vote? I don't understand this. spintheer (talk) 05:40, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- We all know very well that when 70% of people agree on something, that is at least a "preliminary consensus". You might not like the supermajority's reasoning, but there are still valid points made and it would be inappropriate to close it another way. This page does not say "flight destinations are a forbidden directory", so it's merely an opinion that these !votes are any more "firmly based". Reywas92 22:02, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- Many of the Option 4 arguments fall within WP:ATA and while there were some that alluded to policy, the Option 3 !votes were more firmly based there. Thus, I would not take the vote count as a means to judge this for the future. Masem (t) 05:50, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- This wasn't a deletion discussion, it was a discussion about whether the content is encyclopedic. SportingFlyer T·C 05:52, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- If it wasn't encyclopedic, it wouldn't likely be kept or remain in that same format. I would think that because that's basically a step from deletion, the same ATA issues would apply. (And in general, many of the points in ATA apply to any other content disputes absent a deletion discussion such as WP:OTHERSTUFFEXISTS, as pointed out in the 3rd lede paragraph) There's also WP:AADP, which many of the Option 4 !votes fell in line with, particularly the "it's useful" aspect. Masem (t) 05:58, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- We must be reading completely different discussions then. SportingFlyer T·C 06:06, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- (involved party) I also challenge this "withdrawal" by Sunnya343 and let someone else close this discussion, because there is clear consensus reached for option 4.OhanaUnited 15:54, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- We must be reading completely different discussions then. SportingFlyer T·C 06:06, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- If it wasn't encyclopedic, it wouldn't likely be kept or remain in that same format. I would think that because that's basically a step from deletion, the same ATA issues would apply. (And in general, many of the points in ATA apply to any other content disputes absent a deletion discussion such as WP:OTHERSTUFFEXISTS, as pointed out in the 3rd lede paragraph) There's also WP:AADP, which many of the Option 4 !votes fell in line with, particularly the "it's useful" aspect. Masem (t) 05:58, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- This wasn't a deletion discussion, it was a discussion about whether the content is encyclopedic. SportingFlyer T·C 05:52, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- involvement aside, why do experienced editors continue referring back to vote count in the context of determining consensus? Isn't the first thing that new editors learn about consensus is that it's not a vote? I don't understand this. spintheer (talk) 05:40, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- I also agree that the RFC should not have been withdrawn. I think the community was heading for consensus and by withdrawing the RFC, this unresolved question could be forum shopped. --Enos733 (talk) 18:00, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- I'm also involved, but my feelings match those of OhanaUnited and Enos73 - there appears to be a clear consensus for option 4 and the withdrawal could be read as an attempt to avoid that. I'm assuming that this wasn't Sunnya's intention, but it would preferable for someone uninvolved to formally close the discussion - even as no consensus - to avoid the appearance of avoiding a consensus they were not advocating for. Thryduulf (talk) 19:53, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- I have been editing these for years adding references too. There has been a long history of debating to get these lists removed from Misplaced Pages going back as far as 2007. So this won't be the last one more will come. CHCBOY (talk) 02:33, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- I'm also involved, but my feelings match those of OhanaUnited and Enos73 - there appears to be a clear consensus for option 4 and the withdrawal could be read as an attempt to avoid that. I'm assuming that this wasn't Sunnya's intention, but it would preferable for someone uninvolved to formally close the discussion - even as no consensus - to avoid the appearance of avoiding a consensus they were not advocating for. Thryduulf (talk) 19:53, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
- As an uninvolved editor, I've 'unwithdrawn' the RfC per the discussion above so that a closer can evaluate whether it reached consensus for anything. (I don't have time to evaluate that myself right now, so I'm hoping someone else will do that part.) -sche (talk) 03:21, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
- Imagine if there was a proposal to ban all list of songs by artists with all of the effort in finding all of the information. There would be a huge number of people upset especially with all of the historical content of chart positions etc. Once you try to remove one set of list articles it can lead to others becoming vulnerable and potentially being removed from Misplaced Pages as well. CHCBOY (talk) 19:08, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
- now I am wondering, when will we be reaching consensus, I think a lot of people have already spoken. Metrosfan (talk) 14:06, 17 January 2025 (UTC)
- RFCs typically run for at least 30 days. Thryduulf (talk) 18:55, 17 January 2025 (UTC)
- now I am wondering, when will we be reaching consensus, I think a lot of people have already spoken. Metrosfan (talk) 14:06, 17 January 2025 (UTC)
- Imagine if there was a proposal to ban all list of songs by artists with all of the effort in finding all of the information. There would be a huge number of people upset especially with all of the historical content of chart positions etc. Once you try to remove one set of list articles it can lead to others becoming vulnerable and potentially being removed from Misplaced Pages as well. CHCBOY (talk) 19:08, 15 January 2025 (UTC)