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{{tpr|Misplaced Pages:Manual of Style/Linking#General principles|merge=yes}} | |||
==Support and opposition== | |||
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Supporters of the "build the web" rule include: ], ] (strongly), ], ], ], ], ], 24 (strongly), ], ], ], ], ], ], ] | |||
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| text = Please discuss any further issues relating to the content of this page at ], to where the substantial content has been merged. | |||
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I always add too many links in articles that deal with imaginary topics: SF, TV, movies, urban legends. This possibly helps people to go back to the reality. It's usually next to impossible for a SF movie to link to another one, unless filmmakers wanted to do so. But all fictional subjects link to the shared human knowledge base. -- ] 02:57, Sep 22, 2004 (UTC) | |||
== Intent behind the merge == | |||
It must be noted here in the BTW talk page that after weeks of dissembling, we did get that the reason why Kotniski "merged" BTW with the other pages and then interfered with any identification of BTW as a Misplaced Pages guideline in the ] page (Tony1 and others participated in this also) is that he does not think it should be a guideline at all. | |||
Opponents include: | |||
This just isn't the Wikipedian way of going about things and it's a subversion of process. If the BTW page needs to be clarified or improved (which I definitely think it does, comparing the current version to the earlier ones which I'd read) let that be done. And if anyone thinks that BTW shouldn't be a guideline, let its deletion or demotion be proposed here (again.) | |||
:This is an unfair request to vote. I might as well say I'm opposed to motherhood and apple pie as list my name as an "opponent" of the "Build the web" rule. Of course we should build the web. Yet, I also believe that there is a cost to over-linking - potentially, quite a high cost. The hard part of our job as editor/contributors is finding the right balance. The discussion at ] and its related archive page(s) is more balanced and detailed than the discussion here. ] 17:11, 16 Feb 2004 (UTC) | |||
---- | |||
Note: the appearance need not be like shown above; if all words are links, there is no need for underlining, a different color, etc. These could be reserved for the more important links, so that the appearance would remain the same as it is now. ''(comment by ] moved off the main policy page)'' | |||
* Please see ] where this topic comes up several different times in the discussion thread. ] 13:39, 13 Sep 2004 (UTC) | |||
* What Rossami said; this dubious "guideline" is in direct conflict with ], ] and ]. — <b><span style="font-family:Tahoma;">]</span></b> []] []] <b>‹(-¿-)›</b> 11:38, 21 September 2007 (UTC) | |||
:*'''Support'''On the contrary: this guideline is fundamental to the very concept of Misplaced Pages. The point of this page is that "articles should have wikilinks to other articles", no more, no less. The other guidelines limit the extent of the linking, but the mindset represented by this guideline is the reason that we have the {{tl|deadend}} and {{tl|wikify}} templates: sometimes we just don't wikilink '''enough'''.--] ] ] '''''<font color="green">]</font>''''' 04:10, 6 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
But besides that - the reason why the guideline "Wikipedians should build the web" ought not be tucked away as some minor detail of an enormous policy page primarily dealing with styling issues and other technicalities of handling links (which, coincidentally, would make it much easier to delete) is that it is genuinely an important WP principle in it's own right. It's the same reason why ] isn't just a side note on the etiquette or civility pages, for example. | |||
== Allwiki == | |||
BTW is one of the Misplaced Pages ''rules'' that is referred to by ]. No question that there are exceptions to it but that simply means that exceptions should be described here or linked to from here.--] 16:53, 4 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
While I don't support the idea of[REDACTED] articles having hyperlinks for every word, I'd support a function where you could input a piece of text and see which words/phrases have entries in[REDACTED] (and/or wiktionary), and which ones would be redlinks. ] 10:41, 20 December 2005 (UTC) | |||
:If you want to pursue that line, justify each statement in the short BTW essay, as I invited people to do above. That is the only way in which guideline status could possibly be supported, and we're waiting to see you do it. ] ] 18:01, 4 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Tony1, it does not matter what it says in this page. I was not bringing any of the language in the content of this page over to ]; all I was doing was insisting that there was a sentence containing the phrase "an important Misplaced Pages guideline is that editors should build the web". And it's the opposition to and interference with that which has given you away. | |||
:It exists, it is the #ifexists function. See ]. ] 19:02, 28 May 2006 (UTC) | |||
::You do not particularly care what it says in this page: what you want is to make certain that "build the web" is not identified as a Misplaced Pages behavioral guideline even in a merged page where I'm not disputing the definition of what that is. | |||
==One line summary== | |||
::It's ''you'' who needs to justify yourself and your actions. There is no question that BTW is an established Misplaced Pages behavioral guideline and no one needs to prove it, no matter how much chaff you throw around about that or even if you double dog dare me to. --] 21:50, 4 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
There being a need for concise one line summaries of guidelines, I offer this version. Please feel free to change it as necessary, and update the template Template:Guideline one liner to suit your taste. Please don't remove it simply because you think the summary is inaccurate for this guideline. Comments and opinions welcome! ] 03:01, 21 December 2005 (UTC) | |||
: You start with the premise "There being a need for concise one line summaries...". I question that premise. I do '''not''' see a need for a one line summary. The only possible summary which is that concise is already on the page - the page title. The next layer of detail is the introductory paragraph. Our introductory paragraphs are not always perfectly written but creating an eye-blurring template with a redundant sentence adds nothing of obvious value to the page. I'm removing the template and pasting it below pending further discussion. ] ] 18:14, 21 December 2005 (UTC) | |||
{{Guideline one liner|Link articles sideways to neighbours, and upwards to categories and contexts to create a useful web of information}} | |||
::Thanks for copying it here. The discussion is taking place at ]. ] 00:30, 22 December 2005 (UTC) | |||
:Update: See {{tl|Nutshell}}. — <b><span style="font-family:Tahoma;">]</span></b> []] []] <b>‹(-¿-)›</b> 11:38, 21 September 2007 (UTC) | |||
:(ec) Yours is an exceptionally malicious interpretation of the diff you are pointing to. I think it's also factually incorrect. (<s>"Kotniski interfered with any identification of BTW as a Misplaced Pages guideline in the ] page" – are you referring to ???</s>) If you continue to feel the need to discuss editors in this way, I suggest that you take it to an appropriate venue, rather than poison the atmosphere here even more. --] (]) 18:15, 4 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
== What links here comment == | |||
::Strikeout because this doesn't seem to be what you mean. But I have gone back to mid-January in the edit history of ] without finding anything appropriate. --] (]) 18:30, 4 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::Somehow I think that everyone following that diff link I put up above will have no trouble figuring out what Kotniski asserting ''"BTW as a guideline is both redundant and misleading, and should thus not be marked as such"'' has to with him making a long series of efforts that coincidentally culminated in it not being marked as a Misplaced Pages guideline anywhere. | |||
:::You weren't by any chance looking for an excuse to announce that I was being malicious and factually incorrect, were you? I'm sorry, did you ''just'' say something about how it's bad to "poison the atmosphere here"?--] 13:17, 6 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
Could someone explain the sentence: | |||
:''Remember that a link can also be useful when applying the "What links here" feature from the target page.'' | |||
I know what the "What links here" tool does, but still don't understand how extra wikilinks help it.--] 18:12, 27 December 2005 (UTC) | |||
:Well, if linking makes an article more useful, it follows that an increased number of backwards links is also a ]. - ]] 15:14, 31 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
I gave a bunch of feedback about this page/merge/status at ]. Rather than repeating or copying all of that here, I'd appreciate it if the content were read and taken as my contribution to this discussion. Much thanks. -- ] (]) 18:28, 4 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
Does "If you are not happy with a link, improve the link or improve the linked article. Only in rare cases is it better to remove the link altogether (apart from the case of a duplicate link)" have to do with dead "red links"? All too often I see links that didn't need to be links in the first place that are red, but this guideline seems to imply that the red-links shouldn't be touched. ] 15:50, 7 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
Rather than personalizing this with total irrelevancies, please give real reasons why it serves WP editors to have BTW as a separate page with guideline status. I can't see any yet. Clearly even when it was so marked, it wasn't interpreted as a "rule" that has only occasional exceptions (otherwise people would link almost every word in articles, and include goodness knows how many external links, which is simply not what we do or ever have done). Meanwhile the principle that we "build the web" (i.e. make hyperlinks) is stated very clearly, both in those words and in even clearer and stronger words, in the lede of ]. It isn't in any sense "tucked away". I just don't see what you're getting at with these arguments.--] (]) 19:19, 4 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Yes, of course you should use common sense and remove ridiculous red links. In many regards, this guideline is rubbish (ie is in dynamic tension with ])--] 16:26, 7 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
::It doesn't matter whether or not it "serves WP editors" for BTW to be a guideline. You still don't get to personally do a demotion of it in the course of a "tidying up and organizing" merge, period. If you want to demote it then you should have honestly, openly, and straightforwardly brought a proposal for ''that'' up. --] 21:50, 4 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Allwiki periodically re-evaluated == | |||
:As I explained at ], the only "advantage" of keeping the guidelines separate that I am aware of is that it makes it possible to "run to the other parent": Say there is a dispute whether the link in "the ] happened in ]" is relevant . A single guideline will eventually be clear that it is relevant, but only because the article ] talks about European history in this year (per consensus for option 1 in ]). | |||
I'm referring to: | |||
:The year of birth of ] also happens to be 1689. The article ] is completely irrelevant for this person. (The information about the relations between Russia and China is hardly relevant, and that's the closest I could find.) But in the current situation an editor who believes that all birth and death links should be linked can appeal to ] which, when read in isolation, does in fact suggest that we can never have enough links. When you reply with ], this editor will respond by saying that the two guidelines contradict each other and in this case ] is right. | |||
:"''The[REDACTED] community evaluated and eventually rejected the allwiki concept. It is periodically proposed for re-evaluation''" | |||
:Even for an editor who wants to (correctly) link 1689 in the Glorious Revolution context, arguing with someone who believes year links should never be made becomes easier by using the same strategy. --] (]) 20:54, 4 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
I have been here for over a year and have never seen allwiki re-evaluated. So can the statement be reduced to: | |||
:"''The Misplaced Pages community evaluated and eventually rejected the allwiki concept.''" | |||
--] 00:22, 1 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
::I don't think you understand what we're discussing here Hans. At the moment I don't care about and I am not attempting to determine what it says in the BTW policy page or even what it says about the "build the web" guideline over in the ] policy page except that BTW is properly identified ''as a guideline''. And I definitely am not saying anything about date linking; I haven't even read up on that. | |||
== FYI: ] proposal == | |||
{{Resolved|1=This proposal now part of the ].}} | |||
A proposal relating to this policy has been created at ], please discuss on that proposal's discussion page. ] 23:14, 8 May 2006 (UTC) | |||
::The point is that a guideline can't be demoted by someone pretending to just be doing a merge to tidy the Misplaced Pages namespace up. We know that these guys were trying to do that because it wasn't enough for them that the pages be merged - they also insist that BTW not be identified as a Misplaced Pages guideline in the resulting merged page. | |||
== What ] is not == | |||
::If ArbCom renders a verdict that no date anywhere must be linked (or whatever they're adjudicating, even once I tracked down what was apparently the relevant page I couldn't figure it out) then I have no problem with it being smack in the middle of the BTW page or smack in the middle of the "build the web" behavioral guideline paragraph of a merged page. But it still wouldn't mean that these guys get to demote BTW from guideline status on their own cognizance. --] 21:50, 4 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
] ] ] ] ]. ] 21:13, 17 January 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::It's getting more and more clear to me that you are discussing something completely different than everybody else. I, like everybody else, I believe, have been talking about "guidelines" as the written representations of community consensus. Guidelines in this sense can obviously be merged for presentational reasons, so long as the sense is preserved. And if you want to oppose such a merger you need to explain how and why the merger affects the way the consensus is codified, or why the presentation has not been improved. I am still not sure what exactly you are talking about, but it is beginning to look like a "guideline" as an entity whose content may be transferred elsewhere, but which may not be killed even when it's empty. Or perhaps the ''words'' "build the web" as a sacrosanct creed which, once you feel it is under attack, needs something like constitutional protection. You may not recognise your position in this description, but this is honestly the best I can come up with. --] (]) 11:50, 6 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
] ] ] ], ]. ] 21:07, 21 January 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::In summarizing my opinion on the merge, you came up with something completely incoherent. I am totally surprised. Really. | |||
== Query over guideline status == | |||
:::::"Opposition to mergers must explain how and why the merger affects the way the consensus is codified." Way to make up rules out of thin air. I don't need to summarize that one for it to be incoherent. --] 13:17, 6 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
Can someone advise me of the circumstances in which the tag was added to the top of the page, particular, the nature of the consensus that was achieved? The content doesn't ''look'' like a guideline, and to claim that it "is generally accepted among editors and is considered a standard that all users should follow" appears to be a stretch. The status of the information about "allwiki" is unclear in relation to this "guideline". There's none of the detail and precision that is typical of guidelines, but rather a series of instructions unsupported by logic or other reasoning. ] 06:59, 4 June 2007 (UTC) | |||
:There appears to have been no discussion or consensus concerning the change from semipolicy to policy. Thus, I intend to change the tag back to semi tomorrow as an opening measure, unless a convincing case is made for retaining it. ] 23:44, 4 June 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::Why of course, if people want to merge and give convincing reasons why it should be done, then just saying no without giving any reason is not acceptable. And if my attempt at mind-reading failed, then how about making it unnecessary by summarising your opinion yourself? --] (]) 14:38, 6 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Intention to remove the semiguideline status of this page == | |||
:::::::Give us a quote of where I've said "no without giving any reason" and I'll hold your hand while you read it to ensure that your attempt to mind-read doesn't fail. Somehow I think your "mind-reading" powers are calibrated to help you say things that further your objectives, like misreading obvious diffs so as to claim I'm malicious and factually incorrect, rather than designed to achieve any understanding of other people. ''That's'' probably why your "mind-reading" attempts fail. | |||
There is no sign that consensus was gained on the addition of the guideline or semiguideline status of this page. | |||
:::::::And it's also why they're prefaced with categorical assertions about what are valid objections to the way a merge is carried out and what are not. That's a required technique there, I suppose? You have to hypnotize yourself by reciting a series of fake legalisms that would mean you're not going to encounter any opinions that don't fit with your own agenda, before you can enter the mind-reading trance. Such a sincere attempt to understand your interlocutor, to go to the effort of invoking psychic powers. | |||
The text is full of vague statements, and the page lacks cohesion, coherence and focus. It is not in an appropriate register for a guideline. | |||
:::::::You should adopt Kotniski's technique there of changing the meaning of words as you're carrying on a discussion with someone. I bet it would do wonders for "mind reading" of the sort you're trying to perform. --] 11:03, 7 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
I intend to take steps to remove the guideline status in two weeks' time (13 September 2007) unless a good argument is put here to retain it. ] 12:41, 30 August 2007 (UTC) | |||
: Do not do so. This page has existed since long before we started making the artificial distinctions between "policy pages", "guidelines", et al. Consensus is demonstrated by the mere fact that it's been around so long and has no significant disputes in it's history. It's also a remarkably accurate description of the way the project functions. Within limits, articles are improved by hyperlinking. | |||
: By the way, this page can also be found in Meta where it is equally well supported and applies to ''all'' the WikiMedia projects. | |||
: The text is vague because it's a guideline. That means there are lots of exceptions, considerations and nuance. If it could be reduced to absolute rules, we'd call it something else. That's not to say that the wording can't be improved, though. If you think you can improve it, ]. ] <small>]</small> 13:12, 30 August 2007 (UTC) | |||
:: You're going to have to point to where this so-called consensus is. It needs to be discussed. The page, as I've pointed out, lacks key aspects of a guideline and ''is'' in dynamic tension with another MOS submanual. This is an unsatisfactory situation. <br> Where, for example, is the original consensus for making this a semiguideline, and then a full guideline? I've searched for it, and came away with the impression that this is POV-pushing page for just one or two people. ] 03:27, 5 September 2007 (UTC) | |||
::: Please keep reading the archives - not just of this page, though. You'll have to check out the Village Pump archives and the other common discussion pages used back in 2002. Some of those discussions were moved to Meta and others were simply archived into the page histories. (We were not in the habit back then of creating special archive pages for every discussion.) You'll have to do some real digging if you really want to read it for yourself. This is one of the foundational pages from the very start of the project. <br> If you look at the pagehistory, you'll see that the page was tagged as "semi-policy" in Dec 2004. The concept of "semi-policy" was changed to "guideline" in the spring of 2005. The tag was applied without dispute as soon as the category was created and upgraded when they changed the designation. The age of the page also serves as evidence of consensus because at Misplaced Pages, ], especially on well-read and well-linked pages. Many people have read this page and you are the first person to contest it. <br> As to the principle behind the page, it's a fundamental expression of the way that a hypertext-powered reference is supposed to work. It explains to those new to the concept that the organization of information is not bound by hierarchy - it can expand across multiple dimensions simultaneously in ways that paper-based references never can. Effective use of hyperlinks can bring readers to new information - knowledge that they might not have thought to look for themselves. <br> At the same time, there can certainly be too much of a good thing. Any policy can render absurd results when taken to absurd extremes. That is the very principle behind the concept of ] - being asked to balance two competing priorities almost always gives better results than measuring on only one factor. ] is the counter-balance. <br> Finally, you've said twice now that you think this is POV-pushing. I'm not sure what POV you think is being pushed here. How do you think that changing the header on this page will change any behavior of editors? Why do you think this guideline is a bad thing for the project? ] <small>]</small> 06:31, 5 September 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::::I am giving up. Seeing what happened with your user page and how you reacted has inspired me to consider the possibility that you believe that minute details of process are infinitely more important than minor matters such as writing an encyclopedia or making our policy pages reflect consensus in the most efficient way. After rereading some of your comments I have now come to the conclusion that that's exactly your position. No wonder you are simply dismissing all relevant rational arguments as detractions while blowing irrelevancies out of all proportion. --] (]) 12:26, 7 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
By the way, I am again removing the "debate" line from this page because the debate was ''never'' about this side of the balance. The debate at the time was whether ] was necessary or healthy for the project. That debate is long ended. If you want to flag the current page as disputed, do so directly using {{tl|disputedpolicy}}. The link to the talk page of ] is inappropriate for your stated goal. ] <small>]</small> | |||
*Tony, I'm afraid you are mistaken in your assumptions on how Misplaced Pages policies and guidelines work. As Rossami points out, the fact that this page has been around uncontroversially for a very long time demonstrates its consensual acceptance. Pages aren't "made" a guideline through some kind of process or vote or whatnot. And I have no idea where you came across the idea of "semiguideline" because such things do not exist on Misplaced Pages. ] 08:25, 5 September 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::You heard it here first, folks. Eliminating all mention of a guideline from current Misplaced Pages policy pages without discussing whether or not the elimination should occur is a "minute details of process" according to Hans. | |||
Nothing here remotely supports your contention that the status of the page ever received consensus. It has, in fact, no consensus at all, and I believe that to claim this is fraudulent. Now listen <s>SunShinesOutOfYour</s>..., you've acquired a nasty habit of telling people, or is it just me, that they're "wrong", plain "wrong", or mistaken. I find you offensive. ] 09:52, 5 September 2007 (UTC) | |||
:Radiant has a few good technical points, but I have to concur that this is not a Misplaced Pages guideline. The fact that it has existed for a long time as a page on Meta is ''utterly'' irrelevant; ] and ] have too, but they are not only not WP guidelines they do not exist on WP at all. I've tried to improve the text of this thing some, but it is mostly a lost cause, because it is an unfocused (albeit short) ramble, provides no guidance at all, just a summary of history and differing viewpoints, conflicts with three guidelines, and is diametrically opposed by ] which has far more buy-in in Misplaced Pages of 2007. I.e. both ] and ] are necessarily essays, not guidelines. No one is arguing for this page's deletion; it is simply confusing to editors to present them with competing essays one of which claims without consensus to be a Misplaced Pages guideline (as opposed to a well-liked Meta braindump). — <b><span style="font-family:Tahoma;">]</span></b> []] []] <b>‹(-¿-)›</b> 11:48, 21 September 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::Explain to everyone, Hans: why isn't simply merging the pages enough? I have ''again'' agreed with that down below when rd232 proposed it. Why does any mention of BTW as a Misplaced Pages guideline have to be eradicated? Or is the answer to this question just an "irrelevancy" that never, ever has to be addressed by any of you? (Until it's good and long since done, am I right?) --] 02:38, 9 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
== shortcut == | |||
:::Nothing was demoted as far as I know. Anyway, whatever it was that was done had consensus, and that consensus was later confirmed in discussion. If you think it should be partially undone, then you're entitled to argue for that, but please do so rationally, based on what arrangement of pages and information offers the best/clearest guidance for WP editors, not on some personal or political accusations. --] (]) 09:39, 6 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
New shortcut: ]. Not sure how to edit the above template on the page. ] ] ] 18:33, 4 September 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::Ah! Nothing was demoted in your opinion! Which, unless there is some unusual semantic subtext to that statement, would appear to mean that you are conceding that "Build the Web" is an established Misplaced Pages guideline in the same fashion that "Assume Good Faith" is as I mentioned directly above in this thread. (Not to draw any similarity between them other than the fact that they are both established Misplaced Pages guidelines.) | |||
== Disputed policy tag == | |||
::::Funny how you failed to mention this during the great many occasions you raised objections to the inclusion of a statement affirming it into ] previous to now. An oversight, I would imagine. But if this is some measure of assurance that your future action on material you will not involve excisions of language identifying BTW as a guideline from other policy pages, I find it agreeable. | |||
Now, let me get this right: you ''are'' allowed to dispute policy on WP, aren't you? Rossami has suggested the tag, and I've added it. | |||
::::And thank you for the advice on how to argue rationally. --] 10:31, 6 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
Or is it that case that you're ''not'' allowed to dispute Radiant's view? | |||
:::::No problem. The page you mention, ], is another one you might like to take a read of. As regards that sentence, I've explained at ] why I don't think it should be there (more to do with the semantics than any deep agenda). --] (]) 10:40, 6 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::And there it is in your response under what you linked to: a statement that the word "guideline" ought not to be linked to ] when it is used to refer to "build the web". | |||
Reverting the tag will be a serious breach of accepted behaviour, and will result in a complaint. ] 10:53, 5 September 2007 (UTC) | |||
*Read the documentation for {{tl|disputedpolicy}} - ''"It is not intended for ... indicating a personal dislike of the document."'' Furthermore, a single user's objection does not mean that the "status" of a long-standing guideline is disputed, not by a long shot. If you object to the wording, {{tl|sofixit}}. Handwaving that "this page wasn't approved by the official guideline building process" is irrelevant since such a process doesn't exist. ] 10:59, 5 September 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::So the thing that in this page was labeled as a guideline with a link to ] ''did'' change in such a way that it ought no longer be referred to as such during the course of your merge, but that isn't being "demoted" in the way you used the word on that occasion in that sentence. This would be the unusual semantic subtext I had anticipated above: you just ''coincidentally'' chose to use the word "demoted" in a completely different way than it was used in the rest of this thread, when you were responding to my statement about this guideline being demoted out of guideline status. | |||
::<s>OK, you're not acting like a Nazi</s>. No one is allowed to dispute this article, because you say they shouldn't: that's what it comes down to. You're also in defiance of the other user on this page who suggested that the tag be added. You're crazy. ] 11:07, 5 September 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::]. You've just lost the discussion. ] 11:13, 5 September 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::So you operate on a win/lose thing, do you? I really don't care what your link to some law says; not interested. Looks as though you and I are in for a protracted, nasty struggle. ] 11:32, 5 September 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::::Before you get yourself in trouble for violating ] and ], Tony1, I suggest you go read those policies and make sure you're willing to abide by them. Also, you might want to be aware that a ] has been filed regarding your behavior. — ''']''' (]) — 18:19, 5 September 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::::Where would I ''ever'' get the idea that you intentionally try to deceive people? --] 13:17, 6 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Essay not guideline == | |||
:::::::SB has done that already. And like many of our bad faith specialists he wasn't content with just reading. (I agree with the first edit, although that, too, seems typical.) See also ]. --] (]) 19:10, 7 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
This should clearly be designated an {{tl|Essay}} not {{tl|Guideline}}. It wanders, does not actually advise much about anything, is written in an informal tone like an essay, does not appear to have consensus to be designated a guideline, directly conflicts with the ] (and well as ] and ], which is one of the most widely and strongly accepted guidelines on the system, and just overall seems dreadfully out of focus, wandering here and there as it does into historical "allwiki" curiousities that no one but wikihistorians care about, and so forth. Has some interesting points, but this is ''so'' not guideline material. The fact that it was considered interesting (in both positive and negative senses of that word) and appealed to some but by no means all editors (the competing ] is far more heavily relied upon today) all the way back to 2004 or 2002 or whatever is of no consequence; there is no clear consensus that this document is a 2007 Misplaced Pages guideline. — <b><span style="font-family:Tahoma;">]</span></b> []] []] <b>‹(-¿-)›</b> 04:01, 21 September 2007 (UTC) | |||
: If you think it could be better worded, ] and fix it. But summarily downgrading this from guideline will be vigorously opposed. This is a fundamental explanation of the way a hypertexted reference work functions (which may now seem obvious to you but is still a new idea to many of our readers/editors). I will also dispute the assertions that this guideline directly conflicts with the Manual of Style (though a few of the examples could probably use updating based on the new standards for numbers, etc). I see this page as an integral part of our style guidelines - a clear description of the essential balance that we need to strike between this guideline and WP:CONTEXT. <br> I will concede that it is informal and has some asides. That's how all our policy and guideline pages used to be written. Frankly, I prefer that style but if you think it should be more formal, propose some changes. <br> I will also concede that right now we have more trouble with people over-linking than underlinking, hence the current focus on WP:CONTEXT. But removing the page will lead us to equal but opposite imbalance. We need both measures in order to maintain the ]. ] <small>]</small> 04:02, 22 September 2007 (UTC) | |||
:: That said, perhaps both this and WP:CONTEXT would be improved if we merged them into a single page which explained ''both'' sides of the balance on one page... ] <small>]</small> | |||
:::I don't think so. This page would have to be reconceived and rewritten completely to qualify as a guideline or even to justify appearing on the same page as "Context". ] ] 08:10, 22 September 2007 (UTC) | |||
: You know, I'd been taking it for granted that the page might need updating based on the changes that have been made to ] and ] since this page was originally drafted. I finally had some time to re-read those pages and I'll tell you that I don't see anything in either page that is inconsistent with the guidance on the WP:BUILD page. Nor can I find any conflicts with the Manual of Style. Show me what I'm missing, please. ] <small>]</small> 11:22, 12 October 2007 (UTC) | |||
::Not even talking about the inconsistency in fact; just the inconsistency in tone, tenor, texture and style. This is just vague musings that come over as a personal, pet obsession. Try to rewrite it if you can, but until it's completely redone, it's a laughing stock. ] ] 11:34, 12 October 2007 (UTC) | |||
*Just a small, teensy-weensy point: when is ''someone''—you or another supporter of this page—going to respond to my invitation to justify any one of the sentences of which it comprises. In the total absence of any such justification, this page remains on the prime list not just for being solely an essay, but for deletion (unless someone wants to take it into their userspace). ] ] 10:37, 6 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Before you shoot me == | |||
**This would be appropriate when a significant number of editors manage to actually disagree with one of these sentences. If some editors find this useful guidance, and nobody disagrees with it, it should stay; those who find it anodyne need not mention it at all. ] <small>]</small> 17:22, 7 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
...for boldly de-guidelinifying, I do have my arguments handy and I do have a plan. I'm heavily involved in patrolling style guidelines, but it's a real chore. One thing that would make it a lot easier would be for some of the 67 style guidelines to get promoted to editing guidelines, which would mean that theoretically, more people will be interested in keeping an eye on them. Anything that makes editing guidelines look silly will thwart this plan, and this stubby-stub of a page is an example of a silly editing guideline. It has one or two nice ideas which could easily slide into other guidelines, IMO. ] has some content in common. Thoughts? - Dan ] (])(]) 21:35, 26 April 2008 (UTC) | |||
: This is one of the earliest guidelines the project had. Demoting it to "essay" status demeans a lot of its value. It also creates a strong possibility of confusion over the precedent between this page and ]. Having one as guideline and one as essay sends the message that they are to be weighed differently. In fact, they are in dynamic tension and only work if both factors are considered. | |||
: That's not to say that this page couldn't be improved or merged somewhere. But I don't think the fact that the page is short is inherently bad. It says what it has to and no more. ] <small>]</small> 16:31, 27 April 2008 (UTC) | |||
::On the prime list for deletion, eh? Gosh, it sounds like someone ought to make a proposal for its deletion! But oddly enough I keep suggesting that and no one seems interested. --] 13:17, 6 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Okay, if there's a long-time sense that this is the way to balance this issue, I have no problem keeping it as is. - Dan ] (])(]) 02:22, 28 April 2008 (UTC) | |||
*Having watched the whole debate since well before the merge, I can say that Kotniski did the merge in good faith. I feel bad that some assumed the contrary. We all have different opinions about linking ''(I personally don't believe WP has an overlinking problem)'', so we have to work together towards reaching a consensus. Having 2 or 3 separate pages about links will not lead to any consensus. ] (]) 06:36, 8 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Remove the Allwiki section == | |||
::I at first also assumed that Kotniski was operating in good faith and I went along with his merge and worked on the merged page. But if you're going to assert Kotniski's good faith here you must account for why he followed up the "merge" with eliminating any mention that "there is a Misplaced Pages behavioral guideline that editors should build the web" from WP:Linking and you must also account for why, when repeatedly and directly asked if he thought that BTW shouldn't be a guideline and if this was what he was trying to achieve, he simply replied that he was "tidying up". (He has since stated that he does ''not'' think it should be a guideline and that this is connected to why he pursued eradication of anything mentioning that.) | |||
I think the Allwiki section is sort of unnecessary. It's not saying anything that ] doesn't say, while having no continuity from the top of the page. It's not a necessary part of the guideline. This would be far more appropriate over on WP:CONTEXT, or, probably, on its own page, which both of these guidelines would then link to. I really don't care which, but I definitely think it doesn't belong here. Thoughts, anyone? --] ] ] ] 19:31, 24 May 2008 (UTC) | |||
: It's in there because the proposal to switch the MediaWiki software to an allwiki concept is a perennial question. Whenever we've removed it, new editors again start to argue that we should link everything automatically, without realizing all the reasons why doing so would be a huge disservice to our readers. If you can improve the wording, ], but I'd be hesitant to remove it altogether. ] <small>]</small> 01:49, 25 May 2008 (UTC) | |||
::I'm not advocating deleting it entirely. I'm saying it should be moved somewhere else, and then linked to from here. Like, the guideline should include the sentence "Misplaced Pages does not use Allwiki", with a link to the WP:Allwiki page, or the Allwiki section in WP:CONTEXT. Either way, I'm going to be bold and rewrite that section as you suggested.--] ] ] ] 07:10, 25 May 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::That section is necessary, even essential, to put this page in context. Sooner or later, you'll need to come to the realisation that your aims are thwarted by the technical inflexibility of the MediaWiki system: bright-blue and underlined links by default, rather than a less in-your-face colour and no underlining as default with options for brighter colours in user preferences. The purist BTW idea of linking just about everything would be served best by having links not show at ''all'' until you hang the cursor over linked items; then the reading experience and look of the page won't be so actively degraded by linking and autoformatting. | |||
:::The technical facts and the resistance of the MediaWiki developers to doing anything about linking and autoformatting, have increasingly forced people into a minimalist position on linking and autoformatting. These people are not necessarily antagonistic to the BTW principle; rather, we believe that the technical limitations of the system, until fixed, place severe limits on the wisdom of undisicplined linking. Please see the current debate at ]. ] ] 01:13, 30 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::You misunderstand my "aims": I don't disagree with the current policy at all. I was just disagreeing with the placement and wording of the Allwiki section. I still think that section would be better placed in ], but I don't care about it enough to push against consensus at the moment.--] ] ] ] 14:13, 1 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
::Also, this is not some simple misunderstanding of the difference between a ] and a project namespace page: I repeatedly invited him to discuss that but he avoided discussion of it and he and others continued pursuing the deletion of phrases like the one above. This is ''not'' behavior that is consistent with good faith. | |||
*CONTEXT would be better integrated into MOSLINK, and this page made into an essay; that's my angle. ] ] 04:32, 6 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
::I personally ''do'' think that WP probably has an overlinking problem with dates now that I've looked at it a little bit. But I am not involved in that issue and trying to eliminate guidelines like BTW - much less doing so with no transparent discussion - definitely would not be the solution. --] 02:30, 9 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
== "Build the Web" dismissed? == | |||
'''Moved from ]: begin'''<br> | |||
I was taking my cue from "Don't overdo it" on the BTW page, which seems to be saying that the community has dismissed the basic idea. ] ] 03:05, 6 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
:Actually, I originally wanted to remove that section entirely, see ]. I think that particular section is superfluous precisely because we already have ]. There didn't appear to be consensus to remove it completely, so I re-wrote it ] to make it flow better. I can see from the talk page that you are not a big fan of ], but it is one of the fundamental building blocks of Misplaced Pages.--] ] ] '''''<font color="green">]</font>''''' 03:28, 6 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
::Your rewrite is a considerable improvement. Frankly, the extreme BTW concept will work only if linking is made more flexible (i.e., no blue splash and underline—then I don't care if ''every single word'' is linked). It's the obstruction to the reading experience that I don't like. Actually, on second thought, linking everything is a problem in that it takes from editors the ability to highlight valuable links. But I don't want to get into a big debate about this; suffice it to say that we need to remove trivial links under the current technical regime. ] ] 04:29, 6 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::Actually, I think you misunderstand the point of the Build the Web guideline. (It is possible that the wording has changed since you last read it. I have a feeling it will change again as the result of our discussion here.) The point is not that everything should be linked. The point is that we should HAVE links, period. There are plenty of articles marked with {{tl|wikify}} and {{tl|deadend}}, precisely because this guideline is so fundamental. If you think that the current version of the guideline is not clear on that point, then feel free to re-write it so that it is clear, or give me an idea of what would make it clearer so I can make the change. I will emphasize again that I do fully support the limits on WP:BUILD that are listed in WP:CONTEXT and the Manual of Style, but I feel that WP:BUILD is necessary to serve as a constant reminder that we shouldn't ''under''link, either.--] ] ] '''''<font color="green">]</font>''''' 05:05, 6 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
'''Moved from ]: end'''<br> | |||
::::No problem, then. If BTW is no longer pushing for extremely high and undisciplined linking policies, it and CONTEXT don't need to be on separate pages. But I'm concerned that there are still people hanging around this page who want to encourage WPians to make "trivial" links all over the place. Ultimately, it would be better not to have three pages, but one: MOSLINK. But merging is not a high priority for me at the moment—perhaps a medium-term goal. ] ] 05:19, 6 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::::I think that those people you are referring to are either long gone or have accepted the consensus that WP:CONTEXT and WP:MOSLINK represent. Either way, until I see what form a merged page would take, I'm going to be skeptical of it, to tell you frankly. I like the idea of having the three pages in ].--] ] ] '''''<font color="green">]</font>''''' 05:42, 6 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::::Actually, now that I re-read the three guidelines closely, they are all talking about exactly the same subject, and it really doesn't make sense to have them all in different places.--] ] ] '''''<font color="green">]</font>''''' 05:52, 6 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::::My take is that there are some contentious subjects where the outcome is better when you split them into two or three pages and let people with different viewpoints concentrate on the pages they like, because it reduces the number of fights, but I don't see anything like that issue on this page at this time. Maybe it was contentious back in the day, I don't know. I support a merge. - Dan ] (])(]) 15:07, 6 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
*Yep, I don't see much dynamic tension, frankly. And this page appears to have been a one- or two-man band from the start. I think the BTW philosophy might get a look-in at a new, merged MOSLINK in its own section, but until the linking system becomes more technically sophisticated (don't hold your breathe), I don't think it will ever go beyond a hypothetical frame. ] ] 15:12, 6 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
**I think this page had a lot more support when it started, or it wouldn't have stayed as a guideline for so long, I am thinking of writing a proposed document that would merge WP:BUILD,WP:CONTEXT, and WP:MOSLINK. Right now, WP:BUILD is just a general exhortation to do our job as editors of a wiki and make wikilinks. WP:CONTEXT provides some common-sense rules on how to prevent overlinking. WP:MOSLINK tells us what the links should look like. I propose this merger because it doesn't make sense to have these in seeming contradiction with each other, when they're really not. I will start it at ] (feel free to jump the gun and start before I do). We can work on a limited consensus first before we start pushing it out for community evaluation.--] ] ] '''''<font color="green">]</font>''''' 03:08, 7 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
: Some history. Yes, this was a ''very'' contentious debate once upon a time with some users taking rhetorical stances at either extreme of the debate. Once we realized that the two goals ''could'' be held in dynamic tension, the debate cleared up. The decision to document that debate in two competing pages is more an artifact of history than anything else. I would agree that a merger is now feasible in theory, though I'd worry if the page ends up too long to be easily readable. ] <small>]</small> 16:29, 7 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
::When I first discovered this page, I was perplexed as to why it had attained "semi-policy", and then "policy" status, when it didn't look or sound like policy. By researching the history, I found that one person had slipped it into both of those statuses, one after the other, without any semblance of consensus (there was, as I recall, no debate). I'm relieved to see that it's back at guideline status. Aervanath, your proposal sounds like a good idea. I'm just concerned that none of the text that supports a move towards a more disciplined culture of linking in the project be watered down or challenged. In general, rationalising styleguides is a damned good idea. I know that Lightmouse supports it in principle. ] ] 17:13, 7 July 2008 (UTC) | |||
== |
===Sod the intent and the edit history, can we get to the point?=== | ||
My impression is that people lean towards merging - at least enough that the onus is on those who want to keep it as a separate guideline to explain ''why'' the status quo is better than the whole shebang being made a section of something else. Complete with shortcut, if required. ] <sup>]</sup> 12:27, 6 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
:If the intent is to eliminate there being a Misplaced Pages behavioral guideline that says that editors should "build the web" (and that, by the way, is exactly what happened in this recent "merge" - ] intentional) that policy change is what should be proposed. Trying to accomplish the same thing through something advertised as a merge is a subversion of process. That's the only kind of merge I am opposed to. | |||
<blockquote>Think carefully before you remove a link altogether (apart from the case of a duplicate link). Remember that what may seem like an irrelevant link to you may actually be useful to other readers.</blockquote> | |||
:(And I'm perfectly fine with it if eliminating this behavioral guideline is what everyone wants to do, I just think it needs to be above-board rather than on the sly as handled by the individuals conducting the merge.)--] 13:17, 6 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
This seems to ignore the need to avoid catering for ''diversionary browsing'' on WP, and the notion of ''disciplined linking'' that has been increasingly embraced as a way of highlighting our high-value links rather than the previous scattergun approach of linking anything you can; the latter simply dilutes the links that we want our readers to click on. | |||
:Oh, and also rd232 - what you're talking about there "Complete with shortcut, if required" sounds a whole lot more like an actual merge than what occurred under the auspices of Kotniski, Tony1, and company. (Assuming of course that I properly understand what you mean.) --] 13:26, 6 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
I suggest that this para be deleted altogether. ] ] 11:22, 22 August 2008 (UTC) | |||
::It's coming, but I want to give supporters a fair chance to justify the statements in this quasi-essay. And we need a final check to ensure that nothing in it—no smidgeon of a point or idea—has ''not'' been transferred to WP:LINKING. ] ] 15:00, 6 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
:WP:BUILD is meant to be interpreted in light of WP:CONTEXT and WP:MOSLINK. Just as WP:CONTEXT is meant to limit indiscriminate overlinking, WP:BUILD acts to limit indiscriminate underlinking. This is the point of this paragraph, and so I have to oppose it's deletion. However, I'd be interested in exactly what you mean by ''diversionary browsing'', since that sounds like exactly how I use Misplaced Pages: just browsing from one article to another, finding info that I'd never known before about topics I hadn't even known existed. But you possibly mean something else.--] ] ] '''''<font color="green">]</font>''''' 15:36, 22 August 2008 (UTC)] | |||
:::I do not believe that. If you guys are out in ] actively hunting down and deleting any mention that BTW is a[REDACTED] behavioral guideline with vague reasons like "it's inappropriate" in response to direct questions on why a Misplaced Pages guideline can't be labeled as such, I simply do not believe that everyone just needs to wait because what you're ''really'' doing is working on a clear, unambigious new version of the merge "Complete with shortcut, if required". What rd232 proposes there you are actively working to prevent and I believe your intent from the beginning was to eliminate anything like that. | |||
:<s>By the way, this would become moot if we could get WP:BUILD and WP:CONTEXT merged into WP:MOSLINK. I've got a draft going at ], but at the moment it's basically just a copy-and-paste job. It's not really ready for widespread viewing yet, but I know that this is a goal that we share, so I'd appreciate your input. Cheers,--] ] ] '''''<font color="green">]</font>''''' 15:36, 22 August 2008 (UTC)</s> | |||
:::This "final check" you speak of is nothing of the sort: it's an attempt to trick people into saying they're supporting a "merge" in such a way that you can claim you have support for elimination of BTW as a behavioral guideline from Misplaced Pages project pages everywhere. If the situation "Complete with shortcut" rd232 describes does not fit into your plans - which I believe it does not ''at all'' - cut the deceptive dissembling and say so. There's no reason your "final check" would have to be conducted as a pre-condition to creating content like that in ]. --] 10:43, 7 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
::After some consideration, I've speedied the draft I was working on. It was getting to be too large and unwieldy, and I think that the current setup of ] works better, by providing guideposts that limit the extremes, as opposed to a single document dictating what should and should not be linked.--] ] ] '''''<font color="green">]</font>''''' 11:17, 7 September 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::If I'm understanding your concerns right, I think a little assumption of good faith and clear thinking might resolve them. This is what happens when you merge a number of (say 3) guidelines: you start with page A, page B and page C, all tagged as guidelines. You end up with a page D, now tagged as a guideline in place of A, B and C. The guidance given by D is substantially the same as that which was previously given by A, B and C (of course, not necessarily expressed in the same words). ''There is no reason at all why page D needs to contain three statements of the form " is an (important/...) WP guideline".'' The absence of such statements is not a sign that those working on the merge have attempted to or succeeded in changing the substance of the guidance in any way. If page C had some valuable pithy message (as some people apparently consider "build the web" to be), then it is enough that that message be part of the text of page D - there is no point in saying " is a (...) guideline", since everything on page D is a guideline anyway, by virtue of that page's being so marked. So when people started talking about how they liked the "build the web" wording, we listened to them and included it (or gave it more prominence - I think it was originally there anyway) in the merged page. But that doesn't mean we have to say "build the web is an important guideline/rule/etc." - even the original Build the Web page didn't say anything like that. If you keep in mind the logical distinction between the words "build the web" and the page titled ], you'll see I hope that no-one has any dark intentions in objecting to the inclusion of your sentence in ] - I just don't think it contributes to the clarity of the guidance. Anyway, this is my last attempt to convince you of my good faithedness - if it hasn't worked, then too bad.--] (]) 14:21, 7 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::I am glad to see this is Kotniski's last effort to justify his disruptive meddling. By this argument, we need not have ''any'' separate guidelines at all, but can have one massive unreadable ] containing all our guidance. It will be unreadable, unreferrable, and useless, but apparently that doesn't matter. ] <small>]</small> 17:16, 7 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::Why do you do this, PA - have I offended you in some way? Why do you feel the need to insult people when they do something you don't agree with? What do you want to achieve by making such obviously absurd arguments like that one? Do you even know what we were discussing? --] (]) 17:54, 7 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::(ec) That's just rude. Take a step back, and a deep breath, ''before'' hitting save. Please! I am a supporter of closer scrutiny of this merge, and you are not helping any of us see your points by stooping to personal attacks and mischaracterizations of intent, and using ludicrous slippery-slope arguments. Let's just drop that now, please. If you cannot say something constructive, say nothing. -- ] (]) 17:56, 7 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
Oh, I think people just ignore this BTW pages as being an eccentric, bizarre vestige of the past. ] ] 12:28, 7 September 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::::I'm fairly satisfied with the bold and emphatic description of '''build the web''' as currently incorporated into ]. I do however think more of the wording from this guideline should be ''copied exactly'' to the Linking guideline. For example the section on redlinks as Piotr points out above at ] - "Don't be afraid ..." is an important reminder of WP:BOLDness. | |||
:Really? We're banning wikilinks entirely, then? (yes, that's sarcasm.) But I have to say, if WP:BTW is such an "eccentric, bizarre vestige of the past", does that mean that {{tl|deadend}}, {{tl|orphan}}, and their associated categories are useless as well? P.S. Also, you never answered my question above regarding what you mean by ''diversionary browsing''.--] ] ] '''''<font color="green">]</font>''''' 17:11, 8 September 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::::These wordings were discussed and honed and argued over for years, which is why some of us oldtimers are protective of the page (and implicitly its choices of phrasing). I don't have time to read more of the threads, or suggest more exact changes, but hopefully you get my meaning, and can extrapolate the changes that will make us all happy. Thanks. -- ] (]) 17:56, 7 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
::By the way, here's a statistic for you to mull over: as of this writing, there are a total of FIVE (5) articles in ], and yet there are 32,315 articles in ], and 515 in ]. Looking at that, I have to wonder why you seem to think that there is such an epidemic of overlinking, when it looks to me as if the pendulum has in fact swung too far towards underlinking.--] ] ] '''''<font color="green">]</font>''''' 17:44, 8 September 2008 (UTC) | |||
::::::Wow, thanks! I guess there has been constructive criticism of the merger or the way it has been attempted somewhere here or on ], but I don't remember any that I could understand. Finally something to act upon and even an explanation why this conflict happened. I hope that in a few hours' time I will get some time to work on a proposal at ]. (] is currently protected.) --] (]) 18:59, 7 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::Actually, Piotr is referring to ], a separate guideline which in my opinion should also be merged into ]. The "Don't be afraid" sentence needs balancing like the rest of BTW. I think I am going to think about this a bit more. Perhaps BTW can be expanded to discuss all the motivational and less technical aspects in depth (and in a balanced way), and then serve as a subarticle of ]? --] (]) 22:48, 7 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Well, a prime example of the advantages of explaining even what seems to be obvious. Everything Quiddity says has been implicit in the counterarguments since before I got here; but it has not been seen. I would add that ] and ] should link to any merged section, like the links to the clauses of MOS. ] <small>]</small> 02:31, 8 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::As a detail, this should not be a ''subpage'' of ]; this and ] are the principles which ] attempts to implement. It would be a useful exercise to expand ] and make it a separate page which would answer this one point by point. ] <small>]</small> 02:31, 8 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
== RfC currently open on linking dates of birth and death == | |||
:::::::::That's not at all what I meant. Do you see the parenthetical "and in a balanced way"? I don't believe in having two guidelines that contradict each other, enabling extremists who don't agree with the consensus (which of course lies somewhere in the middle) to cherry-pick. If I get support from everybody but you I will be happy, but I simply don't expect you to agree with any solution that makes sense. --] (]) 08:15, 8 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
For anyone who hasn't yet seen it so far, there's an ] on whether dates of birth and death in the first sentence of a biography article should be linked or not. | |||
::::::::::::These "contradict each other" exactly as much as ] and ]. Both ''BTW'' and ''don't overlink'' are true, which is why we have two pages; if the merger had been kept, and they were two sections, they would ''still'' be quoted tendentiously. ] <small>]</small> 19:35, 9 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::Kotniski, your "it's redundant" explanation is a completely new one, different from ''all'' of the other explanations you've given for eliminating mention that there's a BTW guideline from the WP:Linking page. (And as I've pointed out folks, previous explanations included things like .) | |||
:::::Your willingness to discuss the distinction between a guideline and a Misplaced Pages namespace page is completely new in the last few days - well after the point where the page was locked and the statement in question can't simply be deleted or altered - despite the fact that for weeks and weeks I was asking questions and making points about this and linking to ] to make it clear what I was talking about. | |||
:::::This behavior, and things like concealing your desire to remove BTW as a guideline when ''directly, repeatedly asked as the author of the merge whether you had such intentions'', is not remotely consistent with good faith; in fact it's plainly disingenuous and deceptive. ] is not some sort of mental hygiene requirement that compels Wikipedians to not think about bad faith or prevent them from recognizing and talking about bad faith behavior. I granted you the benefit of the doubt, the assumption of good faith, and over the course of weeks you completely and totally forfeited it. You can't consistently, repeatedly, and openly act like this and expect to get away with it in a place like Misplaced Pages where diffs showing exactly what you've said and done and the history of every page can be presented and examined by anyone. So I am very well justified to not simply trust you on this and to insist that very explicit and above-board mention that BTW is a guideline be included in any merged page; my concerns and the things I'm insisting on are not nonsensical or inappropriate at all as has been repeatedly asserted. | |||
:::::And one other point: the original BTW page most certainly ''did'' say "this is a Misplaced Pages behavioral guideline" right before the "merge" - that's something which only appears to have been changed recently. --] 03:16, 9 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::* Very well said. — ] ] 13:55, 9 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::For the ''last, last'' time: BTW was a page which was marked as a guideline page. "Build the web" is a phrase. If you merge BTW with something else, it isn't a page any more, so it doesn't make sense to say "Build the web" is a "guideline", meaning the page BTW is a guideline page. It might make sense to say "build the web" (phrase) is a guideline (useful maxim to be followed) - you can argue for that, but that exact phrasing (particularly since it never appeared on the BTW page before the merge) isn't essential to making the merge an unbiased merge. Just because we disagree about whether that particular sentence makes the Linking page clearer guidance or not is no reason for these heaps of abuse that have been poured in my direction - it's hardly a matter of any consequence (and you seem to have got your way about it anyway). No further replies from me here; with the possible exception of the Brandt debacle, this is the most ridiculous thing I've encountered in my time at Misplaced Pages so far.--] (]) 07:13, 9 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Merge proposal == | |||
This is an issue that has recently come to a head, with the new deprecation of date auto-formatting, and recent bot-driven de-linking sprees. ] (]) 19:42, 3 October 2008 (UTC) | |||
Proposal: merge ] into ] by adding the following paragraph at the top of ]: | |||
==Specific merge proposal== | |||
I've hacked out a merged version of ], ] (aka WP:CONTEXT) and ], as we agreed was desirable. It's at ]. Please comment on ''']'''. I know it still needs brushing up, but let me know if I've left out anything major. If there are no objections, I'm planning on substituting it for the current version of MOSLINK. This page (BUILD) contains virtually nothing that isn't there - once the merged version is in place I would suggest either simply redirecting this page to there, or incorporating the existing text of this page into some other more visible page that new editors are likely to read.--] (]) 20:06, 9 January 2009 (UTC) | |||
MERGE DONE per general agreement. --] (]) 13:34, 11 January 2009 (UTC) | |||
:No such actual "merge" seems to have occurred. A 40 hour discussion on another talk page is insufficient for destroying a five year old guideline, hence I have restored it. -- ]<sup>]</sup> 06:39, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
<blockquote> | |||
==Merge== | |||
{{shortcut|WP:BTW|WP:BUILD}} | |||
This page should not be merged into ]. This page doesn't deal with the style issue of linking, but rather with the consensus view of how Misplaced Pages should operate in more general terms. —] • ] • ] 08:07, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
Misplaced Pages is based on ], and aims to "build the web" to enable readers to find relevant information on other pages with just a click of the mouse. Therefore in adding or removing links, consider an article's place <s>in the web</s>in the ]. Make upward links to <s>categories and</s> relevant contexts (] was a ]; ] is a ] in ], etc. Make sideways links to neighboring articles (for ] see also ], ] borders on ]). Introduce links from related articles to avoid ] the article; and don't be afraid to create ]. | |||
:Well, at the time I suggested renaming ] to ] so it wouldn't be merely a style guideline. I may be wrong, but I seem to remember you commented negatively. Anyway, would it settle this new dispute if we did such a rename?--] (]) 08:23, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
</blockquote> | |||
:(ec)I have mentioned this issue (without any names) at ]. I was hoping it would prove to have been unnecessary, as we could continue the discussion amicably, but we must stop making uni/bilateral changes to the long-agreed stauts quo - and certainly avoid things like "vandalism" in edit summaries.--] (]) 08:38, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::No, as Kendrick7 notes above this guideline has existed for five years. I have no problem merging ] and ] as they are heavily related, but this guideline is a fundamental part of Misplaced Pages (not a mere style issue) and part of the reason most of us are here. —] • ] • ] 08:34, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::If it were fundamental, there would have been objections as soon as it was merged. It was just one more of the vast number of unneeded page in guideline space which make finding proper useful guidance more difficult to find. The fact that it existed it this form for many years doesn't change the fact that there was consensus to merge it. Now if you want to bring it back, please do as other civilized editors do and respect BRD, make a proposal, make your case, discuss and help reach a conclusion.--] (]) 08:42, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::(ec)You've got the steps in BRD messed up: your merge was Bold, the Revert occurred today, the next step was Discussion. Not a revert war. —] • ] • ] 08:48, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::Nonsense, the merge was not B because it was preceded by (and supported by) D.--] (]) 08:54, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::No, Cole: ''did'' exist. You were in on the merger, and compromises were made at MOSLINK to secure your support. Some people were most unhappy at those compromises, but endured them for the sake of peace. Your tense is full of spin at the top, too. You meant: "... should ''not have been'' merged", did you? Your spin will convince no one. You're free to start your own BTW page as an essay. Nothing stopping you. ] ] 08:45, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::My concerns were with the language of chronological item links. I was unaware of your longstanding attempts to water this guideline down because of your objections to it or I would have opposed the merger of this '''guideline''' into a style guideline. —] • ] • ] 08:48, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::Oh no, you're not ''still'' on about date linking are you? This page had nothing of substance on that or any other issue, so there was nothing to water down. And the fact that the target is a "style guideline" is irrelevant - it could just as easily be rechristened as I've already suggested.--] (]) 08:54, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::There was a proposal at one time to bring back BTW as a "historical page" (but not as the target of any shortcuts) - maybe that solution would help satisfy those with a sentiment for this piece of prose?--] (]) 08:51, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
*Um ... you stood by at the time, and ''now'' suddenly claim that you weren't aware of the merged contents? Why do you raise issues within an hour of Kendrick's atttempts to re-fragment this style guide? Could it be ... somehow related? The reasons for merging are for the sake of our editors—those who rely on the style guides. They do ''not'' want guidance on linking in three separate locations. To return to that would be utter madness. ] ] 08:58, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:*I bring it up because of ]. The merge of ] was reverted, and the time was for discussion. Instead you (and Kotniski) chose to engage in edit warring. Stop it. You won't "win this game" by trying to force your view over everyone else. —] • ] • ] 10:31, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Did you not read my response above? It's utterly absurd to suggest that the merge was the "bold" step in the BRD cycle. The merge was done ''after'' discussion. It's your/Kendrick's sudden undiscussed restoration that's bold and should not be repeated until consensus is reached.--] (]) 10:40, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
That's shorter than I expected; I'd written another para based on BTW but I've found all the parts of it are already in that target section (apart from the bit about category trees which I couldn't make sense of and doesn't seem to belong here). Comments? Can we do this merge now? ] <sup>]</sup> 03:56, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
I for one was unaware of the merger until today and am disappointed to have discovered that ] has simply disappeared. ''Yes'', some of the ideas from that guideline have been transferred to this one, but as a page outlining the philosophy of interconnectedness, BTW did a far better job of it than the merged page now does. Among other things, the very phrase "build the web" was evocative and compelling; what we have now is dry and lost in a mound of rules, rules, rules about how to use links. | |||
:Revised to replace "web" with ]. ] <sup>]</sup> 12:36, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Revised to strike ref to categories implying linking to categories, which is deprecated. ] <sup>]</sup> 15:23, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
*'''Support''' revised version per Tony below <s>] (]) 04:57, 27 April 2009 (UTC)</s> ] (]) 03:30, 28 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
I appreciate the desire to streamline and consolidate our guidance (and I support the merger of WP:CONTEXT and WP:LINKS), but in folding a guideline about principles into a guideline about formatting, you've dessicated the principles. | |||
*I support the idea of remerging (i.e. making this page a redirect to Linking, as it was always agreed it would be), but what's the point of including this text? We already say all of this at WP:Linking. The stuff about upward, sideways etc. isn't helpful - you'd have to define a hierarchy for this to make sense (a web is specifically ''not'' a hierarchy).--] (]) 06:25, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
*I support in principle just to end this dispute, not because I find anything useful in the paragraph. However, the merge would require a few things to be changed in the para. | |||
**First, is there a source for the concept of "upward" and "sideways"? It's not intuitive to me that "desert" be upward of "Sahara". | |||
**"Desert" is just the kind of trivial link that is now discouraged as a dictionary-type word. At the very least, you'd want to link to the appropriate ''section'' of the desert article, but that brings in another point about focusing links as much as possible (covered elsewhere in MOSLINK, I think), and we don't want to confuse issues in the one example. The same goes for "Africa", which is starting to be trivial, like linking "United States" or "the UK" or "Europe". These conflict with the well-established practice to use links selectively so that the higher-value ones, whether vertical or under the seat or left or right, are more likely to be clicked on. | |||
**Rather than the imperative "Make upward links to ..", it would be more appropriate to simply explain the concept of upwards, etc. ] ] 07:12, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
***These comments piqued my curiousity about the way we currently use categories. What's a better link: Charles Darwin is a ] or Charles Darwin is a ]? I appreciate that's an easter egg link we like to avoid, but when you think about it, currently, we have categories stuck all the way down the bottom of the page. Is that making the best use of categories? If the purpose of some of these links is to "build a web", well, isn't the category structure that web? After all, the "Build The Web" guidance predates category implentation by a long chalk, doesn't it? I doubt we've ever reviewed the implications categories had for this page, given the text currently used. ] <small>] </small> 09:37, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
****Interesting, so here is my guess: Imagine X is a foreign speaker not knowing exactly what a biologist actually does. In case X wants to know more, X clicks on the wikilink. I guess X would rather read an explanation about the different kinds of biologists and what biologists spend their days doing, than a list of articles that are similar to the one he was reading. ] (]) 10:03, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
*****Doesn;t really address the wiser points, does it. We could all have anecdotal evidence of what a particular user or group of users is expecting. But what do you think about the broader points, that this guidance hasn't been updated to reflect the introduction of categories. That probably speaks to its current utility. ] <small>] </small> 13:45, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
*'''Support''' The Sahara example makes much sense to me, it seems obvious to me that the Sahara article should begin like this: '''Sahara''' is a ]. If only one wikilink should be to remain in the article, that would be this one. ] (]) 09:40, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
**I think we can agree about that - but can we not phrase it in a way that makes sense to everyone? (At the very least we must make it clear that it's the Sahara article we're talking about; at the moment it looks like we're talking about some other article in which this sentence appears, because it says ] instead of '''Sahara'''. But we must also explain more explicitly what we mean by "upward" links to "categories" and "contexts".)--] (]) 11:04, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
* '''Support'''. "Desert" might be a dictionary word, but the article "]" contain more info than just a dicdef, some of which might be interesting to someone reading an article about the Sahara. Maybe it's slight too generic and one could link ] instead (but so far it happens to be a redirect). Likewise, the Darwin article now links to ] which is more specific than biologist. As for North Africa, yes, everyone know where it is, but someone reading an article about the Sahara might want to read more about it, so the link from "]" to "]" is not pointless. So I'd change the examples to "] is a ] in ]; ] was a ]". --<span style="font-family: monospace; font-weight: 600; color: #00F; background-color: #FFF;">]</span> (formerly Army1987)<small> — ''], not ]''.</small> 11:19, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
Bring back BTW. It's not a style guideline, it never was, and the merger, while well-meant, was erroneous.--] (]) 09:23, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Yes, this is far more the direction to go in. I don't think this text has much to add in terms of general principles - largely because BTW already ''has'' been merged into WP:Linking, so anything that means anything here is already there. What might be worth adding (though it would need to be written out properly, with legible examples) is the idea that we are more inclined to link to things which directly contain the thing we are writing about, or are classes containing that thing, or are similar to that thing, or are examples or components of that thing. (I guess that's what the upward/sideways/etc. language is supposed to mean.) But this wouldn't go at the top of general principles - it would get quite detailed and technical, and would probably go somewhere in the list of principles, or maybe better in a separate subsection.--] (]) 11:44, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
:So what purpose does a separate page serve? What principles are not reflected clearly in the merged page? We aren't here to espouse philosophies with emotional language, but to give editors (whether in disagreement with other editors or simply unsure for themselves) solid guidance to solve real problems. If the guidance on a subject is all on one page, that not only makes it easier to find, but also prevents people from "guideline shopping" when looking for arguments to back up their position. Clearly we want to have lots of links - this page says that in various places, in language not dissimilar to that of BTW - but that's balanced by a desire not to have too many links, and putting all the guidance on one page makes it easier for people to find the right balance. | |||
:The ] link is justified in my opinion. Today I was pointing Africa on a map and asked a group of 5 koreans what this continent was and they had no idea. So we shouldn't take it for granted that everybody knows what we learnt in primary school. And these koreans can speak English. ] (]) 15:25, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
* '''Comment'''. I've just taken the existing language from BTW and some of the criticisms made of the result are clearly valid. I agree that "upwards" and "sideways" are not necessarily clear, but if you visualise a web of knowledge with the more general topics at the top and the more specific at the bottom, that seems to be what the terms relate to. I'm not sure if we can find clearer terms, or if we should just put in a sentence to explain that; or else drop the concepts entirely, but that would mean deletion rather than merger, because just putting the shortcuts in the target section without explanation would be confusing. ] <sup>]</sup> 12:02, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Maybe you would be happier if we renamed this page ] like I always assumed we would - then we would be clearer that it's not ''just'' part of the style manual?--] (]) 10:15, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
**By shortcuts, do you mean ], ], etc.? These can simply go to ], not to any section of it (since the web-building principle is already mentioned prominently there); but just point there, not be advertised there. And we must avoid mixing metaphors - the World Wide Web (or any web I can imagine) is not hierarchical. The metaphor I'm used to for the sort of structure you're describing is "tree". So yes, we can try to develop this concept, AND we can retain the references to WP's place in the Web, BUT these should be treated as two quite separate issues (and the second one is already addressed, I think satisfactorily, at WP:Linking).--] (]) 12:21, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
:I agree with FG completely. I also note Tony1 is again being disruptive by splitting off conversations from their original talk page. Tony, '''do not do this again'''. —] • ] • ] 10:31, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
***You're right, it's a "knowledge tree" thing; linking these points to "building the web" is confusing because of that. I've revised the proposal accordingly. I hope this is clearer. ] <sup>]</sup> 12:35, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
::It was one of you two who resurrected this talk page without discussion, knowing that many interested people wouldn't be watching it since it was merged. Let's have the conversation here now if you must, but less of the accusations of others being disruptive - this is another in a series of quite unnecessary incidents caused by failure on the part of you and a few others to discuss before making changes against consensus.--] (]) 10:40, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
****OK, I would still make some improvements to the wording and positioning, but I guess those will be discussed further once we see this paragraph in place on the target page. '''Support''' this merge.--] (]) 12:53, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
*'''Support'''. The exact formulation of the paragraph is somewhat problematic, but I don't really mind that too much. I don't agree with Tony that linking from ] to ] or ] is wrong; I agree with A. di M. that linking from Darwin to ] would be better than to ]. The most important thing is that all the basic instructions about what to link and what not to link are in a single place, rather than spread over several guideline POV forks. --] (]) 12:29, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
I didn't say that linking Darwin to "biologist" was wrong: please read again. But does the "biologist" article really explain how Darwin was the father of modern biology? I don't think so; the field has changed so much, and the link is a potential distortion rather than an aid to readers' understanding. This example is also precariously close to an encouragement to link "actor", "novelist", and just about any occupation or artistic field, in the opening sentence of biographical articles. | |||
Since the merger into MOSLINK, few users will have this page watchlisted. I am moving the discussion, thus far, to the MOSLINK talk page. '''Do not remove it from that page, Cole.''' ] ] 11:02, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:That's faulty logic Tony. In actuality, more people concerned with this page will have '''this page''' watchlisted than will have MOSLINK watchlisted. This page has also existed far longer than the other page. Stop moving talk page discussions it's disruptive and inappropriate for you to decide this unilaterally. —] • ] • ] 15:28, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Locke, while this is still being worked out, I moved the section below to the other page, so at least it'll be near where Tony moved the other section to. I agree that there are probably two different groups of people watchlisting the two pages; it's a dilemma. -- ] ]</sup>/<sub>]</sub>] 15:34, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
What I ''did'' say was that "desert" is a dictionary term; however, after Nicholas's comment, I re-consulted the "desert" article and found it to be better than I'd recollected. Unfortunately, the subsection "Types of desert" doesn't clarify which type of desert the Sahara is: this is the type of value-added I'm always looking for in linking, and I'm concerned that the example will give a green light to the linking of every second word in, for example, the Geography and Climate sections of country articles. While the Sahara example might just be doable, it's an unfortunate example. "Africa" can't ''possibly'' go into MOSLINK as a link: this is sending the wrong signal after the project has moved away from the automatic linking of every geographical or political entity that ever occurs in any article. | |||
== Resurrect this guideline? == | |||
Inserting some of these examples into MOSLINK is the wrong way to go; if better examples can be found that do not risk a return to thoughtless linking by analogy, the paragraph would be less unsuitable. ] ] 13:32, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
Entire section moved ] so more people will see it. -- ] ]</sup>/<sub>]</sub>] 12:45, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Sorry for misrepresenting your words. I hope I have fixed this to your satisfaction. – Perhaps we have just found a genuine point of BTW: I do happen to think that while links to articles such as ] and ] should be used very sparingly, ] is an excellent example of an article where they are appropriate because superficial readers of the article are likely to find them of interest. The article actually links to ] instead, which is even better. --] (]) 14:45, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
{{tl|editprotected}} | |||
Bit out of order of Earle to support restoring it so strongly and then to restore it himself - but please put it right by removing or {{tl|tl}}ing the "guideline" notice from the top.--] (]) 13:12, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:I am also unhappy with the conflict of interest here—we should have asked an uninvolved admin to do it. ] (]) 13:24, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
"Don't be afraid to create links to articles that don't exist yet" ... red link spattering? Some are OK, but we don't want to encourage newbies to go about creating links that remain red for some time. I tell people who create red links to go there and at least write a stub; then it's not red and shows at least the beginnings of what will become an article. I'm also unsure that linking items just in the fear that their destinations might become "orphaned" is a good reason (alone) to link, yet it could be construed this way. ] ] 13:39, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
{{tick|18}} '''Done''' I've also added a link to where this page is being discussed. -- ] ]</sup>/<sub>]</sub>] 13:38, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:This is already in the target section. I'd rather we didn't get into a big discussion, as we seem to be, about the precise wording and policy implications. The only thing that really matters, as far as I can see, is the first two sentences, plus the shortcuts. The rest is naturally subject to future post-merger revision and clarification (which I think the target page could do with); these two sentences are the core idea which is worth merging, I think, the rest is detail, and is precisely ''why'' the merger should be done. ] <sup>]</sup> 15:18, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
*I guess I stand against the proposed text, because it is quite clear Misplaced Pages practise has changed. With the implenetation of category space, we stopped making inline upwards links to categories. That was one reason why category space was implented, and realistically, when you think about it, category space is the web. Just deprecate this page. Quietly. Next year. ] <small>] </small> 13:45, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
Why is this page being discussed on another page? If there's actually strong support to downgrade this to an essay, I'll file an RfC, but let's please discuss this in the correct forum per ]. -- ]<sup>]</sup> 17:07, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:*Have you been misled by the discussion? The proposal says nothing about linking to categories. ] <sup>]</sup> 14:10, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
::*Have you read the text you appear to have proposed? "Make upward links to '''categories''' and contexts". My emphasis. ] <small>] </small> 15:13, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
::: :) clearly I haven't!! Removed the ref to categories. ] <sup>]</sup> 15:20, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
*I agree with Rd232 that the first two sentences are what matter at the moment. ] ] 15:27, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Tony claims that "more people will see it there". I personally think that this is a more appropriate place, but I'm holding off from moving discussion back here without more support for the idea, lest we get another Tony-tantrum. -- ] ]</sup>/<sub>]</sub>] 17:11, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
*Here is a revised example. The sentence about red links has gone, since they are treated in more detail already and many editors would query that their creation should be so strongly encouraged (while not objecting to the occasional red link). The sentence about orphans has gone, since linking articles for the sake of linking articles is not now encouraged. Links to so-called orphan articles are best made because they are useful to the readers; the knowledge tree is not strengthened by low-value links. Given that the examples of "upward" and "sideways" links are almost entirely devoid of a larger context with which to judge the relevance of links, they have been replaced by items about which there can be less doubt as to the usefulness of their linking to most English-speakers. (Isn't "lateral" a better word than "sideways"? But if not, someone reinstate "sideways", please.) Tell me your thoughts: | |||
::Any discussion on the wrong page is moot, in my opinion. -- ]<sup>]</sup> 17:14, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
<blockquote> | |||
:::], says I! The ] crowd can make do with a hyperlink. -- ] ]</sup>/<sub>]</sub>] 17:15, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
{{shortcut|WP:BTW|WP:BUILD}} | |||
In adding or removing links, consider an article's place in the ]. This tree comprises "upward" links to relevant contexts ("'''Charles Babbage''' was one of the great ]s"; "'''Antarctica''' is the largest ]"), and "lateral" links to neighboring articles ("'''Protons''', along with ]s, are the basis of electrical charge within atoms"; "'''Mauritania''' shares a long border with ]").</blockquote> | |||
] ] 16:44, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Yes, that's certainly an improvement (much more pertinent examples; and red links and orphaning are perfectly well covered by what already exists at WP:Linking anyway). I would still remove "Therefore", since the second sentence (about the tree) isn't a logical consequence of the first (about the web). (The first sentence could go, actually, since it is already stated at least once on the WP:Linking page as it is now.) And if the examples are supposed to be from the articles indicated by the first links, then we should show that, at the very least by replacing the links by bold type as they would be in those articles ('''Charles Babbage''' was one of the great ]s etc.).--] (]) 16:56, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Reverts == | |||
:Actually maybe the Antarctica example doesn't quite work (is there such a thing as "the Antarctica"?) And the proton example never worked. But it's going in the right direction.--] (]) 17:07, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Oops, yes, some silly mistakes. How is that? ] ] 18:06, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
:{{ec}} <del>"The" Antarctica? Except for this,</del> your example sounds OK to me. (But I disagree that linking "]" in the first sentence of an article about a novelist is overlinking.) As for "categories" in the original wording, I don't think it referred to categories in the MediaWiki sense of the word: it would make little sense to write "Charles Darwin is a <code><nowiki>]</nowiki></code>". As for red links, the criterion should be whether the linked title could host an article complying with ] and ] and relevant to the topic of the article containing the red link. So I'd write something like: <blockquote>and don't be afraid to create relevant ], provided that the topic is ] and the linked title complies with the ].</blockquote> --<span style="font-family: monospace; font-weight: 600; color: #00F; background-color: #FFF;">]</span> (formerly Army1987)<small> — ''], not ]''.</small> 18:11, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
Kendrick7 reverted Kotniski's restorations of the BTW redirects with an "rvv" (= revert of vandalism) edit summary. I have undone both of Kendrick7's reverts as being highly improper, (1) due to the false allegation in the edit summary, (2) because it is uncollegial to Tony, who is currently unable to spend more than a tiny amount of time on Misplaced Pages, (3) because there has been nowhere near enough preparatory discussion beforehand, (4) the arguments are weak, (5) there is no consensus for what Kendrick7 wants, and (6) there is no hurry.--] (]) 18:19, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:I will revert vandalism as I see fit, thankyou. Clearly, the target of those shortcuts is this page. -- ]<sup>]</sup> 18:55, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Vandalism is defined at ]. You are wrong.--] (]) 19:01, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::"Sigh". I'm not getting my point across very well here. ''As for "categories" in the original wording, I don't think it referred to categories in the MediaWiki sense of the word''. That's my point, it does and doesn't refer to categories in the MediWiki sense of the word because the MediaWiki sense of the word didn't exist when the text was written. '''This guidance predates category space.''' That's why the guidance refers to category linking, it was the only way to implement a category, by linking to "biologist" and then extracting a "category" if you will, byt using "what links here" on bilogist. That's what a vast number of people seem to be missing, that "Build The Web" '''hasn't been updated in seven years''' to reflect the way the software has changed. The way we implemented categories means the guidance as stands is written to indicate that we write "Charles Darwin is a <code><nowiki>]</nowiki></code>". This is probably germane and not germane, but there was once a reason for BTW and articles being a sea of blue. It was all there was. Way back when, even "policy" was written in the main space, because it was all there was. Support the merge, but make sure it is updated to take account of the fact that this is so old it doesn't grapple with advancements. Don't get blind-sided into accepting or re-using material that has absolutely no relevance to today's Misplaced Pages. ] <small>] </small> 12:02, 28 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::Well, you seem to be acting deliberately and repeatedly to direct those redirects to the wrong page. I suggest you stop. -- ]<sup>]</sup> 19:17, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::They go to the current guideline - the right page. Please stop trying to imply that you have the right to undo anything that was agreed without your personal participation.--] (]) 19:22, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::If the merged page really contains all the details the original page did, why are you revert warring to have it link to that (allegedly same) content here? It just seems odd to me. —] • ] • ] 19:41, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::It's not the same, over there there is much more detail, obviously, and it is the currently maintained guideline on the subject, which is what people expect to link to when they use these shortcuts.--] (]) 19:46, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::This page is hardly out of date, it's barely a month old. Again, why are you revert warring over those shortcuts? Those shortcuts originally pointed to this page, not that page, so 99.95% of all incoming links should be to this page. And why is it every time there's some disagreement with MOS I feel like we're trying for newer levels of ]? Edit warring over a shortcut: has it really come to that, that you must gang up on another editor to force him to nearly violate 3RR? —] • ] • ] 19:49, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::As the children say: he started it. But "this page" is now AT that page - or it would be, if you and your oppressed other editor hadn't quite bizarrely begun undoing without discussion what you KNOW was agreed before. This page only has any current content in order to display it for discussion purposes.--] (]) 19:57, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::Again, a situation we wouldn't be in if you and Tony hadn't engaged in revert warring to keep it a redirect. Mergers (and unmerging) should generally be uncontroversial unless something was lost or changed during the merge that people are trying to protect. And I don't see that here. So I again: why are you revert warring over a merge? Seriously, why? Wouldn't it be simpler to just let this be than to think you'll "win" by revert warring? And ditto for the shortcuts. —] • ] • ] 20:13, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::Don't see that I've been revert warring any more than you have. I've just been trying to protect the work that I did and that everyone supported and praised as a great improvement. Anyway, discussion's on the other page, so no point continuing this here.--] (]) 20:23, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::Discussion on another page doesn't apply here, per ]. -- ]<sup>]</sup> 03:53, 19 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::No, discussions concerning several pages should take place in one place and be advertised on all of them. Per common sense. And that was done here. Don't wikilawyer.--] (]) 08:20, 19 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
Kendrick7 you have broken 3RR on both redirects. Please self revert immediately or I will report you to ].--] (]) 19:28, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Maybe you should stop disrupting[REDACTED] to make a ]. You don't like my edit summaries, OK, I get it. -- ]<sup>]</sup> 03:52, 19 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::You still seem to be using "rvv" in edit summaries, which apparently stands for "revert vandalism". Please don't do this unless you really are reverting ], or you'll upset people.--] (]) 17:06, 19 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
What if we just merge the first two sentences and the shortcuts, and then continue this discussion at ] post-merger, where it will be more productive, in the larger context of that page? ] <sup>]</sup> 18:51, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
==Link to discussion to remove this guideline== | |||
Can someone please provide a link to where removing this guideline last month was "extensively" discussed? It certainly wasn't on this page or a subpage that I can see. -- ]<sup>]</sup> 18:55, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:It was linked to from here - the link is still there above (]) (though it's probably all been archived now). To repeat - the guideline wasn't ''removed'', it was ''merged''. Everything of substance (not very much in fact, as you will see if you analyse the text of this page objectively) was included in the merged guideline. If you think anything's been omitted (apart from nonsense), then please say so, but be specific.--] (]) 19:04, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Uh huh. It was removed under the guise of being "merged" as decided by editors working somewhere else (although, again, I still don't know where, as I still can't find this "extensive" discussion). Building the web ''isn't even a style issue to begin with'' -- this looks like simply ]. -- ]<sup>]</sup> 19:13, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::You can look in the archives of ] - it was a couple of months ago, and not just one discussion. I don't have a clue what you mean by empire building. I keep suggesting that MOSLINK should be renamed ] to make clear that it's not just (or even principally) a style guidline. Would that satisfy your concerns?--] (]) 19:20, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
(''edit conflict'') See ], and ; there may be others (Kotniski may know). The first of these three links points to the closed RfC on the merge proposal: '''this issue is settled already'''. Kendrick7, you realize, don't you, that you are doing things bass-ackwards? Before making bold reverts, you should have come here first to ask.--] (]) 19:24, 17 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:None of which was on the talk page here. This clearly enjoys has enough support as an essay, which does not require consensus. Once the lock expires I will tag it as such. -- ]<sup>]</sup> 03:50, 19 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::I have no problem with that, as long as it is not connected with MOS or editing guidelines in any way. ] (]) 05:13, 19 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
* '''Support merge''' There is far too much overlap of content. The subject is linking, so put it all there. As it is, this article is an essay. It needs to be merged into “WP:”-space so it is truly a guideline. As an aside, I can’t see the value in creating broken links. If someone thinks a subject is noteworthy enough to have its own article, they ought to at least have the gumption to be willing to create the stub. Just putting square brackets around some text to make it red in hopes someone else will come in later is, IMO, just being too lazy. Besides, in some cases, the actual article title may be slightly different from the pointer links and the text ''still'' won’t turn from broken-link red to link-blue even after someone makes the article. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 23:28, 27 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
{{tl|editprotected}} | |||
*: Personally, I prefer a red link to a blue link to a very short stub: that way, it can't happen that a reader follows a link and is disappointed because the stub it takes to doesn't explain the subject any better than he was able to figure out himself from the context. But maybe that's just me... And sometimes it's not laziness, but rather lack of knowledge to create the stub: for example, I once read the sentence <blockquote>In addition to this, sea quarks can hadronize via a certain fragmentation function; for instance, a sea quark hadronizing into a pion (π) does so through the fragmentation function <math>xD(s \to \pi) = F(x).</math></blockquote> Without knowing what the hell a fragmentation function is, I could only make wild guesses about the intended meaning of that sentence. So I added a red link to ]. I then googled for that phrase in order to find out its meaning (and possibly write an article about it), but I found lots of very technical pages which assumed the reader already knew that phrase, and no page which actually explained what a fragmentation function is. So I left the link red. (And I would have been ''far'' more disappointed if the link were blue, but it took to a one-sentence article such as "In ], a '''fragmentation function''' is a ] describing how ]s can ]ize.") As for the possibility of the link staying red if the article isn't created with the exact same meaning, it is minimized if the editor who adds the red link conforms to the ], and the author of the article creates redirects from any other title also allowed by the conventions for the same title. --<span style="font-family: monospace; font-weight: 600; color: #00F; background-color: #FFF;">]</span> (formerly Army1987)<small> — ''], not ]''.</small> 11:07, 28 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
'''Support''' This is a good compromise between those who are strongly attracted to the principle of BTW and those who want to consolidate the MOS. ] (]) 01:03, 28 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
:{{tick|18}} '''Done''' Seems fair. Hope this helps show that my restoration of the text was made in good faith. -- ] ]</sup>/<sub>]</sub>] 05:44, 19 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Thank you. ] (]) 13:08, 19 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
'''Support''' the last version by Tony1 as well. It is no perfect (for instance I don't think "great" is appropriate in Misplaced Pages) but let's merge first and polish things afterwards. By the way, I am quite happy to have this healthy discussion where we are trying to reach a consensus despite our very different views. ] (]) 06:07, 28 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
==Proposed action== | |||
Please see my suggestions for action at ], and comment either there or here as appropriate.--] (]) 08:53, 21 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Well, no substantial comment over there, so let's bring the discussion back here. Rather than use {{tl|historical}} or {{tl|essay}}, let's use a new template I've just created, {{tl|former guideline}}. With appropriate parameters, it would look like this: | |||
{{former guideline|Misplaced Pages:Manual of Style (links)|BTW}} | |||
**Army, your suggestion "and don't be afraid to create relevant ], provided that the topic is ] and the linked title complies with the ]—can we avoid contractions in formal text (as required by MoS)? And the opening is an odd angle to take (being afraid or not ... just a little ''too'' rhetorical. Why not "and consider creating ], provided the topic is sufficiently relevant and ] and the title complies with the ]."? But just how different is this from the advice already in MOSLINK? And why not put the statement in the red link section if it has to go in? | |||
Sums the situation up nicely? --] (]) 13:24, 24 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
**Hiding, sorry, I can't get my brain around your point about categories. Perhaps I'm just too tired. ] ] 17:06, 28 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
*I think I'd prefer to use {{tl|Guideline}}. From memory we've deleted templates like {{tl|former guideline}} in the past, preferring {{tl|historical}}, but that's certainly open to change. ] <small>] </small> 14:07, 24 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
**:Er, yes. I had overlooked the fact that the proposal is to put the text on top of ], which already mentions red links. For some reason I was thinking that the proposal was to put it into its lead. (Also, I don't think that it must necessarily be "formal text": we're essentially talking to fellow editors; BTW, the contraction and the rhetorical opening (is it? I assumed "Don't be afraid" to be an idiom) were already present in the existing wording which I only adapted (as opposed to rewriting from scratch); I don't care about what specific wording is used.) --<span style="font-family: monospace; font-weight: 600; color: #00F; background-color: #FFF;">]</span> (formerly Army1987)<small> — ''], not ]''.</small> 17:54, 28 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Well, we obviously can't use {{tl|guideline}} at present, since consensus has determined (for the second time) that this page should not be marked as such. I'd be perfectly happy to use {{tl|historical}}, but I thought this graphic and more informative description might be more appropriate than the red cross for a page that has been merged rather than rejected or overturned. --] (]) 14:41, 24 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::I'm not prepared at the present time to state that such a consensus emerged, if it is all the same to you. I'd rather allow this discussion be allowed to remain open a bit longer than you've allowed so far, and see where it takes us. I'd also like to avoid declaring things like consensus was determined "for the second time". We're not in a pissing contest, we're having a collegiate debate which can run its course as and when. Looking over this page and the page this discussion was previously on, I'm not finding myself as moved as you are to declare any strong consensus, to be honest. I'd rather just let people comment and see what develops. If no-one else has commented after a couple of weeks or more, I'd imagine the issue will have resolved itself, but I don't find the need to make any declarations at present. Hope you can accommodate some tortoise paced thinking for me. ] <small>] </small> 22:02, 24 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::The main discussion was at ]. Both the numbers and - more importantly - the strength of argument clearly showed that this page should not be marked as a guideline. If that changes in the future, then it's easy enough to change the label on this page accordingly. But in the meantime people arriving at this page have a right to know what its status is.--] (]) 08:38, 25 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::My only comment on this before going back to my self-enforced break from this: , so I wouldn't count on getting any more input. Further, Kotniski misrepresents the state of things: note he says this is the "second time" consensus has been reached to demote this guideline; this is factually incorrect of course. This is (if anything!) the first time. The other time he refers to wasn't a discussion on demoting this page from guideline but merging it with MOSLINK. —] • ] • ] 09:09, 25 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::It comes down to the same thing. One of the consequences (and major benefits) of merging two guidelines is that you end up with only one page marked as a guideline.--] (]) 09:22, 25 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
*"But in the meantime people arriving at this page have a right to know what its status is." They know what the status is. It's a page in the Misplaced Pages namespace. It doesn't need a template at the top of it, there isn't a law which says it does, and until there is a general consensus on what tag should go on it, we might as well leave it bare as anything else, to save edit wars and arguments over side issues. I appreciate the time everyone will allow to let the matter settle itself out. Personally, I don't think you are the best person to determine where the strength of argument lies, given that it was mostly your argument that you have decided was strongest. That's not intended as a slight, just my personal feeling on the separation of the roles of judge, jury and executioner. Kotniski, I think you've made your views known and understood, and I think maybe you just need to leave the issue time to settle itself down. You don't need to have the last word here, agreed? ] <small>] </small> 11:41, 25 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::All right, let's wait another week. Though I find this all very disruptive - once we've had a discussion with as clear a result as this, I would have thought those who originally took the viewpoint that ended up being rejected could have the decency to accept it and move on to other things. That's what I do on the (frequent) occasions it happens to me. (And this is the same reason the date linking debate is still going on and on.)--] (]) 11:54, 25 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::You're misunderstanding me. I'm not asking for another week. I'm not acting with a lack of decency. I'm just trying to move this on, and I think your efforts are starting to become counter-productive. People are arguing with you because you keep responding. Like I said above, you don't need to have the last word here, agreed? Trust other people. Have good faith. ] <small>] </small> 14:22, 25 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::Pardon me, Hiding: good faith is a ''two''-way thing, too. As far as I can see, Kotniski has been a model for us all in his forging of consensus and his skilful incorporation of the two guidelines into MOSLINK. Please calm down and be reasonable. ] ] 14:45, 25 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::Tony, if you'll forgive me, I happen to disagree ever so slightly. First off, I don't think I am being unreasonable, or in any sense anything other than calm. I'm simply asking for people to take the time to allow the dust to settle, and trying to amicably point out to Kotniski that the person who initiates something and carries most of the argument forwards, isn't the best person to decide the outcome. Now if you think that's unreasonable behaviour, I'm at a loss. If you can show me where I've tag warred or edit warred or done anything other than say that I would prefer this to be a guideline, then maybe you've got a leg to stand on. But I'm quite happy to stand on my editing record. I haven't engaged in edit warring, I don't wish to, and I'm not going to. Now, if you think I'm the person you really need to be calling into question throughout this discussion, I suggest you review the whole debate again and have another look at which editor's behaviour got this page protected. You won't see my name in there. I just want to make sure the right decision is reached in the right way. And I'm sure you'd agree that I'm the sort of person that knows that the right decision is not always the decision I would prefer. Yes I would prefer this page to be a guideline. But if in a week or a month or a year's time I'm the only one here and there's tumbleweed blowing, you can rest assured I'll add the essay tag myself with the edit summary ''per talk''. There's no deadline, is there? Let's try and take the heat out of all of this, yes? Or do I need my big brother, too? ;) ] <small>] </small> 15:03, 25 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::We seem to be straying... Let's get back on topic with a new thread, which we can link to from the hatnote on the page. | |||
===Merge proposal (minimal)=== | |||
==How to label this page== | |||
This discussion is still dancing around a lot. It's not that it's unproductive, just that it would be much better to do this post-merger. So can we just merge the minimum we agree on (to the top of the General Principles para), then continue the discussion about the other points at ]? ] <sup>]</sup> 17:30, 28 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
As far as I can see (and I don't think anyone can ''seriously'' suggest that the outcome of the recent discussion at ] is compatible with this page's being marked a current guideline, though if someone wants to make that argument then go ahead), there are three possibilities: | |||
1. {{tlx|essay}}: | |||
{{essay}} | |||
2. {{tlx|historical}} | |||
{{historical}} | |||
3.{{tlx|former guideline|Misplaced Pages:Manual of Style (links)}} | |||
{{former guideline|Misplaced Pages:Manual of Style (links)}} | |||
For me, the third is simply the most helpful and factually accurate. Are there any reasons to prefer either of the others, or something else?--] (]) 15:21, 25 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
*Um, excuse me? Could you perhaps re-factor this to avoid the statement in brackets which is unhelpful, in breach of etiquette and counter-productive? And could we also recognise the other possibilities: | |||
4. {{tlx|guideline}}: | |||
{{guideline}} | |||
5. No template. | |||
<s>For me the fourth option is the more preferable, but I would not be opposed if a consensus formed behind the first option or the fifth.</s> I reject the third option, since in the past we have deleted such templates, and I feel it just adds another unnecessary template to the many we have. I'd also prefer it if we avoid any attempt to place a time limit on this discussion, and simply let it run its course. ] <small>] </small> 15:56, 25 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:But please, give arguments if you're supporting the fourth version, since we had a detailed discussion which rejected that option. It's no help to just say "I like this" - you must address the arguments which appeared to show that it was wrong.--] (]) 16:01, 25 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Sorry. <s>I'm arguing for guideline status</s> since this page is a concise, actionable expression of what we are in part attempting to achieve, and it is extremely useful to new editors to have things in a short form to avoid confusion. I still recall my first time here as a Misplaced Pages editor, when I found the overly long pages with their very confusing tags incredibly daunting. This was back when things weren't even policy pages but rules to consider and the like. The shorter pages were much more helpful, and there are a number of editors who still find shorter guidance incredibly helpful. I'm also concerned that the drive towards longer, more complicated guidance is occurring at the same time as the trend for fewer contributions and fewer contributors, and the anecdotal evidence that the two are linked. I'd like Misplaced Pages to remain as accessible and open to as many people as possible, and to allow us to remain as adaptive to and considerate of as many people's needs as possible. ] <small>] </small> 16:16, 25 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::So how is a new editor supposed to chance on this page among the hundreds or possibly thousands of pages we have hanging around project space? And surely you're not suggesting that this page in its present form is useful for that purpose - it would need to be rewritten, firstly to make sense to ordinary human beings, and secondly to present both sides of the issue. I certainly agree about making the documentation on Misplaced Pages accessible, and how to do that is a much larger issue than just this page. (Too long pages is one problem; too many pages is another; lack of overall logical structure is another.)--] (]) 16:32, 25 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::well, see back when I came here, there was an introduction to Misplaced Pages that took you through all these pages. Lately we seem to have templatised all that, so we have a template that lists policies, and another that lists guidelines, so I assume they would find it like that. I mean, forgive me if I am being silly, but wouldn't that particular problem be faced by any guideline, no matter what it was? ] <small>] </small> 16:35, 25 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::Ohm and I agree with regards the fact that too many pages is another problem and a lack of overall logical structure is another. I'd certainly like to see the last one addressed; it would probably take care of the first one. My only fear is that it would lead to too long pages as a result. I think there has become a tendency on Misplaced Pages to attempt to bolt every single possible door a horse might escape from, inclusive of cat flaps. ] <small>] </small> 16:38, 25 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::So if we were to introduce "baby" guidelines aimed specifically at new editors, then there ought to be a special template directing them to those. But then "Build the web" is a rather opaque title to put on such a template. Are there any other cases like this? I'm thinking maybe about ], which is another long guideline, but works in conjunction with other pages: ] (which, like most Help: pages, is not particularly helpful) and ] (which is more of an entry point perhaps). Perhaps a rewritten, neutrally worded BTW could stand in the same relation to ] as the FAQ does to Categorization. But the whole system needs to be reorganized so that both new and old editors can find the information they need. At the moment it's a total mess, as I think we all know from practical experience.--] (]) 16:54, 25 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::We seem to have gone off topic. I'm finding I'm not understanding the main arguments against this page at the minute. Either it has been merged into another page, which means it can't conflict with that page, or it hasn't been merged, which means it shouldn't have been deprecated? ] <small>] </small> 09:45, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::Hiding, you're missing the point that this page disagrees with the new linking standard at ], which is that articles can "be linked to other Misplaced Pages articles which are likely to add significantly to readers' understanding of the topic." The new standard would preclude most of our traditional links. For example, in the article on ], we would no longer link to ], or ], or ], or ] because none of those links are likely to "deepen" a reader's understanding of the topic of Ben Franklin. This page suggests, even encourages, those links. -- ]<sup>]</sup> 01:39, 26 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::A reason to make MOSLINKS, and the rest of the MOScruft, not guidelines; they do not represent consensus, but the latest round of editwarring; they do not represent what Misplaced Pages does, but what one or another gang demands Misplaced Pages do. ] <small>]</small> 01:49, 26 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
*Anderson has been conducting a one-person crusade against the status of the style guides for some time; few people listen. It has not changed in substance. Kendrick, MOSLINK hasn't ''suddenly'', or even recently, advised against such trivial links (although the dollar-bill one might be appropriate in some articles, and Philadelphia perhaps in a few). The recommendation against trivial blue has been well-established for a long time. ] ] 07:50, 26 February 2009 (UTC) PS, under no circumstances is BTW framed as a guide line, either in scope or language. It seems to be pushing a marginalised one-horse cause. It is best framed as an essay, or a historical page. ] ] 07:52, 26 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
**Tony, however, has been nice enough to respond to all of my posts on the subject; some might think he had something to defend, besides the specious "authority" of MOS and its innumerable subpages.] <small>]</small> 01:07, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:*BTW was a guideline since 2002 up until a month ago. I would think that '']'' should be linked from the most famous person to ever fly a kite, myself. We can quibble over examples, and maybe Old Ben isn't the best, but we're still talking about a fundamental change over what is or is not linked. -- ]<sup>]</sup> 09:14, 26 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::I don't think so - BTW was too vaguely written to be considered to give any guidance about any specific situations. MOSLINK is now more detailed but still leaves a lot to the editor's judgement. I don't think anything has changed, certainly not fundamentally - or if it has, then it's changed in people's behaviour already, and the current MOSLINK reflects that. If you think that MOSLINK is wrong about something, then the best thing to do is to formulate and propose a change to that page. --] (]) 10:42, 26 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::On the contrary, it was advice. Nothing we can say on this subject, here or elsewhere, can be more, and this was at least coherent. ] <small>]</small> 01:07, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::You obviously have a different definition of "coherent" than I do. It certainly didn't address the topic fully, and we now have a page that does, so we don't need to distract and mislead people with this one any more.--] (]) 09:37, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::Um, I'm getting a little confused. In what way does this page mislead people? ] <small>] </small> 09:45, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::Firstly that the meaning of most of its sentences is unclear (read it, imagining you're a new editor, and you'll see); secondly that it seems to say "all links are good" (at least, it mentions nothing about the links which should not be made).--] (]) 10:11, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::For a long period of its existence, the page did contain pointers regarding links which should not be made. And I don't have to imagine being a new editor, I was one once, and I read it back then, and it didn't seem very confusing at all. It still doesn't. Where does the confusion lie? What do you think is the central message of this page? ] <small>] </small> 10:37, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Precisely, I don't know. "Make lots of links" seems to be the only message, though the reasons given are weird (it talks of abstract things like webs and nodes, when the real reason we create links is to help real readers). The "make links" message is certainly something that needs to be conveyed to very new editors somehow, but preferably with the accompanying message that we don't link everything just because we can. Then once people get used to the basics of editing and want more detail, they can come to MOSLINK and get the full lowdown on the topic. We should certainly have a summary page or section on linking for new editors, but (1) it has to be placed within the context of the pages that new editors read, to make sure that they see it; (2) it has to be written in clear explicit language; (3) it ought to mention that it's not always right to link; (4) it probably shouldn't be called "Build the web"; (5) it wouldn't be classed as a guideline in the WP sense. --] (]) 11:26, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::You seem to have made a lot of assumptions there, based on a statement in which you indicate that you don't know what is wrong with this page. Let's track it back a little. How do the reasons given on this page conflict with the idea that we create links to help readers? ] <small>] </small> 11:50, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::I know what's wrong with the page; I meant that I don't know what the message is. And there's no conflict between those things, but if you want to say something, say it clearly without introducing needless abstractions that many people will not understand.--] (]) 11:55, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
(unindent)I've just tried editing a page as a logged-out user and following some of the links. Obviously there are a lot of paths - perhaps they need to be cut down so that a new editor is taken to the information that we know is most likely to be helpful (such people themselves are in little position to know what links to click). One page I found myself on where the linking message seemed to be absent was ]. Perhaps we should be thinking about adding to that page and others like it.--] (]) 11:40, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Have we moved to the point where maybe that should be ]? regarding this page, though, and getting back to your point that you don't know what the message of this page is, I'd like to probe at that a little further. I don;t quite believe a person of your capabilities has no grasp of what the message of this page is. You seem to have danced around it a little, but I think you know what it is saying. So if all we are arguing about with regards this page is that it is badly written, that's a solvable problem, isn't it? Unless you're indicating that you don't want people to build the web, which would sort of defeat us being a hypertextual encyclopedia, wouldn't it? ] <small>] </small> 12:10, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Yes, it is a solvable problem, and it has been solved, by merging it into a well-written (he said immodestly) page that conveys the same message with much more detail available for those who want it. The only remaining problem seems to be making sure that new editors get the basic message(s) about linking without having to explore our appallingly ill-structured jungle of WP:/Help: pages. Do you see any other problem?--] (]) 12:34, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::Now I'm at a loss. If you don't understand what the message is, how do can you state you've merged it? ] <small>] </small> 12:38, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::Well, I've merged what appeared to be the message. I kept asking people during the recent discussion to tell me what I'd left out, and no-one had anything to say (except Earle's complaint that I'd changed "the" to "a", which seems to be at about the same level of pedantry as "w" vs. "W"). Do you think I've missed something out?--] (]) 12:43, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
*At this point I think the page needs to be tagged as an essay or redirected to MOSLINK. ] <small>] </small> 21:54, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
* I personally like number 3. This page, I believe '''was''' part of policy and it should be kept because if its large historical reference, but it appears to have been superseded. ] ] 11:44, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
*I think BTW is still a very good guideline and one of the main things we should be doing here at wikip. ] (]) 15:05, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
*I'll go with ], thanks.--] (]) 15:25, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
*If I didn't say so above, yes, door no. 3. There's the procedural issue (already had consensus), the inappropriate angle and tone for a guideline, the almost total lack of distinctive content (it's said at WP:LINKING, and the fact that it's poorly written. ] ] 16:01, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
== "the web" == | |||
Did I miss the definition of "the web" in the draft guideline? --] (]) 09:33, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Which draft guideline? I don't think "the web" was ever defined, as is evidenced by the confusion as to whether it means "the Web" (i.e. the WWW) or the Misplaced Pages internal "web" (which is the meaning implied by the text. Just one of the reasons why this page was incoherent, and was probably largely ignored for that reason.--] (]) 09:37, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Unless I'm missing a trick, how is the Misplaced Pages internal web ringfenced from the WWW? ] <small>] </small> 09:48, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::It's not. But the text of BTW mentioned only internal links, and the title spelt "web" with a small "W", giving the impression that it was about some internal web. --] (]) 10:08, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::I still don't follow. In what sense is the internal web we are speaking of not part of the WWW? In what sense, when we build the web on Misplaced Pages, is that not building the web on the WWW? ] <small>] </small> 10:32, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::Yes, but BTW doesn't go into this. Our practice with regard to internal links is quite different to that with regard to external links. Yet BTW (despite referring to "the Web" as if it meant the WWW) fails to address external links at all. All these ideas are now addressed at MOSLINK, hopefully more clearly (though improvements are obviously still possible).--] (]) 11:03, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::I'm not following you at all. In what sense is the internal web we are speaking of not part of the WWW? ] <small>] </small> 11:45, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::I'm not saying it isn't. I'm saying that BTW (among its many other faults) fails to make clear what web it is talking about or how the internal web relates to the wider Web.--] (]) 11:48, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Um,, I can't relate your statements. Given you indicate you agree the internal web is a part of the WWW, how do the following two statements you make apply? Or are you saying this page is wrong in assuming everyone will be aware that Misplaced Pages is a part of the WWW? ] <small>] </small> 12:14, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::I think it's wrong in assuming that people will correctly read the minds of the people who wrote it. Indeed I think the different people who wrote it (and titled it) probably didn't read each other's minds correctly. If it talks about a "Web" without once mentioning the World Wide Web or any way of creating links to/from it, then people will be forgiven for assuming that the Web in question is not the WWW. Particularly since there is no capital W in the page title.--] (]) 12:27, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::This page was created back when you couldn't have a capital w in the page title. And it sprang from a time and a place where its meaning was more readily understood, and was contextualised by being within stuff that talked about the WWW. Sadly, a lot of the history has been lost when the databases went down way back when, though. ] <small>] </small> 12:34, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
Whatever you mean, it's ironic that it's not wikilinked. --] (]) 11:02, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
I know I said I was going to stay out of this discussion, but I have to say that this is pedantry taken to the extreme. There's only one eb, and you're using it right now. Some people don't bother to capitalize the W. It's ''not'' an issue. Anyway, I severely doubt that anyone who read BTW took away the impression that it was referring to some kind of "internal web". The word you're looking for there is ''site'', and this guideline wasn't called ''Build the site''. -- ] ]</sup>/<sub>]</sub>] 12:17, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:That's exactly the impression that I took away from it. Because that's what it talks about. If it meant something else, it should have said something else. Or as Dweller points out, at least ''linked'' to the ]. --] (]) 12:27, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::It doesn't talk about an internal web. The word internal is not found once in the page. But this is a side issue which can be fixed with rewriting the page to better indicate what it means. ] <small>] </small> 12:34, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::As I've pointed out above, this has already been done (the result is MOSLINK).--] (]) 12:44, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::You haven't linked web there, either. I made two changes, see where we go from there I guess. ] <small>] </small> 12:58, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
I find unacceptable; if it continues, I will make Kotniski a party to the current arbitration. The way to clean up MOS is to throw pointless rules out of it, not to roll this in. | |||
There is plainly no consensus to merge this page; it should therefore retain its status until there is consensus to change it. ] <small>]</small> 17:53, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
*I'm sorry, but I've reverted the guideline tag because quite clearly there is discussion here and elsewhere that demonstrates the community is unsure of how to move forwards. I think it is best if the page remains untagged for the time being and we allow time for all interested parties to express an opinion. I've also edited your comments because I've found some of your comments unhelpful to moving the debate forwards, which in my opinion is the only thing that matters. Misplaced Pages policy is to comment on content, not on the contributor. As we say round my way, play the ball, not the man. ] <small>] </small> 19:59, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:*That's not the way consensus works. If there's no consensus to change the status, the status does not return to "undecided", it returns to the prior status. {{tl|Disputedtag}} has been added, which notes that there is an active dispute over this, but the guideline tag should not be removed until a consensus to do so has emerged. —] • ] • ] 20:38, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::*Consensus works any way we want it to. But I'm not interested in partisan combat. Misplaced Pages is not a battleground. I'm bowing out, because this sort of tag warring is precisely what I wanted to avoid. I was far more interested in discussing the underlying issues to an amicable solution. I've taken my concerns to MOSLINK. ] <small>] </small> 21:50, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::*Traditionally this is how Misplaced Pages works: until consensus to change something emerges, it remains as it was (this is how disputes in articles and deletion are handled, for example). I'm sorry you view this as a "battleground", but I've tried to stay away from this for the past week (with pretty good success). I'm also sorry that expressing an opinion appears to result in this now being a "battleground". I have no idea how to voice an opinion then without things falling apart. —] • ] • ] 22:17, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::*I apologise if I have offended you. I'm fairly well versed in how Misplaced Pages works, I've been an admin here for over three years now. I have no objection to people voicing their opinion, but I don't tend to engage in edit warring. I am a firm believer in trying to find a compromise, and it had seemed to be a perfectly acceptable compromise to just leave the page without a tag on it, if only to save tag warring. This page doesn't need a special tag to say what it says, when all is said and done. It wasn't the voicing of an opinion that caused me to declare the page a battleground, it's more my general feeling that there isn't going to be a middle ground found in this debate, and I don't want to get sucked into that. I hadn't meant to put it all on your shoulders; from reading and engaging with the debate it appears as if no-one is prepared to shift ground on what to do with this page. I'm practising good old fashioned dispute resolution and taking the long view. Regards, ] <small>] </small> 22:42, 27 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
==Overruling consensus== | |||
We were having a civil and productive discussion here, and yet it has been derailed by the usual clique coming along and awarding itself the right to overrule established consensus. The merge of this page ''had'' consensus, when it was proposed that it be restored as a guideline ''there was consensus not to'' (or certainly there was no consensus to do so). I find it totally unacceptable and disruptive for certain individuals to take it upon themselves to throw out what people have agreed in detailed and thoughtful discussion, awarding themselves the right to declare an absence of consensus and to decree unilaterally how things are to be in the absence of consensus. There is clearly no point arguing with you lot, since your well-established tactic is simply to deny any assertion of consensus regardless of the objective evidence, citing the noise you yourselves are curretly making as evidence that consensus doesn't exist or never existed, and to further edit war as a means of creating more of that noise and disrupting reasoned discussion. I've had to report this again at WP:AN/I - I hope that we'll get the attention of an admin perceptive enough to see through what's been happening here. If not, then OK, you win; WP will no longer be ruled by the good sense to come out of community discussion, but by those most willing to waste their and others' time fighting. --] (]) 10:11, 28 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:I've been over this with you further above, at MOSLINK and on your own talk page. I'm sorry you'd rather treat Misplaced Pages like a battleground than understand the reasons I've given you. —] • ] • ] 17:29, 28 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
::That is to say, a number of editors have objected to the "consensus" consisting of Kotniski and Tony1. ] <small>]</small> 18:12, 28 February 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::You know, because you were part of the discussion (at least the more recent one) at WP:MOSLINK, that the consensus consisted of far more people than that. Locke knows (because he was part of the original discussion about the merger) that there was wide ranging support then (including him), and no opposition (apart from a brief outbreak of handbags that was quickly settled). You usually seem such a reasonable and sensible editor; I don't know why you are inventing your own version of reality over this issue (and then accusing ''me'' of lying).--] (]) 10:45, 1 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::Particularly as Cole seems to have "changed his mind" over the consensus he was part of, ''just'' at the same time Kendrick decided to make a fuss here. It's not reasonable, and not the way things are done on WP. I agree entirely with Kotniski's complaint above. | |||
::::What information, exactly, does this page contain that is somehow lacking in the merged MOSLINK? What is the actual ''substance'' of this page? It looks like an essay stub. It is not of the style or substance of a guideline, and there was consensus to merge it, after the merge sign had been there for months, to remove an historical absurdity. MOS needs to be rationalised, not fragmented. ] ] 14:14, 1 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::And see what two editors show up to complain. I acknowledge that the two of them are in consensus on this; but is anybody else? | |||
:::::Tony asks, as usual, the wrong question: what is MOSLINK that it should justify swallowing up this page, which has never been part of MOS? since it really deals with a content, not a style, question. | |||
:::::Rationalizing MOS should begin with abolishing the large portion of it which has neither justification nor source, not making it longer. ] <small>]</small> 22:12, 1 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::I strongly support MOS containing only questions about style, not about content in general. That's the first step in rationalizing it. ''']''' (]) 00:06, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::But links are neither a matter of style, i.e. spelling and punctuation, nor content, i.e. whether content is or is not linked doesn't inherently change the actual content. So it's its own matter entirely, more a matter of "accessibility" than anything else. -- ]<sup>]</sup> 04:44, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::So we have a guideline page about linking. It's now at ] - anyone can decide for themselves whether the issues addressed are about style, content or whatever: ''it doesn't matter''. What matters is that it's a page that treats the issue in full and has come about through reasoned, long-term, constructive, good-faithed discussion, so as to be useful both for guiding new editors and for resolving (some) disagreements. There is no longer any need for this separate page (at least, not for it to be marked as a guideline), and since it is so manifestly incomplete it is most definitely not desirable. Anyway, we've been through that discussion, consensus has been reached as you all know by now, so please, people, accept that consensus like good Wikipedians, quit the against-consensus reverts (especially those based on untrue claims), and let's move on. --] (]) 07:16, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::If consensus had been reached, we would not be having this discussion. ] <small>]</small> 16:11, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::How does that follow? Consensus doesn't mean unaninimity.--] (]) 16:21, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:I wandered over here from AN/I....I'd never heard of this page before now. But looking this page over and a few of the links above (including a poll that hardly ran past a day and didn't draw much input) I don't see any of the consensus you're talking about. I think you should start over, in a single place and try again. But I think that just claiming consensus where none exists is counter productive. If I'm wrong, please provide a link to a page that more clearly show consensus on this issue. ] (]) 17:09, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::I've just added the relevant links to the AN/I thread. ] seems to be the major one. There was certainly much, much more than just a one-day poll. And we did recently start again, and got the same result. Clear consensus must be respected - if someone wants to change it, it's up to ''them'' to start a new discussion and achieve change. We can't have a situation where whenever a vociferous group decides it doesn't like something, they can go back to whatever version they feel like and insist on their opponents ''once again'' demonstrating consensus. That goes on forever and is what happened (and is still happening) over date linking. --] (]) 08:33, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::Clear consensus doesn't need to be "respected"; it can enforce itself (although it rarely needs to, because almost everybody agrees with it). Kotniski's claim of consensus is: Tony and I agreed once upon a time, so the discussion is over. ] <small>]</small> 15:43, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::Your edit summary states "reply to liar". I assume that means me. What "lie" am I alleged to have told? Indeed, what is ''your'' claim about only Tony and me supporting this position if not a demonstrable and deliberate lie? --] (]) 15:50, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::That you have "clear consensus". It's clear to you, and to nobody else; it isn't even clear to the unfortunate RxS, who wandered in here as a neutral. ] <small>]</small> 15:58, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::I presume it is now, if (s)he's looked at the links to the relevant discussions. You obviously have your own definition of consensus, which means something approaching unanimity, without requiring that the filibusterers engage in good-faithed discussion. Talking of which, can we get back to that? Is there any remaining reasoned opposition to removing the "guideline" tag from this page?--] (]) 16:06, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::Is your presumption supported by any evidence, or is more ''I'm Kotniski, and therefore everybody agrees with me''? Of course this should stay a guideline; the only objections to the substance are by those who claim, by the same post, not to understand it. ] <small>]</small> 16:22, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::Er, if we don't understand it, that isn't a great advertisement for a guideline, is it? If you understand it, can you explain in more dumbed-down language what it's supposed to mean, and explain how it is not redundant to WP:Linking?--] (]) 16:33, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::*Since it seems to me, as to most people, clear, concise, and substantive, it is difficult to paraphrase without cutting and pasting. I'll see what I can do; to cut down several sentences to a phrase or two would be unfair to the original. | |||
:::::::*But the version in MOSLINK differs in both tone and emphasis, as may be expected after butchery by editors who do not understand it. I would not include this there, even if it were identical; this is not a mere "style guideline", those crutches put forward by the half-educated for the illiterate, it is the second grade of WP principle, and repeating it elsewhere is no reason to get rid of it, any more than repeating one of the Five Pillars elsewhere would justify a merge. ] <small>]</small> 16:48, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Style guidelines are no more "mere" than other guidelines. This never had any higher status than the MoS pages, and can never have had anything comparable to the status of the 5 pillars, otherwise at least ''someone'' would have tried to edit it up to normal standards of clarity and cohesion over all these years. Indeed it (or at least its title) seems at odds with one of the pillars - namely ], which tells us that WP is not a collection of links, particularly external ones. We specifically refrain from too much "building of the Web".--] (]) 08:56, 4 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
*My definition of consensus is ] (as a whole, but these sentences seem particularly apt: ''Consensus develops from agreement of the parties involved. This can happen through discussion, editing, or more often, a combination of the two.'') What definition can possibly justify Kotniski's claims of "clear consensus"? ] <small>]</small> 16:22, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Whatever. I still can't see what on earth this guideline has that WP:LINK doesn't. This makes me suspect that it's being treated as a private castle. I'd like to hear substantive arguments. Another matter I'd like explained is why the tone and poor prose qualifies as a guideline. I mean, the opening sentence is a hoot. The logic of the causality, resting on "since" escapes me. Comma would be nice, too. It's full of that kind of idle musing. What are you defending, Anderson? I thought you were on the side of high standards? ] ] 16:41, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
==Substance== | |||
Setting aside the question of whether it should have been merged, does anyone actually disagree with what this page says? And if so, could they be specific about what is wrong? ] <small>]</small> 01:36, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Go back to the original discussion (the recent one at ]) and read through the "arguments against resurrection", which no one has disputed. --] (]) 07:06, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::That would be ]. | |||
::*I see lots of arguments that this page can be merged, as redundant; that's the position that this page is right, but doesn't need to be repeated. | |||
::*GregL said it was incomplete, in that it omits his own motion in an RFC; but even that's not disagreeing with it; all our guidelines are incomplete. | |||
::*LaserBrain said, in full ''I've been monitoring this process and it's been going in the right direction; reinstating BTW is a step entirely in the wrong direction.'' That is a claim that this page is wrong, but lacks all specifics; indeed, it's another ]. ] <small>]</small> 16:02, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::Oh come on, omit all the pertinent arguments and attack the straw men. It's redundant (because anything it says is said elsewhere) and misleading (because it omits important relevant information). Why anyone's arguing for this except out of pique or sentiment is beyond me - I've certainly seen no explanation.--] (]) 16:26, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::I omit all the procedural arguments on whether this page should be merged, because they have their own section. To me, that's not the most interesting question (and enough people are pained by it above that it's unlikely to be a peaceful consensus). Before we discuss where to put this, does anybody disagree with what it says, which is rather more important? ] <small>]</small> 21:10, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::It really doesn't say anything concrete, so it's hard to say. I certainly disagree with its being stated without qualification and then marked as a guideline (which would imply only "occasional exceptions"). --] (]) 08:37, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Alive/dead/alive/dead/alive/dead/alive... == | |||
Unfortunately the rollback feature doesn't let you add an edit summary, which is a bit daft. What I would have said just now was that so far I count at least five separate editors challenging the "consensus" to demote this guideline. So I've returned it to ''disputed'' guideline status. -- ] ]</sup>/<sub>]</sub>] 09:03, 2 March 2009 (UTC) (giving up all attempts to not participate in this) | |||
:But you and I ''know'' that they are unware of the facts or being simply disnhonest. You know that consensus has been properly established - why are you, an admin, playing along with their cynical game?--] (]) 09:07, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::I know no such thing. -- ] ]</sup>/<sub>]</sub>] 09:10, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::Right, deny the consensus. That's the game plan. Whether it's date linking, this, whatever else. No-one can enforce consensus, so if you don't like it, just ignore it. You know we had a discussion, you know all the arguments came down on one side, you know a clear majority supported that viewpoint, but of course, no-one can prove that you know it, so just claim it's not so. I expect this sort of behaviour from mad POV-pushers, but as an admin, you should be very ashamed. (By the way, rollback is for edits that don't require a summary; to add a summary you should use undo instead.)--] (]) 10:50, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::Yes, rollback should only be used for vandalism; this was a misuse of rollback by Earle. For future reference, there are ] that allow users to use their own edit summaries. ] (]) 13:30, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
===How soon we forget=== | |||
Earle, remember writing this? Or was that your good twin? | |||
<blockquote> | <blockquote> | ||
{{shortcut|WP:BTW|WP:BUILD}} | |||
] | |||
Misplaced Pages is based on ], and aims to "build the web" to enable readers to find relevant information on other pages with just a click of the mouse. Therefore in adding or removing links, consider an article's place in the ]. | |||
:''Namely ]. Note: for the time being, I have restored the text of the guideline, as it is unfair to expect that people can argue for the life of someone when then have already been executed. This is for discussion purposes, not edit warring, and '''I will adhere to the eventual result of the discussion.''' -- ] ]</sup>/<sub>]</sub>] 12:48, 17 February 2009 (UTC)'' | |||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
Emphasis added by me.--] (]) 12:12, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Yes, and the discussion's not over. Do you have a point to make? -- ] ]</sup>/<sub>]</sub>] 20:23, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::You know, there must be some uncounted ballots still floating around from the November 2008 presidential elections. In your mind, is Dubya still the prez?--] (]) 20:37, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::What a silly comment. -- ] ]</sup>/<sub>]</sub>] 20:46, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::The discussion does seem to be long over (back at ], which was the discussion in question). Please abide by the result and remove the guideline tag. If some new discussion here leads to the conclusion that the tag should be restored, then it can be done.--] (]) 08:50, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::The discussion is clearly not over. Unless you're contending that all the talk right here on this page is a mirage, which would undoubtedly come as a great surprise to everyone participating in it. -- ] ]</sup>/<sub>]</sub>] 04:01, 4 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::Most of it is off-topic. The only person who seems to be making any attempt to justify the guideline tag is Sept, and he seems to have gone strangely silent when asked for specifics. Can anyone else help him? We'd like to know what this page is actually trying to say, why it needs to be said on a page separate from ], and why that separate page should be marked as a ]. --] (]) 08:46, 4 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
*"What a silly comment. -- ]"—Earle Martin, could I remind you of your obligation as an admin to uphold NPA and standards of civility by example? Have you read ]? ] ] 14:35, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
**I thought of half a dozen different ways to reply to you here, and will go with the most efficient and succinct of all of them, which is simply ''LOL''. -- ] ]</sup>/<sub>]</sub>] 14:56, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
*How soon ''you'' forget: remember this one, Earle Martin? | |||
<blockquote>Oppose. As said above, candidate is condescending and contemptuous, | |||
rude and snippy and plainly in that class of admin who would immediately | |||
set out causing grief and bloodshed. Such things are a big deal. | |||
Would recommend not returning to RfA in future.</blockquote> | |||
] ] 15:57, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:*Unfortunately, the public seemed to have forgotten that, and he got through on the third pass. However, I seem to recollect Earle standing on the 'common sense' ticket. ] (]) 01:55, 4 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::*I have my own opinions on Earle Martin's RfA and administrative capabilities. However, they are not relevant to this discussion; can we all try to stay focused on content and not individual contributors? ] (]) 02:38, 4 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::That'll be the day. -- ] ]</sup>/<sub>]</sub>] 03:09, 4 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
"Silly comment"? Not at all. You see Earle, last I checked, the ] had ground to a halt more than two weeks ago. At that point, six editors had spoken in favor of umerging "Build the Web" into a separate page and twelve editors were against. Not only were the opponents of an unmerge in a 2-to-1 majority, their arguments were more detailed as well. To any rational observer, the discussion ''is'' over. Apparently, when you gave the undertaking that I quoted above, what you really meant was, "The discussion will be over when ''I, Earle Martin,'' am good and ready to declare it so, be that next week, next year, or never."--] (]) 15:22, 4 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:I've been watching this over the last couple days and have a couple comments. First of all, the debate here has gotten a little heated and it might be a good thing to step back for a bit. Secondly, to the point I've not seen compelling evidence that a consensus exists here. The strongest case seems to be here , and for something like this I think it's borderline. At this point I myself would say the the discussion still needs to continue and that no consensus has been achived. I think you'd be doing yourself a favor by making sure many more editors are involved...] (]) 15:39, 4 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::RxS, I've explained why I think the effort to change the status quo failed with a 1-to-2 losing margin. Perhaps you could explain why exactly you think the discussion is not over yet?--] (]) 15:53, 4 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
== a comment about the merge/revert war/thing == | |||
Im sure I read somewhere that if a guideline is in dispute a very senior member of the community has to get involved. <span style="border:1px solid #000000;background:# 787878">]]</span> 10:25, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:You probably also read somewhere that decisions on WP are taken by consensus, and that when consensus has been reached editors accept that decision. We're all learning fast here.--] (]) 10:52, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:: to Kotniski=(yes i do know look at when i created my account please dont write at me as though im only new) | |||
::as far as I can see there was no proper concensus on the matter even some time ago (the summeries say it was just done) and as its a guideline set out by the head, surely mere editors cant just be the ones to diside what happens with something fundamentle (yes I know its a "guideline" but we must do things properly). <span style="border:1px solid #000000;background:# 787878">]]</span> 11:09, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::Sorry, I didn't mean that to be in any way patronizing. But I agree this sort of thing should be decided by an admin; unfortunately admins are loathe to intervene in anything that is in any way complicated, they prefer to just block and go. So we have to operate on the basis of consensus, which we ''did'' undoubtedly have in this case (as I keep saying, the discussion was not on this page, but it was well advertised here, in case anyone was watching). However as you see, a certain clique has discovered that consensus needn't be a barrier to anything - it's how determinedly you can edit-war and stir up trouble that actually decides things. I've started a thread about this, now at ].--] (]) 11:19, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
==Civility== | |||
Please avoid insults and comments on personal traits of wikipedians. Statements like this: ''admins are loathe to intervene in anything that is in any way complicated'' do not contribute to cooperation, not to say it is false and misleading. Please discuss the subject, not the editors. Calling names is not only uncivil, it is merely waste of people's time and delay of the solution. - 7-bubёn ] 18:57, 2 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Sorry, just where are Kotniski's "insults", and why is the comment about admins (technical, as far as I can see) a problem? ] ] 02:47, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::This statement, technical or not, falsely portrays "admins" ''en masse'' as lazy or reckless ones, willing to deal with simple cases only. It is a problem because it may be perceived as an insult, even it was not intended as such. - 7-bubёn ] 04:54, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Now that you asked and I am here, I'd like to mention that I have an impression that this phrase expresses a misconception that admins possess some kind of supersmartness to sole any problems quickly. They are not. They have certain tools, only because they have a degree of credibility they will not abuse these tools, since they are powerful. In all other respects they are not supposed to be better or smarter or faster than you. Quite a few very experienced editors do not want to have admin privileges. And opposite way, quite a few admins were desysopped despite all their smartness: they are human and may err, sometimes badly. - 7-bubёn ] 04:54, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Further, I picked the phrase in question at random. This talk page is abound of other examples of treading on personalities. It does not matter whether the person is good or bad. If he is good, then accusations are bad. If he is bad, he will just laugh. In both cases you gain nothing, only waste the bandwidth. The basic behavior policy, ] states is simply and plainly: Comment on '''content''', not on the '''contributor'''. I understand that sometimes a person for some reason appears to defy any logic. There are venues of ] barring personal confrontation. - 7-bubёn ] 04:54, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::I am not sure to what level of detail I have to explain you[REDACTED] policies. If you still feel unconvinced, please answer my question first: what exactly is unclear in the rule "Comment on '''content''', not on the '''contributor'''"? - 7-bubёn ] 04:54, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::I never mentioned or even implied any specific individuals, so I don't think I was being in any way uncivil. It was meant as a criticism of the system and the behaviours that the system encourages, not of admins as people. --] (]) 08:45, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::Your statment unfortunatly does not read like that.<span style="border:1px solid #000000;background:# 787878">]]</span> 12:37, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
*Now that I have time to read K's statement at normal speed, yes, he might have avoided the criticism of admins. However, I believe there is over-reaction here. Admins' time would be better spent convincing a few of their colleagues ''not'' to block as a first rather than a last resort, and to communicate properly before and after the blocking. These are both policy requirements, and an incident only last week exposed wanton disregard of these rules. Kotniski's statement may have been slightly out of place here, but needs to be made in quite a few places on WP. ] ] 14:11, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
*:"Slightly out of place" is a slightly correct statement. Any postfactum out-of-context whining will not change the system. If you think that the actions of certain admins are improper, you must discuss them in appropriate venues. This particular page is about improvement of a particular article. Once again, my remark is not limited to the comment about the admin. I stumbled upon this talk page by a sheer acccident, and I was quite surprized that such an abstract topic generated so much heat. It is not, like, Palestinian-Israel conflict here. I suggest to forget all "yes, but", apologize to each other (even if you feel you should not), and keep on. Please notice I am not threatening nobody with blocks, so I don't accept the accusation in "over-reaction". Don't you know that mutual incivility has an ugly tendency to escalate? I understand that sometimes a person just has to vent their frustration. But is this topic really worth anger? - 7-bubёn ] 16:53, 3 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
I would merely add the observation, as a fact and not intended as a criticism of anyone, that my report at AN/I was archived before any admin responded (either positively or negatively) to the substantial evidence I provided. This does indeed indicate to me that "difficult" matters are less likely to attract admin attention. Only natural I suppose - if I were an admin, I'd prefer the quick and easy jobs as well - but I think part of the problem is that admins are expected just to act on the basis of what they see without talking to the parties first, which (if it were me) would discourage me from acting in those cases where I'd feel a need to discuss the parties' positions with them before judging.--] (]) 11:29, 4 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Admins are not expected to act without talking. It all depends on circumstances. The complaints are often closed when (1) coming from only one person, when no furter escalation occurs after the initial complaint or (2) there is no evidence that milder forms of ] were attempted. - There are serious resons to do so, I will not go into detail here. In other words, quite on the contrary of your perception, the admins are supposed to undertake "long and difficult jobs", leaving "quick and easy" ones to be dissolved by themselves or by the community efforts, without resorting to ten-pound hammer. - 7-bubёn ] 16:28, 4 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Just to make it clear - what do you envisage will be at ] when this merger is done? A redirect? A historical page or essay?--] (]) 21:01, 28 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
== OK, sentence by sentence: why is MOS fragmentation required? == | |||
::I actually hadn't thought about it. And now that you ask, I'm not sure I mind either way. ] <sup>]</sup> 00:51, 29 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
'''Support''' I think in this case the simpler the better.. let's just get this done, complicating things is counter-productive. Have WP:BTW redirect directly to the merged section. It can be a shortcut. -- ''']''' <sup>(])</sup> 01:37, 29 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
Further to , I've listed all of the text on the page here, with comments below. | |||
'''Support''' I agree with OlEnglish ] (]) 03:06, 29 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
'''BTW sentences''' | |||
#Build the Web is the idea of connecting relevant topics throughout an article since all articles in the encyclopedia are nodes in a hypertext system. Do not just write the article, but also consider its place in the web. | |||
#Make upward links to categories and contexts (Charles Darwin was a biologist; Sahara is a desert in Africa; the Enlightenment happened in the 18th century). Make sideways links to neighboring articles (for proton see also electron, Oregon borders on California). Introduce links from related articles to avoid orphaning the article. | |||
#Do not build category trees too deep and narrow, or too flat. Writing category directories first (top-down) will help ensure that subcategory articles get useful names. | |||
#Think carefully before you remove a link altogether (apart from the case of a duplicate link). Remember that what may seem like an irrelevant link to you may actually be useful to other readers. | |||
#Don't be afraid to create links to articles which don't exist yet. If you think there should be an article with that title, then be bold and make the link. Of course, the best way to build the web is to then go ahead and write that article. | |||
#Remember that a link can also be useful when applying the "What links here" feature from the target page. | |||
#If you feel that a certain link does not belong in the body of the text, consider moving it to a "See also" section at the bottom of the article. This keeps the web intact while removing overlinking. | |||
{{tlx|editprotected}} Please restore this text to the point before merger. All trace of the merged text (except the name) has been removed from ] <small>]</small> 20:45, 8 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
'''Comments by Tony1''' | |||
:] '''Not done:''' please establish a ] for this alteration before using the {{tlx|edit protected}} template.<!-- Template:EP -->. — Martin <small>(] · ])</small> 21:04, 8 May 2009 (UTC) | |||
:#This appears to be so close in meaning to the opening of WP:LINKING as to be redundant. | |||
:#The "upward", "downward" and "sideways" concepts are probably worth a mention at LINKING. The examples, aside from "desert" in most contexts, are covered at LINKING, I'd have thought. In any case, it would be more useful to show editors examples of where, say, "desert" might be an appropriate link (perhaps a pipe to the ] section of "Desert" from an article on the ] or the ]), rather than implying that "desert" should normally be linked. | |||
:#Can someone explain what a "category tree" is (for less experienced editors), and what it is to build them "too deep and narrow, or too flat"? An example is needed for "top–down"—I'm ignorant of what it could mean. This could easily be included somewhere in LINKING, if it's useful (convince us). | |||
:#Perhaps this could be noted at LINKING explicitly; however, I think it's already implied, isn't it? | |||
:#Is there disagreement between this and ], or the article on ]? If so, could we resolve it? | |||
:#This feature is discussed at ] in LINKING. Is it in conflict? If so, it must be very subtle. | |||
:#This should definitely be included in LINKING. | |||
==Request for edit== | |||
So what is the problem? Can we agree which little bits might be added to LINKING, please, and then all get back to improving WP? ] ] 11:18, 4 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
Since there now seems to be universal support for doing this (and consensus in the earlier discussions was in favour anyway, it was just prevented from being implemented), I think it's time to go ahead. Therefore: | |||
{{tlx|editprotected}} | |||
:Agree with your points, and with the proposal to move relevant aspects of this page to ]. | |||
Please replace the content of this page with a redirect to ], at the same time as making the edit requested at ], which implements the merge as agreed in the above discussions (] onward).--] (]) 06:09, 30 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
:The "quality" of the current four paragraphs (a result of 219 edits over a period of seven years) suggest a general disinterest in the improvement of the page. "''Think carefully..''" and "''Don't be afraid...''"? Seriously? In general, the page is weak on practical advice for WP's editors ("''do not build category trees too deep and narrow, or too flat.''"—what is the practical point of that "advice"?). Although I am in favour of the bit about considering the movement of certain links into the See Also section of an article. On the other hand, WP:LINKING takes some time and effort to offer practical advice and useful guidelines. The simple fact that WP:LINKING has attracted almost twice the edits in just over half the lifespan of this page indicates a clear preference as to which page is worthy of being developed. | |||
:All {{done}} as requested. Congratulations on sorting this out. — Martin <small>(] · ])</small> 07:04, 30 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
:The few practical aspects of the whimsical jottings on this page should be subsumed into WP:LINKING. If I were a BOLDer editor, I'd do that and consider suggesting this page for deletion. However, truth be told the page may be worth keeping for amusement-sake alone (I certainly derive some amusement from noticing that the final word in an "essay" promoting the use of links, is "''overlinking''"). | |||
::Thanks. I suggest further discussion about improvements to the text continue at ].--] (]) 07:44, 30 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
:] 00:49, 5 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
{{discussion-bottom}} | |||
{{tlx|editprotected}} | |||
'''Comments by ...''' | |||
Please add this redirect template: {{tl|R from merge}} on the same line as the redirect. Thanks. -- ''']''' <sup>(])</sup> 21:50, 30 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
*This existed before MOS:Linking, and independently of it. The best response to duplication is to remove the recent redundancy in the MOS:Linking page. | |||
:] '''Done'''<!-- Template:EP --> - ] (]) 23:08, 30 April 2009 (UTC) | |||
*"Fragmenting" an annexation of last month is the cry of poor beleaguered imperialists everywhere; as always, Tony fails to ask the question: why should any of this be in a style guideline at all? | |||
*He should learn to confine his itch for "authority" to more hierarchical societies than WP. ] <small>]</small> 21:25, 4 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Anderson, you should know by now that I spurn hierarchy. The only authority we need here is that of style guides, not people. This guideline needs to be returned to bed and one or two morsels, if people insist, included in LINKING. What exactly did you say was unique info here? ] ] 01:37, 5 March 2009 (UTC) |
Latest revision as of 07:02, 20 January 2025
This is the talk page of a redirect that has been merged and now targets the page: • Misplaced Pages:Manual of Style/Linking Because this page is not frequently watched, present and future discussions, edit requests and requested moves should take place at: • Misplaced Pages talk:Manual of Style/Linking Merged page edit history is maintained in order to preserve attributions. |
Please discuss any further issues relating to the content of this page at WT:Linking, to where the substantial content has been merged. |
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This page has archives. Sections older than 28 days may be automatically archived by Lowercase sigmabot III when more than 3 sections are present. |
- The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section.
Intent behind the merge
It must be noted here in the BTW talk page that after weeks of dissembling, we did get a confirmation that the reason why Kotniski "merged" BTW with the other pages and then interfered with any identification of BTW as a Misplaced Pages guideline in the Misplaced Pages:Linking page (Tony1 and others participated in this also) is that he does not think it should be a guideline at all.
This just isn't the Wikipedian way of going about things and it's a subversion of process. If the BTW page needs to be clarified or improved (which I definitely think it does, comparing the current version to the earlier ones which I'd read) let that be done. And if anyone thinks that BTW shouldn't be a guideline, let its deletion or demotion be proposed here (again.)
But besides that - the reason why the guideline "Wikipedians should build the web" ought not be tucked away as some minor detail of an enormous policy page primarily dealing with styling issues and other technicalities of handling links (which, coincidentally, would make it much easier to delete) is that it is genuinely an important WP principle in it's own right. It's the same reason why WP:AGF isn't just a side note on the etiquette or civility pages, for example.
BTW is one of the Misplaced Pages rules that is referred to by Misplaced Pages:Ignore all rules. No question that there are exceptions to it but that simply means that exceptions should be described here or linked to from here.--❨Ṩtruthious ℬandersnatch❩ 16:53, 4 April 2009 (UTC)
- If you want to pursue that line, justify each statement in the short BTW essay, as I invited people to do above. That is the only way in which guideline status could possibly be supported, and we're waiting to see you do it. Tony (talk) 18:01, 4 April 2009 (UTC)
- Tony1, it does not matter what it says in this page. I was not bringing any of the language in the content of this page over to Misplaced Pages:Linking; all I was doing was insisting that there was a sentence containing the phrase "an important Misplaced Pages guideline is that editors should build the web". And it's the opposition to and interference with that which has given you away.
- You do not particularly care what it says in this page: what you want is to make certain that "build the web" is not identified as a Misplaced Pages behavioral guideline even in a merged page where I'm not disputing the definition of what that is.
- It's you who needs to justify yourself and your actions. There is no question that BTW is an established Misplaced Pages behavioral guideline and no one needs to prove it, no matter how much chaff you throw around about that or even if you double dog dare me to. --❨Ṩtruthious ℬandersnatch❩ 21:50, 4 April 2009 (UTC)
- (ec) Yours is an exceptionally malicious interpretation of the diff you are pointing to. I think it's also factually incorrect. (
"Kotniski interfered with any identification of BTW as a Misplaced Pages guideline in the Misplaced Pages:Linking page" – are you referring to this???) If you continue to feel the need to discuss editors in this way, I suggest that you take it to an appropriate venue, rather than poison the atmosphere here even more. --Hans Adler (talk) 18:15, 4 April 2009 (UTC)- Strikeout because this doesn't seem to be what you mean. But I have gone back to mid-January in the edit history of WP:LINKING without finding anything appropriate. --Hans Adler (talk) 18:30, 4 April 2009 (UTC)
- Somehow I think that everyone following that diff link I put up above will have no trouble figuring out what Kotniski asserting "BTW as a guideline is both redundant and misleading, and should thus not be marked as such" has to with him making a long series of efforts that coincidentally culminated in it not being marked as a Misplaced Pages guideline anywhere.
- Strikeout because this doesn't seem to be what you mean. But I have gone back to mid-January in the edit history of WP:LINKING without finding anything appropriate. --Hans Adler (talk) 18:30, 4 April 2009 (UTC)
- You weren't by any chance looking for an excuse to announce that I was being malicious and factually incorrect, were you? I'm sorry, did you just say something about how it's bad to "poison the atmosphere here"?--❨Ṩtruthious ℬandersnatch❩ 13:17, 6 April 2009 (UTC)
I gave a bunch of feedback about this page/merge/status at Template talk:Guideline list#Village pump. Rather than repeating or copying all of that here, I'd appreciate it if the content were read and taken as my contribution to this discussion. Much thanks. -- Quiddity (talk) 18:28, 4 April 2009 (UTC)
Rather than personalizing this with total irrelevancies, please give real reasons why it serves WP editors to have BTW as a separate page with guideline status. I can't see any yet. Clearly even when it was so marked, it wasn't interpreted as a "rule" that has only occasional exceptions (otherwise people would link almost every word in articles, and include goodness knows how many external links, which is simply not what we do or ever have done). Meanwhile the principle that we "build the web" (i.e. make hyperlinks) is stated very clearly, both in those words and in even clearer and stronger words, in the lede of WP:Linking. It isn't in any sense "tucked away". I just don't see what you're getting at with these arguments.--Kotniski (talk) 19:19, 4 April 2009 (UTC)
- It doesn't matter whether or not it "serves WP editors" for BTW to be a guideline. You still don't get to personally do a demotion of it in the course of a "tidying up and organizing" merge, period. If you want to demote it then you should have honestly, openly, and straightforwardly brought a proposal for that up. --❨Ṩtruthious ℬandersnatch❩ 21:50, 4 April 2009 (UTC)
- As I explained at Template talk:Guideline list#Village pump, the only "advantage" of keeping the guidelines separate that I am aware of is that it makes it possible to "run to the other parent": Say there is a dispute whether the link in "the Glorious Revolution happened in 1689" is relevant . A single guideline will eventually be clear that it is relevant, but only because the article 1689 talks about European history in this year (per consensus for option 1 in WP:Date formatting and linking poll#Year linking).
- The year of birth of Tokugawa Yoshimichi also happens to be 1689. The article 1689 is completely irrelevant for this person. (The information about the relations between Russia and China is hardly relevant, and that's the closest I could find.) But in the current situation an editor who believes that all birth and death links should be linked can appeal to WP:BTW which, when read in isolation, does in fact suggest that we can never have enough links. When you reply with WP:OVERLINK, this editor will respond by saying that the two guidelines contradict each other and in this case WP:BTW is right.
- Even for an editor who wants to (correctly) link 1689 in the Glorious Revolution context, arguing with someone who believes year links should never be made becomes easier by using the same strategy. --Hans Adler (talk) 20:54, 4 April 2009 (UTC)
- I don't think you understand what we're discussing here Hans. At the moment I don't care about and I am not attempting to determine what it says in the BTW policy page or even what it says about the "build the web" guideline over in the Misplaced Pages:Linking policy page except that BTW is properly identified as a guideline. And I definitely am not saying anything about date linking; I haven't even read up on that.
- The point is that a guideline can't be demoted by someone pretending to just be doing a merge to tidy the Misplaced Pages namespace up. We know that these guys were trying to do that because it wasn't enough for them that the pages be merged - they also insist that BTW not be identified as a Misplaced Pages guideline in the resulting merged page.
- If ArbCom renders a verdict that no date anywhere must be linked (or whatever they're adjudicating, even once I tracked down what was apparently the relevant page I couldn't figure it out) then I have no problem with it being smack in the middle of the BTW page or smack in the middle of the "build the web" behavioral guideline paragraph of a merged page. But it still wouldn't mean that these guys get to demote BTW from guideline status on their own cognizance. --❨Ṩtruthious ℬandersnatch❩ 21:50, 4 April 2009 (UTC)
- It's getting more and more clear to me that you are discussing something completely different than everybody else. I, like everybody else, I believe, have been talking about "guidelines" as the written representations of community consensus. Guidelines in this sense can obviously be merged for presentational reasons, so long as the sense is preserved. And if you want to oppose such a merger you need to explain how and why the merger affects the way the consensus is codified, or why the presentation has not been improved. I am still not sure what exactly you are talking about, but it is beginning to look like a "guideline" as an entity whose content may be transferred elsewhere, but which may not be killed even when it's empty. Or perhaps the words "build the web" as a sacrosanct creed which, once you feel it is under attack, needs something like constitutional protection. You may not recognise your position in this description, but this is honestly the best I can come up with. --Hans Adler (talk) 11:50, 6 April 2009 (UTC)
- In summarizing my opinion on the merge, you came up with something completely incoherent. I am totally surprised. Really.
- "Opposition to mergers must explain how and why the merger affects the way the consensus is codified." Way to make up rules out of thin air. I don't need to summarize that one for it to be incoherent. --❨Ṩtruthious ℬandersnatch❩ 13:17, 6 April 2009 (UTC)
- Why of course, if people want to merge and give convincing reasons why it should be done, then just saying no without giving any reason is not acceptable. And if my attempt at mind-reading failed, then how about making it unnecessary by summarising your opinion yourself? --Hans Adler (talk) 14:38, 6 April 2009 (UTC)
- Give us a quote of where I've said "no without giving any reason" and I'll hold your hand while you read it to ensure that your attempt to mind-read doesn't fail. Somehow I think your "mind-reading" powers are calibrated to help you say things that further your objectives, like misreading obvious diffs so as to claim I'm malicious and factually incorrect, rather than designed to achieve any understanding of other people. That's probably why your "mind-reading" attempts fail.
- And it's also why they're prefaced with categorical assertions about what are valid objections to the way a merge is carried out and what are not. That's a required technique there, I suppose? You have to hypnotize yourself by reciting a series of fake legalisms that would mean you're not going to encounter any opinions that don't fit with your own agenda, before you can enter the mind-reading trance. Such a sincere attempt to understand your interlocutor, to go to the effort of invoking psychic powers.
- You should adopt Kotniski's technique there of changing the meaning of words as you're carrying on a discussion with someone. I bet it would do wonders for "mind reading" of the sort you're trying to perform. --❨Ṩtruthious ℬandersnatch❩ 11:03, 7 April 2009 (UTC)
- I am giving up. Seeing what happened with your user page and how you reacted has inspired me to consider the possibility that you believe that minute details of process are infinitely more important than minor matters such as writing an encyclopedia or making our policy pages reflect consensus in the most efficient way. After rereading some of your comments I have now come to the conclusion that that's exactly your position. No wonder you are simply dismissing all relevant rational arguments as detractions while blowing irrelevancies out of all proportion. --Hans Adler (talk) 12:26, 7 April 2009 (UTC)
- You heard it here first, folks. Eliminating all mention of a guideline from current Misplaced Pages policy pages without discussing whether or not the elimination should occur is a "minute details of process" according to Hans.
- Explain to everyone, Hans: why isn't simply merging the pages enough? I have again agreed with that down below when rd232 proposed it. Why does any mention of BTW as a Misplaced Pages guideline have to be eradicated? Or is the answer to this question just an "irrelevancy" that never, ever has to be addressed by any of you? (Until it's good and long since done, am I right?) --❨Ṩtruthious ℬandersnatch❩ 02:38, 9 April 2009 (UTC)
- Nothing was demoted as far as I know. Anyway, whatever it was that was done had consensus, and that consensus was later confirmed in discussion. If you think it should be partially undone, then you're entitled to argue for that, but please do so rationally, based on what arrangement of pages and information offers the best/clearest guidance for WP editors, not on some personal or political accusations. --Kotniski (talk) 09:39, 6 April 2009 (UTC)
- Ah! Nothing was demoted in your opinion! Which, unless there is some unusual semantic subtext to that statement, would appear to mean that you are conceding that "Build the Web" is an established Misplaced Pages guideline in the same fashion that "Assume Good Faith" is as I mentioned directly above in this thread. (Not to draw any similarity between them other than the fact that they are both established Misplaced Pages guidelines.)
- Funny how you failed to mention this during the great many occasions you raised objections to the inclusion of a statement affirming it into Misplaced Pages:Linking previous to now. An oversight, I would imagine. But if this is some measure of assurance that your future action on material you designate as a pollution of the Misplaced Pages namespace will not involve excisions of language identifying BTW as a guideline from other policy pages, I find it agreeable.
- And thank you for the advice on how to argue rationally. --❨Ṩtruthious ℬandersnatch❩ 10:31, 6 April 2009 (UTC)
- No problem. The page you mention, WP:AGF, is another one you might like to take a read of. As regards that sentence, I've explained at WT:Linking#Another plea for a practical upshot why I don't think it should be there (more to do with the semantics than any deep agenda). --Kotniski (talk) 10:40, 6 April 2009 (UTC)
- And thank you for the advice on how to argue rationally. --❨Ṩtruthious ℬandersnatch❩ 10:31, 6 April 2009 (UTC)
- And there it is in your response under what you linked to: a statement that the word "guideline" ought not to be linked to Misplaced Pages:Policies and guidelines when it is used to refer to "build the web".
- So the thing that in this page was labeled as a guideline with a link to Misplaced Pages:Policies and guidelines did change in such a way that it ought no longer be referred to as such during the course of your merge, but that isn't being "demoted" in the way you used the word on that occasion in that sentence. This would be the unusual semantic subtext I had anticipated above: you just coincidentally chose to use the word "demoted" in a completely different way than it was used in the rest of this thread, when you were responding to my statement about this guideline being demoted out of guideline status.
- Where would I ever get the idea that you intentionally try to deceive people? --❨Ṩtruthious ℬandersnatch❩ 13:17, 6 April 2009 (UTC)
- SB has done that already. And like many of our bad faith specialists he wasn't content with just reading. (I agree with the first edit, although that, too, seems typical.) See also WT:AGF#Diplomacy (especially Admins). --Hans Adler (talk) 19:10, 7 April 2009 (UTC)
- Just a small, teensy-weensy point: when is someone—you or another supporter of this page—going to respond to my invitation to justify any one of the sentences of which it comprises. In the total absence of any such justification, this page remains on the prime list not just for being solely an essay, but for deletion (unless someone wants to take it into their userspace). Tony (talk) 10:37, 6 April 2009 (UTC)
- This would be appropriate when a significant number of editors manage to actually disagree with one of these sentences. If some editors find this useful guidance, and nobody disagrees with it, it should stay; those who find it anodyne need not mention it at all. Septentrionalis PMAnderson 17:22, 7 April 2009 (UTC)
- On the prime list for deletion, eh? Gosh, it sounds like someone ought to make a proposal for its deletion! But oddly enough I keep suggesting that and no one seems interested. --❨Ṩtruthious ℬandersnatch❩ 13:17, 6 April 2009 (UTC)
- Having watched the whole debate since well before the merge, I can say that Kotniski did the merge in good faith. I feel bad that some assumed the contrary. We all have different opinions about linking (I personally don't believe WP has an overlinking problem), so we have to work together towards reaching a consensus. Having 2 or 3 separate pages about links will not lead to any consensus. Nicolas1981 (talk) 06:36, 8 April 2009 (UTC)
- I at first also assumed that Kotniski was operating in good faith and I went along with his merge and worked on the merged page. But if you're going to assert Kotniski's good faith here you must account for why he followed up the "merge" with eliminating any mention that "there is a Misplaced Pages behavioral guideline that editors should build the web" from WP:Linking and you must also account for why, when repeatedly and directly asked if he thought that BTW shouldn't be a guideline and if this was what he was trying to achieve, he simply replied that he was "tidying up". (He has since stated that he does not think it should be a guideline and that this is connected to why he pursued eradication of anything mentioning that.)
- Also, this is not some simple misunderstanding of the difference between a guideline and a project namespace page: I repeatedly invited him to discuss that but he avoided discussion of it and he and others continued pursuing the deletion of phrases like the one above. This is not behavior that is consistent with good faith.
- I personally do think that WP probably has an overlinking problem with dates now that I've looked at it a little bit. But I am not involved in that issue and trying to eliminate guidelines like BTW - much less doing so with no transparent discussion - definitely would not be the solution. --❨Ṩtruthious ℬandersnatch❩ 02:30, 9 April 2009 (UTC)
Sod the intent and the edit history, can we get to the point?
My impression is that people lean towards merging - at least enough that the onus is on those who want to keep it as a separate guideline to explain why the status quo is better than the whole shebang being made a section of something else. Complete with shortcut, if required. Rd232 12:27, 6 April 2009 (UTC)
- If the intent is to eliminate there being a Misplaced Pages behavioral guideline that says that editors should "build the web" (and that, by the way, is exactly what happened in this recent "merge" - scare quotes intentional) that policy change is what should be proposed. Trying to accomplish the same thing through something advertised as a merge is a subversion of process. That's the only kind of merge I am opposed to.
- (And I'm perfectly fine with it if eliminating this behavioral guideline is what everyone wants to do, I just think it needs to be above-board rather than on the sly as handled by the individuals conducting the merge.)--❨Ṩtruthious ℬandersnatch❩ 13:17, 6 April 2009 (UTC)
- Oh, and also rd232 - what you're talking about there "Complete with shortcut, if required" sounds a whole lot more like an actual merge than what occurred under the auspices of Kotniski, Tony1, and company. (Assuming of course that I properly understand what you mean.) --❨Ṩtruthious ℬandersnatch❩ 13:26, 6 April 2009 (UTC)
- It's coming, but I want to give supporters a fair chance to justify the statements in this quasi-essay. And we need a final check to ensure that nothing in it—no smidgeon of a point or idea—has not been transferred to WP:LINKING. Tony (talk) 15:00, 6 April 2009 (UTC)
- I do not believe that. If you guys are out in Misplaced Pages:Linking actively hunting down and deleting any mention that BTW is a[REDACTED] behavioral guideline with vague reasons like "it's inappropriate" in response to direct questions on why a Misplaced Pages guideline can't be labeled as such, I simply do not believe that everyone just needs to wait because what you're really doing is working on a clear, unambigious new version of the merge "Complete with shortcut, if required". What rd232 proposes there you are actively working to prevent and I believe your intent from the beginning was to eliminate anything like that.
- This "final check" you speak of is nothing of the sort: it's an attempt to trick people into saying they're supporting a "merge" in such a way that you can claim you have support for elimination of BTW as a behavioral guideline from Misplaced Pages project pages everywhere. If the situation "Complete with shortcut" rd232 describes does not fit into your plans - which I believe it does not at all - cut the deceptive dissembling and say so. There's no reason your "final check" would have to be conducted as a pre-condition to creating content like that in Misplaced Pages:Linking. --❨Ṩtruthious ℬandersnatch❩ 10:43, 7 April 2009 (UTC)
- If I'm understanding your concerns right, I think a little assumption of good faith and clear thinking might resolve them. This is what happens when you merge a number of (say 3) guidelines: you start with page A, page B and page C, all tagged as guidelines. You end up with a page D, now tagged as a guideline in place of A, B and C. The guidance given by D is substantially the same as that which was previously given by A, B and C (of course, not necessarily expressed in the same words). There is no reason at all why page D needs to contain three statements of the form " is an (important/...) WP guideline". The absence of such statements is not a sign that those working on the merge have attempted to or succeeded in changing the substance of the guidance in any way. If page C had some valuable pithy message (as some people apparently consider "build the web" to be), then it is enough that that message be part of the text of page D - there is no point in saying " is a (...) guideline", since everything on page D is a guideline anyway, by virtue of that page's being so marked. So when people started talking about how they liked the "build the web" wording, we listened to them and included it (or gave it more prominence - I think it was originally there anyway) in the merged page. But that doesn't mean we have to say "build the web is an important guideline/rule/etc." - even the original Build the Web page didn't say anything like that. If you keep in mind the logical distinction between the words "build the web" and the page titled Build the web, you'll see I hope that no-one has any dark intentions in objecting to the inclusion of your sentence in WP:Linking - I just don't think it contributes to the clarity of the guidance. Anyway, this is my last attempt to convince you of my good faithedness - if it hasn't worked, then too bad.--Kotniski (talk) 14:21, 7 April 2009 (UTC)
- I am glad to see this is Kotniski's last effort to justify his disruptive meddling. By this argument, we need not have any separate guidelines at all, but can have one massive unreadable WP:Guideline containing all our guidance. It will be unreadable, unreferrable, and useless, but apparently that doesn't matter. Septentrionalis PMAnderson 17:16, 7 April 2009 (UTC)
- Why do you do this, PA - have I offended you in some way? Why do you feel the need to insult people when they do something you don't agree with? What do you want to achieve by making such obviously absurd arguments like that one? Do you even know what we were discussing? --Kotniski (talk) 17:54, 7 April 2009 (UTC)
- I am glad to see this is Kotniski's last effort to justify his disruptive meddling. By this argument, we need not have any separate guidelines at all, but can have one massive unreadable WP:Guideline containing all our guidance. It will be unreadable, unreferrable, and useless, but apparently that doesn't matter. Septentrionalis PMAnderson 17:16, 7 April 2009 (UTC)
- If I'm understanding your concerns right, I think a little assumption of good faith and clear thinking might resolve them. This is what happens when you merge a number of (say 3) guidelines: you start with page A, page B and page C, all tagged as guidelines. You end up with a page D, now tagged as a guideline in place of A, B and C. The guidance given by D is substantially the same as that which was previously given by A, B and C (of course, not necessarily expressed in the same words). There is no reason at all why page D needs to contain three statements of the form " is an (important/...) WP guideline". The absence of such statements is not a sign that those working on the merge have attempted to or succeeded in changing the substance of the guidance in any way. If page C had some valuable pithy message (as some people apparently consider "build the web" to be), then it is enough that that message be part of the text of page D - there is no point in saying " is a (...) guideline", since everything on page D is a guideline anyway, by virtue of that page's being so marked. So when people started talking about how they liked the "build the web" wording, we listened to them and included it (or gave it more prominence - I think it was originally there anyway) in the merged page. But that doesn't mean we have to say "build the web is an important guideline/rule/etc." - even the original Build the Web page didn't say anything like that. If you keep in mind the logical distinction between the words "build the web" and the page titled Build the web, you'll see I hope that no-one has any dark intentions in objecting to the inclusion of your sentence in WP:Linking - I just don't think it contributes to the clarity of the guidance. Anyway, this is my last attempt to convince you of my good faithedness - if it hasn't worked, then too bad.--Kotniski (talk) 14:21, 7 April 2009 (UTC)
- It's coming, but I want to give supporters a fair chance to justify the statements in this quasi-essay. And we need a final check to ensure that nothing in it—no smidgeon of a point or idea—has not been transferred to WP:LINKING. Tony (talk) 15:00, 6 April 2009 (UTC)
- (ec) That's just rude. Take a step back, and a deep breath, before hitting save. Please! I am a supporter of closer scrutiny of this merge, and you are not helping any of us see your points by stooping to personal attacks and mischaracterizations of intent, and using ludicrous slippery-slope arguments. Let's just drop that now, please. If you cannot say something constructive, say nothing. -- Quiddity (talk) 17:56, 7 April 2009 (UTC)
- I'm fairly satisfied with the bold and emphatic description of build the web as currently incorporated into WP:LINKING. I do however think more of the wording from this guideline should be copied exactly to the Linking guideline. For example the section on redlinks as Piotr points out above at Misplaced Pages talk:Build the web/Archive 3#View from the sidelines - "Don't be afraid ..." is an important reminder of WP:BOLDness.
- These wordings were discussed and honed and argued over for years, which is why some of us oldtimers are protective of the page (and implicitly its choices of phrasing). I don't have time to read more of the threads, or suggest more exact changes, but hopefully you get my meaning, and can extrapolate the changes that will make us all happy. Thanks. -- Quiddity (talk) 17:56, 7 April 2009 (UTC)
- Wow, thanks! I guess there has been constructive criticism of the merger or the way it has been attempted somewhere here or on WT:LINKING, but I don't remember any that I could understand. Finally something to act upon and even an explanation why this conflict happened. I hope that in a few hours' time I will get some time to work on a proposal at WT:LINKING. (WP:LINKING is currently protected.) --Hans Adler (talk) 18:59, 7 April 2009 (UTC)
- Actually, Piotr is referring to Misplaced Pages:Red link, a separate guideline which in my opinion should also be merged into WP:LINKING. The "Don't be afraid" sentence needs balancing like the rest of BTW. I think I am going to think about this a bit more. Perhaps BTW can be expanded to discuss all the motivational and less technical aspects in depth (and in a balanced way), and then serve as a subarticle of WP:LINKING? --Hans Adler (talk) 22:48, 7 April 2009 (UTC)
- Well, a prime example of the advantages of explaining even what seems to be obvious. Everything Quiddity says has been implicit in the counterarguments since before I got here; but it has not been seen. I would add that WP:BTW and WP:Build the web should link to any merged section, like the links to the clauses of MOS. Septentrionalis PMAnderson 02:31, 8 April 2009 (UTC)
- As a detail, this should not be a subpage of WP:Linking; this and WP:OVERLINK are the principles which WP:Linking attempts to implement. It would be a useful exercise to expand WP:OVERLINK and make it a separate page which would answer this one point by point. Septentrionalis PMAnderson 02:31, 8 April 2009 (UTC)
- That's not at all what I meant. Do you see the parenthetical "and in a balanced way"? I don't believe in having two guidelines that contradict each other, enabling extremists who don't agree with the consensus (which of course lies somewhere in the middle) to cherry-pick. If I get support from everybody but you I will be happy, but I simply don't expect you to agree with any solution that makes sense. --Hans Adler (talk) 08:15, 8 April 2009 (UTC)
- These "contradict each other" exactly as much as WP:UE and WP:UCN. Both BTW and don't overlink are true, which is why we have two pages; if the merger had been kept, and they were two sections, they would still be quoted tendentiously. Septentrionalis PMAnderson 19:35, 9 April 2009 (UTC)
- That's not at all what I meant. Do you see the parenthetical "and in a balanced way"? I don't believe in having two guidelines that contradict each other, enabling extremists who don't agree with the consensus (which of course lies somewhere in the middle) to cherry-pick. If I get support from everybody but you I will be happy, but I simply don't expect you to agree with any solution that makes sense. --Hans Adler (talk) 08:15, 8 April 2009 (UTC)
- Kotniski, your "it's redundant" explanation is a completely new one, different from all of the other explanations you've given for eliminating mention that there's a BTW guideline from the WP:Linking page. (And as I've pointed out folks, previous explanations included things like defining it as pollution.)
- Your willingness to discuss the distinction between a guideline and a Misplaced Pages namespace page is completely new in the last few days - well after the point where the page was locked and the statement in question can't simply be deleted or altered - despite the fact that for weeks and weeks I was asking questions and making points about this and linking to the page where Misplaced Pages guidelines are defined to make it clear what I was talking about.
- This behavior, and things like concealing your desire to remove BTW as a guideline when directly, repeatedly asked as the author of the merge whether you had such intentions, is not remotely consistent with good faith; in fact it's plainly disingenuous and deceptive. WP:AGF is not some sort of mental hygiene requirement that compels Wikipedians to not think about bad faith or prevent them from recognizing and talking about bad faith behavior. I granted you the benefit of the doubt, the assumption of good faith, and over the course of weeks you completely and totally forfeited it. You can't consistently, repeatedly, and openly act like this and expect to get away with it in a place like Misplaced Pages where diffs showing exactly what you've said and done and the history of every page can be presented and examined by anyone. So I am very well justified to not simply trust you on this and to insist that very explicit and above-board mention that BTW is a guideline be included in any merged page; my concerns and the things I'm insisting on are not nonsensical or inappropriate at all as has been repeatedly asserted.
- And one other point: the original BTW page most certainly did say "this is a Misplaced Pages behavioral guideline" right before the "merge" - that's something which only appears to have been changed recently. --❨Ṩtruthious ℬandersnatch❩ 03:16, 9 April 2009 (UTC)
- Very well said. — Hex (❝?!❞) 13:55, 9 April 2009 (UTC)
- For the last, last time: BTW was a page which was marked as a guideline page. "Build the web" is a phrase. If you merge BTW with something else, it isn't a page any more, so it doesn't make sense to say "Build the web" is a "guideline", meaning the page BTW is a guideline page. It might make sense to say "build the web" (phrase) is a guideline (useful maxim to be followed) - you can argue for that, but that exact phrasing (particularly since it never appeared on the BTW page before the merge) isn't essential to making the merge an unbiased merge. Just because we disagree about whether that particular sentence makes the Linking page clearer guidance or not is no reason for these heaps of abuse that have been poured in my direction - it's hardly a matter of any consequence (and you seem to have got your way about it anyway). No further replies from me here; with the possible exception of the Brandt debacle, this is the most ridiculous thing I've encountered in my time at Misplaced Pages so far.--Kotniski (talk) 07:13, 9 April 2009 (UTC)
Merge proposal
Proposal: merge WP:BTW into WP:linking by adding the following paragraph at the top of WP:linking#General principles:
ShortcutsMisplaced Pages is based on hypertext, and aims to "build the web" to enable readers to find relevant information on other pages with just a click of the mouse. Therefore in adding or removing links, consider an article's place
in the webin the knowledge tree. Make upward links tocategories andrelevant contexts (Charles Darwin was a biologist; Sahara is a desert in Africa, etc. Make sideways links to neighboring articles (for proton see also electron, Oregon borders on California). Introduce links from related articles to avoid orphaning the article; and don't be afraid to create links to articles which don't exist yet.
That's shorter than I expected; I'd written another para based on BTW but I've found all the parts of it are already in that target section (apart from the bit about category trees which I couldn't make sense of and doesn't seem to belong here). Comments? Can we do this merge now? Rd232 03:56, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- Revised to replace "web" with knowledge tree. Rd232 12:36, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- Revised to strike ref to categories implying linking to categories, which is deprecated. Rd232 15:23, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- Support revised version per Tony below
Ohconfucius (talk) 04:57, 27 April 2009 (UTC)Ohconfucius (talk) 03:30, 28 April 2009 (UTC) - I support the idea of remerging (i.e. making this page a redirect to Linking, as it was always agreed it would be), but what's the point of including this text? We already say all of this at WP:Linking. The stuff about upward, sideways etc. isn't helpful - you'd have to define a hierarchy for this to make sense (a web is specifically not a hierarchy).--Kotniski (talk) 06:25, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- I support in principle just to end this dispute, not because I find anything useful in the paragraph. However, the merge would require a few things to be changed in the para.
- First, is there a source for the concept of "upward" and "sideways"? It's not intuitive to me that "desert" be upward of "Sahara".
- "Desert" is just the kind of trivial link that is now discouraged as a dictionary-type word. At the very least, you'd want to link to the appropriate section of the desert article, but that brings in another point about focusing links as much as possible (covered elsewhere in MOSLINK, I think), and we don't want to confuse issues in the one example. The same goes for "Africa", which is starting to be trivial, like linking "United States" or "the UK" or "Europe". These conflict with the well-established practice to use links selectively so that the higher-value ones, whether vertical or under the seat or left or right, are more likely to be clicked on.
- Rather than the imperative "Make upward links to ..", it would be more appropriate to simply explain the concept of upwards, etc. Tony (talk) 07:12, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- These comments piqued my curiousity about the way we currently use categories. What's a better link: Charles Darwin is a biologist or Charles Darwin is a biologist? I appreciate that's an easter egg link we like to avoid, but when you think about it, currently, we have categories stuck all the way down the bottom of the page. Is that making the best use of categories? If the purpose of some of these links is to "build a web", well, isn't the category structure that web? After all, the "Build The Web" guidance predates category implentation by a long chalk, doesn't it? I doubt we've ever reviewed the implications categories had for this page, given the text currently used. Hiding T 09:37, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- Interesting, so here is my guess: Imagine X is a foreign speaker not knowing exactly what a biologist actually does. In case X wants to know more, X clicks on the wikilink. I guess X would rather read an explanation about the different kinds of biologists and what biologists spend their days doing, than a list of articles that are similar to the one he was reading. Nicolas1981 (talk) 10:03, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- Doesn;t really address the wiser points, does it. We could all have anecdotal evidence of what a particular user or group of users is expecting. But what do you think about the broader points, that this guidance hasn't been updated to reflect the introduction of categories. That probably speaks to its current utility. Hiding T 13:45, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- Interesting, so here is my guess: Imagine X is a foreign speaker not knowing exactly what a biologist actually does. In case X wants to know more, X clicks on the wikilink. I guess X would rather read an explanation about the different kinds of biologists and what biologists spend their days doing, than a list of articles that are similar to the one he was reading. Nicolas1981 (talk) 10:03, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- These comments piqued my curiousity about the way we currently use categories. What's a better link: Charles Darwin is a biologist or Charles Darwin is a biologist? I appreciate that's an easter egg link we like to avoid, but when you think about it, currently, we have categories stuck all the way down the bottom of the page. Is that making the best use of categories? If the purpose of some of these links is to "build a web", well, isn't the category structure that web? After all, the "Build The Web" guidance predates category implentation by a long chalk, doesn't it? I doubt we've ever reviewed the implications categories had for this page, given the text currently used. Hiding T 09:37, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- Support The Sahara example makes much sense to me, it seems obvious to me that the Sahara article should begin like this: Sahara is a desert. If only one wikilink should be to remain in the article, that would be this one. Nicolas1981 (talk) 09:40, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- I think we can agree about that - but can we not phrase it in a way that makes sense to everyone? (At the very least we must make it clear that it's the Sahara article we're talking about; at the moment it looks like we're talking about some other article in which this sentence appears, because it says Sahara instead of Sahara. But we must also explain more explicitly what we mean by "upward" links to "categories" and "contexts".)--Kotniski (talk) 11:04, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- Support. "Desert" might be a dictionary word, but the article "Desert" contain more info than just a dicdef, some of which might be interesting to someone reading an article about the Sahara. Maybe it's slight too generic and one could link hot desert instead (but so far it happens to be a redirect). Likewise, the Darwin article now links to naturalist which is more specific than biologist. As for North Africa, yes, everyone know where it is, but someone reading an article about the Sahara might want to read more about it, so the link from "Sahara" to "North Africa" is not pointless. So I'd change the examples to "Sahara is a hot desert in North Africa; Charles Darwin was a naturalist". --A. di M. (formerly Army1987) — Deeds, not words. 11:19, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- Yes, this is far more the direction to go in. I don't think this text has much to add in terms of general principles - largely because BTW already has been merged into WP:Linking, so anything that means anything here is already there. What might be worth adding (though it would need to be written out properly, with legible examples) is the idea that we are more inclined to link to things which directly contain the thing we are writing about, or are classes containing that thing, or are similar to that thing, or are examples or components of that thing. (I guess that's what the upward/sideways/etc. language is supposed to mean.) But this wouldn't go at the top of general principles - it would get quite detailed and technical, and would probably go somewhere in the list of principles, or maybe better in a separate subsection.--Kotniski (talk) 11:44, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- The North Africa link is justified in my opinion. Today I was pointing Africa on a map and asked a group of 5 koreans what this continent was and they had no idea. So we shouldn't take it for granted that everybody knows what we learnt in primary school. And these koreans can speak English. Nicolas1981 (talk) 15:25, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- Comment. I've just taken the existing language from BTW and some of the criticisms made of the result are clearly valid. I agree that "upwards" and "sideways" are not necessarily clear, but if you visualise a web of knowledge with the more general topics at the top and the more specific at the bottom, that seems to be what the terms relate to. I'm not sure if we can find clearer terms, or if we should just put in a sentence to explain that; or else drop the concepts entirely, but that would mean deletion rather than merger, because just putting the shortcuts in the target section without explanation would be confusing. Rd232 12:02, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- By shortcuts, do you mean WP:BTW, WP:BUILD, etc.? These can simply go to WP:Linking, not to any section of it (since the web-building principle is already mentioned prominently there); but just point there, not be advertised there. And we must avoid mixing metaphors - the World Wide Web (or any web I can imagine) is not hierarchical. The metaphor I'm used to for the sort of structure you're describing is "tree". So yes, we can try to develop this concept, AND we can retain the references to WP's place in the Web, BUT these should be treated as two quite separate issues (and the second one is already addressed, I think satisfactorily, at WP:Linking).--Kotniski (talk) 12:21, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- You're right, it's a "knowledge tree" thing; linking these points to "building the web" is confusing because of that. I've revised the proposal accordingly. I hope this is clearer. Rd232 12:35, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- OK, I would still make some improvements to the wording and positioning, but I guess those will be discussed further once we see this paragraph in place on the target page. Support this merge.--Kotniski (talk) 12:53, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- You're right, it's a "knowledge tree" thing; linking these points to "building the web" is confusing because of that. I've revised the proposal accordingly. I hope this is clearer. Rd232 12:35, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- By shortcuts, do you mean WP:BTW, WP:BUILD, etc.? These can simply go to WP:Linking, not to any section of it (since the web-building principle is already mentioned prominently there); but just point there, not be advertised there. And we must avoid mixing metaphors - the World Wide Web (or any web I can imagine) is not hierarchical. The metaphor I'm used to for the sort of structure you're describing is "tree". So yes, we can try to develop this concept, AND we can retain the references to WP's place in the Web, BUT these should be treated as two quite separate issues (and the second one is already addressed, I think satisfactorily, at WP:Linking).--Kotniski (talk) 12:21, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- Support. The exact formulation of the paragraph is somewhat problematic, but I don't really mind that too much. I don't agree with Tony that linking from Sahara to desert or Africa is wrong; I agree with A. di M. that linking from Darwin to naturalist would be better than to biologist. The most important thing is that all the basic instructions about what to link and what not to link are in a single place, rather than spread over several guideline POV forks. --Hans Adler (talk) 12:29, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
I didn't say that linking Darwin to "biologist" was wrong: please read again. But does the "biologist" article really explain how Darwin was the father of modern biology? I don't think so; the field has changed so much, and the link is a potential distortion rather than an aid to readers' understanding. This example is also precariously close to an encouragement to link "actor", "novelist", and just about any occupation or artistic field, in the opening sentence of biographical articles.
What I did say was that "desert" is a dictionary term; however, after Nicholas's comment, I re-consulted the "desert" article and found it to be better than I'd recollected. Unfortunately, the subsection "Types of desert" doesn't clarify which type of desert the Sahara is: this is the type of value-added I'm always looking for in linking, and I'm concerned that the example will give a green light to the linking of every second word in, for example, the Geography and Climate sections of country articles. While the Sahara example might just be doable, it's an unfortunate example. "Africa" can't possibly go into MOSLINK as a link: this is sending the wrong signal after the project has moved away from the automatic linking of every geographical or political entity that ever occurs in any article.
Inserting some of these examples into MOSLINK is the wrong way to go; if better examples can be found that do not risk a return to thoughtless linking by analogy, the paragraph would be less unsuitable. Tony (talk) 13:32, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- Sorry for misrepresenting your words. I hope I have fixed this to your satisfaction. – Perhaps we have just found a genuine point of BTW: I do happen to think that while links to articles such as desert and Africa should be used very sparingly, Sahara is an excellent example of an article where they are appropriate because superficial readers of the article are likely to find them of interest. The article actually links to North Africa instead, which is even better. --Hans Adler (talk) 14:45, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
"Don't be afraid to create links to articles that don't exist yet" ... red link spattering? Some are OK, but we don't want to encourage newbies to go about creating links that remain red for some time. I tell people who create red links to go there and at least write a stub; then it's not red and shows at least the beginnings of what will become an article. I'm also unsure that linking items just in the fear that their destinations might become "orphaned" is a good reason (alone) to link, yet it could be construed this way. Tony (talk) 13:39, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- This is already in the target section. I'd rather we didn't get into a big discussion, as we seem to be, about the precise wording and policy implications. The only thing that really matters, as far as I can see, is the first two sentences, plus the shortcuts. The rest is naturally subject to future post-merger revision and clarification (which I think the target page could do with); these two sentences are the core idea which is worth merging, I think, the rest is detail, and is precisely why the merger should be done. Rd232 15:18, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- I guess I stand against the proposed text, because it is quite clear Misplaced Pages practise has changed. With the implenetation of category space, we stopped making inline upwards links to categories. That was one reason why category space was implented, and realistically, when you think about it, category space is the web. Just deprecate this page. Quietly. Next year. Hiding T 13:45, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- Have you been misled by the discussion? The proposal says nothing about linking to categories. Rd232 14:10, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- Have you read the text you appear to have proposed? "Make upward links to categories and contexts". My emphasis. Hiding T 15:13, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- :) clearly I haven't!! Removed the ref to categories. Rd232 15:20, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- I agree with Rd232 that the first two sentences are what matter at the moment. Tony (talk) 15:27, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- Here is a revised example. The sentence about red links has gone, since they are treated in more detail already and many editors would query that their creation should be so strongly encouraged (while not objecting to the occasional red link). The sentence about orphans has gone, since linking articles for the sake of linking articles is not now encouraged. Links to so-called orphan articles are best made because they are useful to the readers; the knowledge tree is not strengthened by low-value links. Given that the examples of "upward" and "sideways" links are almost entirely devoid of a larger context with which to judge the relevance of links, they have been replaced by items about which there can be less doubt as to the usefulness of their linking to most English-speakers. (Isn't "lateral" a better word than "sideways"? But if not, someone reinstate "sideways", please.) Tell me your thoughts:
ShortcutsIn adding or removing links, consider an article's place in the knowledge tree. This tree comprises "upward" links to relevant contexts ("Charles Babbage was one of the great cryptographers"; "Antarctica is the largest polar desert"), and "lateral" links to neighboring articles ("Protons, along with electrons, are the basis of electrical charge within atoms"; "Mauritania shares a long border with Mali").
Tony (talk) 16:44, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- Yes, that's certainly an improvement (much more pertinent examples; and red links and orphaning are perfectly well covered by what already exists at WP:Linking anyway). I would still remove "Therefore", since the second sentence (about the tree) isn't a logical consequence of the first (about the web). (The first sentence could go, actually, since it is already stated at least once on the WP:Linking page as it is now.) And if the examples are supposed to be from the articles indicated by the first links, then we should show that, at the very least by replacing the links by bold type as they would be in those articles (Charles Babbage was one of the great cryptographers etc.).--Kotniski (talk) 16:56, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- Actually maybe the Antarctica example doesn't quite work (is there such a thing as "the Antarctica"?) And the proton example never worked. But it's going in the right direction.--Kotniski (talk) 17:07, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- Oops, yes, some silly mistakes. How is that? Tony (talk) 18:06, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- (edit conflict)
"The" Antarctica? Except for this,your example sounds OK to me. (But I disagree that linking "novelist" in the first sentence of an article about a novelist is overlinking.) As for "categories" in the original wording, I don't think it referred to categories in the MediaWiki sense of the word: it would make little sense to write "Charles Darwin is a]
". As for red links, the criterion should be whether the linked title could host an article complying with WP:N and WP:NC and relevant to the topic of the article containing the red link. So I'd write something like:
--A. di M. (formerly Army1987) — Deeds, not words. 18:11, 27 April 2009 (UTC)and don't be afraid to create relevant links to articles which don't exist yet, provided that the topic is notable enough to merit its own article and the linked title complies with the Misplaced Pages naming conventions.
- "Sigh". I'm not getting my point across very well here. As for "categories" in the original wording, I don't think it referred to categories in the MediaWiki sense of the word. That's my point, it does and doesn't refer to categories in the MediWiki sense of the word because the MediaWiki sense of the word didn't exist when the text was written. This guidance predates category space. That's why the guidance refers to category linking, it was the only way to implement a category, by linking to "biologist" and then extracting a "category" if you will, byt using "what links here" on bilogist. That's what a vast number of people seem to be missing, that "Build The Web" hasn't been updated in seven years to reflect the way the software has changed. The way we implemented categories means the guidance as stands is written to indicate that we write "Charles Darwin is a
]
". This is probably germane and not germane, but there was once a reason for BTW and articles being a sea of blue. It was all there was. Way back when, even "policy" was written in the main space, because it was all there was. Support the merge, but make sure it is updated to take account of the fact that this is so old it doesn't grapple with advancements. Don't get blind-sided into accepting or re-using material that has absolutely no relevance to today's Misplaced Pages. Hiding T 12:02, 28 April 2009 (UTC)
- "Sigh". I'm not getting my point across very well here. As for "categories" in the original wording, I don't think it referred to categories in the MediaWiki sense of the word. That's my point, it does and doesn't refer to categories in the MediWiki sense of the word because the MediaWiki sense of the word didn't exist when the text was written. This guidance predates category space. That's why the guidance refers to category linking, it was the only way to implement a category, by linking to "biologist" and then extracting a "category" if you will, byt using "what links here" on bilogist. That's what a vast number of people seem to be missing, that "Build The Web" hasn't been updated in seven years to reflect the way the software has changed. The way we implemented categories means the guidance as stands is written to indicate that we write "Charles Darwin is a
What if we just merge the first two sentences and the shortcuts, and then continue this discussion at WP:linking post-merger, where it will be more productive, in the larger context of that page? Rd232 18:51, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- Support merge There is far too much overlap of content. The subject is linking, so put it all there. As it is, this article is an essay. It needs to be merged into “WP:”-space so it is truly a guideline. As an aside, I can’t see the value in creating broken links. If someone thinks a subject is noteworthy enough to have its own article, they ought to at least have the gumption to be willing to create the stub. Just putting square brackets around some text to make it red in hopes someone else will come in later is, IMO, just being too lazy. Besides, in some cases, the actual article title may be slightly different from the pointer links and the text still won’t turn from broken-link red to link-blue even after someone makes the article. Greg L (talk) 23:28, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- Personally, I prefer a red link to a blue link to a very short stub: that way, it can't happen that a reader follows a link and is disappointed because the stub it takes to doesn't explain the subject any better than he was able to figure out himself from the context. But maybe that's just me... And sometimes it's not laziness, but rather lack of knowledge to create the stub: for example, I once read the sentence
Without knowing what the hell a fragmentation function is, I could only make wild guesses about the intended meaning of that sentence. So I added a red link to fragmentation function. I then googled for that phrase in order to find out its meaning (and possibly write an article about it), but I found lots of very technical pages which assumed the reader already knew that phrase, and no page which actually explained what a fragmentation function is. So I left the link red. (And I would have been far more disappointed if the link were blue, but it took to a one-sentence article such as "In particle physics, a fragmentation function is a function describing how sea quarks can hadronize.") As for the possibility of the link staying red if the article isn't created with the exact same meaning, it is minimized if the editor who adds the red link conforms to the naming conventions, and the author of the article creates redirects from any other title also allowed by the conventions for the same title. --A. di M. (formerly Army1987) — Deeds, not words. 11:07, 28 April 2009 (UTC)In addition to this, sea quarks can hadronize via a certain fragmentation function; for instance, a sea quark hadronizing into a pion (π) does so through the fragmentation function
- Personally, I prefer a red link to a blue link to a very short stub: that way, it can't happen that a reader follows a link and is disappointed because the stub it takes to doesn't explain the subject any better than he was able to figure out himself from the context. But maybe that's just me... And sometimes it's not laziness, but rather lack of knowledge to create the stub: for example, I once read the sentence
Support This is a good compromise between those who are strongly attracted to the principle of BTW and those who want to consolidate the MOS. Dabomb87 (talk) 01:03, 28 April 2009 (UTC)
Support the last version by Tony1 as well. It is no perfect (for instance I don't think "great" is appropriate in Misplaced Pages) but let's merge first and polish things afterwards. By the way, I am quite happy to have this healthy discussion where we are trying to reach a consensus despite our very different views. Nicolas1981 (talk) 06:07, 28 April 2009 (UTC)
- Army, your suggestion "and don't be afraid to create relevant links to articles which don't exist yet, provided that the topic is notable enough to merit its own article and the linked title complies with the Misplaced Pages naming conventions—can we avoid contractions in formal text (as required by MoS)? And the opening is an odd angle to take (being afraid or not ... just a little too rhetorical. Why not "and consider creating links to articles that do not yet exist, provided the topic is sufficiently relevant and notable and the title complies with the Misplaced Pages naming conventions."? But just how different is this from the advice already in MOSLINK? And why not put the statement in the red link section if it has to go in?
- Hiding, sorry, I can't get my brain around your point about categories. Perhaps I'm just too tired. Tony (talk) 17:06, 28 April 2009 (UTC)
- Er, yes. I had overlooked the fact that the proposal is to put the text on top of WP:LINK#General principles, which already mentions red links. For some reason I was thinking that the proposal was to put it into its lead. (Also, I don't think that it must necessarily be "formal text": we're essentially talking to fellow editors; BTW, the contraction and the rhetorical opening (is it? I assumed "Don't be afraid" to be an idiom) were already present in the existing wording which I only adapted (as opposed to rewriting from scratch); I don't care about what specific wording is used.) --A. di M. (formerly Army1987) — Deeds, not words. 17:54, 28 April 2009 (UTC)
Merge proposal (minimal)
This discussion is still dancing around a lot. It's not that it's unproductive, just that it would be much better to do this post-merger. So can we just merge the minimum we agree on (to the top of the General Principles para), then continue the discussion about the other points at Misplaced Pages talk:linking? Rd232 17:30, 28 April 2009 (UTC)
ShortcutsMisplaced Pages is based on hypertext, and aims to "build the web" to enable readers to find relevant information on other pages with just a click of the mouse. Therefore in adding or removing links, consider an article's place in the knowledge tree.
- Just to make it clear - what do you envisage will be at WP:Build the web when this merger is done? A redirect? A historical page or essay?--Kotniski (talk) 21:01, 28 April 2009 (UTC)
- I actually hadn't thought about it. And now that you ask, I'm not sure I mind either way. Rd232 00:51, 29 April 2009 (UTC)
Support I think in this case the simpler the better.. let's just get this done, complicating things is counter-productive. Have WP:BTW redirect directly to the merged section. It can be a shortcut. -- OlEnglish 01:37, 29 April 2009 (UTC)
Support I agree with OlEnglish Nicolas1981 (talk) 03:06, 29 April 2009 (UTC)
{{editprotected}}
Please restore this text to the point before merger. All trace of the merged text (except the name) has been removed from
- Not done: please establish a consensus for this alteration before using the
{{edit protected}}
template.. — Martin (MSGJ · talk) 21:04, 8 May 2009 (UTC)
Request for edit
Since there now seems to be universal support for doing this (and consensus in the earlier discussions was in favour anyway, it was just prevented from being implemented), I think it's time to go ahead. Therefore:
{{editprotected}}
Please replace the content of this page with a redirect to Misplaced Pages:Linking#General principles, at the same time as making the edit requested at WT:Linking#Requested addition, which implements the merge as agreed in the above discussions (#Merge proposal onward).--Kotniski (talk) 06:09, 30 April 2009 (UTC)
- All Done as requested. Congratulations on sorting this out. — Martin (MSGJ · talk) 07:04, 30 April 2009 (UTC)
- Thanks. I suggest further discussion about improvements to the text continue at WT:Linking.--Kotniski (talk) 07:44, 30 April 2009 (UTC)
{{editprotected}}
Please add this redirect template: {{R from merge}} on the same line as the redirect. Thanks. -- OlEnglish 21:50, 30 April 2009 (UTC)
- Done - Rjd0060 (talk) 23:08, 30 April 2009 (UTC)