This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Simetrical (talk | contribs) at 21:56, 4 August 2006 (Add {{policy in a nutshell}}, remove basically redundant shortcut). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Revision as of 21:56, 4 August 2006 by Simetrical (talk | contribs) (Add {{policy in a nutshell}}, remove basically redundant shortcut)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)This guideline is a part of the English Misplaced Pages's Manual of Style. It is a generally accepted standard that editors should attempt to follow, though occasional exceptions may apply. Any substantive edit to this page should reflect consensus. When in doubt, discuss first on the talk page. | Shortcut
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This page in a nutshell: Misplaced Pages is free content. To ease reusability, never allow the text of an article to assume that the reader is viewing it at Misplaced Pages, and try to avoid even assuming that the reader is viewing the article at a website. There may also be stylistic issues with using phrases such as this article unnecessarily. |
Avoid self-references within Misplaced Pages articles to the Misplaced Pages project, such as:
- This Misplaced Pages article discusses ...
- Free content projects, such as this website ..
- While Misplaced Pages is not a dictionary, ... (in an article about a certain term)
- Warning: Misplaced Pages contains spoilers (see Misplaced Pages:Spoiler warning for alternative text)
Such self-references are entirely acceptable on talk pages or in the Misplaced Pages namespace, but they are inappropriate in articles for two reasons. The first is that self-references are often considered disruptive in an encyclopedia because they distract from the topic at hand. A secondary concern is that self-references limit the use of Misplaced Pages as an open source encyclopedia suitable for forking, as permitted by our license. Put simply, this policy is about remembering that the goal of Misplaced Pages is to create an encyclopedia, not merely to perpetuate itself, so the articles produced should be useful even outside the context of the project used to create it.
Misplaced Pages can, of course, write about Misplaced Pages, but context is important. If you read about Shakespeare's works, you are not interested in reading about Misplaced Pages's policies or conventions. If, however, you read about online communities, the article may well discuss Misplaced Pages as an example, in a neutral tone, without specifically implying that the article in question is being read on — or is a part of — Misplaced Pages. If, in this framework, you link from an article to a Misplaced Pages page outside the main namespace, use external link style to allow the link to work also in a site with a copy of the main namespace content. Template:Associations/Wikipedia Bad Things
Think about print
Don't forget, we want to make the creation of a print version of Misplaced Pages as easy as possible, so try to use terms such as "this article" as opposed to "this website", and certainly don't use terms such as "click here" (which make no sense when using a screen reader, for instance). You may also find it helpful to imagine you're reading the article in another encyclopedia.
Community and website feature references
While we're often inclined to mention the Misplaced Pages community that we are all part of, as well as the website features we use in creating the articles, these confuse readers of derivative works. In particular, do not refer to the fact that the page can be edited, do not refer to any Misplaced Pages project page or process, do not use specialized Misplaced Pages jargon (e.g. "POV" in place of "biased"), and do not refer to any link in the sidebar or along the top of the screen, such as the talk page, What links here, or history. Remember, articles are part of an encyclopedia, not part of the Misplaced Pages project being used to create them.
However, there are exceptions to this. In particular, an article which is still in its initial development or under dispute often will include tags such as {{stub}}, and {{npov}} to help editors further develop the article, and the text in these templates include self-references. Try, however, to limit such self-references, even in templates.
Neutral references
References which exist in a way which assumes the reader is using an encyclopedia without reference to the specific encyclopedia (Misplaced Pages), or the manner of access (online), are acceptable. For instance, the article on Kobe Bryant's accuser, before her identification, said that "Due to concerns over privacy the name of the alleged victim is not being included in this article or at this time." That is a reference which makes sense on a mirror or a fork, makes sense in print, and makes sense in a copy of Misplaced Pages which contains only the article space. A more common example is the disambiguation message This article is about X. For Y, see Z. and all of the "See also" links.
In the Template and Category namespaces
Limited use of self-references are sometimes found in the Template namespace and the Category namespace, such as with disambiguation and stub notices. Expanding this to other areas is not encouraged due to the need of third party users to either delete those templates or modify them to remove the Misplaced Pages references.
When forced to use templates like this, you should use them in a way such that the article still makes sense when the template is removed, in order to facilitate automated removal.
Misplaced Pages project coordination pages should be under Category:Misplaced Pages administration, not in categories which contain main-namespace articles by topic. (A small number of articles about Misplaced Pages are in the mainstream categories, and this is OK.) User pages may be categorized under Category:Wikipedians, but not under Category:People.
Examples of self-references
The following are some examples of self-references in Misplaced Pages's article namespace. They should at least be acknowledged or marked as self-references but not necessarily be deleted as they serve their purpose here on Misplaced Pages.
- Articles that self-reference
- Any article in the article namespace that links to one in the Misplaced Pages namespace
- Any article in the article namespace that redirects to one in the Misplaced Pages namespace (except the shortcuts in the "pseudo" WP: namespace)
- Articles that mention or are named "article" rather than "topic" and may also refer to Misplaced Pages itself. For example, "List of articles" rather than "List of topics".
- Categories that self-reference
- Category:Misplaced Pages and its subcategories in the article namespace
- User categories such as Category:User en and Category:Wikipedians
- Use of templates in the article namespace that self-reference because they link to articles in the user, talk, or Misplaced Pages namespace or that are special articles.
- Various stub messages
- Template:NPOV
- Template:Disputed, Template:TotallyDisputed
- Template:Afd, Template:Cfd, Template:Rfd
- Template:Merge, Template:Mergeto, Template:Mergefrom
- Template:Disambig (Also the text only makes sense online)
- Template:Wrongtitle
- Template:Fact
- Template:Uncategorized
- Template:Spoiler
- Template:Unreferenced
- Templates used to advertise sister projects and other versions of itself
Self-reference tools
The self-reference template Template:Selfref provide a way to contain all the self-references as tags. This gives the ability to programatically remove all such references or transform them into external links. Thus, the end product can have all of its self-references removed automatically for users such as forks and mirrors.
In cases where a Misplaced Pages page should be mentioned on Misplaced Pages itself (for instance, at Misplaced Pages), and this link should be kept on mirrors, the format {{srlink|link}} can be used to write the link as external rather than internal, to prevent it breaking in mirrors. For instance: Main Page as opposed to Main Page.
See also
- Click here
- User:Wmahan/Articles with self-references, fixes external links in articles that should be internal