User:Wcquidditch/My Daily Feature/Sunday

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Sunday StatChart edit | purge
NOTE: Information about wikis other than the English Wikipedia may be out of date; their display here is updated only every six hours. All other information given is current as of 14:13, 17 May 2024 (UTC) unless otherwise noted.
  • Article count: 6,824,592 (and growing! In all of the 342 Wikipedias that have ever existed, there have collectively been 62,993,235 articles, but the number of topics covered on all Wikipedias might be a bit smaller than that as articles may exist in multiple languages.)
  • Local file count: 917,221 (These are only the locally-uploaded files.)
  • Commons file count: 105,506,235, for a total of 106,423,456 available files (with so many files, it's inevitable that we still don't have enough articles for them all yet… Across all of Wikimedia there are 108,527,245 files, 2,812,925 of them on Wikipedias.)
  • Overall page count: 60,680,135 (There might not be many websites with that many pages. It's even harder to imagine someone having been to all of those pages, especially since this number, too, is ever-growing! But even that might be nothing compared to the estimated 622,576,828 pages that comprise all of Wikimedia…)
  • Registered user count: 47,413,050 (Wikipedia's popular, I can tell you that! In all of Wikimedia, there are about 210,352,516 accounts, though I can't confirm if unified logins inflate that count in any way.)
  • Active registered users: 121,919 (At this juncture this probably gives a better impression of the size of the Wikipedia community, though best I can tell this doesn't include unregistered users and does include some one-or-done users that happen to have actually edited something in the past month. The number jumps up to 369,955 users across all of Wikimedia, though again, I can't confirm whether unified logins are counted multiple times.)
  • My edit count (excluding deleted edits): 103,536 edits on 38,202 pages (From XTools edit counter; more info here. This info is as of 04:18, 5 May 2024 (UTC).)
  • Deleted edits: 6,991 edits, for a total of 110,527 edits (From XTools edit counter. This info is as of 04:18, 5 May 2024 (UTC).)
  • Global edit count (live edits only): 124,559 edits (From XTools edit counter; more info here. This info is as of 04:18, 5 May 2024 (UTC). Note that this section of the counter has an 2,870-edit discrepancy in my English Wikipedia editcount (they are included here, but excluded above); I cannot confirm which number is more accurate (note that it is the larger of the two that gets pushed to the list of Wikipedians by number of edits), but the gap keeps increasing every time I check…)
  • Overall edit count: 1,219,548,984 (Certainly makes my numbers look more quaint, doesn't it? How about the 7,029,880,907 or so edits to all Wikimedia projects?))
  • MediaWiki version number: 1.43.0-wmf.5 (58d6360)


The Red Cape
The Red Cape, also known as Madame Monet or The Red Kerchief, is an oil-on-canvas snowscape by the French Impressionist artist Claude Monet. Painted around 1868 to 1878, it depicts Monet's wife, Camille, passing outside a window dressed in a red cape as seen from inside a house. Monet created the painting while living in Argenteuil and the solitary setting at his home there allowed him to paint in relative peace, as well as spend time with his family. It is Monet's only known snowscape painting featuring Camille. The Red Cape is now in the collection of the Cleveland Museum of Art in Ohio, United States.Painting credit: Claude Monet

Tip of the day

Tip of the day...
How to add hidden editor notes in an article

Have you ever needed to post an important message to all editors about an article, on the article itself, but thought it would stick out like a sore thumb and ruin the article if you did? Are you reverting many edits on an article because editors just aren't seeing the important message or special instructions on the talk page?

The solution is that you can insert hidden text in the article! That way, only the people editing the page will see your message! Here is how to insert a hidden comment:

  1. First, begin the comment by typing <!--
  2. Once you have done that, type what you need the editors to read
  3. Then, end the comment by typing -->

Once you have completed those 3 easy steps, you won't be reverting as many mistakes!

For example, the following hidden comment has been used in the Meaning of life article, in the Popular views section:

<!--Please do not add 42 in this section. It is covered under the section titled "Popular culture treatments". Thank you.-->

Some more examples of pages that have hidden messages include:

Read more:
To add this auto-updating template to your user page, use
{{tip of the day}}