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User:Katherine/WP-links

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A directory of links to frequently-used Wikipedia project pages. I have created this directory to save me having to hunt through search pages and bookmarks.

Infoboxes

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Note: The Indian Jurisdiction infobox is up for deletion. Do not use.

Template guide

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Reference list of frequently-used templates, including a summary of their content.

Templates
Template name Usage Reason Message summary
Uw-badlistentry {{subst:uw-badlistentry|Article|Additional text}} ~~~~ User adds redlink to list Names & orgs added to lists should have an article. Only create one if notable.
Uw-articlesig {{subst:uw-articlesig|Article}} ~~~~ Adding name or sig to article Hello, thanks for contribs, please don't sign articles, edit history shows attribution
Uw-spam2 (Twinkle) 2nd warning, spam and other WP:ELNO Please don't add, see WP:EL and WP:SPAM
Uw-error1 (Twinkle) 1st warn, deliberate factual errors Your edit added incorrect info, must be WP:V and WP:RS, don't add without cite
Uw-talkinarticle (Twinkle) Single-issue notice, talk/commentary in article space Thanks for contribs, noticed commentary, please use talk page, quick summary of talk guidelines.
Gutenberg (external links) Template to link to books at Project Gutenberg Example: {{Gutenberg|no=2383|name=The Canterbury Tales and Other Poems}}
. . . .
. . . .

Reference guide

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Links to references which have proven useful in wikifying dead-end pages and other tidy-up tasks.

NSW state records

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  • Indexes Online - index of records (need to go to reading room at Kingswood for these)



Places

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  • US Geographic Names Information System - information about physical and cultural geographic features of all types in the United States, associated areas, and Antarctica, current and historical, but not including roads and highways.


  • US Hometown Locator - profiles, maps, data, and directions for US cities, towns, neighborhoods, subdivisions, physical, cultural and historical features.

Manual of style

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Sections of the Wikipedia Manual of Style to which I frequently refer. Includes a brief summary of the page or section content, where useful. Most of these summaries are my own interpretation of the MOS, and should not be taken as a Wikipedia guideline or policy.

Section headings

  • Headings should not normally contain links (do as I say, not as I do?)
  • Capitalise the first letter of the first word and any proper nouns in headings, but leave the rest in lower case
  • Style markup:
== Primary heading ==
=== Sub heading ===
==== Sub sub heading ====
  • A blank line below the heading is optional; but do include one blank line above the heading, for readability in the edit window.
  • If the topic of a section is also covered in a dedicated article, show this by inserting {{main|Article name}} directly under the section heading.

Offices, positions, and job titles

  • Positions and titles are common nouns, and should only be capitalised when they form part of a person's name.
Usage examples: Prime Minister Gillard - Louis XVI was King of France
La Gillardine is the prime minister of Australia - A monarchy has a king or queen as its head of state

Religions, deities, and philosophies

  • Names of organised religions take a capital letter, whether used as a noun or adjective. Islam, Catholicism, Pentecostal
  • Unofficial movements and ideologies within religions do not take a cap. evangelical, fundamentalist

Acronyms in article titles

  • Name the page for the acronym is that is the most usual and common name. NASA, radar
  • Use redirects and disambiguation pages where confusion exists.

Acronyms in article body

  • Do not apply initial caps to common nouns even when forming an acronym. AutoCad is a computer-aided design (CAD) tool...'
  • Use the full name as the first reference, and give the acronym as an alternative. Roads and Traffic Authority (RTA)
  • Generally avoid full stops in acronyms, but more importantly be consistent.

Special considerations

In normal text:

  • Texas, not TX. New South Wales, not NSW

Unless an official name or registered trademark:

  • Mount or Mountain, not Mt

Disambiguation pages

Top of the page

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  • Definitions - cross-link to Wiktionary. {{wiktionary pipe|WORD|optional display name}} – without parameters, defaults to using the current page's name. Check the links as Wiktionary titles are case-sensitive on the first letter, using proper caps for its entries.
  • When a page has "(disambiguation)" in its title – i.e., it is the disambiguation page for a term that has a WP:primary topic, link back to the primary topic:

A school is an institution for learning.

School may also refer to:

  • School (discipline) or school of thought, a number of individuals with shared styles, approaches or aims
  • School (fish), a group of fish swimming in the same direction in a coordinated manner
  • . . .
  • Intro line - The term being disambiguated should be in bold (not italics). It should begin a sentence fragment ending with a colon, introducing a bulleted list. Examples:
Interval may refer to:
John Smith is the name of:
ABC may stand for:
Arc or ARC may refer to:

Don't include minor variants. ( AU may refer to ) is better than ( AU or au or Au may refer to ).

Individual entries

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  • Preface each entry with a bullet (an asterisk in wiki markup)
  • Start each entry with a capital letter (unless it begins with a link to an article marked with {{lowercase}}, like eBay)
  • Entries should nearly always be sentence fragments, with no final punctuation (commas, full stops, semicolons, etc.)
  • Each entry should have exactly one navigable link to guide readers to the most relevant article for that use term - do not wikilink any other words in the line

Dark Star (song), by the Grateful Dead NOT Dark Star (song), by the Grateful Dead

  • Keep the description to a minimum, just enough to determine the subject
  • Usually the title is at the start of the line, and displayed in full (not piped unless formatting needed, such as for book and movie titles in italics)
  • Dab pages shouldn't have all red links, or only one blue link
  • Never include external links
  • No references - incorporate them into the article
People
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  • Include birth and death year if known, and just enough descriptor to distinguish between people:
Places
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(See also MOS:DABRL)

  • Only retain redlinks if they are linked to by an article (check What links here)
  • If the only pages that use the red link are disambiguation pages, do one of the following:
  • Unlink the entry word but still keep a blue link in the description. Red links should not be the only link in a given entry; link also to an existing article, so that a reader (as opposed to a contributing editor) will have somewhere to navigate to for additional information. The linked article should contain some meaningful information about the term.
  • Start a new article for the red link, using the description on the disambiguation page.
  • Make a redirect to a page where the item is described (see Piping and redirects above).

Organisation

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  • Primary subject at the top
  • Split long dab pages into sections
  • Use a See also section for likely misspellings, different forms, confused terms (Newtown, New Town)

End of the page

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The usual template to use is {{[/wiki/Template:Disambig disambig]}}, which produces a general disambiguation notice, and places the page in Category:Disambiguation pages. Parameters can be added to place the page additionally into other more specific disambiguation categories. For example, if a page includes multiple places and multiple people with the same surname (and possibly other items), use {{[/wiki/Template:Disambig disambig]|geo|surname}}. A full list of available parameters and their corresponding categories can be found in the {{[/wiki/Template:Disambig disambig]}} template documentation. See also: