On 06/11/06, charles.r.matthews@ntlworld.com charles.r.matthews@ntlworld.com wrote:
Maybe so, but not necessarily a tenable one. There are going to be articles on, say, string theory, where the content you need to approach the article at all will be behind some wikilinks. Same applied broadly across technical areas. Articles split out of general surveys, to cover something specialise in depth, should not be criticised for doing that and not something else. Not everyone likes the ten-second scroll to get to the meat.
Depends. This is an editorial style consideration. It should take about half a sentence on the front to give context. e.g. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EXA has a somewhat clumsy "In computing, in the X Window System, in the X.Org Server," on the front. Just a quick "you are here," with the subtext "and you probably don't want to be" for anyone who would find the article gibberish. The same should be easily possible for mathematics, science and so forth.
- d.