[Wikipedia-l] linking
Ray Saintonge
saintonge at telus.net
Mon Nov 25 22:01:23 UTC 2002
Tom Parmenter wrote:
>A start.
>
>Should be linked:
>
>-- birth and death dates
>-- major connections with the subject of the article, that is, if it's
> an article about, say, B. B. King, there should be links on
>-- [[blues]], [[guitar]], and [[singer]]
>-- significant names mentioned in the article, defining significant to
> mean people who deserve an article. Opening for the [[Rolling
> Stones]] had a big effect on B.B. King's career, but that doesn't
> mean B.B.'s bass player should get a link.
>-- Anything you think there *should* be an article about. Linking
> gets it on the Most Wanted list.
>
>Should not be linked:
>
>-- dates of marriage, book publication, and other dates between the
> big two unless they bear some kind of significant connection with
> the date. That Charles Reich's "Greening of America" was published
> in [[1970]] is significant because it was a zeitgeist book.
>-- Every song on a record album. "[[Helter Skelter]]" deserves an
> article, "Back in the U.S.S.R." doesn't.
>-- Likewise, every book and short story by an author, unless you're
> prepared to back it up by writing all the articles, as some Robert
> Heinlein enthusiast did. Otherwise, leave the various works
> unlinked until you get around to writing an article.
>
Although I would disagree in a few of the details, I think this list is
a good starting rule of thumb. I would add to the should not be linked
list:
-- up-links that are not germane to the article. Thus, a link in
saying that B. B. King was born in the [[United States]] is not helpful
because the reader is not likely to be interested at this time in a
general discussion about the United States. Another way of saying this
might be "Avoid uplinking to an article where you would not reasonably
expect a down link back.
Eclecticology
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