MarioWiki:Article size: Difference between revisions

From the Super Mario Wiki, the Mario encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
m (Text replacement - "(\[|\|)MW:" to "$1SMW:")
mNo edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
Articles which become too long should be split into multiple, smaller articles. The reasoning behind this is to increase the readability and reduce the load time for any given article.
Articles which become too long should either be trimmed or split into multiple, smaller articles. The reasoning behind this is to increase the readability and reduce the load time for any given article.


Splitting an article usually entails taking lengthy or overly-detailed sections of an article and creating a new article for that topic. The section then remains on the original article, the {{tem|main}} template is used to link to the new article, and a much more top-level summary is given in that section of the original article. For example, summarizing the "History" section of [[Mario]] to give a much more top-level overview and using {{tem|main}} to link to a new page entitled "History of Mario".
== When to split ==
The page size for our longest articles is given in [[Special:LongPages]]. Articles over 150,000 bytes should be considered for a split.


== Rule of thumb ==
Some splits are more straightforward than others. Factors such as the rationale for the split and the size of the resulting articles should be considered and discussed. In some cases, having a longer article may be preferred over the alternatives.
The page size for our longest articles is given in [[Special:LongPages]]. The table below summarizes when an article may need to be split based on page size.


{| cellspacing="0" cellpadding="4"
== How to split ==
| style="text-align:center" | '''Article size''' || '''What to do'''
Splitting an article usually entails taking lengthy or overly-detailed sections of an article and creating a new article for that topic. The section then remains on the original article, the {{tem|main}} template is used to link to the new article, and a much more top-level summary is given in that section of the original article. For example, summarizing the "History" section of [[Mario]] to give a much more top-level overview and using {{tem|main}} to link to a new page entitled [[History of Mario]].
|-
| style="text-align:center" | > 100 kB || Almost certainly should be divided
|-
| style="text-align:center" | > 60 kB || Probably should be divided
|-
| style="text-align:center" | > 50 kB || May need to be divided (likelihood goes up with size)
|-
| style="text-align:center" | < 40 kB || Length alone does not justify division
|}


{{MarioWiki}}
{{MarioWiki}}
{{Shortcut|SMW:AS}}
{{Shortcut|SMW:AS}}
[[Category:Policies]]
[[Category:Writing guidelines]]

Revision as of 16:50, December 2, 2023

Articles which become too long should either be trimmed or split into multiple, smaller articles. The reasoning behind this is to increase the readability and reduce the load time for any given article.

When to split

The page size for our longest articles is given in Special:LongPages. Articles over 150,000 bytes should be considered for a split.

Some splits are more straightforward than others. Factors such as the rationale for the split and the size of the resulting articles should be considered and discussed. In some cases, having a longer article may be preferred over the alternatives.

How to split

Splitting an article usually entails taking lengthy or overly-detailed sections of an article and creating a new article for that topic. The section then remains on the original article, the {{main}} template is used to link to the new article, and a much more top-level summary is given in that section of the original article. For example, summarizing the "History" section of Mario to give a much more top-level overview and using {{main}} to link to a new page entitled History of Mario.