Wikipedia talk:Do not use subpages: Difference between revisions

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h2>Pro subpages</h2>
<h2>Pro subpages</h2>




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<h3>Ease of linking related data together</h3>
<h3>Ease of linking related data together</h3>


* '''Helps link together related data:''' subpages can be used to divide an
* '''Helps link together related data:''' subpages can be used to divide an otherwise long article into sections; so can ordinary pages, but with subpages, the sections are connected automatically by being subpages. Britannica uses subpages for this purpose.


** True! The original version of this point did not acknowledge that ordinary pages could be used for the same purpose--that in itself does ''not'' constitute an advantage of subpages. Therefore, the ''only'' advantage subpages have over no-subpages is the fact that sections are "connected automatically." Now, is that actually an ''advantage''? Maybe
otherwise long article into sections; so can ordinary pages, but with


sometimes, yes, a weak advantage. Sometimes it ''isn't,'' and that's one of my points. In many cases, the subpage creator notwithstanding, we ''shouldn't'' have a "hard-wired" link from the subpage to the main page. This is inherently prejudicial, really, in that the subpage mechanism leads people to contextualize the subpage as part of, or somehow dependent upon, the main page. This is explained in "contra subpages." --[[LMS]]
subpages, the sections are connected automatically by being subpages.


**Moreover, it is highly misleading to say that Britannica uses subpages. Britannica has one large article and divides it conveniently into sections, instead of putting it on one page. That is ''not'' how subpages are (have been) used on Wikipedia. It's hardly as though anyone has written a twenty-page article and used subpages to break it into bite-sized chunks. In fact, mention of Britannica's use of subpages is more obviously a point ''against'' subpages: to find information about a specific topic, I've observed that often one has to search through a long article, with a lot of information not immediately relevant to the topic in question. Why should we want to emulate ''that''? Wikipedia is not paper, and Britannica obviously chose their article chunking feature in order to facilitate the inclusion of ''long paper articles'' in electronic form. --[[LMS]]
Britannica uses subpages for this purpose.


* Subpages can also be used to facilitate linking to individual sections and between sections.
** True! The original version of this point did not acknowledge that


** This, again, assumes that subpages are being used to create sections of one long article. If they were ''always'' used for that purpose, my objection to subpages wouldn't be quite as strong. But we can't dictate that people will use them only for that purpose. More importantly, Wikipedia isn't paper--it's [[hypertext]]. Why not let ''hypertext'' (i.e., internal, intelligent, human-created links) specify the relationships between chunks of information? There are very few information chunks that belong in an encyclopedia that are longer than our page length limit. Long articles ''should'' be broken into chunks. --[[LMS]]
ordinary pages could be used for the same purpose--that in itself does


* Subpages can also be used to create automatic links from the child to the parent and from a parent to the list of children; these links, appearing in a linkbar or other special place on a page, stand out and provide a useful, yet non-obtrusive, reminder to the reader of what "main" connections of the current page, in some useful sense of the word.
''not'' constitute an advantage of subpages. Therefore, the ''only''


** Again, I have serious doubts that this is always actually an advantage. Sometimes, it's precisely my point that we ''don't'' want such links, because they are positively ''disadvantageous'' (as explained in "contra subpages"). --[[LMS]]
advantage subpages have over no-subpages is the fact that sections are

"connected automatically." Now, is that actually an ''advantage''? Maybe

sometimes, yes, a weak advantage. Sometimes it ''isn't,'' and that's one of

my points. In many cases, the subpage creator notwithstanding, we

''shouldn't'' have a "hard-wired" link from the subpage to the main page.

This is inherently prejudicial, really, in that the subpage mechanism leads

people to contextualize the subpage as part of, or somehow dependent upon,

the main page. This is explained in "contra subpages." --[[LMS]]

**Moreover, it is highly misleading to say that Britannica uses subpages.

Britannica has one large article and divides it conveniently into sections,

instead of putting it on one page. That is ''not'' how subpages are (have

been) used on Wikipedia. It's hardly as though anyone has written a

twenty-page article and used subpages to break it into bite-sized chunks.

In fact, mention of Britannica's use of subpages is more obviously a point

''against'' subpages: to find information about a specific topic, I've

observed that often one has to search through a long article, with a lot of

information not immediately relevant to the topic in question. Why should

we want to emulate ''that''? Wikipedia is not paper, and Britannica

obviously chose their article chunking feature in order to facilitate the

inclusion of ''long paper articles'' in electronic form. --[[LMS]]

* Subpages can also be used to facilitate linking to individual sections and

between sections.

** This, again, assumes that subpages are being used to create sections of

one long article. If they were ''always'' used for that purpose, my

objection to subpages wouldn't be quite as strong. But we can't dictate

that people will use them only for that purpose. More importantly,

Wikipedia isn't paper--it's [[hypertext]]. Why not let ''hypertext'' (i.e.,

internal, intelligent, human-created links) specify the relationships

between chunks of information? There are very few information chunks that

belong in an encyclopedia that are longer than our page length limit. Long

articles ''should'' be broken into chunks. --[[LMS]]

* Subpages can also be used to create automatic links from the child to the

parent and from a parent to the list of children; these links, appearing in

a linkbar or other special place on a page, stand out and provide a useful,

yet non-obtrusive, reminder to the reader of what "main" connections of the

current page, in some useful sense of the word.

** Again, I have serious doubts that this is always actually an advantage.

Sometimes, it's precisely my point that we ''don't'' want such links,

because they are positively ''disadvantageous'' (as explained in "contra

subpages"). --[[LMS]]




Line 121: Line 43:
<h3>Other advantages</h3>
<h3>Other advantages</h3>


* '''Provides a useful home for data that wouldn't make sense on its own:'''
* '''Provides a useful home for data that wouldn't make sense on its own:''' subpages can be used to store small or large amounts of data about a subject that could be useful but would clutter the main page about that subject.

subpages can be used to store small or large amounts of data about a subject

that could be useful but would clutter the main page about that subject.

** I'm not sure how to evaluate this without further elaboration of what

"data" means here. But if "data" includes ordinary text of the sort one

finds in an encyclopedia, we must bear in mind that Wikipedia is going to be

''huge'' in the end. There are going to be articles on the most recherche

of academic topics, which necessarily cannot be understood without huge

amounts of other knowledge. Should we, on those grounds, make those

''many'' articles subpages of some slightly-less recherche academic topics?

No; the decision in many cases would be totally arbitrary what topic to

place them under. I can think of plenty of examples from philosophy where

this is true, but it is also evidently true in many other subjects, such as

history and physics. I think it is essential that each article begin with a

definition that explains what the article is about; in most cases, that

definition will, if correct, include something like a genus and differentia

(see [[genus-differentia definition]]) and therefore point the reader to

pages about more general and thus hopefully more accessible topics.

Similarly, when an article is about a person or a place or an event,

broader, more encompassing categories will be mentioned in the description

of the person, place, or event, therefore leading the reader back to more

accessible topics. --[[LMS]]

** Now, compare that system to a system that contains a lot of parent pages

and subpages. In that case, quite often, one must visit a parent page in

order to put a subpage into context (as I have had to do with Britannica

articles), when this contextualizing can and should be done in the article

about the topic I'm interested in. Since it's a subpage, the

contextualizing is left to the parent page. In hypertext, that's a bad

thing. Let people find the information they need ''efficiently.'' --[[LMS]]

* Similarly to the foregoing, subpages can be used to create small

sub-articles that are puzzling as stand-alone encyclopedia articles, but

which make sense ''qua'' encyclopedia articles as subpages of a main

article.

** Understood correctly, this is a point ''against'' subpages. It's ''bad''

that subpages have been written so that they can be understood only in the

context of a main article. What if someone could have written that same

article, now on a subpage, so that it was a nice stand-alone article, with

just a paragraph of stage-setting? Our readers would thank us for that, I

think. This gives the reader freedom: the reader can, if ''desired,'' get

more background information from articles on more general topics. Look,

there's background to be given about ''everything.'' That's what an

education is all about, giving people background about everything. It's

arbitrary to arrange articles so that ''some'' of them (the subpages)

require that one get background from some ''specific'' article (the main

page), while others, which could just as easily be made subpages of ''some''

other article, are not so arranged.

* '''Established habit:''' they're known and used in the wikipedia

community, removing subpages might cause confusion among those who have used


** I'm not sure how to evaluate this without further elaboration of what "data" means here. But if "data" includes ordinary text of the sort one finds in an encyclopedia, we must bear in mind that Wikipedia is going to be ''huge'' in the end. There are going to be articles on the most recherche of academic topics, which necessarily cannot be understood without huge amounts of other knowledge. Should we, on those grounds, make those ''many'' articles subpages of some slightly-less recherche academic topics? No; the decision in many cases would be totally arbitrary what topic to place them under. I can think of plenty of examples from philosophy where this is true, but it is also evidently true in many other subjects, such as history and physics. I think it is essential that each article begin with a definition that explains what the article is about; in most cases, that definition will, if correct, include something like a genus and differentia (see [[genus-differentia definition]]) and therefore point the reader to pages about more general and thus hopefully more accessible topics. Similarly, when an article is about a person or a place or an event, broader, more encompassing categories will be mentioned in the description of the person, place, or event, therefore leading the reader back to more accessible topics. --[[LMS]]
them and who have not practiced writing pages without them


** Now, compare that system to a system that contains a lot of parent pages and subpages. In that case, quite often, one must visit a parent page in order to put a subpage into context (as I have had to do with Britannica articles), when this contextualizing can and should be done in the article about the topic I'm interested in. Since it's a subpage, the contextualizing is left to the parent page. In hypertext, that's a bad thing. Let people find the information they need ''efficiently.'' --[[LMS]]
** This is a very weak advantage. I'd say there are rather few people who


* Similarly to the foregoing, subpages can be used to create small sub-articles that are puzzling as stand-alone encyclopedia articles, but which make sense ''qua'' encyclopedia articles as subpages of a main article.
have been writing on Wikipedia who can't think up all sorts of ways to avoid


** Understood correctly, this is a point ''against'' subpages. It's ''bad'' that subpages have been written so that they can be understood only in the context of a main article. What if someone could have written that same article, now on a subpage, so that it was a nice stand-alone article, with just a paragraph of stage-setting? Our readers would thank us for that, I think. This gives the reader freedom: the reader can, if ''desired,'' get more background information from articles on more general topics. Look, there's background to be given about ''everything.'' That's what an education is all about, giving people background about everything. It's arbitrary to arrange articles so that ''some'' of them (the subpages) require that one get background from some ''specific'' article (the main page), while others, which could just as easily be made subpages of ''some'' other article, are not so arranged.
using subpages. --[[LMS]]


* '''Established habit:''' they're known and used in the wikipedia community, removing subpages might cause confusion among those who have used them and who have not practiced writing pages without them
* '''Makes for concise titles:''' subpages convey the most information most


** This is a very weak advantage. I'd say there are rather few people who have been writing on Wikipedia who can't think up all sorts of ways to avoid using subpages. --[[LMS]]
concisely: for instance <nowiki>[[Algeria/Government]] vs. [[Government of


Algeria]] or [[Algerian government]]</nowiki>
* '''Makes for concise titles:''' subpages convey the most information most concisely: for instance <nowiki>[[Algeria/Government]] vs. [[Government of Algeria]] or [[Algerian government]]</nowiki>


** This is no advantage at all. We get conciseness at the expense of clarity, as argued in the "contra subpages" section.
** This is no advantage at all. We get conciseness at the expense of clarity, as argued in the "contra subpages" section.

Revision as of 20:21, 18 October 2001

I didn't want to add my evaluations of some of the alleged advantages and

disadvantages of subpages to the main page, so I made a subpage.  ;-)

Frankly, I wouldn't mind seeing subpages for non-article pages, such as

the "Wikipedia:" namespace. But we could easily do without them there, too.

I deny that their convenience for purposes such as this discussion

constitutes a very good argument for thinking they're a good idea for

encyclopedia articles. (Why would it?) Below are my evaluations of the

"pro subpages" arguments. --Larry Sanger


Pro subpages


Ease of linking related data together

  • Helps link together related data: subpages can be used to divide an otherwise long article into sections; so can ordinary pages, but with subpages, the sections are connected automatically by being subpages. Britannica uses subpages for this purpose.
    • True! The original version of this point did not acknowledge that ordinary pages could be used for the same purpose--that in itself does not constitute an advantage of subpages. Therefore, the only advantage subpages have over no-subpages is the fact that sections are "connected automatically." Now, is that actually an advantage? Maybe

sometimes, yes, a weak advantage. Sometimes it isn't, and that's one of my points. In many cases, the subpage creator notwithstanding, we shouldn't have a "hard-wired" link from the subpage to the main page. This is inherently prejudicial, really, in that the subpage mechanism leads people to contextualize the subpage as part of, or somehow dependent upon, the main page. This is explained in "contra subpages." --LMS

    • Moreover, it is highly misleading to say that Britannica uses subpages. Britannica has one large article and divides it conveniently into sections, instead of putting it on one page. That is not how subpages are (have been) used on Wikipedia. It's hardly as though anyone has written a twenty-page article and used subpages to break it into bite-sized chunks. In fact, mention of Britannica's use of subpages is more obviously a point against subpages: to find information about a specific topic, I've observed that often one has to search through a long article, with a lot of information not immediately relevant to the topic in question. Why should we want to emulate that? Wikipedia is not paper, and Britannica obviously chose their article chunking feature in order to facilitate the inclusion of long paper articles in electronic form. --LMS
  • Subpages can also be used to facilitate linking to individual sections and between sections.
    • This, again, assumes that subpages are being used to create sections of one long article. If they were always used for that purpose, my objection to subpages wouldn't be quite as strong. But we can't dictate that people will use them only for that purpose. More importantly, Wikipedia isn't paper--it's hypertext. Why not let hypertext (i.e., internal, intelligent, human-created links) specify the relationships between chunks of information? There are very few information chunks that belong in an encyclopedia that are longer than our page length limit. Long articles should be broken into chunks. --LMS
  • Subpages can also be used to create automatic links from the child to the parent and from a parent to the list of children; these links, appearing in a linkbar or other special place on a page, stand out and provide a useful, yet non-obtrusive, reminder to the reader of what "main" connections of the current page, in some useful sense of the word.
    • Again, I have serious doubts that this is always actually an advantage. Sometimes, it's precisely my point that we don't want such links, because they are positively disadvantageous (as explained in "contra subpages"). --LMS


Other advantages

  • Provides a useful home for data that wouldn't make sense on its own: subpages can be used to store small or large amounts of data about a subject that could be useful but would clutter the main page about that subject.
    • I'm not sure how to evaluate this without further elaboration of what "data" means here. But if "data" includes ordinary text of the sort one finds in an encyclopedia, we must bear in mind that Wikipedia is going to be huge in the end. There are going to be articles on the most recherche of academic topics, which necessarily cannot be understood without huge amounts of other knowledge. Should we, on those grounds, make those many articles subpages of some slightly-less recherche academic topics? No; the decision in many cases would be totally arbitrary what topic to place them under. I can think of plenty of examples from philosophy where this is true, but it is also evidently true in many other subjects, such as history and physics. I think it is essential that each article begin with a definition that explains what the article is about; in most cases, that definition will, if correct, include something like a genus and differentia (see genus-differentia definition) and therefore point the reader to pages about more general and thus hopefully more accessible topics. Similarly, when an article is about a person or a place or an event, broader, more encompassing categories will be mentioned in the description of the person, place, or event, therefore leading the reader back to more accessible topics. --LMS
    • Now, compare that system to a system that contains a lot of parent pages and subpages. In that case, quite often, one must visit a parent page in order to put a subpage into context (as I have had to do with Britannica articles), when this contextualizing can and should be done in the article about the topic I'm interested in. Since it's a subpage, the contextualizing is left to the parent page. In hypertext, that's a bad thing. Let people find the information they need efficiently. --LMS
  • Similarly to the foregoing, subpages can be used to create small sub-articles that are puzzling as stand-alone encyclopedia articles, but which make sense qua encyclopedia articles as subpages of a main article.
    • Understood correctly, this is a point against subpages. It's bad that subpages have been written so that they can be understood only in the context of a main article. What if someone could have written that same article, now on a subpage, so that it was a nice stand-alone article, with just a paragraph of stage-setting? Our readers would thank us for that, I think. This gives the reader freedom: the reader can, if desired, get more background information from articles on more general topics. Look, there's background to be given about everything. That's what an education is all about, giving people background about everything. It's arbitrary to arrange articles so that some of them (the subpages) require that one get background from some specific article (the main page), while others, which could just as easily be made subpages of some other article, are not so arranged.
  • Established habit: they're known and used in the wikipedia community, removing subpages might cause confusion among those who have used them and who have not practiced writing pages without them
    • This is a very weak advantage. I'd say there are rather few people who have been writing on Wikipedia who can't think up all sorts of ways to avoid using subpages. --LMS
  • Makes for concise titles: subpages convey the most information most concisely: for instance [[Algeria/Government]] vs. [[Government of Algeria]] or [[Algerian government]]
    • This is no advantage at all. We get conciseness at the expense of clarity, as argued in the "contra subpages" section.
  • Useful for fictional universes and some other topics: subpages are particularly useful for collections of articles that have complex interrelations but very few if any relationships to topics outside the collection. For example Dungeons and Dragons and Lord of the Rings; perhaps poker.
    • This is true, but everything is related--even nonexistent things! (In ontology, I'm of the view that there are things that do not exist. :-) ) Hence, we could relate Gandalf to other fictional wizards in an article about fictional magic, and wouldn't that be a great article indeed. But to make that article, we would be ripping each individual wizard out of his own main page-subpage universe to compare them. Many other such cross-universe discussions are possible. Anyway, for me, this is the least controversially positive advantage of subpages, because usually, when we speak of Gandalf, it's in relation to Frodo and Sauron, rather than in relation to a Wizard of Earthsea. As such, it's not a very strong advantage. Moreover, if we allow people to use subpages for this purpose, they'll use them, as they have used them, for a lot of bogus purposes as well. --LMS
  • Can be used to create standardised organisation of the same kind of relationship; for a trivial but by no means exhaustive example, consider "X/Childhood" in a biographical article versus competing schemes "Childhood of X" and "X's Childhood" creating confusion and unnecessary complication. (It seems however that all three schemes are equally arbitrary and one could standardize on either one.)
    • This just doesn't make any clear sense. Put differently, I could just as easily have made it a "contra subpages" point. There are going to be competing schemes with or without subpages. E.g., we can just as easily imagine "X/Childhood" as "X/Upbringing" and "X/Childhood and Youth," etc. Besides, we shouldn't make this decision based on what can be easily standardized: we aren't standardizing yet and nothing about the software or our habits militates against some future standardization. --LMS
      • I disagree and believe it does make clear sense. Put simply, pick any 100 personalities on whom we'll have large biographical articles. In absence of any standartization (and I'm not saying these things can't be standartised, see below) and in absence of subpages, perhaps half of them will have "Childhood of X" articles and the other half "X's Childhood", or some other proportion perhaps. I think we can agree that that would be undesirable? With subpages, this particular confusion does not arise: "X/Childhood" it will be, "Childhood/X" is clearly absurd and will not be used. Now it's true that someone may use "X/Childhood and Youth" or whatever, but that's not an argument against subpages: the very same confusion may arise without subpages, with "Childhood and Youth of X", "Upbringing of X", etc. etc.
      • To sum up: whenever a page's title needs to transmit the idea of "the aspect B of A", where A is clearly the primary object and B is clearly its aspect, as in X and their Childhood, subpage-based naming allows us to unambiguously present the relationship without leading to likely confusion between different schemes in the English language, such as "B of A", "A's B", etc.
      • Now, in absence of subpages these things may of course be standartised. I'm not saying they can't be, but it's additional work for something we already have for free with subpages (which of course has other advantages in my opinion). And this standartization may prove difficult because of the multitude of different kinds of relationships we'll have to standartize on. Suppose we agree that "X's Childhood" is better than "Childhood of X"; but what about when X is country -- "Geography of X" does seem to be slightly better than "X's Geography". We'll have to consciously decide on any such issue and wade through existing pages, fixing their titles - one-choice-for-all is unlikely to work. Retaining subpages, on the other hand, eliminates this particular problem completely. --AV
      • Re "perhaps half of them will have "Childhood of X" articles and the other half "X's Childhood", or some other proportion perhaps. I think we can agree that that would be undesirable?" First, a strictly speaking irrelevant point: it's slightly undesirable, but not nearly as undesirable as an attempt right now to impose a standardization. Now more to the point, this is clearly not going to be an advantage of subpages or of not having subpages. Subpages do not require any particular standardization scheme, nor do they make any particular standardization scheme any easier. The fact that, in your example, there are more viable options (X's childhood" and "childhood of X") than the same variables "X" and "childhood" in combined to make a viable main page-subpage combination ("X/Childhood"), is not very convincing. In the long run, subpages make standardization harder because one must come up with standards for making subpages, and as I've argued, subpages are inherently arbitrary, since everything in an encyclopedia can be made a subtopic of something else. --LMS
      • Re "whenever a page's title needs to transmit the idea of "the aspect B of A", where A is clearly the primary object and B is clearly its aspect, as in X and their Childhood, subpage-based naming allows us to unambiguously present the relationship without leading to likely confusion between different schemes in the English language, such as "B of A", "A's B", etc." The problems are precisely that "A/B" does not always convey "the aspect B of A" in the context of Wikipedia--contrary to what you said, and your specific example not withstanding, the slash does not unambiguously present the relationship. I propose to use English, for clarity. "X/Childhood" is understandable because of the meanings of the words involved (people have childhoods). In the titles of other possible subpages, such as Electromagnetism/Charge, the slash has no such clear meaning, and is unacceptable precisely because it is ambiguous. --LMS
  • Can be used to separate out meta-pages from the contents of the encyclopedia proper.
    • This is not an advantage specific to subpages. In Magnus's PHP wiki software, theoretically, we could get rid of subpages entirely while still, as we are planning to, using a "Wikipedia:" namespace for Wikipedia-related articles. --LMS
  • Autogenerating subpage lists: a nice feature would be to autogenerate a list of links to subpages on each page that has them. We haven't done this yet, but it would be nice. (It's in the PHP script; try [1])
    • This is an advantage only if subpages per se advantageous to have; since they're not, it's not. --LMS