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    Wikipedia:Hatnote

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

      (Redirected from Wikipedia:HAT)
    Jump to: navigation, search

    Hatnotes are short notes placed at the top of an article, normally to provide links to other similarly named articles or disambiguation pages. For more information about methods of disambiguating articles, see Wikipedia:Disambiguation.

    Contents

    [edit] Format

    In most cases, hatnotes should be created using a standard disambiguation template (as illustrated below). This permits the form and structure to change uniformly over time. Currently, each note should be italicized and indented, without a bullet before the item. A horizontal dividing line should not be placed under a note, nor after the final item in a list.

    [edit] Summarize or not?

    Some hatnote disambiguation templates include a summary of the present article's topic; others do not. For instance, in the article Honey, one might use the template {{otheruses4}} to produce:

    This article is about the insect-produced fluid. For other uses of the term, see Honey (disambiguation).

    Alternatively, one might use {{otheruses3}} to produce:

    For other uses of the term, see Honey (disambiguation).

    Either of these two styles is acceptable; the choice of style in a given article is based on editors' preference and what is likely to be clearer and easier for the reader. Where an article already has a hatnote in one of these styles, editors should not change to the other style without good reason.

    [edit] Placement

    Shortcut:
    WP:HNP

    Hatnotes are placed at the very top of the article, before any other items such as images, navigational templates and maintenance templates (like the "cleanup", "unreferenced", and "POV" templates).

    [edit] Examples of proper use

    [edit] Two articles with similar titles

    This article is about the village in England. For H. P. Lovecraft's fictional town, see Dunwich (Lovecraft).
    Dunwich (pronounced Dun-Itch) is a town in the county of Suffolk in England, the remnant of what was once a prosperous seaport and centre of the wool trade during the early middle ages, with a natural harbour formed by the mouths of the River Blyth...

    When two articles share the same title, except that one is disambiguated and the other not, the undisambiguated article should include a hatnote with a link to the other article. It is not necessary to create a separate disambiguation page. {{otheruses4}} may be used for this.

    [edit] Linking to a disambiguation page

    For other uses, see Monolith (disambiguation).
    A monolith is a monument or natural feature such as a mountain, consisting of a single massive stone or rock. Erosion usually exposes these formations...

    When a term has a primary meaning and two or more additional meanings, the hatnote on the primary topic page should link to a disambiguation page. {{otheruses}} may be used for this.

    In many cases the hatnote also includes a brief description of the subject of the present article, for readers' convenience:

    This article is about the mazelike labyrinth from Greek mythology. For other uses, see Labyrinth (disambiguation).
    In Greek mythology, the Labyrinth was an elaborate maze-like structure constructed for King Minos of Crete and designed by the legendary artificer Daedalus to hold the Minotaur...

    The template {{otheruses1}} may be used for this.

    [edit] Ambiguous term that redirects to an unambiguously named article

    {{Redirect}} or a related template can be used when an unambiguous article name is redirected to from an ambiguous term:

    Johann Sebastian Bach


    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    (Redirected from Bach)

    "Bach" redirects here. For other uses, see Bach (disambiguation).

    Johann Sebastian Bach (pronounced [joˈhan/ˈjoːhan zeˈbastjan ˈbax]) (March 21, 1685 O.S.July 28, 1750 N.S.) was a prolific German composer...

    [edit] Examples of improper use

    [edit] Trivial information, dictionary definitions, and slang

    When notes feature a trivial detail or use of a term, or links to overly specific and tendentious material, they are unwarranted.

    During a siege, to invest a town or fortress means to surround it with a contravallation and a circumvallation.
    Investment is a term with several closely-related meanings in finance and economics. It refers to the accumulation of some kind of asset in hopes of getting a future return from it...

    In this case, there is no direct disambiguation, and the note listed is bound to be uninteresting to most readers. The proper disambiguation simply links to a separate Invest (disambiguation) page.

    [edit] Legitimate information about the topic

    A previous version of the Aisha article showed:

    Ayesha is sometimes used as a woman's name. Once popular only among Muslims, it was briefly popular among English-speakers after it appeared in the book She by Rider Haggard.
    Aisha or Ayesha (Arabic عائشه `ā'isha = "she who lives") was a wife of the Islamic prophet Muhammad...

    This is a typical and highly improper misuse of disambiguating hatnotes. Instead, the information belongs in the body of the article, or in the articles about the book, or in a separate article about names, or all three places. Hatnotes are meant to reduce confusion and direct readers to another article they might have been looking for, not for information about the subject of the article itself.

    Shortcut:
    WP:RELATED

    [edit] Linking to articles that are highly related to the topic

    This article is about the scientific study of extraterrestrial life; for treatment in popular culture, see Extraterrestrial life in popular culture.
    Extraterrestrial life is life that may exist and originate outside the planet Earth. Its existence is currently hypothetical: there is as yet no evidence of extraterrestrial life that has been widely accepted by scientists...

    Instead of using a hatnote, it is better to summarize Extraterrestrial life in popular culture under a subsection of Extraterrestrial life in conjunction with the {{main}} template. Alternatively, it could be linked to in the See also section.

    Shortcut:
    WP:NAMB

    [edit] Disambiguating article names that are not ambiguous

    Tree (set theory)


    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    For other uses, see Tree (disambiguation).

    In set theory, a tree is a partially ordered set (poset) in which there is a single unique minimal element (called the root) and in which the set of elements less than a given element is well ordered...

    Here, the problem is that the reader would not have ended up at tree (set theory) if they were interested in other types of trees, as tree does not redirect there.

    However, a hatnote may still be appropriate when even a more specific name is still ambiguous. For example, Matt Smith (comics) might still be confused for the comics illustrator Matt Smith (illustrator).

    A hatnote may also be appropriate in an unambiguously-named article when an ambiguous term redirects to it, as explained in the "Proper uses" section above.

    [edit] External links

    A previous version of the Hurricane Katrina article contained:

    If you are trying to locate someone missing in Hurricane Katrina, or register yourself as found, you can use the site www.disastersearch.org [1]
    Hurricane Katrina, which made landfall near New Orleans, Louisiana, on August 29, 2005, was one of the most destructive and expensive tropical cyclones to hit the United States...

    The use of external help links in Wikipedia, though noble, cannot reasonably be maintained. In special cases, a link to an "External links" section with several links may be appropriate, but POV favoritism can be obstructive. In this case, the hatnote was removed entirely.

    [edit] Non-existent articles

    Hatnotes should not be used for articles that do not exist since the notes are intended to point the user to another article they may have intended to find. The exception is if one intends to create the linked article immediately. In that case, consider creating the new article first, before saving the addition of the hatnote.

    [edit] Hatnote templates

    The following list of available hatnote templates is transcluded from {{Otheruses templates}}.

    This box: view  talk  edit

    [edit] Otheruses templates

    To discuss these templates as a whole, please see Wikipedia talk:Disambiguation If you wish to discuss general wordings, rather than the wording or formatting of this specific template, don't post here, or else what you say will probably go unnoticed.

    For a summary page on how to use these templates, see Wikipedia:Otheruses templates (example usage).

    [edit] Generic

    For example, {{dablink|For other senses of this term, see [[etc...]]}}. This template is adaptable, but fails to standardize hatnotes.
    (Similar to Dablink, but used for messages that wouldn't make sense on mirrors of Wikipedia, such as a link in the main article namespace that links to one in the Wikipedia namespace. See Wikipedia:Avoid self-references for more details.)

    [edit] Otheruses

    {{About}} is the main template for giving other uses; it redirects to {{otheruses4}}.

    • {{otheruses4|USE1|USE2|PAGE2|USE3|PAGE3|USE4|PAGE4|USE5|PAGE5}} (fully specified):

    [edit] Variations

    There are also variations of {{about}}. These serve the same purpose, and are marginally easier to use for each individual purpose, but overall, it is complicated to have so many different templates; it could be argued that the time saved using them is lost as other editors have to familiarise themselves with them.

    All of these templates are special cases of {{about}}.

    Note: {{about}} will produce the same result.

    Note: {{about|USE}} will produce the same result.

    Note: this simply adds "(disambiguation)" to what you input as PAGE.

    Note: {{about|||PAGE}} will produce the same result - note the two empty parameters.

    Note: this is for when there is both a singular and plural disambiguation page; it only works when the plural is formed simply by adding "s" at the end.

    Note: this is for when there are two disambiguation pages, such as noun and adjective, or singular and irregular plural. There are only two parameters and at least one is required.
    Note: this cannot be recreated with {{about}} - only with {{dablink}} or {{for}}.

    • {{This|USE|PAGE}}:

    Note: {{about|USE||PAGE}} will produce the same result - note the empty parameter.

    Note: This template is precisely the same as {{Otheruses4}}, except it says "section" instead of "article" or "page", and indents only as far as {{Main}} and other section quasi-hatnotes.

    [edit] For (other topic)

    {{for}} (and {{for2}}) can be used instead of {{about}} to not include the first part - "This article is about USE". However, this can also simply be achieved with an empty first parameter in {{about}}.
    For example, {{For|OTHER TOPIC|PAGE}} becomes {{About||OTHER TOPIC|PAGE}}.
    {{for3}} is somewhat different, appending the word the in its mention of the second parameter, then generates a link using either the second or (if present) the third parameter as a parenthetical. {{the}} is simply a rendering of {{for3}} without bothering with the optional first argument.

    [edit] See also
    See also: OTHER TOPIC

    This can be used when OTHER TOPIC is related to that of the current article, and already contains a self-explanatory parenthetical.

    [edit] Other people

    • {{otherpeople4|USE1|USE2|PAGE}}:

    [edit] Other places

    [edit] Otherhurricaneuses

    For articles on storms.

    [edit] Otherusesof (topic)

    [edit] Redirect

    [edit] "Not to be confused with"...

    [edit] Notes

    Do not use subst: with these templates, as that will prevent:

    1. propagating changes as the template is modified; and
    2. the What links here (WLH) listing.


    Please do not edit these templates unless you know what you are doing

    These templates may be used in thousands of articles, and changing the syntax could therefore break thousands of articles. If you wish to edit a disambiguation template first ask yourself:

    1. Is there already another template that will do this job? We have lots of disambiguation templates already, see Category:Disambiguation and redirection templates.
    2. Do I really need a template for this? Will it ever get used on any other articles, or should I just use {{dablink}} instead?
    3. Do I know what will happen if I change the parameters around? Will it break existing uses of the template, and if so, can I fix them all?

    [edit] See also

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