Wikipedia:Policies and guidelines
Wikipedia is a collaborative project and its founders and contributors have a common goal:
- Our goal with Wikipedia is to create a free encyclopedia--indeed, the largest encyclopedia in history, in both breadth and depth. We also want Wikipedia to become a reliable resource.
The Wikipedia has some policies and guidelines that are generally accepted and considered important, or even essential, by the project's founders and participants. These help us to work toward our goal. It is important to note that at least some of these policies are still evolving as Wikipedia grows and develops. Some others, however, have now long been settled and are not regarded as controversial by the vast majority of Wikipedia's "old hands."
Generally accepted policies
- Avoid bias. Articles should be written from a neutral point of view, which means that articles should represent differing views on a subject fairly and sympathetically.
- Don't infringe copyrights. Wikipedia is a free encyclopedia licensed under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. Submitting work without the copyright holder's permission threatens our objective to build a truly free encyclopedia that anyone can redistribute, and could lead to legal liability for the project. See Wikipedia copyrights for more information.
- Wikipedia is an encyclopedia. The site should primarily be used for developing the encyclopedia. In particular, discussions on talk pages should be directed at improving articles. See Wikipedia:What Wikipedia is not.
- Respect other contributors. Wikipedia contributors come from many different countries and cultures, and have widely different views. By treating others with respect we are able to cooperate effectively in building an encyclopedia. For some guidelines, see Etiquette.
- Follow conventions. By following these conventions we are able to produce a more consistent and usable encyclopedia:
- Editing policy (How to edit articles)
- Naming conventions (How to title articles)
- Disambiguation (How to resolve title conflicts)
- Image use policy (Handling uploads)
- Deletion policy (When and how to delete)
- Protection policy (When and why to protect a page)
For policies on using some restricted features, see Administrators.
See also most common Wikipedia faux pas for some useful information for newcomers.
How are these policies enforced?
You are a Wikipedia editor. Wikipedia lacks an editor-in-chief or a central, top-down mechanism whereby the day-to-day progress on the encyclopedia is monitored and approved. Instead, active participants monitor recent changes and make copyedits and corrections to the content and format problems they see. So the participants are both writers and editors.
In extreme and unusual cases, Jimbo Wales has stepped in to ban a user who has proven to be unusually disruptive. Jimbo has also declared certain policies to be, essentially, official Wikipedia policies; see this Wikien-l post and User:Jimbo Wales/Statement of principles.
How policy has been formulated
Wikipedia policy is formulated for the most part by habit and consensus. Hence, the statements on this page and pages adjoining it are intended for the most part to be descriptive of existing community norms that have developed over time. Issues are still formulated and debated on talk pages, the Meta-Wikipedia, and the Wikipedia-L mailing list. Everyone who is interested in Wikipedia policy, news, and social life should be subscribed to that mailing list.
Some users are currently working on a Wikipedia:Decision Making Process, hoping that it will be used to agree on a set of consistently enforced policies for the project, as well as on the process used for their interpretation.
Specific guidelines to consider
In addition to the generally accepted policies listed above, the following guidelines have been suggested by various participants:
General guidelines
- Contribute what you know or are willing to learn about (and create stubs responsibly)
- Be bold in updating pages
- Make omissions explicit
- Build the web
- Ignore all rules
- Avoid using bots
Behavior guidelines
- Sign your posts on talk pages
- Avoid profanity
- No personal attacks (and move personal debates to email)
- Log in before making drastic changes to existing articles
- No offensive usernames
- Bans and blocks
- Please do not bite the newcomers
- Don't create articles about yourself
- Revert wars considered harmful
Content guidelines
- Explain jargon
- Integrate changes (instead of just appending your thoughts at the end of an article)
- Deal appropriately with patent nonsense
- Establish context (instead of presuming too much knowledge)
- Define and describe
- State the obvious
- Cite your sources (and use proper references)
- Avoid statements that will date quickly
- Warn readers about spoilers
- Make articles useful for readers (and consider the audience in writing)
- Check your facts
- Check your fiction
- Avoid blanket statements
- Summarize discussion (after a while)
- Make only links relevant to the context
- Describe external links
- Don't use external links where we'll want Wikipedia links
- Avoid peacock terms
- Avoid weasel terms
- Avoid self-references
Style guidelines
- Manual of style
- Pay attention to spelling
- Don't include copies of primary sources
- Avoid making your articles orphans
- Use other languages sparingly
- Always fill summary field
- Follow highlighting conventions
- Use color sparingly
- Use subheads sparingly
- Use short sentences and lists
- Balance parts of a page
- Don't use line breaks
- Avoid one-sentence paragraphs
- Do not use subpages
- Consider writing articles in news style
Other essays and discussions about Wikipedia
- The Meta-Wikipedia site contains many articles about Wikipedia and related topics in a more editorial style.
- Creating how-to articles in Wikipedia.
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