Difference between revisions of "Naming conventions"

From Geohashing
imported>Relet
(New page: I would like to move a few pages around, to make them adhere to some simple to remember naming conventions. The following therefore is a suggestion, please feel free to discuss, add and co...)
 
imported>Robyn
(Yes to both.)
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== --->8 discuss new conventions below >8--- ==
 
== --->8 discuss new conventions below >8--- ==
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I support both. I would have argued for book title capitalization, but the Wikipedia standard is reluctantly acceptable to me.
  
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I also suggest avoiding words in page titles that have variant english spellings (e.g. ize/ise, our/or, and the doubled l in participles). So use "Travel" instead of "Travelling," for example. -[[User:Robyn|Robyn]] 17:05, 3 April 2009 (UTC)
  
 
[[Category:Standards]]
 
[[Category:Standards]]

Revision as of 17:05, 3 April 2009

I would like to move a few pages around, to make them adhere to some simple to remember naming conventions. The following therefore is a suggestion, please feel free to discuss, add and comment. When there is enough of a consensus, ReletBot could do the dirty work. -- relet 15:35, 3 April 2009 (UTC)

The one rule to remember

one rule to bind them all

Achievements and ribbons

ever managed to spell Category:Curse_of_Unawareness_consolation_prize correctly?

  • Achievement pages shall include the word "achievement". Consolation prize pages shall include the word "consolation prize".
  • The corresponding ribbon shall be named [[Template:X]] for the X achievement or consolation prize.
  • The corresponding category shall be named identical to the achievement.
    e.g.: Abduction achievement, Template:Abduction, Category:Abduction achievement (<-contains one misnomer, currently)

--->8 discuss new conventions below >8---

I support both. I would have argued for book title capitalization, but the Wikipedia standard is reluctantly acceptable to me.

I also suggest avoiding words in page titles that have variant english spellings (e.g. ize/ise, our/or, and the doubled l in participles). So use "Travel" instead of "Travelling," for example. -Robyn 17:05, 3 April 2009 (UTC)