CZ:Subpages

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Revision as of 18:48, 8 July 2009 by imported>Peter Schmitt (→‎Complementary texts: adding missing subpages: Function, Recipes)
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A full Citizendium article includes a main article page and a group of standard and optional subpages; the technical name for the entire group is a cluster.

Some subpages contain additional content on the subject of the article, intended for use by Citizendium's readers. Other subpages are used internally to Citizendium, for a variety of management functions, such as discussing the article contents with others who are working on it, recording information about approved versions of articles (stable versions which have been checked and approved by an Editor), etc.

The purpose of the subpages with additional content is to provide supplementary and background information to allow people to find all different types of information about a topic. In a distinctive way, Citizendium subpage capabilities transcend the linearity of traditional printed encyclopedias and illustrate and operationalize hypertext capabilities.

The Citizendium subpage mechanism automatically provides a header on every page or subpage of a cluster which allows easy navigation among the pages of the cluster. In addition, the header on the Talk subpage (a page in a sister MediaWiki namespace, used to discuss article contents) provides access to additional subpage-related functions.

You might look at the Biology article and its subpages--our "biology cluster"--as an example. The Civil society article also includes many subpages, including Timelines in recently (2008) revised format.

Some of the standard subpages, such as the Talk page, and the Approval subpage, are attached to a main (encyclopedia) page semi-automatically when the main article page is set up to use the article checklist. Other standard and optional subpages can be added by authors or editors as appropriate.

Note: Subpages are currently a work in progress, so do report any problems to the Talk page here.

Basic guidelines

Setting up subpages

To enable the full Citizendium subpage functionality, simply:

  • Include the string {{subpages}} (which is a MediaWiki template which invokes the Citizendium subpage functions) at the top of the main article page - and later, all of its subpages, and:
  • Create a Metadata page for the cluster; the Citizendium subpage system will automatically prompt to do this after the first page or subpage with {{subpages}} on it has been saved. You will need to fill in some basic information in the Metadata, such as the article name. Note: the Citizendium subpage mechanisms will not work properly unless the article name is entered correctly.

This is enough to turn on the subpage functionality; the system will also prompt to create the Talk and Approval subpages, if they do not exist, and will provide default contents for them which only have to be saved (although they can be modified first, if desired).

Don't forget that it is desirable to install the {{subpages}} statement on all individual subpages. Basic information about subpages is now included in the text in the subpage header on the Talk subpage.

See the instructions for more details on how to set up an article page to use subpages.

Default content subpages

In addition to the Metadata, Talk, and Approval subpages, which are used internally to Citizendium for management, there are three subpage types which are the "default" user-visible content subpage types for every article. They are:

When articles are approved, another basic type is added, to allow Citizendium authors and editors to work on a future revision of the article, alongside the stable, approved, version:

  • Draft

A number of articles have yet to fully incorporate subpages into their articles, and bibliographic references and external links remain on a number of main article pages, but authors and editors are working on this.

Activation of individual article subpages must be done manually. It is done by clicking on the appropriate subpage tab either on the main page, or in the Unused subpages area of the header on the Talk subpage, and saving the subpage, with appropriate contents - not forgetting the {{subpages}} at the top of the new subpage. CZ will then display the standard Subpages menu on that subpage, and include it in the navigation tabs in the cluster navigation header.

For more technical pointers about how the subpage template works, see CZ:Using the Subpages template.

List of subpage types

For various reasons, we will want to keep a canonical list of subpage types, and ask people to create subpages only of the types listed.

We'll also distinguish between default (required) subpages and optional subpages. Links to the default subpages will appear even if they have not yet been created, while links to optional subpages will be created only if they exist.

Default subpages

  • Talk: The first tab to the right of Main Page on every subpages menu bar, Talk is a page for authors and editors to discuss the contents and composition of the main page and subpages.
  • Related Articles: a list of subtopics, parent topics, and other related topics, augmented by definitions
  • Bibliography: a substantial list of the most important published books and articles on the topic; with links to online sources for them, if available
  • External Links: a lengthy, categorized, annotated list of Web links about the topic

Optional subpages

You can see a complete list of the currently-supported subpages at Template:Subpage list. (To add a new one, see CZ:How to add a new subpage type.)

Further bibliographic material

  • Works: a list of books, articles, artworks, etc., authored by a person
  • Discography: a list of recorded works
  • Filmography: a list of films, television shows, etc., directed, performed in, etc.

Summary presentations of information

  • Catalogs: one or more pages containing almanac-type information about some aspect of the topic, in tabular form; see, e.g., catalog of religions)
  • Timelines: one or more pages giving a timeline about some aspect of the topic; main content may or may not exist on the "Tutorials" page itself

Non-text media

  • Gallery: an image gallery
  • Audio: a collection of Citizendium-hosted audio recordings related to the topic
  • Video: a collection of Citizendium-hosted videos related to the topic
  • Code: a collection of code samples related to the topic

Presentations of the topic at various levels

  • Tutorials: one or more pages that introduce a topic specifically for students; would be focused on more "practical" aspects of the topic, have more examples, and even perhaps some problems at the bottom of the page; some topics may lend themselves to more explicit "how to" type instructions (how to change your oil); main content may or may not exist on the "Tutorials" page itself
  • Student Level: a simplified and entertaining version of the encyclopedia article for younger students
  • Advanced: a subpage with content that will really only be useful for, or possibly even only intelligible to, specialists in the field

Complementary texts

  • Addendum: supplementary text, specifically serving as a continuation of the main encyclopedia article
  • Signed Articles: one or more possibly "biased" articles written exclusively by real experts, and signed; note that the "Signed" subpage is a list of articles, which are placed on sub-sub-pages
  • Function: Used to describes the known and postulated function of different proteins and genes. It will be used primarily by the Biology workgroup.
  • Recipes: Each Recipe subpage will have a basic, but comprehensive and representative recipe as a supplement to our culinary articles.

Planned subpage projects

The following projects will not be included in the initial subpage pilot:

  • Debate Guide: one or more pages giving a "map of the dialectical landscape," an account of the arguments on all sides of a controversial issue about the topic; if important to read "map", give dates arguments introduced, a timeline
  • News Guide: one or more pages summarizing of ongoing stories about the topic (such that a story itself will probably not become its own encyclopedia article!)

Approval of subpages

Provisionally, we will say that individual subpages cannot be approved. Instead, an entire cluster (or infoset) is approved at the same time.

Note that once an article is approved, all new edits to subpages will edit the approved version of the subpages. Such edits must be aimed, therefore, always at improving the article, and editors should pay special attention to such edits. We do not want to forbid or even discourage editing of subpages of approved articles, but we want to apply a higher standard in responding to such edits. In particular, "rough drafts" of new sections, paragraphs, columns, etc., or entire new subpages are discouraged; each saved draft should be presentable to the public.

A plan for The Big Subpagination

Note: This section has not been updated recently, and may contain outdate information.

Actually switching from the current system to a system with subpages is not a logistically trivial task. Here are the steps remaining for making the transition:

  1. Finish designing and testing the subpage template(s).
  2. Put it up to a community vote which template design we will use.
  3. Get approval from the Editorial Council. (continuing below if this proposal passes)
  4. Create process for the Big Subpagination. The basic task that the bot has to accomplish is to convert existing, unsubpaged articles to subpaged articles. This can be done without actually creating any subpages, per se, at all. All that's really required is:
    • Place {{subpages}} on the main article (only if the page really is an article and neither a disambiguation page nor a redirection page).
    • Place {{subpages}} on the talk page; if it exists, copy (and delete) the checklist.
    • Create Template:X/Metadata.
    • Paste X into the pagename field and abc field. Other fields can be left blank. Although if the article was checklisted, paste the data from the checklist in the proper place on that page.
    • Create X/Approval and X/Unused (each with just {{subpages}} on it).
    • However, to accomplish this cleanly, consider: once the subpage template is on the page, if the page is checklisted, then the categories on the article page (including "CZ Live") become redundant--and should be deleted. But since most articles should be checklisted by now, the script needn't attempt to construct metadata out of (very hit-and-miss) category information. Instead, it's like this: subpagify an article only if it is checklisted. If checklisted, then delete both all categories from the article page and the checklist from the talk page. Then Aleksander Stos' script can identify all the checklisted articles--actually, his script should then check for all unsubpaged articles, and might in fact double as a bot that creates the subpage apparatus.
    • The foregoing was started and is now on hiatus; we need to finish, first.
    • I'm inclined to do the above first, and then, if all goes well, we can create a subsection of a certain description (e.g., titled "See also"), auto-create the corresponding subpage and move contents to that subpage. Put {{subpages}} on the new subpage. Do not move if a subpage already exists. Autocompile a list of such pagename conflicts. For Related Articles pages, autocreate the canonical headings and move all links to "Other related topics".
    • Again, if all goes well, then we can expand the checklists (per [1]) using a different bot.
  5. The Big Subpagination Part II: revenge of the human beings:
    • Create homepage, process notes, and sign-up sheet for the human-run Big Subpagination.
    • Go through all pages in the namespace. Move (by hand) all pages that should be living on subpages, like the various catalogs, lists, galleries, etc. (Actually, do this before the bots run.)
    • Go through all subpages systematically. Divide work up by Workgroups, then alphabetically. Note that this plan requires that the subpage template makes categories out of all WORKGROUP + SUBPAGE TYPE combinations.
    • For Related Articles pages, move links to appropriate categories, and define words.
    • For Bibliographies, format entries properly and add categories if possible.
    • For External Links, format entries properly and add categories if possible.
  6. The Big Relate (trust me, this is cool). Again, divide work up by Workgroups, then alphabetically.
    • Create homepage, process notes, and sign-up sheet for the Big Relate.
    • Part I, create and define: systematically go through all clusters either with or without Related Articles (RA) pages, and create (or improve) all RA pages. A minimally acceptable RA page lists, say, ten topics, all defined, and at least one parent topic.
    • Part II, de-orphan: again systematically go through all RA pages. For each RA page, examine the parent topics. If a parent topic has no RA page (if the small [r] link next to it is still red), then create one (and make sure it is minimally acceptable according to the above definition). Then examine the parent topics of the new RA page; check that they have RA pages; and so forth, until one reaches RA pages that have no parents.
    • Part III, stubify: now, presumably, there is a path "downward" from the "topmost" topics to all CZ articles. The next task is to create stubs, at least, for all articles that have RA pages but no articles.
    • The result is a completely integrated outline of knowledge.
  7. Done?

See also


Citizendium Content Policy
Approval Standards | Article Mechanics | Subpages | Importing material from other sources | Citable articles

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