Help:Naming articles

From PoliceWiki
Revision as of 05:46, 2 February 2008 by Sockii (talk | contribs) (New page: The following article summarizes basic principles to follow when naming articles on PoliceWiki. Articles which are found not to follow proper naming guidelines will be moved and rename...)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

The following article summarizes basic principles to follow when naming articles on PoliceWiki. Articles which are found not to follow proper naming guidelines will be moved and renamed by the sysops.

Event/timeline articles

In order for articles related to specific events--such as live performances, public appearances, and personal milestones to be recorded in the calendar pages at Category:Timeline, all articles about events should be named using the following format:

  • YYYY-MM-DD

For example, and article about The Police performing on the Grammy Awards on February 11, 2007, would be titled

Date disambiguation

It is possible that multiple events may have taken place on the same date. For instance, Sting might have been having an album signing event the same date as Andy was having a book signing . If and when this is a case, the main article, YYYY-MM-DD, should be a disambiguation page and the individual performances given separate articles with related titles, such as:

Media articles

Articles about books, albums, songs, films and other media should share the name of that media and match the punctuation and capitalization format of the original item. For instance:

Media disambiguation

Many media titles, however, may represent multiple separate items: a song as well as an album title; a song as well as a music video; a film as well as a book; etc. When this is the case, the main article with that title should be a disambiguation page with the separate articles named for their media type. For example:


Person articles

Articles about individuals should be titled

  • Firstname Lastname

For example,

Be sure to include appropriate suffixes to avoid confusion between people as well, such as