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This page describes how to create a wikilink , interwiki link , or an external web link link (as hyperlink) on Wikipedia, which gives readers one-click access to other Wikipedia pages, other Wikimedia projects, and external websites.

Links have various (editable) views on the "anchor" page, and the "target" page, which has "backlinks", and who can count links to it with WP: What's the link here tool.

For a short list of some basic shortcuts, see Wikipedia: Cheatsheet.

For guidance on how links should be used on Wikipedia, see Wikipedia: Manual Style/Linking.


Video Help:Link



Wikilinks (tautan internal)

wikilink (or internal links ) links pages to other pages in the English Wikipedia. In wikitext, the link is enclosed in square double brackets like this:

  • [[abc]] is seen as "abc" in the text and a link to the "abc" page.

Use the vertical bar "|" ("pipe" symbol - see Wikipedia: Paired links for how to type it) to create links when labeling them with different names on the original page. The first term in parentheses is the link (the page you're about to take), while anything you type after the vertical bar is what the link looks like on the original page. Here are some examples:

  • [[a | b]] is labeled "b" on this page but a link to the "a" page. Example: b.
  • [[a]] b gives ab. So is [[a | ab]] : ab. Code [[a | b]] c gives bc, as did [[a | bc]] . However, these four examples will link to the "a" page.
  • a [[b]] ​​â € <â € < gives ab.
  • [[a]]: b gives: b because the colon is outside the final bracket. The same goes for [[Washington]] or e - [[mail]] .
  • [[a]] '' b '' flags b . (Double apostrophes enables and turns italics.)
  • '' [[a]] '' b gives a b.
  • [[a | b]] cd generate bcd, and show sample trailing link.
  • [[a]] & lt; nowiki/& gt; b gives ab. (Tag nowiki is required to turn off the so-called "linktrail rules".)
  • [[a | b]] & lt; nowiki/& gt; c gives bc.

Links with specific labels are said to be "funneled" because pipe symbols are used ("|"). For certain types of links, labels will be created automatically if pipes are typed, even without labels after it (meaning you do not have to type them). See Help: Pipe Trick.

The link target is case-sensitive except for the first character (so [[atom]] links to "Atom" but [[ATom]] is not ). Another way in which link targets are reinterpreted is further explained: Convert to canonical form.

If the wikilink target does not exist, it is shown in red and is called "red link". Here's an example of a red link. If the red link is clicked, the user is directed to a blank page where it is possible to create a page using the red link title. While in the blank page, another red link to this title (none) can be detected using the "What links here" feature.

If the link target is the same as the page on which the link appears (the link itself), the link is shown in bold, such as with: Help: Link.

Trying to link normally to an image page, category page or interlinked link will have a different effect: it will place an image on the page, add a page to a category, or create an interlacing link on the edge of the page. To override this behavior, enter the initial colon ":", as in [[: File: Mediawiki.png]] , [[: Category: Help]] , [[: fr: Help: Link]] .

Maps Help:Link



Interwiki links

Interwiki links connect to pages on other Wikimedia project websites, such as Meta or other Wikipedia languages. The target site must be on the interwiki map specified for the wiki source. This link has the same [[...]] syntax as wikilinks (see previous), but take the ": x:" prefix that specifies the target site.

For example, the [[m: Help: Links]] link to the "Help: Links" page in Meta, while the [[: commons: Athens]] link to the "Athens" page "on Wikimedia Commons as: commons: Athens.

Interwiki links can be channeled, as is the case with wikilinks. Remember that interlanguage links must be preceded by a colon if they want to be displayed, where they are inserted in text, as interlaced inline links; if not, it will be displayed in a list of interlaced links on the side of the page (which is only appropriate if it is the most similar page in other Wikipedia languages). Thus (combining pipe tricks), [[: ja: Wikilink |]] will be used to link to Wikilink on the Japanese Wikipedia. Example: ( [[: ja: URL |]] link to URL in Japanese Wikipedia).

Interwiki links (such as external links) are shown in a slightly paler blue color than regular wikilinks. MediaWiki page formatting does not detect whether this target page exists, so it is never displayed in red.

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External links

External links use absolute URLs to link directly to any web page. External links are enclosed by single parentheses (not double brackets as in internal links), with optional text links separated from URLs by spaces (not "|" as with internal links). When rendered, external links are followed by external link icons. For example, [http://www.example.org/Ã,linkÃ, text] will appear as link text.

When no link text is specified, external links appear numbered: [http://www.example.org/some-page] [http://www.example.org/some-other-page] becomes [1] [2]. Uneven bracketed links are displayed as a whole: http://www.example.org/ is displayed as http://www.example.org/.

For more details on external connecting practices, see Help: URL Ã,§ Connecting to URL. Also note that Special: LinkSearch can be used to find all pages linked to a particular site.

The external link syntax can also be used to link to certain pages within Wikipedia that wikilinks can not access, such as page history, edit view, old version of page, differences between two versions etc. Can also be used to create a navigation image.

The external link has an "external" related CSS class. To display external links without the arrow icon, place the syntax of external links between & lt; span class = "plainlinks" & gt;... & lt;/span & gt; tags. For example, & lt; span class = "plainlinks" & gt; [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Help:Link&action=history history of this page] & lt;/span & gt; will be displayed as: history of this page . If you use this often, the CharInsert gadget (which can be enabled under PreferencesÃ, -> GadgetsÃ,> Editing -> CharInsert ), has the option to include this text in "Wiki markup" mode.

http: and https:

In mid 2015, Wikipedia and all other Wikimedia sites were changed to use HTTPS to encrypt all traffic. Accessing URLs like http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Link will generate a webserver that points you to http s ://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help: Link . Therefore, when creating an external style link to an internal page (i.e., using single parentheses, or empty URLs), https must be specified to avoid unnecessary redirects, as in https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Help:Link&action=history .

In the past, when Wikipedia was accessible either via HTTP or HTTPS, protocol-relative URLs could be used to create external links (or external style links to internal pages) that would use http: or http: depending on how the link page appears in accessed, as in [//www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Links] . However, since all Wikimedia sites now require HTTPS, this linking style is outdated and should no longer be used. http: or https: must be explicitly specified for the target site (prefer https: , if available). What is an anchor?

The word "anchor" has two opposite sides:

  • In the context of links from anchor to target , this is the starting place.
  • In the context of the {{anchor}} template, "anchor" is the landing site for skipped links.

The anchor template results to automatically create some invisible code from a particular text in the "landing place", taking into account certain parameters in the reference template in general. So for developers the word "anchor" can refer

  • to the landing site in general,
  • to the least visible code, or
  • to the text and parameters from which the code was created.

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The connecting part (anchor)

To link to sections or sub-sections on other pages, add # and part names to the page name:

[[Page name # Section name | text shown]]

If linking on the same page, you can omit the page name and use:

[[Part Name | text shown]]

Note that Part name is case-sensitive, in contrast to article links, where the first letter is not case-sensitive.

Template

To link to sections so that they are formatted with section symbols instead (page name § Part names rather than as page names # section names), use the {{Link part}} (or {{slink}} template:

{{Link section | Page Name | The section name}}

When using a template, certain characters [] {| } requires encoding when linking to a section:

For example, the "[Closed] Complaints" section can be linked with [[#. 5BClosed.5D Complaint]] . The link in the table of contents will automatically make this encoding so that the url can be copied from there. However, the url will also encode other characters that do not interfere with the template or wikicode, so the results may look ugly.

For more information, see Help: Sections. See also Wikipedia: Redirect Ã, § Targetted and untargeted redirects.

Specific

The section title actually points to an anchor on the target page. According to the Style Manual, it's probably better to define anchors in addition to explicit section titles, using {{Anchor | anchor name}} or alternatively HTML code & lt; span id = "anchor_name" & gt;... & lt;/span & gt; (see {{Anchor}} syntax). Links to the anchor can also be added to external URLs and to interwiki links, again using # syntax.

The section link still works via the redirected pagenames. For example, if Danzig diverts to Gda? Sk, then Danzig # History will link to the "History" section of Gda's article? Sk. Instead it is also possible to place section links as redirection targets (this only works if JavaScript is enabled). For example, Wikipedia: Part link redirects specifically for the Help section: Link # The connecting (anchor) section on this page. However, when adding a section to a redirect link, the named section will replace the original portion of the redirect. So Wikipedia: Links section # Interwiki links will go to the "Interwiki links" section of this page.

Duplicate the section name

If more than one section on the destination page has the same title, the link to the title is to the first part with that title. If the link should be to another section with titles or titles that differ only in capitalization (Example vs. EXAMPLE), add to the linked title _2, _3, and so on, without spaces (or 2, 3, and so on) on with space), counting from the top of the destination page and regardless of whether a part is part or a subset. For example, some sections titled "History" can be linked as "History", "History_2" (or "History 2"), and so on.

Connect to a section of

Anchors can also be used to link to any part of a section. For example, if you want to link to the fifth sentence of a part, you just put the anchor at the beginning of the sentence, and you can then connect to the anchor in the same way you would connect to the other anchor.

However, you must choose a unique anchor name on the page (the article or the Talk Page) and it will likely remain unique, because when multiple anchors on the same page have the same name, that link will only lead to the first anchor. Using the date and time as part of the anchor name is a simple way to help keep it unique (for example, by naming "ThisSection2014-09-22-18-05a1" as in {{Anchor | ThisSection2014-09-22- 18-05a1} }).

Anchors can also be placed anywhere in a sentence (eg at the beginning of a clause), and in notes and quotes, although it is advisable to first test in your sandbox before attempting some kind of exotic new location for the first time.

There are a small number of special anchor names. See Ã, § The linking row table.

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Table table linking

To create an anchor for a row of tables, see Help: Table § Section Link or map link to the row anchor. However, [[# top]] and [[# toc]] is a backed up name that links to the top of the page and the table of contents, respectively.

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Piped link

The piped link is an internal link or interwiki link where both target links and link labels are specified. This is necessary in that they are not the same, while the link label is not the same as the link target with the last extended word:

  • cheese (label = target, no pipes needed)
    produces cheese, related to the Cheese article.
  • cheese s (label = target extension ["s"], no need for pipes)
    produces cheese, related to the Cheese article.
  • [[Swiss cheese | cheese]] (label = part of target, pipeline required)
    produces cheese, related to Swiss boti article.
  • [[cheese | Swiss cheese]] (label = additional text targets ["Switzerland"], required pipes)
    produces Swiss cheese, related to the Cheese article.
  • [[cheese | that stuff]] (labels are completely different from target, pipes are required)
    produces those items, related to the Cheese article.

It allows connecting a word or phrase in the text of a page rather than using "see also", even if the words do not exactly match the name of the target page. With the appropriate browser and depending on the preference set, one can still see the link target: when you point to a link, the name appears in the description of the floating tool and is also displayed in the status bar.

Example:

[[Train station | station]]
will show: station

This is useful when the word "station" is used in an article on the train; from the context, it is clear that the railway station is intended. The pipeline link is more convenient for users than links to stations that may be disambiguation pages.

The word piped refers to the use of the "|" used to separate the good description of the actual link. This character is named after using it again; see Pipe (computing).

There are various tricks to get the same result with less typing:

  • Leave the right-hand section blank - "pipe trick"
  • Leave the left blank - "reverse pipe trick"
  • Just attach the text to the link, as in "[[train]] s", see MOS: PIPE.

Using redirects as alternate

Alternatives to the pipeline only use redirecting pages. To create a coffee house setting, use [[How to set up coffee house]] and make this redirect to the coffee shop setup (note that, unlike before, the tooltip that appears when you navigate to a link, if applies to your browser, only text that has been shown).

It's convenient if the redirects already exist or will also be useful elsewhere; However, there are several disadvantages:

  • tooltip does not show the page that will arrive in
  • "Related changes" make changes to the redirecting pages instead of the redirect targets
  • The redirect message on the target page minimizes it

Combining the piped and redirect links, one can provide some non-name information from the linked page into the hover tooltip, the following pipeline to redirect [[United Nations Organization | UNO]] will display the "United Nations Organization" tooltip while hovering over UNO, explaining the abbreviations.

Wikitext automatic conversion with pipe trick

If in the connected link section after "|" left blank, converted to an abbreviated form of the linked page, as follows:

  1. Any words before the first colon (:), as well as the colon itself, are removed. This word may or may not be a namespace prefix (such as "Help:") or interwiki prefix (such as "commons:"). If the page name is preceded by a colon, "first" refers to "first after this".
  2. If there is text in parentheses at the end, it will be deleted.
  3. If there are no brackets but there are commas, commas and everything after deleting,
  4. The link will be used in any case.

Same as for three or four tildes when entered on the Talk page and the use of subst , in preview, the results have appeared in the preview itself, but the conversion in the edit box is not yet displayed. Press "Show changes" to see changes in wikitext.

Category tag
The key syntax is sort of a category like a pipeline link, the pipeline trick also works for category tags, though not useful there.
The example uses a colon
[[Help: Template |]] changed to [[Help: Template | Template]], which is translated as Template.
[[Music: My life |]] changed to [[Music: My Life | My Life]], translated as My Life - though "Music:" is not a namespace (hence the space after the colon is not removed automatically), the shortcut still works.
[[w: en: Pipe (computation) |]] changed to [[w: en: Pipe (computing) | en: Pipe]], which is translated as en: Pipe.
Case case
[[pipe (computing) |]] changed to [[pipe (computing) | pipe]] which is translated as pipe.
[[Pipe (computation) |]] changed to [[Pipe (computation) | Pipe]] which is translated as Pipe.
Example coma
[[commons: Boston, Massachusetts |]] changed to [[commons: Boston, Massachusetts | Boston]], which translates into Boston.
Another example
Parameters and variables:
[[w: {{1}}} |]] not not giving [[w: {{{1}}} | {{{1}}}]].
Calling a template with parameter value 1 provides a link that works only in case of a replacement.
[[w: en: {{FULLPAGENAME}} |]] not not giving [[w: en: {{FULLPAGENAME}} | en: {{FULLPAGENAME}}]].
[[m: {{FULLPAGENAME}} |]] not not giving [[m: {{FULLPAGENAME}} | {{FULLPAGENAME}}]]
  * [[project: a (b) |]]  * [[w: project: a (b) |]]  * [[: de: project: a (b) |]]  * [[wiktionary: project: a (b) |]]  * [[wiktionary: de: project: a (b) |]]  * [[wikibooks: project: a (b) |]]  * [[wikiquote: project: a (b) |]]  * [[wikisumber: project: a (b) |]]  * [[w: en: {{FULLPAGENAME}} |]]  ** [[w: en: {{FULLPAGENAME}} | en: {{FULLPAGENAME}}]]  * [[m: {{FULLPAGENAME}} |]]  ** [[m: {{FULLPAGENAME}} | {{FULLPAGENAME}}]]  

Contoh-contoh ini muncul sebagai:

  • a
  • proyek: a
  • proyek: a
  • proyek: a
  • de: proyek: a
  • proyek: a
  • proyek: a
  • proyek: a
  • [[w: id: Bantuan: Tautan |]]
    • id: Bantuan: Tautan
  • [[m: Bantuan: Tautan |]]
    • Bantuan: Tautan

Trik pipa terbalik

On the "A (c)" page, [[| B]] is automatically converted to [[B (c) | B]].

Similarly, on the page "A, c", [[| B]] is automatically converted to [[B, c | B]].

A further example is here.

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Subpage links

Wikilink requires fullpagename , and this is not optional except when the link is connected to or from the subpage. A wikilink to the parent page is [[../]] , and, even if no page name is given, the full name will be displayed. On parent, wikilink to subpage can use [[/subiagename ]] to make sub-name instead.

Although the subpage is created in the article space, the subpage bookmark does not fully work there.

Subpage links work as expected to link to any page under parent parent page:

  • connecting section: [[../# section ]]
  • child-to-child sub-page that connects: [[../ subpagename ]]
  • parental parents [[../../]]
  • include [[../| pipe tricks ]]
  • and include transclusions: {{../}} and {{/ subpagename }}

Consider that there are about 140 subpages of of Style Manual arranged in 97 branches, 35 of which have two subpages, and 5 of which have three subpages. Sub-page link saves typing. Say you edited this full group of full names:

Wikipedia: Manual Style/Accessibility/Signature
Wikipedia: Style Guide/Accessibility/Tutorial data table
Wikipedia: Style Guide/Accessibility/Tutorial data tables/Internal guides

To view this page from the four-level variable and markup sub-pages, see/one/two/three/four, and from there go to level two in one/two .

The [[../]] address of the basepagename , except when pagename includes the / slash character (allowed), character basepagename/subpagename variable 'italics. To see all these, and how to add additional ../ build redlink improvements generated, see/sub/page/name1/sub/page/nama2/subpage level 3, and from there go to sub/page/name2 .

Note that the top of each sub-page shows a navigation link to all subpagens of the parent name. From this you can easily measure levels and connect constructs.

For more information:

  • View Wikipedia: Page name # Subpagename and filename.
  • Create subpage by using red links .
  • View m: Help: Link Feature # Subpage.
  • See examples at m: Link/a/b and m: Help: Link/a/b.

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ISBN, RFC and PMID auto links

The ISBN, PMID, and RFC keywords will automatically generate internal or external links:

To prevent such automatic linking, use & lt; nowiki/& gt; between the identifier and the value or non-breaking space.

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Change link view

The way links are displayed in the browser, as described above, is the default display style on the default skin. Users can change the way they see links:

  • By choosing different skins.
  • By applying a user style using CSS.
  • By changing the "Underline" or "Format of broken links like this" link on the Appearance tab of user preferences.
  • By setting a "threshold for stub view" on the User preferences tab. This causes links to pages in the main room to be displayed in different ways - dark red by default - if wikitext from the target page has less than the specified number of bytes. (Any inner link marker is ignored. Links to redirects are shown in normal style.)

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Point tooltips

In many browsers, holding the cursor over the link (mouse gestures) shows the floating tooltip that contains the HTML attribute text title link. MediaWiki - software running Wikipedia - sets this to the target page name (without section indication) if it is wikilink, the page name is prefixed if it is an interwiki link and a link address (URL) if it is an external link. (This can be turned off in user preferences.) The browser may also display similar information, including any section indications, in the status bar.

For these effects, the channeled link is useful even if it is not followed; for example, to show the meaning of the acronym. It is possible to generate floating tooltips without links, using the {{H: title}} template.

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Unauthorized characters

Links whose targets contain unauthorized characters (see WP: Page name) will be shown without markup, as in [[A {b}]].

Conversions are automatically generated to non-literal characters in wiki and interwiki links. For example, " [[Help: Page% 20name]] " becomes "Help: Page name". However, the opposite applies to external links; literal characters are converted into non-literal characters. For example, most browsers convert ".../wiki/!" to ".../wiki/% 21".

Some characters in web address links should be represented as escape characters because they are provided for Wikipedia editing. Examples include % 5B for [, % 5D for], % 3C for & lt;, % 3E for & gt;, % 7B for {, % 7D for}, and % 26 for & amp;. More can be found by reading about the percent encod. Numeric character references (eg & amp; # 91; or & amp; # x5B; ) may not be used in external links because the ampersand character ( & amp; ) has a special meaning in a URL.

Codes like % 70 in the redirect disable it, even though the link works from the redirecting page. For functional redirects, redirecting pages display a target canonical shape, unlike the preview page, which creates links in the normal way.

Links containing URL query strings

Since ampersand (& amp;) characters are not allowed, it is not possible to create a regular link that contains & amp; action = edit or & amp; redirect = no in the rope URL query. Such links can be useful on user pages. Also, redirect pages can have categories and you may want to view or edit this in one click.

The following syntax shows the use of the magic word fullurl as it would appear in the constructed template to add action = edit to the URL query string:

 [{{fullurl: {{{1}}} | action = edit}} {{{1}}}]  

Note that this will be displayed as an external link and not as an internal link and for this reason it may not appear in what-linked questions here are associated with the target page.

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Link the report

Links navigating to the page are wikilinks, redirects, and external style wikilinks. The {{orphan}} tag can be placed on a page without incoming wikilinks.

Go to page

Every link to the page is a link to name . No reports show all links to content .

The What links tool here, on every page, will report all wikilinks and all redirects to the content of that page. (You also get wikilinks to redirects.) Search parameters linksto will only find wikilinks. Both reports (not visible) wikilinks are placed by transclusion through {{template}}. The difference between them is that the linkto reports the number of links to the page name , while WhatLinksHere reports the link map to the page as content .

Go to

Links navigating to sections of the page are wikilinks, redirects, and URL-style wikilinks. The difference between redirect and wikilink is most prominent when a redirect targets a section, when you can not add your # Ã, section to it even though it appears as [[ page name ]] . Wikilinks linking to and sections that appear as [[ page names # section names ]] can link to sections it is via a canonical page name (the title on the page with the actual content) or through the name of any redirect page into it, in which case the page name is the name of the redirection page.

To find wikilinks to the section requires two or more reports.

  1. Only show redirects , available external tools from the What links page page, reporting redirects to content from a section. (No matter which page the name you provided, you get all the names of the redirects page.) See previous " No links or any groups redirects, and any "invalid" section, to see if your section's name is explicitly listed, since the underlying redirects page can have incoming links which will then enter that section. ("What Link Here" also has a "show redirects" report, but does not specify whether redirects go into specific sections.)
  2. Use "What's Here Here" link on each redirect page found in the previous step.
  3. Use {{Link to}} to create a group of search links that will each report multiple links to a section. Can work with only one page name at a time. For each given search link, simply change the page name in the query to each redirect in turn.

The more redirects there are, the more reports you need to run. If no redirects are involved, one report from "Link to" is sufficient.

From the page

To report a link from a page, you simply include all the wikilinks on the page.

  • Wikipedia: Tools/Editing tools Ã,§ Relink can count wikilinks from a copy of wikitext on your local computer.
  • Some text editors support counting and highlighting of [[...]] events.
  • The Wikipedia web API accepts requests based on URLs.

One way to send a query to an API is to create an external link (Ã,§ External link). For example, using external links is very similar to a search link, you can send a request API to include a "wp: example" link property. It should interpret it correctly as "Wikipedia: Example", pageid 25263910 .

What you type
[//en.wikipedia.org/w/api.php?action=query&prop=links&pllimit=500&titles= full name your labels ]
What you get when fullpagename is wp: example
your label
  • This report is in JSON format, as usual for RESTful APIs.
  • Ordering pages is available from Page information on every page.
  • The title parameter is plural. (This is designed to retrieve some full name or pageid, limited by the character | pipeline.)
  • The number of links returned by this query is limited to 500, per URL you create. View mw: API: Queries for how to get more securely. For example, the operating system has 510 wikilinks.

To make a page sign up for a link to a page, but without actually pointing out the link, create a link to the page, but label it with a space character using the pipe trick: [[ pagename | Ã,]] .

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Related link functionality

For the effects the link has on date formatting, see Help: Formatting and linking dates.

Another feature that relies on links is related changes, which allows to view recent changes to all pages linked from the current page (or who is a category member, if it is a category page).

For information about how to link to a page from an image, see mw: Extensions: ImageMap.

Some templates have been created to make linking easier (though they are not usually used in article space). This includes {{tl}} and {{tlx}} for linking to templates, and {{cl}} and {{lc}} to link to categories. More can be found in Category: Internal link template.

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Convert to canonical form

As mentioned before, if the target of a link starts with a lowercase letter, it will be interpreted as if starting with an equal capital letter. If the target contains a namespace prefix, then all the first prefixes and characters after the colon are not case sensitive (so uSeR: jimbo Wales links to User: Jimbo Wales).

In link targets, spaces and underscores (effectively equivalent) are ignored if they come at the beginning, at the end, or just before or after the colon follow the namespace prefix. The sequence/bottom space is treated as a single space. Therefore _User_: Jimbo_ __ Wales__ link to User: Jimbo Wales.

Also, the HTML character reference and the character encoded percent are replaced by the rough characters. For example, [[d & amp; eacute; partement]] generate dÃÆ' Â © partement, and [[% 40]] generate @. Links assigned to invalid page titles are shown as un-marked wikitext.

The title indicated by wikilinks is shown in canonical form (with the capitalization correction and excess space/underscores removed, as described earlier) in the following places:

  • In the transcript tag for a non-existing page: {{qwsazx}} gives a Template: Qwsazx.
  • In the tool description and in the status bar (if applicable to the browser) when the mouse cursor is moved over the link.
  • On the redirecting page.
  • In the category box.

The prefix in interwiki links is treated similarly to the namespace prefix: not case-sensitive and spaces before and after colon. But the first character after the colon is not is automatically capitalized (whether it is interpreted as modal depending on the target wiki configuration).

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See also

  • Find the link tool: a simple tool that lets you search for articles to consider adding links to.
    • Clear link
  • MediaWiki help page at link
  • Help: Link color: the link color indicates the status of the corresponding target page.
  • Help: Pipe trick: use pipe characters (" | ") to save typed linked link labels.
  • Help: Permanent link: create a permanent link to the page revision.
  • Intelligent Link Tool: a tool for linking and previewing connected articles above the text box with wiki code.
  • Help: Self-link: the link itself is a link to the page itself. Automatic links to pages appear as bold text when articles are viewed.
  • Wikipedia: Shortcut: a special type of redirect page that provides an abbreviated wikilink to the project page.
  • Help: Colon Trick: a trick when providing category, image or interwiki links.
  • Wikipedia: Orphan Ã,§Ã, Step 2: Find related articles

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Source of the article : Wikipedia

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