| Thisessay is currently inactive or at one time hadcommunity consensus, but is no longer relevant. It is retained forhistorical reference.It is an essay oncategories, lists, and series boxes. It has only been updated occasionally to remove criticisms that were resolved by newer functions added to Wikipedia categorization. It was last substantively updated 2007. |
This is anessay oncategories, lists, and series boxes. It contains the advice or opinions of one or more Wikipedia contributors. This page is not an encyclopedia article, nor is it one ofWikipedia's policies or guidelines, as it has not beenthoroughly vetted by the community. Some essays represent widespread norms; others only represent minority viewpoints. |
In 2007, when Wikipedia was still in its developmental stages and growing rapidly,categories were decentralized to facilitate easierindexing of pages duringpage creation. This system was also designed to distribute the workload of category maintenance among page maintainers.
However, the category system has since created more problems than it has solved.
Editors have their favorite pages that they watch over and maintain. This includes maintaining the category tags on those pages. Each editor's views on categorization differ. So when you decide to add a large group of pages to a category, some of the watchdogs are bound to object to and remove that tag from their pages. This punches holes in the categories which can lead to edit wars when you try to fill those holes. By contrast, lists are centralized, so you usually don't have to worry about the watchdogs, because you link to their pages without altering their pages at all. In most cases, they won't even be aware of the link.
When a category tag is removed from a page, and the link to that page disappears from the category page, there is no record at the category page of that link ever being there. So the only ways to spot link disappearances is either from memory, or cross-checking against a list of what was there, or seeing the category on thewatchlist, the last option is asetting at "watchlist". Lists have histories, so by usingdiff, you easily monitor for deletions.
When a category is deleted, it can't be undeleted and restored. All the tags leading to it will have been removed. The information contained in the tags cannot be rebuilt as easily as a page can. It would require going through the page history of all of Wikipedia to refind the deleted tags.
When a page is deleted, it disappears off the category system, and most people aren't likely to notice unless they are specifically looking for it (but they usually use search when they look for specific topics), so this could hurt readers who are forced browse incomplete categories. With lists, when a page linked to is deleted, the link turns red. If the article was important, those who monitor the list are alerted to the problem and can take measures to repair the damage done to the subject area.
Likewise, categories can have advantages over lists: