Archive:Maintainability: Difference between revisions
imported>Andries Krugers Dagneaux (Reducing redundancy by merging several small articles that treat more or less the same subject may increase maintainability) |
imported>Larry Sanger No edit summary |
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{{Content Policy}} | |||
Certain articles, we say, are not ''maintainable.'' In other words, there are certain classes of articles that will probably never be completely filled out, high-quality, and well-maintained. If an article is a member of such a class, it does not belong in the ''Citizendium'' at all. Obviously, common sense is needed to determine what the relevant class is. | Certain articles, we say, are not ''maintainable.'' In other words, there are certain classes of articles that will probably never be completely filled out, high-quality, and well-maintained. If an article is a member of such a class, it does not belong in the ''Citizendium'' at all. Obviously, common sense is needed to determine what the relevant class is. | ||
Revision as of 08:38, 6 September 2007
Citizendium Content Policy | ||
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Approval Standards | Article Mechanics | Subpages | Importing material from other sources | Citable articles |
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Certain articles, we say, are not maintainable. In other words, there are certain classes of articles that will probably never be completely filled out, high-quality, and well-maintained. If an article is a member of such a class, it does not belong in the Citizendium at all. Obviously, common sense is needed to determine what the relevant class is.
The reason for this is simply that the Citizendium will never have an adequate number of contributors to do the work. The "class" of article here depends on certain types that are in many cases fairly easy to spot. For example, we should not write an article about an undistinguished, perfectly ordinary school unless we can write articles about all schools; we should not write an article about a county in Connecticut unless we can write articles about all counties in the United States; and so forth. An example of a class of article that it seems we will never have the contributors to maintain is: all named roads. What the future has in store could surprise us, however, so it is important not to be dogmatic here.
Only editors may mark articles for deletion on grounds of non-maintainability.
Reducing redundancy by merging several small articles that treat more or less the same subject may increase maintainability.
The Citizendium does not have a "notability" policy.
To be elaborated later.