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Wikipedia:Hatnote

Hatnotes are short notes placed at the very top of a page or a section. As an example, see the notes in italics immediately preceding the boxes above. The name comes from their placement, as a hat is placed on top of one's head. The purpose of a hatnote is to help readers locate a different article if the one they are at is not the one they're looking for. Readers may have arrived at the article containing the hatnote because:

  • They were redirected.
  • They may be seeking an article that uses a more specific, disambiguated title.
  • They may be seeking an article with a similar name to, or that otherwise might be confused with, the article with the hatnote.

Hatnotes provide links to the possibly sought article or to a disambiguation page.

  • WP:HATNOTERULES
  • WP:HRULES
  • WP:HATNOT
  • WP:HNR

The five basic rules of hatnotes are:

  1. Link directly to other articles; do not pipe non-disambiguation links. Linking to redirects is typically not preferred, although of course exceptions can occur. Links to disambiguation pages should always end in "(disambiguation)", even when that version of the title is a redirect.
  2. Keep explanations to a minimum; explain vital information only, letting the lead section and body of the article to clarify things for the reader.
  3. Mention other topics and articles only if there is a reasonable possibility of a reader arriving at the article either by mistake or with another topic in mind.
  4. However, if a notable topic X is commonly referred to as "Foo", but the article "Foo" is not about X, there must be a hatnote linking to the article on X or linking to a disambiguation page that contains a link to the article on X.
  5. Ideally, limit hatnotes to just one at the top of the page or section. Multiple hatnotes may be appropriate when they serve different purposes, such as disambiguating topics with similar names and explaining redirects. (In such cases, consider using {{hatnote group}}.)

For more information about methods of disambiguating articles, see Wikipedia:Disambiguation.

Placement edit

  • WP:HATNOTEPLACE
  • WP:HNP

Place hatnotes at the top of the article or section. When used at the top of an article, hatnotes go immediately below a short description template, but strictly above anything else including protection icons or maintenance tags.[1] Text-based web browsers and screen readers present the page sequentially. If a reader has reached the wrong page, they should find that out first.

In the Wikipedia iOS app, there is a known bug whereby hatnotes fail to appear anywhere on the page.

Format edit

In most cases, hatnotes should be created using a standard hatnote template, as illustrated in § Hatnote templates below. This permits the form and structure of hatnotes to be changed uniformly across the encyclopedia as needed, and the templates to be excluded in print.

Current style on the English Wikipedia is to italicize and to indent each note, without a bullet before the item. A horizontal dividing line should not be placed either under a note or after the final item in a list. Links to articles should follow the naming conventions for capitalization – typically sentence case, not all lower case.

When determining the content of the hatnote, keep in mind that it forms part of the user interface rather than the article content. Two applicable user interface design principles are clarity and conciseness. The hatnote should not overload the user with extraneous information, and the content should be imparted quickly and accurately. These design goals are conveyed succinctly in the principle less is more.

Length and number edit

  • WP:1HAT
  • WP:ONESHORTHAT
  • WP:HATLENGTH

As hatnotes separate the reader from the content they are looking for, hatnotes should generally be as concise as possible. Long explanations are generally discouraged; the article's lead text, not the hatnote, should explain what the article is about. In almost all cases, the hatnote is intended only to direct readers to other articles in case they were actually looking for something they will not find in the article containing the hatnote.

If a disambiguation page exists for a given term, then linking to it should be enough. For example, if the article is X then its hatnote will link to X (disambiguation); it should not have entries for other topics known as X, like X (Grafton novel) or X (charge), because they are already listed in the disambiguation page. However, such an article may be linked if it could be expected by a significant number of readers to be at the title in question: for instance, Turkey is about the country, but many readers expect to find the article about the bird at that title; therefore, the hatnote there correctly reads

{{about|the country|the bird|Turkey (bird)|other uses}}

which renders

There should be as few hatnotes as possible. One single hatnote, which can accommodate several links, is greatly preferable to two or more. Multiple hatnotes may however be appropriate when each serves a different purpose, such as disambiguating the title or distinguishing similar terms.[2]

Summarize or not? edit

  • WP:HNS

Some hatnote disambiguation templates include a brief summary of the present article's topic; others do not have a summary. For instance, in the article Honey, one might use the template {{about|the insect-produced fluid}} to produce:

Alternatively, one might use {{other uses}} to produce:

Either of these two styles is acceptable. The choice of style in a given article is based on editors' preferences and on what is likely to be clearer and easier for the reader. (In this particular instance, most English speakers will know what honey is, and the second, more concise hatnote is preferable.) Where an article already has a hatnote in one of these styles, editors should not change it to the other style without good reason.

Examples of proper use edit

Two articles with similar titles edit

  • WP:SIMILAR

Dunwich (/ˈdʌnɪ/) is a town in the county of Suffolk in England, the remnant of what was once a prosperous seaport and centre of the wool trade during the early middle ages, with a natural harbour formed by the mouths of the River Blyth. ...

When two articles share the same title, except that one title is disambiguated and the other is not, and it is not appropriate to change the undisambiguated article's title (see WP:PRIMARYTOPIC), the undisambiguated article should include a hatnote with a link to the other article. It is not necessary to create a separate disambiguation page. The {{about}} template may be used for this. In this case, the parameterization was {{about|the village in England|H. P. Lovecraft's fictional town|Dunwich (Lovecraft)}}.

Terms that can cause confusion with another topic edit

  • WP:HATCONFUSE
  • WP:HATMISSPELL

Perl is a family of high-level, general-purpose, interpreted, dynamic programming languages. ...

{{Distinguish}} or a related template can be used when there can be confusion with a similar term. They are typically used when readers have misspelled their desired title, and the error would be apparent by simply displaying the alternative term without further explanation. These hatnotes should only be used when the ambiguity exists for a significant portion of the readership.

However, they are not suitable when the difference is not readily apparent without additional details. In those cases, use {{about}}, {{for}} or {{other uses}} instead, as the differences in the suggested article are explained upfront without requiring the reader to click through and differentiate the terms on their own.

Linking to a disambiguation page edit

  • WP:HATDAB

A monolith is a monument or natural feature, such as a mountain, consisting of a single massive stone or rock. Erosion usually exposes these formations. ...

When a term has a primary meaning and two or more additional meanings, the hatnote on the primary topic page should link to a disambiguation page. {{other uses}} may be used for this.

In many cases, the hatnote also includes a brief description of the subject of the present article, for readers' convenience:

In Greek mythology, the Labyrinth was an elaborate maze-like structure constructed for King Minos of Crete and designed by the legendary artificer Daedalus to hold the Minotaur. ...

The template {{about}} may be used for this. In this case the parameterization was {{about|the mazelike labyrinth from Greek mythology}}.

Ambiguous term that redirects to an unambiguously named article edit

  • WP:AMBIGTERM
  • WP:HATREDIR

{{redirect}}, or a related template, can be used when an ambiguous title is redirected to an unambiguous title or a primary topic article:

Johann Sebastian Bach



(Redirected from Bach)

Johann Sebastian Bach (31 March [O.S. 21 March] 1685 – 28 July 1750) was a German composer and musician of the late Baroque period. He is known for his orchestral music such as the ...

Hatnotes above maintenance tags edit

Always place a hatnote above maintenance tags, but below short description templates. See above for specific details regarding the placement of hatnotes.

The Giver is a 1993 American young-adult dystopian novel by Lois Lowry. It is set in a society which at first appears as utopian, but is later revealed to be a dystopian one as the story progresses. The novel follows a boy named Jonas. ...

Hatnotes with italics in the links edit

  • WP:ITHAT

Caprona agama, the spotted angle, is a butterfly belonging to the family Hesperiidae. ...

Words or phrases that are italicized within a normal sentence should be unitalicized within a hatnote. Since all words in a hatnote are italicized, the specific text will not stand out if the italics are not disabled.

Italics are cancelled by the parameterization:

{{Redirect|Spotted angle|the other butterfly with this name|Caprona alida{{!}}''Caprona alida''}}

Many hatnote templates found below section headers, such as {{Main}}, {{See also}}, {{Further}}, and others have label parameters to customize the italicization of the output text:

{{See also|Caprona alida|label1=''Caprona alida''}}

In this instance, the rendered term will stand out unitalicized.

Examples of improper use edit

Trivial information, dictionary definitions, and slang edit

  • WP:TRHAT
  • WP:NOTHATNOTE

When notes feature a trivial detail or use of a term, or links to overly specific and tendentious material, they are unwarranted.

A previous version of the article Investment showed:

Investment is a term with several closely related meanings in finance and economics. It refers to the accumulation of some kind of asset in hopes of getting a future return from it. ...

In this case, there is no direct disambiguation, and the note listed is bound to be uninteresting to most readers. The proper disambiguation simply links to a separate Invest (disambiguation) page.

Legitimate information about the topic edit

  • WP:LEGITHAT

A previous version of the Aisha article showed:

Aisha or Ayesha (Arabic عائشه `ā'isha = "she who lives") was a wife of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. ...

This is a typical but improper use of disambiguating hatnotes. Instead, the information belongs in the body of the article, or in the articles about the book, or in a separate article about names, or all three places. Hatnotes are meant to reduce confusion and direct readers to another article they might have been looking for, not for information about the subject of the article itself.

Linking to articles that are related to the topic edit

  • WP:RELATED

Disambiguation hatnotes are intended to link to separate topics that could be referred to by the same title, of the article or any of its redirects. They are not intended to link to topics that are simply related to each other, or to a specific aspect of a general topic:

Extraterrestrial life is life that may exist and originate outside the planet Earth. Its existence is currently hypothetical: there is as yet no evidence of extraterrestrial life that has been widely accepted by scientists. ...

Instead of using a disambiguation hatnote in such cases, it is better to summarize the topic Extraterrestrial life in popular culture under a subsection of Extraterrestrial life in conjunction with the {{main}} template.

Similarly, do not use the {{see also}} or {{main}} templates on top of a page, as they are meant only for sections; templates {{other uses}} and {{broader}} might be more appropriate alternatives.

This guideline does not discourage the use of disambiguation hatnotes in a situation where separate topics are related, but could nonetheless be referred to by the same title and would thus qualify for disambiguation, such as a book and its film adaptation (e.g. The Lord of the Rings and The Lord of the Rings (film series)).

Disambiguating article names that are not ambiguous edit

  • WP:NAMB
  • WP:NOTAMB
  • WP:NOHAT
  • WP:NOHATNOTE

It is usually preferable not to have a hatnote when the name of the article is not ambiguous.

Water (wuxing)


In Chinese philosophy, water (Chinese: ; pinyin: shuǐ), is the low point of matter. It is considered matter's dying or hiding stage. ...

Here, the hatnote can be removed. A reader who is following links within Wikipedia is unlikely to end up at Water (wuxing) if they were looking for other meanings of water, since water does not redirect there.

A hatnote may still be appropriate when even a more specific name is still ambiguous. For example, Tree (set theory) might still be confused with Tree (descriptive set theory).

The presence or absence of hatnotes in articles with disambiguated titles has been a contentious issue, and this guideline doesn't prescribe one way or the other. There are cases where some editors strongly believe that such hatnotes should be included, such as the various articles about treaties called Treaty of Paris.

A hatnote may be appropriate in an unambiguously named article when an ambiguous term redirects to it, as explained in § Ambiguous term that redirects to an unambiguously named article above.

Extraneous links edit

  • WP:HATEXTRA

Each additional link in the hatnote besides the ambiguous or confusable topic(s) makes it more difficult to find the desired target. For example, in a previous version of the article WTOB (AM) under a former callsign:

WTIX (980 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a Sports radio format.

In this case, the link to New Orleans, Louisiana, in the hatnote leads to an article that is not ambiguous with the title. Linking only to the possible other destination (WIST (AM)) makes it easier to find the link.

External links edit

  • WP:ELHAT

A previous version of the Hurricane Katrina article contained:

Hurricane Katrina, which made landfall near New Orleans, Louisiana, on August 29, 2005, was one of the most destructive and expensive tropical cyclones to hit the United States. ...

The use of external help links in Wikipedia, though noble, cannot reasonably be maintained. In special cases, a link to an "External links" section may be appropriate, but POV favoritism can be obstructive. In this case, the hatnote was removed entirely.

Non-existent articles edit

  • WP:NOARTICLE
  • WP:REDHAT

Hatnotes should not contain red links to non-existent articles, since hatnotes are intended to help users navigate to another article they may have intended to find. The exception is if one intends to create the linked article immediately. In that case, consider creating the new article first, before saving the addition of the hatnote.

Hatnote templates edit

Generic hatnote edit

{{Hatnote}} allows general text to be shown in hatnote format. It is appropriate when none of the other specific templates listed below includes the combination of parameters needed, or to combine several of them in a single hatnote.

  • {{Hatnote|CUSTOM TEXT}}
{{Hatnote|For other senses of this term, see [[etc...]]}}
  • {{Self reference}} (a generic template for self-references to Wikipedia material)

Other uses of the same title ("For ..., see ...") edit

Per WP:NAMB, it is usually preferable not to have a hatnote when the name of the article is not ambiguous.

"This page is about ... For other uses, see..." edit

{{About}} is the main template for noting other uses.

Note: When used in main namespace (aka mainspace), the word "page" in the following hatnotes is replaced by "article".

  • {{About|TOPIC}}
  • {{About|USE1||PAGE2}} (When the disambiguation page has a different name – Note the empty second parameter) →
  • {{About|USE1|USE2|PAGE2}} (When there is only one other use) →
  • {{About|USE1|USE2|PAGE2|and|PAGE3}} (Two pages for USE2) →
  • {{About|USE1|USE2|PAGE2#SUBSECTION{{!}}PAGE2TITLE}} (Using the {{!}} magic word to give the link a different title) →
  • {{About|USE1|USE2|PAGE2|other uses}} (When there are several standard other uses and also a disambiguation page with default name – Note that the last page name is not specified) →
  • {{About|USE1|USE2|PAGE2|other uses|PAGE3}} (When there are several standard other uses and also a disambiguation page with non-default name) →
  • {{About||USE2|PAGE2|USE3|PAGE3|other uses}} (When you don't need to state the focus of this article/page – Note the empty first parameter) →
  • {{About|||PAGE1|and|PAGE2}}
Note: {{for||PAGE1|PAGE2}} produces the same result.
  • {{About|TOPIC|section=yes}}
Note: this hatnote says "section", instead of "article" or "page".
  • {{About|USE1|text=TEXT}}

"This page is about ... It is not to be confused with ..." edit

{{About-distinguish}} is a template for noting other uses when there could be confusion with another topic.

"For ..., see ..." edit

{{For}} can be used instead of {{About}} so as not to display: This page is about USE1. but still specify a specific other use. This effect can also be achieved by using an empty first parameter in {{About}} as in:

For example: {{For|OTHER TOPIC|PAGE1}} is the same as {{About||OTHER TOPIC|PAGE1}} (note the empty first parameter).

However, it is somewhat clearer when using the {{For}} template, since the word "about" does not appear in the statement.

  • {{For|OTHER TOPIC}}
  • {{For|OTHER TOPIC|PAGE1}}
  • {{For|OTHER TOPIC|PAGE1|PAGE2}}
  • {{For|OTHER TOPIC|PAGE1|PAGE2|PAGE3}}
Variations
As with {{Other uses}}, there is a whole family of "for" templates. {{For-text}} allows custom text, such as quotation marks or a link from part of the "CUSTOM TEXT", but does not supply automatic wikilinking
  • {{For-text|OTHER TOPIC|CUSTOM TEXT}} (note how CUSTOM TEXT isn't bluelinked)
It also supports up to three topics:
  • {{For-text|OTHER TOPIC|CUSTOM TEXT|OTHER TOPIC 2|CUSTOM TEXT 2}}
  • {{For-text|OTHER TOPIC|CUSTOM TEXT|OTHER TOPIC 2|CUSTOM TEXT 2|OTHER TOPIC 3|CUSTOM TEXT 3}}

"For other uses, see ..." edit

When such a wordy hatnote as {{About}} is not needed, {{Other uses}} is often useful.

Variations
There are, historically, a whole family of "other uses" templates for specific cases. {{About}} is the standard hatnote for "other uses" and many of them can be specified using the {{About}} template. However, the individual templates may be easier to use in certain contexts.
Here are the variations and (when appropriate) the equivalents using the {{About}}, {{Other uses}} or {{For}} templates.
"For other uses of ..., see ..."

Redirect edit

"... redirects here. For other uses, see ..." edit

  • {{Redirect|REDIRECT}}
  • {{Redirect|REDIRECT||PAGE1}}
  • {{Redirect|REDIRECT|USE1|PAGE1}}
  • {{Redirect|REDIRECT|USE1|PAGE1|USE2|PAGE2}}
  • {{Redirect|REDIRECT|USE1|PAGE1|and|PAGE2}}
Variations
  • For two sources:
    • {{Redirect2|REDIRECT1|REDIRECT2}}
    • {{Redirect2|REDIRECT1|REDIRECT2|USE}}
    • {{Redirect2|REDIRECT1|REDIRECT2||PAGE1}}
    • {{Redirect2|REDIRECT1|REDIRECT2|USE|PAGE1}}
    • {{Redirect2|REDIRECT1|REDIRECT2|USE1|PAGE1|USE2|PAGE2}}
  • For three or more sources:
    • {{Redirect-multi|2|REDIRECT1|REDIRECT2}}
    • {{Redirect-multi|3|REDIRECT1|REDIRECT2|REDIRECT3}}
    • {{Redirect-multi|2|REDIRECT1|REDIRECT2|USE|PAGE}}
    • {{Redirect-multi|2|REDIRECT1|REDIRECT2|USE1|PAGE1|USE2|PAGE2|and|PAGE3}}
    • {{Redirect-several|REDIRECT1|REDIRECT2|REDIRECT3}}
  • To specify the text following "redirects here.":
    • {{Redirect|REDIRECT|text=TEXT}}
    • {{Redirect-synonym|TERM|OTHER TOPIC}}

"For technical reasons, ... redirects here. ... edit

... redirects here. Not to be confused with ... edit

Similar proper names ("For other people named ...") edit

Other people edit

  • {{Other people}}
  • {{Other people|NAME}}
  • {{Other people|NAME|PAGE}}
  • {{Other people||PAGE}}
  • {{Other people|NAME|PAGE|named=titled}}
  • {{About other people|PERSON1}}
  • {{About other people|PERSON1|NAME}}
  • {{About other people|PERSON1|NAME|named=titled}}
  • {{About other people|PERSON1|NAME|PAGE}}
  • {{About other people|PERSON1||PAGE}}
  • {{About other people|PERSON1|PAGE1|PAGE2|PAGE3}}
  • {{Similar names|NAME1|NAME2|NAME3|NAME4}}
Note: defaults to "named" as in {{Other people}}, exists for options like "nicknamed", "known as", etc.

Other places/ships/hurricanes edit

Distinguish edit

"Not to be confused with ..." edit

"... redirects here. It is not to be confused with ..." edit

Family names edit

  • WP:HATPAT
  • WP:HATFAM

Family names can also be clarified using inline footnotes via {{Family name footnote}}.

For use in sections edit

"Main article: ..." edit

{{Main}} is used to make summary style explicit, when used in a summary section for which there is also a separate article on the subject:

"Further information: ..." edit

{{Further}} can supplement {{Main}} in summary sections, or can indicate more details in nonsummary sections:

  • {{Further|PAGE}}
  • {{Further|PAGE1|PAGE2|PAGE3}}
  • {{Further|topic=TOPIC|PAGE1|PAGE2|PAGE3}}
  • {{Further2|[[PAGE1]], [[PAGE2]], and other text}}
  • {{Further ill}} may be used to link to articles containing further information on a topic, where English Wikipedia does not yet have an article, but another language Wikipedia does.

"See also ..." edit

{{See also}} can be used at the head of a section.

  • {{See also|TOPIC PAGE|OTHER TOPIC PAGE}}
Note: use only when OTHER TOPIC PAGE is related to current article and contains a self-explanatory parenthetical.
  • {{See also2|[[OTHER TOPIC]]|[[OTHER TOPIC2]]|[[OTHER TOPIC3]] and other text}}

Article or section transclusions edit

For category pages edit

Category-specific templates:

  • {{Category see also|THIS|THAT|THE OTHER}}

This is a template for linking categories horizontally. Horizontal linkage is often the right solution when vertical linkage (i.e., as sub-category and parent category) is not appropriate. In most cases, this template should be used on both categories to create reciprocal linkage between the two categories.

Correct titles edit

"The correct title of this article is ... The substitution or omission of the (or, without a reason: "It appears incorrectly here") ... is due to technical restrictions."

Lists edit

What to do before editing or creating a template edit

These templates are used in thousands of articles; therefore, changing the syntax could break thousands of articles. If you wish to create or edit a disambiguation or redirection template, first ask yourself the following questions:

  1. Is there already a template that will do this job? Since many disambiguation and redirection templates have already been created, first check: Category:Hatnote templates.
  2. Do I really need a new template for this? Will it likely be used on any other articles or should I just use {{Hatnote}} instead? Before creating a new template, see the template namespace guideline.
  3. If I change the parameters around on an existing template, do I know what the result will be? Will it break existing uses of the template, and if so, can I fix all of the errors?

Before making any changes, see Wikipedia:Template sandbox and test cases.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ See MOS:SECTIONORDER for specific details regarding the placement of hatnotes.
  2. ^ The acceptability of multiple hatnotes was clarified in a 2016 discussion.

wikipedia, hatnote, short, navigational, notes, wikipedia, articles, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, redirects, here, confused, with, wikipedia, help, namespace, hatnote, redirects, here, confused, with, headnote, notation, other, uses, disambigu. Short navigational notes in Wikipedia articles WP HAT redirects here For other uses see WP HAT disambiguation WP HN redirects here Not to be confused with Wikipedia Help namespace Hatnote redirects here Not to be confused with Headnote or Hat notation For other uses see Wikipedia Hatnote disambiguation This page documents an English Wikipedia editing guideline It is a generally accepted standard that editors should attempt to follow though occasional exceptions may apply Any substantive edit to this page should reflect consensus When in doubt discuss first on the talk page ShortcutsWP HNWP HATThis page in a nutshell Hatnotes provide links at the very top of an article or a section to help readers locate a different article if the one they are viewing is not the one they re looking for Linking andpage manipulationLinking and diffsURLs Links Orphans Interlanguage links Interwiki linking Shortcuts External links External link icons Plainlinks Link color Colon trick Pipe trick Self links What links here Linksearch Manual of Style on linking Navigation templates Hatnotes Template index for linksDiffs Simplest diff guide Simple diff and link guide Complete diff and link guideCategorizationCategory Categorization guideline Classification Container category FAQ for categorization FAQ for categories Categories lists and navigation templates Categorizing articles about people By year Redirect categories User categories Overcategorization User categories Template index for categoriesMoving and redirectingHow to move a page for beginners Redirects Moving a page Requested moves How to fix cut and paste moves Moving files to Commons Userfication Non admin and admin only moves Template index for moving Template index for redirectsMergingMerging Proposed article mergers Requests for history merge Merge and delete Merge what Delete or merge Template index for merging WikiProject MergeSplittingSplitting Template index for splittingImporting and copyingHow to import articles Requests for page importation Import Export Copying within WikipediaProtectingProtection Protection policy High risk templates Requests for page protection Rough guide to semi protectionAdditionalHow to create a page Article creation Editing Deletion processvteHatnotes are short notes placed at the very top of a page or a section As an example see the notes in italics immediately preceding the boxes above The name comes from their placement as a hat is placed on top of one s head The purpose of a hatnote is to help readers locate a different article if the one they are at is not the one they re looking for Readers may have arrived at the article containing the hatnote because They were redirected They may be seeking an article that uses a more specific disambiguated title They may be seeking an article with a similar name to or that otherwise might be confused with the article with the hatnote Hatnotes provide links to the possibly sought article or to a disambiguation page ShortcutsWP HATNOTERULESWP HRULESWP HATNOTWP HNR The five basic rules of hatnotes are Link directly to other articles do not pipe non disambiguation links Linking to redirects is typically not preferred although of course exceptions can occur Links to disambiguation pages should always end in disambiguation even when that version of the title is a redirect Keep explanations to a minimum explain vital information only letting the lead section and body of the article to clarify things for the reader Mention other topics and articles only if there is a reasonable possibility of a reader arriving at the article either by mistake or with another topic in mind However if a notable topic X is commonly referred to as Foo but the article Foo is not about X there must be a hatnote linking to the article on X or linking to a disambiguation page that contains a link to the article on X Ideally limit hatnotes to just one at the top of the page or section Multiple hatnotes may be appropriate when they serve different purposes such as disambiguating topics with similar names and explaining redirects In such cases consider using hatnote group For more information about methods of disambiguating articles see Wikipedia Disambiguation Contents 1 Placement 2 Format 2 1 Length and number 3 Summarize or not 4 Examples of proper use 4 1 Two articles with similar titles 4 2 Terms that can cause confusion with another topic 4 3 Linking to a disambiguation page 4 4 Ambiguous term that redirects to an unambiguously named article 4 5 Hatnotes above maintenance tags 4 6 Hatnotes with italics in the links 5 Examples of improper use 5 1 Trivial information dictionary definitions and slang 5 2 Legitimate information about the topic 5 3 Linking to articles that are related to the topic 5 4 Disambiguating article names that are not ambiguous 5 5 Extraneous links 5 6 External links 5 7 Non existent articles 6 Hatnote templates 6 1 Generic hatnote 6 2 Other uses of the same title For see 6 2 1 This page is about For other uses see 6 2 2 This page is about It is not to be confused with 6 2 3 For see 6 2 4 For other uses see 6 3 Redirect 6 3 1 redirects here For other uses see 6 3 2 For technical reasons redirects here 6 3 3 redirects here Not to be confused with 6 4 Similar proper names For other people named 6 4 1 Other people 6 4 2 Other places ships hurricanes 6 5 Distinguish 6 5 1 Not to be confused with 6 5 2 redirects here It is not to be confused with 6 6 Family names 6 7 For use in sections 6 7 1 Main article 6 7 2 Further information 6 7 3 See also 6 7 4 Article or section transclusions 6 8 For category pages 6 9 Correct titles 6 10 Lists 7 What to do before editing or creating a template 8 See also 9 ReferencesPlacement editSee also Wikipedia Manual of Style Lead section Elements ShortcutsWP HATNOTEPLACEWP HNP Place hatnotes at the top of the article or section When used at the top of an article hatnotes go immediately below a short description template but strictly above anything else including protection icons or maintenance tags 1 Text based web browsers and screen readers present the page sequentially If a reader has reached the wrong page they should find that out first In the Wikipedia iOS app there is a known bug whereby hatnotes fail to appear anywhere on the page Format editIn most cases hatnotes should be created using a standard hatnote template as illustrated in Hatnote templates below This permits the form and structure of hatnotes to be changed uniformly across the encyclopedia as needed and the templates to be excluded in print Current style on the English Wikipedia is to italicize and to indent each note without a bullet before the item A horizontal dividing line should not be placed either under a note or after the final item in a list Links to articles should follow the naming conventions for capitalization typically sentence case not all lower case When determining the content of the hatnote keep in mind that it forms part of the user interface rather than the article content Two applicable user interface design principles are clarity and conciseness The hatnote should not overload the user with extraneous information and the content should be imparted quickly and accurately These design goals are conveyed succinctly in the principle less is more Length and number edit ShortcutsWP 1HATWP ONESHORTHATWP HATLENGTH Further information WP SUMMARYHATNOTE As hatnotes separate the reader from the content they are looking for hatnotes should generally be as concise as possible Long explanations are generally discouraged the article s lead text not the hatnote should explain what the article is about In almost all cases the hatnote is intended only to direct readers to other articles in case they were actually looking for something they will not find in the article containing the hatnote If a disambiguation page exists for a given term then linking to it should be enough For example if the article is X then its hatnote will link to X disambiguation it should not have entries for other topics known as X like X Grafton novel or X charge because they are already listed in the disambiguation page However such an article may be linked if it could be expected by a significant number of readers to be at the title in question for instance Turkey is about the country but many readers expect to find the article about the bird at that title therefore the hatnote there correctly reads about the country the bird Turkey bird other uses which renders This page is about the country For the bird see Turkey bird For other uses see Turkey disambiguation There should be as few hatnotes as possible One single hatnote which can accommodate several links is greatly preferable to two or more Multiple hatnotes may however be appropriate when each serves a different purpose such as disambiguating the title or distinguishing similar terms 2 Summarize or not editShortcutWP HNS Some hatnote disambiguation templates include a brief summary of the present article s topic others do not have a summary For instance in the article Honey one might use the template about the insect produced fluid to produce This page is about the insect produced fluid For other uses see Honey disambiguation Alternatively one might use other uses to produce For other uses see Honey disambiguation Either of these two styles is acceptable The choice of style in a given article is based on editors preferences and on what is likely to be clearer and easier for the reader In this particular instance most English speakers will know what honey is and the second more concise hatnote is preferable Where an article already has a hatnote in one of these styles editors should not change it to the other style without good reason Examples of proper use editTwo articles with similar titles edit ShortcutWP SIMILAR See also WP PRIMARYTOPIC and WP TWODABS This page is about the village in England For H P Lovecraft s fictional town see Dunwich Lovecraft Dunwich ˈ d ʌ n ɪ tʃ is a town in the county of Suffolk in England the remnant of what was once a prosperous seaport and centre of the wool trade during the early middle ages with a natural harbour formed by the mouths of the River Blyth When two articles share the same title except that one title is disambiguated and the other is not and it is not appropriate to change the undisambiguated article s title see WP PRIMARYTOPIC the undisambiguated article should include a hatnote with a link to the other article It is not necessary to create a separate disambiguation page The about template may be used for this In this case the parameterization was span class nowrap a href Template About html title Template About about a the village in England H P Lovecraft s fictional town Dunwich Lovecraft span Terms that can cause confusion with another topic edit ShortcutsWP HATCONFUSEWP HATMISSPELL Not to be confused with Pearl Perl is a family of high level general purpose interpreted dynamic programming languages Distinguish or a related template can be used when there can be confusion with a similar term They are typically used when readers have misspelled their desired title and the error would be apparent by simply displaying the alternative term without further explanation These hatnotes should only be used when the ambiguity exists for a significant portion of the readership However they are not suitable when the difference is not readily apparent without additional details In those cases use about for or other uses instead as the differences in the suggested article are explained upfront without requiring the reader to click through and differentiate the terms on their own Linking to a disambiguation page edit ShortcutWP HATDAB For other uses see Monolith disambiguation A monolith is a monument or natural feature such as a mountain consisting of a single massive stone or rock Erosion usually exposes these formations When a term has a primary meaning and two or more additional meanings the hatnote on the primary topic page should link to a disambiguation page other uses may be used for this In many cases the hatnote also includes a brief description of the subject of the present article for readers convenience This page is about the maze like labyrinth from Greek mythology For other uses see Labyrinth disambiguation In Greek mythology the Labyrinth was an elaborate maze like structure constructed for King Minos of Crete and designed by the legendary artificer Daedalus to hold the Minotaur The template about may be used for this In this case the parameterization was span class nowrap a href Template About html title Template About about a the mazelike labyrinth from Greek mythology span Ambiguous term that redirects to an unambiguously named article edit ShortcutsWP AMBIGTERMWP HATREDIR redirect or a related template can be used when an ambiguous title is redirected to an unambiguous title or a primary topic article Johann Sebastian Bach Redirected from Bach Bach redirects here For other uses see Bach disambiguation Johann Sebastian Bach 31 March O S 21 March 1685 28 July 1750 was a German composer and musician of the late Baroque period He is known for his orchestral music such as the Hatnotes above maintenance tags edit Further information Wikipedia Manual of Style Layout Order of article elements Always place a hatnote above maintenance tags but below short description templates See above for specific details regarding the placement of hatnotes For the 2014 film adaptation see The Giver film nbsp This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2014 The Giver is a 1993 American young adult dystopian novel by Lois Lowry It is set in a society which at first appears as utopian but is later revealed to be a dystopian one as the story progresses The novel follows a boy named Jonas Hatnotes with italics in the links edit ShortcutWP ITHAT Spotted angle redirects here For the other butterfly with this name see Caprona alida Caprona agama the spotted angle is a butterfly belonging to the family Hesperiidae Words or phrases that are italicized within a normal sentence should be unitalicized within a hatnote Since all words in a hatnote are italicized the specific text will not stand out if the italics are not disabled Italics are cancelled by the parameterization span class nowrap a href Template Redirect html title Template Redirect Redirect a Spotted angle the other butterfly with this name Caprona alida Caprona alida span Many hatnote templates found below section headers such as Main See also Further and others have label parameters to customize the italicization of the output text span class nowrap a href Template See also html title Template See also See also a Caprona alida label1 Caprona alida span In this instance the rendered term will stand out unitalicized Examples of improper use editTrivial information dictionary definitions and slang edit ShortcutsWP TRHATWP NOTHATNOTE When notes feature a trivial detail or use of a term or links to overly specific and tendentious material they are unwarranted A previous version of the article Investment showed During a siege to invest a town or fortress means to surround it with a contravallation and a circumvallation Investment is a term with several closely related meanings in finance and economics It refers to the accumulation of some kind of asset in hopes of getting a future return from it In this case there is no direct disambiguation and the note listed is bound to be uninteresting to most readers The proper disambiguation simply links to a separate Invest disambiguation page Legitimate information about the topic edit ShortcutWP LEGITHAT A previous version of the Aisha article showed Ayesha is sometimes used as a woman s name Once popular only among Muslims it was briefly popular among English speakers after it appeared in the book She by Rider Haggard Aisha or Ayesha Arabicعائشه a isha she who lives was a wife of the Islamic prophet Muhammad This is a typical but improper use of disambiguating hatnotes Instead the information belongs in the body of the article or in the articles about the book or in a separate article about names or all three places Hatnotes are meant to reduce confusion and direct readers to another article they might have been looking for not for information about the subject of the article itself Linking to articles that are related to the topic edit ShortcutWP RELATED Disambiguation hatnotes are intended to link to separate topics that could be referred to by the same title of the article or any of its redirects They are not intended to link to topics that are simply related to each other or to a specific aspect of a general topic This page is about the scientific study of extraterrestrial life For treatment in popular culture see Extraterrestrial life in popular culture Extraterrestrial life is life that may exist and originate outside the planet Earth Its existence is currently hypothetical there is as yet no evidence of extraterrestrial life that has been widely accepted by scientists Instead of using a disambiguation hatnote in such cases it is better to summarize the topic Extraterrestrial life in popular culture under a subsection of Extraterrestrial life in conjunction with the main template Similarly do not use the see also or main templates on top of a page as they are meant only for sections templates other uses and broader might be more appropriate alternatives This guideline does not discourage the use of disambiguation hatnotes in a situation where separate topics are related but could nonetheless be referred to by the same title and would thus qualify for disambiguation such as a book and its film adaptation e g The Lord of the Rings and The Lord of the Rings film series Disambiguating article names that are not ambiguous edit ShortcutsWP NAMBWP NOTAMBWP NOHATWP NOHATNOTE It is usually preferable not to have a hatnote when the name of the article is not ambiguous Water wuxing For other uses see Water disambiguation In Chinese philosophy water Chinese 水 pinyin shuǐ is the low point of matter It is considered matter s dying or hiding stage Here the hatnote can be removed A reader who is following links within Wikipedia is unlikely to end up at Water wuxing if they were looking for other meanings of water since water does not redirect there A hatnote may still be appropriate when even a more specific name is still ambiguous For example Tree set theory might still be confused with Tree descriptive set theory The presence or absence of hatnotes in articles with disambiguated titles has been a contentious issue and this guideline doesn t prescribe one way or the other There are cases where some editors strongly believe that such hatnotes should be included such as the various articles about treaties called Treaty of Paris A hatnote may be appropriate in an unambiguously named article when an ambiguous term redirects to it as explained in Ambiguous term that redirects to an unambiguously named article above Extraneous links edit ShortcutWP HATEXTRA Each additional link in the hatnote besides the ambiguous or confusable topic s makes it more difficult to find the desired target For example in a previous version of the article WTOB AM under a former callsign For the New Orleans Louisiana United States radio station known as WTIX from 1953 2005 see WIST AM WTIX 980 AM is a radio station broadcasting a Sports radio format In this case the link to New Orleans Louisiana in the hatnote leads to an article that is not ambiguous with the title Linking only to the possible other destination WIST AM makes it easier to find the link External links edit ShortcutWP ELHAT A previous version of the Hurricane Katrina article contained If you are trying to locate someone missing in Hurricane Katrina or register yourself as found you can use the site www disastersearch org Hurricane Katrina which made landfall near New Orleans Louisiana on August 29 2005 was one of the most destructive and expensive tropical cyclones to hit the United States The use of external help links in Wikipedia though noble cannot reasonably be maintained In special cases a link to an External links section may be appropriate but POV favoritism can be obstructive In this case the hatnote was removed entirely Non existent articles edit ShortcutsWP NOARTICLEWP REDHAT For the guideline on when to create standalone articles versus sections see WP NOPAGE Hatnotes should not contain red links to non existent articles since hatnotes are intended to help users navigate to another article they may have intended to find The exception is if one intends to create the linked article immediately In that case consider creating the new article first before saving the addition of the hatnote Hatnote templates editGeneric hatnote edit a href Template Hatnote html title Template Hatnote Hatnote a allows general text to be shown in hatnote format It is appropriate when none of the other specific templates listed below includes the combination of parameters needed or to combine several of them in a single hatnote a href Template Hatnote html title Template Hatnote Hatnote a CUSTOM TEXT CUSTOM TEXT a href Template Hatnote html title Template Hatnote Hatnote a For other senses of this term see etc For other senses of this term see etc a href Template Self reference html class mw redirect title Template Self reference Self reference a a generic template for self references to Wikipedia material Other uses of the same title For see edit Per WP NAMB it is usually preferable not to have a hatnote when the name of the article is not ambiguous This page is about For other uses see edit a href Template About html title Template About About a is the main template for noting other uses Note When used in main namespace aka mainspace the word page in the following hatnotes is replaced by article a href Template About html title Template About About a TOPIC This page is about TOPIC For other uses see Hatnote disambiguation a href Template About html title Template About About a USE1 PAGE2 When the disambiguation page has a different name Note the empty second parameter This page is about USE1 For other uses see PAGE2 a href Template About html title Template About About a USE1 USE2 PAGE2 When there is only one other use This page is about USE1 For USE2 see PAGE2 a href Template About html title Template About About a USE1 USE2 PAGE2 and PAGE3 Two pages for USE2 This page is about USE1 For USE2 see PAGE2 and PAGE3 a href Template About html title Template About About a USE1 USE2 PAGE2 SUBSECTION span class nowrap span PAGE2TITLE Using the magic word to give the link a different title This page is about USE1 For USE2 see PAGE2TITLE a href Template About html title Template About About a USE1 USE2 PAGE2 other uses When there are several standard other uses and also a disambiguation page with default name Note that the last page name is not specified This page is about USE1 For USE2 see PAGE2 For other uses see Hatnote disambiguation a href Template About html title Template About About a USE1 USE2 PAGE2 other uses PAGE3 When there are several standard other uses and also a disambiguation page with non default name This page is about USE1 For USE2 see PAGE2 For other uses see PAGE3 a href Template About html title Template About About a USE2 PAGE2 USE3 PAGE3 other uses When you don t need to state the focus of this article page Note the empty first parameter For USE2 see PAGE2 For USE3 see PAGE3 For other uses see Hatnote disambiguation a href Template About html title Template About About a PAGE1 and PAGE2 For other uses see PAGE1 and PAGE2 Note a href Template For html title Template For for a PAGE1 PAGE2 produces the same result a href Template About html title Template About About a TOPIC section yes This section is about TOPIC For other uses see Hatnote disambiguation Note this hatnote says section instead of article or page a href Template About html title Template About About a USE1 text TEXT This page is about USE1 TEXT This page is about It is not to be confused with edit a href Template About distinguish html title Template About distinguish About distinguish a is a template for noting other uses when there could be confusion with another topic a href Template About distinguish html title Template About distinguish About distinguish a USE1 PAGE1 This page is about USE1 It is not to be confused with PAGE1 a href Template About distinguish2 html class mw redirect title Template About distinguish2 About distinguish2 a USE1 TEXT This page is about USE1 It is not to be confused with TEXT For see edit For can be used instead of About so as not to display This page is about USE1 but still specify a specific other use This effect can also be achieved by using an empty first parameter in About as in For example a href Template For html title Template For For a OTHER TOPIC PAGE1 is the same as a href Template About html title Template About About a OTHER TOPIC PAGE1 note the empty first parameter However it is somewhat clearer when using the For template since the word about does not appear in the statement a href Template For html title Template For For a OTHER TOPIC For OTHER TOPIC see Hatnote disambiguation a href Template For html title Template For For a OTHER TOPIC PAGE1 For OTHER TOPIC see PAGE1 a href Template For html title Template For For a OTHER TOPIC PAGE1 PAGE2 For OTHER TOPIC see PAGE1 and PAGE2 a href Template For html title Template For For a OTHER TOPIC PAGE1 PAGE2 PAGE3 For OTHER TOPIC see PAGE1 PAGE2 and PAGE3 Variations As with Other uses there is a whole family of for templates For text allows custom text such as quotation marks or a link from part of the CUSTOM TEXT but does not supply automatic wikilinking a href Template For text html title Template For text For text a OTHER TOPIC CUSTOM TEXT For OTHER TOPIC see CUSTOM TEXT note how CUSTOM TEXT isn t bluelinked It also supports up to three topics a href Template For text html title Template For text For text a OTHER TOPIC CUSTOM TEXT OTHER TOPIC 2 CUSTOM TEXT 2 For OTHER TOPIC see CUSTOM TEXT For OTHER TOPIC 2 see CUSTOM TEXT 2 a href Template For text html title Template For text For text a OTHER TOPIC CUSTOM TEXT OTHER TOPIC 2 CUSTOM TEXT 2 OTHER TOPIC 3 CUSTOM TEXT 3 For OTHER TOPIC see CUSTOM TEXT For OTHER TOPIC 2 see CUSTOM TEXT 2 For OTHER TOPIC 3 see CUSTOM TEXT 3 For other uses see edit When such a wordy hatnote as About is not needed Other uses is often useful a href Template Other uses html title Template Other uses Other uses a For other uses see Hatnote disambiguation a href Template Other uses html title Template Other uses Other uses a PAGE1 For other uses see PAGE1 a href Template Other uses html title Template Other uses Other uses a PAGE1 PAGE2 For other uses see PAGE1 and PAGE2 Variations There are historically a whole family of other uses templates for specific cases About is the standard hatnote for other uses and many of them can be specified using the About template However the individual templates may be easier to use in certain contexts Here are the variations and when appropriate the equivalents using the About Other uses or For templates For other uses of see a href Template Other uses of html title Template Other uses of Other uses of a TOPIC For other uses of TOPIC see TOPIC disambiguation a href Template Other uses of html title Template Other uses of Other uses of a TOPIC PAGE1 For other uses of TOPIC see PAGE1 Redirect edit redirects here For other uses see edit a href Template Redirect html title Template Redirect Redirect a REDIRECT REDIRECT redirects here For other uses see REDIRECT disambiguation a href Template Redirect html title Template Redirect Redirect a REDIRECT PAGE1 REDIRECT redirects here For other uses see PAGE1 a href Template Redirect html title Template Redirect Redirect a REDIRECT USE1 PAGE1 REDIRECT redirects here For USE1 see PAGE1 a href Template Redirect html title Template Redirect Redirect a REDIRECT USE1 PAGE1 USE2 PAGE2 REDIRECT redirects here For USE1 see PAGE1 For USE2 see PAGE2 a href Template Redirect html title Template Redirect Redirect a REDIRECT USE1 PAGE1 and PAGE2 REDIRECT redirects here For USE1 see PAGE1 and PAGE2 VariationsFor two sources a href Template Redirect2 html title Template Redirect2 Redirect2 a REDIRECT1 REDIRECT2 REDIRECT1 and REDIRECT2 redirect here For other uses see REDIRECT1 disambiguation a href Template Redirect2 html title Template Redirect2 Redirect2 a REDIRECT1 REDIRECT2 USE REDIRECT1 and REDIRECT2 redirect here For USE see REDIRECT1 disambiguation a href Template Redirect2 html title Template Redirect2 Redirect2 a REDIRECT1 REDIRECT2 PAGE1 REDIRECT1 and REDIRECT2 redirect here For other uses see PAGE1 a href Template Redirect2 html title Template Redirect2 Redirect2 a REDIRECT1 REDIRECT2 USE PAGE1 REDIRECT1 and REDIRECT2 redirect here For USE see PAGE1 a href Template Redirect2 html title Template Redirect2 Redirect2 a REDIRECT1 REDIRECT2 USE1 PAGE1 USE2 PAGE2 REDIRECT1 and REDIRECT2 redirect here For USE1 see PAGE1 For USE2 see PAGE2 For three or more sources a href Template Redirect multi html title Template Redirect multi Redirect multi a 2 REDIRECT1 REDIRECT2 REDIRECT1 and REDIRECT2 redirect here For other uses see REDIRECT1 disambiguation and REDIRECT2 disambiguation a href Template Redirect multi html title Template Redirect multi Redirect multi a 3 REDIRECT1 REDIRECT2 REDIRECT3 REDIRECT1 REDIRECT2 and REDIRECT3 redirect here For other uses see REDIRECT1 disambiguation REDIRECT2 disambiguation and REDIRECT3 disambiguation a href Template Redirect multi html title Template Redirect multi Redirect multi a 2 REDIRECT1 REDIRECT2 USE PAGE REDIRECT1 and REDIRECT2 redirect here For USE see PAGE a href Template Redirect multi html title Template Redirect multi Redirect multi a 2 REDIRECT1 REDIRECT2 USE1 PAGE1 USE2 PAGE2 and PAGE3 REDIRECT1 and REDIRECT2 redirect here For USE1 see PAGE1 For USE2 see PAGE2 and PAGE3 a href Template Redirect several html title Template Redirect several Redirect several a REDIRECT1 REDIRECT2 REDIRECT3 Several terms redirect here For other uses see REDIRECT1 disambiguation REDIRECT2 disambiguation and REDIRECT3 disambiguation To specify the text following redirects here a href Template Redirect html title Template Redirect Redirect a REDIRECT text TEXT REDIRECT redirects here TEXT a href Template Redirect synonym html title Template Redirect synonym Redirect synonym a TERM OTHER TOPIC TERM redirects here The term may also refer to OTHER TOPIC For technical reasons redirects here edit a href Template Technical reasons html title Template Technical reasons Technical reasons a REDIRECT For technical reasons REDIRECT redirects here a href Template Technical reasons html title Template Technical reasons Technical reasons a REDIRECT PAGE For technical reasons REDIRECT redirects here For REDIRECT see PAGE a href Template Technical reasons html title Template Technical reasons Technical reasons a REDIRECT DESCRIPTION PAGE For technical reasons REDIRECT redirects here For DESCRIPTION see PAGE a href Template Technical reasons html title Template Technical reasons Technical reasons a REDIRECT DESCRIPTION1 PAGE1 DESCRIPTION2 PAGE2 For technical reasons REDIRECT redirects here For DESCRIPTION1 see PAGE1 For DESCRIPTION2 see PAGE2 redirects here Not to be confused with edit a href Template Redirect distinguish html title Template Redirect distinguish Redirect distinguish a REDIRECT PAGE1 REDIRECT redirects here Not to be confused with PAGE1 a href Template Redirect distinguish html title Template Redirect distinguish Redirect distinguish a REDIRECT PAGE1 PAGE2 PAGE3 REDIRECT redirects here Not to be confused with PAGE1 PAGE2 or PAGE3 a href Template Redirect distinguish2 html class mw redirect title Template Redirect distinguish2 Redirect distinguish2 a REDIRECT TEXT REDIRECT redirects here Not to be confused with TEXT Similar proper names For other people named edit Other people edit a href Template Other people html title Template Other people Other people a For other people named Hatnote see Hatnote disambiguation a href Template Other people html title Template Other people Other people a NAME For other people named NAME see NAME disambiguation a href Template Other people html title Template Other people Other people a NAME PAGE For other people named NAME see PAGE a href Template Other people html title Template Other people Other people a PAGE For other people with the same name see PAGE a href Template Other people html title Template Other people Other people a NAME PAGE named titled For other people titled NAME see PAGE a href Template About other people html title Template About other people About other people a PERSON1 This page is about PERSON1 For other people with the same name see Hatnote disambiguation a href Template About other people html title Template About other people About other people a PERSON1 NAME This page is about PERSON1 For other people named NAME see NAME disambiguation a href Template About other people html title Template About other people About other people a PERSON1 NAME named titled This page is about PERSON1 For other people titled NAME see NAME disambiguation a href Template About other people html title Template About other people About other people a PERSON1 NAME PAGE This page is about PERSON1 For other people named NAME see PAGE a href Template About other people html title Template About other people About other people a PERSON1 PAGE This page is about PERSON1 For other people with the same name see PAGE a href Template About other people html title Template About other people About other people a PERSON1 PAGE1 PAGE2 PAGE3 This page is about PERSON1 For other people with the same name see PAGE1 PAGE2 and PAGE3 a href Template Similar names html title Template Similar names Similar names a NAME1 NAME2 NAME3 NAME4 For other people with similar names see NAME1 NAME2 NAME3 and NAME4 Note defaults to named as in Other people exists for options like nicknamed known as etc Other places ships hurricanes edit a href Template Other places html title Template Other places Other places a analogous to Other uses For other places with the same name see Hatnote disambiguation a href Template Other places html title Template Other places Other places a PAGE analogous to Other uses For other places with the same name see PAGE a href Template Other ships html title Template Other ships Other ships a SHIP1 For other ships with the same name see SHIP1 a href Template Other hurricanes html class mw redirect title Template Other hurricanes Other hurricanes a HURR For other storms of the same name see HURR Distinguish edit Not to be confused with edit a href Template Distinguish html title Template Distinguish Distinguish a PAGE1 Not to be confused with PAGE1 a href Template Distinguish html title Template Distinguish Distinguish a PAGE1 PAGE2 PAGE3 PAGE4 Not to be confused with PAGE1 PAGE2 PAGE3 or PAGE4 a href Template Distinguish html title Template Distinguish Distinguish a text TEXT Not to be confused with TEXT a href Template Distinguish html title Template Distinguish Distinguish a text TEXT1 a href PAGE1 html title PAGE1 PAGE1 a TEXT2 Not to be confused with TEXT1 PAGE1 TEXT2 redirects here It is not to be confused with edit a href Template Redirect distinguish html title Template Redirect distinguish Redirect distinguish a REDIRECT PAGE1 REDIRECT redirects here Not to be confused with PAGE1 a href Template Redirect distinguish html title Template Redirect distinguish Redirect distinguish a REDIRECT PAGE1 PAGE2 PAGE3 PAGE4 REDIRECT redirects here Not to be confused with PAGE1 PAGE2 PAGE3 or PAGE4 a href Template Redirect distinguish text html title Template Redirect distinguish text Redirect distinguish text a REDIRECT TEXT REDIRECT redirects here Not to be confused with TEXT Family names edit ShortcutsWP HATPATWP HATFAM Further information Category Hatnote templates for names Family names can also be clarified using inline footnotes via Family name footnote For use in sections edit Further information WP SUMMARYHATNOTE Main article edit a href Template Main html title Template Main Main a is used to make summary style explicit when used in a summary section for which there is also a separate article on the subject a href Template Main html title Template Main Main a Main Article Main article Main Article a href Template Main html title Template Main Main a Main Article Article2 Main articles Main Article and Article2 a href Template Main list html title Template Main list Main list a Article1 For a more comprehensive list see Article1 a href Template Main category html title Template Main category Main category a Category name Main category Category name Further information edit a href Template Further html title Template Further Further a can supplement a href Template Main html title Template Main Main a in summary sections or can indicate more details in nonsummary sections a href Template Further html title Template Further Further a PAGE Further information PAGE a href Template Further html title Template Further Further a PAGE1 PAGE2 PAGE3 Further information PAGE1 PAGE2 and PAGE3 a href Template Further html title Template Further Further a topic TOPIC PAGE1 PAGE2 PAGE3 Further information on TOPIC PAGE1 PAGE2 and PAGE3 a href Template Further2 html class mw redirect title Template Further2 Further2 a PAGE1 PAGE2 and other text Further information PAGE1 PAGE2 and other text a href Template Further ill html class mw redirect title Template Further ill Further ill a may be used to link to articles containing further information on a topic where English Wikipedia does not yet have an article but another language Wikipedia does See also edit a href Template See also html title Template See also See also a can be used at the head of a section a href Template See also html title Template See also See also a TOPIC PAGE OTHER TOPIC PAGE See also TOPIC PAGE and OTHER TOPIC PAGENote use only when OTHER TOPIC PAGE is related to current article and contains a self explanatory parenthetical a href Template See also2 html class mw redirect title Template See also2 See also2 a OTHER TOPIC OTHER TOPIC2 OTHER TOPIC3 and other text See also OTHER TOPIC OTHER TOPIC2 and OTHER TOPIC3 and other textArticle or section transclusions edit a href Template Transcluding article html title Template Transcluding article Transcluding article a PAGE1 PAGE2 PAGE3 used when transcluding 1 or more entire articles into a target article Transcluding articles PAGE1 PAGE2 and a href Template Transcluded section html title Template Transcluded section Transcluded section a PAGE used when selectively transcluding a section from one article into a section of the target article This section is transcluded from PAGE edit history a href Template Transcluded section html title Template Transcluded section Transcluded section a PAGE part yes used when selectively transcluding a section into part of a section on the target page Part of this section is transcluded from PAGE edit history For category pages edit See also Category Hatnote templates for category pages Category specific templates a href Template Category see also html title Template Category see also Category see also a THIS THAT THE OTHER See also the categories THIS THAT and THE OTHERThis is a template for linking categories horizontally Horizontal linkage is often the right solution when vertical linkage i e as sub category and parent category is not appropriate In most cases this template should be used on both categories to create reciprocal linkage between the two categories a href Template Cat main html title Template Cat main Cat main a MAIN ARTICLE The main article for this category is MAIN ARTICLE a href Template Category explanation html title Template Category explanation Category explanation a colourless green ideas This category is for colourless green ideas a href Template Category pair html title Template Category pair Category pair a TOPIC1 TOPIC2 a href Template Preceding category html title Template Preceding category Preceding category a OTHER TOPIC a href Template Succeeding category html title Template Succeeding category Succeeding category a OTHER TOPIC a href Template Contrast html class mw redirect title Template Contrast Contrast a OTHERCAT1 OTHERCAT2 This category is often contrasted with OTHERCAT1 or OTHERCAT2 a href Template Contrast html class mw redirect title Template Contrast Contrast a OTHERCAT1 OTHERCAT2 plural yes This category are often contrasted with OTHERCAT1 or OTHERCAT2 Correct titles edit The correct title of this article is The substitution or omission of the or without a reason It appears incorrectly here is due to technical restrictions Main page Template Correct title Lists edit Further information Category Hatnote templates for listsWhat to do before editing or creating a template edit nbsp This template should not be substituted These templates are used in thousands of articles therefore changing the syntax could break thousands of articles If you wish to create or edit a disambiguation or redirection template first ask yourself the following questions Is there already a template that will do this job Since many disambiguation and redirection templates have already been created first check Category Hatnote templates Do I really need a new template for this Will it likely be used on any other articles or should I just use Hatnote instead Before creating a new template see the template namespace guideline If I change the parameters around on an existing template do I know what the result will be Will it break existing uses of the template and if so can I fix all of the errors Before making any changes see Wikipedia Template sandbox and test cases See also editWikipedia Hatnotes are cheap Inline cleanup tags References edit See MOS SECTIONORDER for specific details regarding the placement of hatnotes The acceptability of multiple hatnotes was clarified in a 2016 discussion vteHatnote templatesWikipedia Hatnote Wikipedia Disambiguation Wikipedia RedirectGeneric Hatnote Self reference For and about For For text for custom text For multi for multiple uses About Variations Other uses Other uses of Redirect distinguish for About distinguish About distinguish text Other topics Other people About other people adds about description Similar names Other storms Other places Other ships Redirect Redirect Redirect2 for two redirects Redirect multi for multiple redirects Redirect several for several redirects without listing each Redirect synonym Redirect distinguish Redirect distinguish text Redirect distinguish for Technical reasons Distinguish Distinguish supports custom text About distinguish About distinguish text for custom text Redirect distinguish Redirect distinguish text for custom text Redirect distinguish for For use in sections Main Main if exists Main list Further Further text for custom text Further interlanguage link See also See also if exists See also text for custom text For outline For timeline Special Broader For introduction See Wiktionary Transcluding article Transcluded section Subject specific About year Highway detail hatnote For LMST WikiIPA nbsp Category Hatnote templates modules for family names for lists hatnote templates for category pages vteWikipedia templatesMain namespaceGeneral Cleanup Verifiability and sources Disputes Hatnotes Infoboxes Links External link templates Linking country articles Lists Main page Section Sources of articles Quick reference Standard boxes Stub types TranslationOther namespacesCompact TOC Category File Talk Template User Userboxes User talk Wikipedia WikiProject bannersAll namespacesDeletion Speedy Formatting Maintenance Merging Moving Requested Navigation Redirect pages Functional index Language codes Splitting Wikimedia sister projectsNavboxeswith templatesArchive Articles for deletion Birth death and age Button Category header Citation and verifiability Citation Style 1 Deletion review Editnotice Hatnotes Help desk Inline cleanup Introduction cleanup IPA Math Notice and warnings Organization infoboxes Proposed article mergers Protection Quotation Redirects Search Semantics Speedy deletion Notices String handling Sup and sub related Top icon Transwiki maintenance Unicode User talk pages User noticeboard notices Userboxes User rights Userspace linking Userspace Disclaimers Wikibreak WikiLoveInline imagesWikipedia icons Discussion icons Comment icons EmojiRelated topicsTemplate documentation Examples of templates Maintenance template removal Requested templates WikiProject Templates Template help Template namespaceSearch nbsp Category vteWikipedia key policies and guidelines Five pillars Ignore all rulesContent PVerifiability No original research Neutral point of view What Wikipedia is not Biographies of living persons Copyright Copyright violations Image use Article titlesGNotability Autobiography Citing sources Reliable sources Medicine Do not include copies of lengthy primary sources Plagiarism Don t create hoaxes Fringe theories Patent nonsense External linksConduct PCivility Consensus Harassment Vandalism Ignore all rules No personal attacks Ownership of content Edit warring Dispute resolution Sockpuppetry No legal threats Child protection Paid contribution disclosureGAssume good faith Conflict of interest Disruptive editing Do not disrupt Wikipedia to illustrate a point Etiquette Gaming the system Please do not bite the newcomers Courtesy vanishing Responding to threats of harm Talk page guidelines SignaturesDeletion PDeletion policy Proposed deletion Biographies Criteria for speedy deletion Attack page Oversight Revision deletionEnforcement PAdministrators Banning Blocking Page protectionEditing PEditing policyGArticle size Summary style Be bold Disambiguation Hatnotes Broad concept article UnderstandabilityStyleManual of Style Contents Accessibility Dates and numbers Images Layout Lead section Linking ListsClassificationCategories lists and navigation templates Categorization Template namespaceProject content GProject namespace WikiProjects User pages User boxes Shortcuts SubpagesWMF PTerms of Use List of policies Friendly space policy Licensing and copyright Privacy policyList of all policies and guidelines P List of policies G List of guidelines Summaries of values and principles Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wikipedia Hatnote amp oldid 1189225093, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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