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Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Icons

The use of icons in Wikipedia encyclopedic project content – mainly lists, tables, infoboxes, and navboxes – can provide useful visual cues, but can also present a number of problems. Guidance on principal issues is summarized below, followed by more in-depth discussion of each.

For the purposes of this guideline, icons encompasses any small images – including logos, crests, coats of arms, seals, flags – or other decoration, whether produced by small image files, typographic dingbats, emojis, or CSS display manipulation.

Icons edit

Appropriate use edit

  • MOS:APPROPRIATEICONS

Icons may be helpful in certain situations:

  • Repeated use of an icon in a table. This should only be done if the icon has been used previously with an explanation of its purpose. Example: Timeline of the far future.
  • They are useful in articles about international sporting events, to show the representative nationality of players (which may differ from their legal nationality). Example: List of WPA World Nine-ball Champions.

Inappropriate use edit

Do not use icons in general article prose edit

  • MOS:NOICONS

Icons should not be used in prose in the article body, as in "Jackson moved to Bristol, England  , in April 2004." This breaks up the continuity of the text, distracting the reader (example).

Encyclopedic purpose edit

  • MOS:DECOR
  • MOS:DECORATION
  • MOS:ICONDECORATION

Icons should serve an encyclopedic purpose and not merely be decorative. They should provide additional useful information on the article subject, serve as visual cues that aid the reader's comprehension, or improve navigation. Icons should not be added only because they look good: one reader's harmless decoration may be another reader's distraction. An icon is purely decorative if it does not improve comprehension of the article subject and serves no navigational function. Where icons are used for layout purposes only, consider using bullet points as an alternative.

Do not put icons in section headings; this is an accessibility problem.

Do not use too many icons edit

  • MOS:TOOMANY
  • MOS:XMASTREE

When icons are added excessively, they clutter the page and become redundant, as in this sportsperson's infobox. Pages with excessive icons can also cause loading problems for some people.

Do not re-purpose icons beyond their legitimate scope edit

Icons can represent a specific entity and should not be re-purposed to represent something else, e.g. because an actually appropriate flag is not available. For example, do not abuse the flag of the United Nations to represent the entire world, as this is not an accurate application of the official flag of that international organization.

Do not distort icons edit

Do not modify or use non-generic icons in a way that is not notably used outside of Wikipedia. See Wikipedia:OR#Original images for further clarification. One example of such a distortion is a user-modified fusing of North American flags to represent a narrow definition of "North America" as a whole.

Do not illustrate or introduce unpublished ideas edit

Remember accessibility for people with visual impairment edit

Every functional icon should have alt text, which is text describing the visual appearance of the image. Failure to provide this alt text will often make the icon meaningless or confusing to those using screen readers or text-only browsers. To provide alt text, simply add the description to the end of the image markup: for example, "[[File:Commons-logo.svg|30x30px|link=Commons:Special:Search|Search Wikimedia Commons]]" generates an icon   that links to Commons:Special:Search and has alt text "Search Wikimedia Commons". Image maps should specify alt text for the main image and for each clickable area; see Image maps and {{English official language clickable map}} for examples.

Flags edit

  • MOS:FLAG
  • MOS:FLAGS

Appropriate flag use edit

  • MOS:WORDPRECEDENCE

Flag icons may be relevant in some subject areas, where the subject actually represents that country or nationality – such as military units or national sports teams. In lists or tables, flag icons may be relevant when such representation of different subjects is pertinent to the purpose of the list or table itself.

Words as the primary means of communication should be given greater precedence over flags, and flags should not change the expected style or layout of infoboxes or lists to the detriment of words.

The use of ship registry flags and International Code of Signals flags in infoboxes of ship articles is appropriate.

See § Inappropriate use for when to not use flags even if the information seems pertinent (in which case, add it in word form).

User choice: Registered users can add a .flagicon {display:none;} CSS rule to their user-specific stylesheet to hide content with the flagicon class (which is used by most flag templates).

Consistency is not paramount edit

If the use of flags in a list, table or infobox makes it unclear, ambiguous or controversial, it is better to remove the flags even if that makes the list, table or infobox inconsistent with others of the same type where no problems have arisen.

Avoid flag icons in infoboxes edit

  • MOS:INFOBOXFLAG

Generally, flag icons should not be used in infoboxes, even when there is a "country", "nationality" or equivalent field: they could be unnecessarily distracting and might give undue prominence to one field among many.

Flag icons should only be inserted in infoboxes in those cases where they convey information in addition to the text. Flag icons lead to unnecessary disputes when over-used. A number of common infoboxes (e.g., Template:Infobox company, Template:Infobox film, Template:Infobox person, Template:Infobox football biography, Template:Infobox weapon) have explicitly deprecated the use of flag icons.

Situations where flag icons may be used in infoboxes include:

Human geographic articles – for example, settlements and administrative subdivisions – may have flags of the country and first-level administrative subdivision in infoboxes. However, physical geographic articles – for example, continents, islands, mountains, valleys, rivers, lakes, swamps, etc. – should not. Where one article covers both human and physical geographic subjects (e.g., Manhattan, which covers both the borough of New York City and the island of the same name), or where the status of the territory is subject to a political dispute, the consensus of editors at that article will determine whether flag use in the infobox is preferred or not.

Accompany flags with country names edit

The name of a flag's political entity should appear adjacent to the first use of the flag, as no reader is familiar with every flag, and many flags differ only in minor details. Nearby uses of the flag need not repeat the name, especially in a list or table. (For example, in this infobox, flags of countries involved in a battle are first given with their names. Following this, the flag alone is used to identify the nationality of military commanders.) To achieve this, the flag-and-name template {{flag|Japan}} (or {{flag|JPN}}) would be used first, and {{flagicon|JPN}} in subsequent uses. However, some editors feel that some tables such as those containing sports statistics (example)[dubious ] are easier to read if {{flag}} is used throughout.

However, first appearances in different sections, tables or lists in a long article may warrant a repetition of the name, especially if the occurrences are likely to be independently reached via links from other articles targeting an {{anchor}}. Use of flag templates without country names is also an accessibility issue, since the images rendered can be difficult for color blind readers to understand. In addition, flags can be hard to distinguish when reduced to icon size.

Historical considerations edit

Flags change, and sometimes the geographical or political area(s) to which a flag applies may also change.

Use historical flags in contexts where the difference matters edit

Use a historical flag and associated country name when they have at least a semi-officially applicable rationale to use them. For example, in lists of Olympic medalists, the USSR flag and country name should be used for reporting before 1992, not those of the Russian Federation or the CIS.

In some military history contexts edit

It may in some narrow military history circumstances be appropriate to use flags as they were used at the time being written about, including naval ensigns, provided that the flags are (as usual) accompanied at first occurrence by their country (or more narrow) names—our readers are not expected to be military historians. An example might be an in-depth exploration of a famous battle involving numerous forces with known flags; such flags might be used in summary tables to make it clearer which force was being referred to for a particular detail.

Entities without flags until after a certain point in time edit

Some subnational entities have not had flags until recently (e.g. the Welsh flag has only been official since 1959). While this flag can still represent Wales generally, it should not be used to represent the country when the context is specifically about a time period predating the flag. Some countries are also new, formed from parts of, or entirely subsuming, one or more other countries. It may need to be decided by consensus on a case-by-case basis what flag to use, when a topic crosses two periods and a conflict arises as to what country the topic pertains to in what contexts.

Political issues edit

Beware of political pitfalls, and listen to concerns raised by other editors. Some flags are (sometimes or always) political statements and can associate a person with their political significance, sometimes misleadingly. In other cases, a flag may have limited and highly specific official uses, and an application outside that context can have political (e.g. nationalist or anti-nationalist) implications.

Use of flags for non-sovereign states and nations edit

  • MOS:SOVEREIGNFLAG
  • MOS:NONSOVEREIGN

The exact definition of a "state", "nation" or "country" is often politically divisive and can result in debates over the choice of flag. For example, England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland are referred to by the British government as "countries" within the United Kingdom [1]; the Canadian House of Commons recognised the Québécois as "a nation within a united Canada";[2] and the United States recognizes many Native American tribal groupings as semi-independent "nations".

In general, if a flag is felt to be necessary, it should be that of the sovereign state (e.g. the United States of America or Canada) and not that of a subnational entity, even if that entity is sometimes considered a "nation" or "country" in its own right. This is partly for the sake of consistency across Wikipedia, but also because a person's legal citizenship is verifiable, whereas "nationality" within a country can be porous, indeterminate and shifting. An English person's passport describes them as a "British citizen", for example, not "English"; being English is a matter of self-identification, not a verifiable legality in most cases. Many editors, however, feel that the UK's subnations in particular are an exception in sporting contexts, and disputes are likely to arise if this sovereign state maxim is enforced in articles on subnational British topics.

Overbroad use of flags with politicized connotations edit

Some flags are politically contentious – take care to avoid using them in inappropriate contexts. Some examples are:

  1. Use of the flags of the Confederate States of America to represent all or part of the Southern United States prior to 1861 or after 1865.
  2. Use of the Ulster Banner to represent Northern Ireland in inappropriate contexts; see Northern Ireland flags issue and Wikipedia:Irish flags for details.
  3. Use of the apartheid-era Flag of South Africa (1928–1994) instead of the present-day one.

Inappropriate use edit

  • MOS:FLAGCRUFT

Do not emphasize nationality without good reason edit

Wikipedia is not a place for nationalistic pride. Flags are visually striking, and placing a national flag next to something can make its nationality or location seem to be of greater significance than other things. For example, with an English flag next to him, Paul McCartney looks like an "English singer-songwriter from Liverpool who was in the Beatles"; without the flag next to him, he looks like an "English singer-songwriter from Liverpool who was in the Beatles". Emphasizing the importance of a person's citizenship or nationality above their other qualities risks violating Wikipedia's "Neutral point of view" policy.

Do not use a flag when a picture of the subject is not available edit

  • MOS:FLAGPLACEHOLDER

A flag (or other symbolic image) should not be used as an image placeholder, such as in biographical articles. While it may be appropriate to use a flag or seal as the principal image in an infobox for the organizational entity it represents (for example, the FBI), in most cases these articles have an infobox with the flag or seal image (example).

Do not use subnational flags without direct relevance edit

  • MOS:FLAGRELEVANCE

Subnational flags (regions, cities, etc.) should generally be used only when directly relevant to the article. Such flags are rarely recognizable by the general public, detracting from any shorthand utility they might have, and are rarely closely related to the subject of the article. For instance, the flag of Tampa, Florida, is appropriately used on the Tampa article. However, the Tampa flag should generally not be used on articles about residents of Tampa: it would not be informative, and it would be unnecessarily visually distracting.

A common example of use of subnational flags would be that of a list concerned with subdivisions of a specific country.

Do not use supranational flags without direct relevance edit

Supranational flags (those of international organizations) should generally be used only when directly relevant to the article. For instance, the Flag of Europe is appropriately used on articles related to the European Union, the Council of Europe and other situations where this flag can be used to represent Europe. In sport, supranational flags should only be used to represent a supranational team or a supranational competition, where the team or competition use the supranational flag. The European flag should generally not be used alongside a national flag in articles about residents of EU member states; it would not be informative, and it would be unnecessarily visually distracting.

Do not rewrite history edit

  • MOS:COA

Do not use the coat of arms of a person as a stand-in for a national, military, or other flag.

Flags should not be used to misrepresent the nationality of a historical figure, event, object, etc. Political boundaries change, often over the span of a biographical article subject's lifetime. Where ambiguity or confusion could result, it is better not to use a flag at all, and where one is genuinely needed, use the historically accurate flag.

For example, writer Oscar Wilde, a native of Ireland while that island was entirely part of the United Kingdom, should have neither an Irish flag nor a British flag, as either would confuse readers.

Do not use flags in genocide-related lists and articles edit

Flags are typically poor or simplistic representations of the sides in such conflicts, and do little to aid understanding. Any value they might have is outweighed by the excessively inflammatory nature of flags in such contexts.

Do not use flags on disambiguation pages edit

In general, flags should not be used on disambiguation pages; see MOS:DABICON.

Biographical use edit

  • MOS:FLAGBIO

Flags make simple, blunt statements about nationality, while words can express the facts with more complexity. For example, the actress Naomi Watts could be said, depending upon context and point of view, to be any or all of: British, English, Welsh, or Australian. She was born a British citizen in England, lived in Wales for a long time, then moved to Australia and became an Australian citizen. There is no single flag for that, and using all four flags will not be helpful.

Flags are discouraged in the individual infoboxes of biographical articles. Special care should be taken with the biographical use of flag templates in the following situations:

  • Never use a flag for birth or death place, since doing so may imply an incorrect citizenship or nationality; a great many people have been born or have died abroad. (For example, American actor Johnny Galecki was born in Belgium, so putting a Belgian flag in his infobox, for any reason, might lead the casual reader to assume he is or was Belgian.)
  • In cases of emigration or periods of foreign residence, do not use the flag of the country of residence unless legal citizenship was achieved.
  • In a case of reliably sourced renunciation of citizenship of a country, do not use the flag and name of that former country to indicate an article subject's nationality; if a flag is used at all, use that of the later nationality.
  • If someone's citizenship has legally changed because of shifting political borders, use the historically correct country designation, not a later one, and perhaps mention in the article prose the new country name, e.g. "Belgrade, Yugoslavia (today in Serbia)"; it may also be best to avoid using any flag at all.
  • Use the flag and name of the country (be it a state or a nation) that the person (or team of people) officially represented, regardless of citizenship, when the flag templates are used for sports statistics and the like. If a French player is awarded a medal for playing in a German team, the German flag would be used in a table of awards. The Scottish flag would be used with regard to the FIFA World Cup, but that of the UK for the Olympics. Caution should be used in extending this convention to non-sporting contexts, as it may produce confusing results. And a countervailing example would be an article about a sports team that officially represents a particular country but is composed of members who are citizens of several countries; a table of players at such an article might list them by their country of actual citizenship or professed nationality.
  • Avoid flag usage, especially to present a point of view, that is likely to raise editorial controversy over political or other factual matters about a biography subject.
See also "Historical considerations" for other relevant recommendations.

Sportspersons edit

  • MOS:SPORTFLAG

Flags should never indicate the player's nationality in a non-sporting sense; flags should only indicate the sportsperson's national squad/team or representative nationality.

Where flags are used in a table, it should clearly indicate that they correspond to representative nationality, not legal nationality, if any confusion might arise.

Flags should generally illustrate the highest level the sportsperson is associated with. For example, if a sportsperson has represented a nation or has declared for a nation, then the national flag as determined by the sport governing body should be used (these can differ from countries' political national flags). If a sportsperson has not competed at the international level, then the eligibility rules of the international sport governing body (such as World Rugby, FIFA, IAAF, etc.) should be used. If these rules allow a player to represent two or more nations, then a reliable source should be used to show who the sportsperson has chosen to represent.

If a sportsperson most usually represents a specific country (e.g., Germany) but has represented a larger, supernational entity on some occasions (e.g., Europe) it may be more appropriate to use the national flag; this will often need to be determined on an article-by-article basis.

Subnational flags (e.g., England rather than UK) are traditionally used in some sports, and should not be changed to the national flag without consensus.

Logos edit

  • MOS:LOGO

The insertion of logos as icons into articles is strongly discouraged: While illustration of a logo may be appropriate at the main article on the topic to which the logo pertains, use of logos as icons is not useful to our readers, and often presents legal problems.

Non-free images edit

Use of company logos, sports team crests, and other images protected as intellectual property (including as copyrights, trademarks, and service marks) in articles can only be done on a non-free content use basis. Use of such images is nearly always prohibited (for more information, see Wikipedia:Non-free use rationale guideline and Wikipedia:Logos).

Free images edit

While legal problems may not be present (no intellectual property right being claimable), all of this guideline's rationales against use of icons as decoration still apply. Generally, addition of logos to article prose or tabular data does not improve the encyclopedia and leads to confusing visual clutter.

wikipedia, manual, style, icons, usage, guidelines, icons, wikipedia, articles, list, icon, templates, used, wikipedia, template, icon, this, guideline, part, english, wikipedia, manual, style, generally, accepted, standard, that, editors, should, attempt, fol. Usage guidelines for icons in Wikipedia articles For a list of icon templates used on Wikipedia see Template Icon This guideline is a part of the English Wikipedia s Manual of Style It is a generally accepted standard that editors should attempt to follow though it is best treated with common sense and occasional exceptions may apply Any substantive edit to this page should reflect consensus When in doubt discuss first on the talk page ShortcutsWP ICONWP MOSICONMOS ICONThis page in a nutshell While icons can be useful in Wikipedia articles in some circumstances there are also problems associated with their misapplication and overuse Words can be clearer Manual of Style MoS ContentAccessibility Biography Disambiguation pages Organizing by subject Gender identity Hidden text Infoboxes Linking Self references Words to watchFormattingAbbreviations Capitalization Dates and numbers Pronunciation Spelling Text formatting Titles of worksImagesCaptions Image placement Icons ImagesLayoutLayout Lead section Tables Trivia sectionsListsLists Lists of works Road junctions Stand alone listsBy topic areaLegalLegal TrademarksArtsAnime and manga Comics Blazons Film Lyrics and poetry Novels Philosophy Television Video games Visual arts Writing about fictionMusicMusic samples Record charts Stringed instrumentsHistoryMilitary historyRegionalSpecific naming conventions Canada China and Chinese Egypt France and French Hawaii India Indonesia Ireland Japan Korea Macedonia Malaysia Pakistan Philippines Poland Singapore Trinidad and TobagoReligionIslam Latter Day SaintsScienceComputer science Mathematics Medicine TaxonomyChemistryCompound classes Chemicals References and external links Safety Structure drawingSportsCue sports SnookerRelated guidelinesArticle size Article titles Categories lists and navigation templates Categorization Citing sources Hatnotes Notability Signatures Subpages Talk page guidelines Template namespace Understandability User pages Wikimedia sister projects WikiProjectsOverview Contents TipsvteThe use of icons in Wikipedia encyclopedic project content mainly lists tables infoboxes and navboxes can provide useful visual cues but can also present a number of problems Guidance on principal issues is summarized below followed by more in depth discussion of each For the purposes of this guideline icons encompasses any small images including logos crests coats of arms seals flags or other decoration whether produced by small image files typographic dingbats emojis or CSS display manipulation Contents 1 Icons 1 1 Appropriate use 1 2 Inappropriate use 1 2 1 Do not use icons in general article prose 1 2 2 Encyclopedic purpose 1 2 3 Do not use too many icons 1 2 4 Do not re purpose icons beyond their legitimate scope 1 2 5 Do not distort icons 1 2 6 Do not illustrate or introduce unpublished ideas 1 3 Remember accessibility for people with visual impairment 2 Flags 2 1 Appropriate flag use 2 2 Consistency is not paramount 2 3 Avoid flag icons in infoboxes 2 4 Accompany flags with country names 2 5 Historical considerations 2 5 1 Use historical flags in contexts where the difference matters 2 5 2 In some military history contexts 2 5 3 Entities without flags until after a certain point in time 2 6 Political issues 2 6 1 Use of flags for non sovereign states and nations 2 6 2 Overbroad use of flags with politicized connotations 2 7 Inappropriate use 2 7 1 Do not emphasize nationality without good reason 2 7 2 Do not use a flag when a picture of the subject is not available 2 7 3 Do not use subnational flags without direct relevance 2 7 4 Do not use supranational flags without direct relevance 2 7 5 Do not rewrite history 2 7 6 Do not use flags in genocide related lists and articles 2 7 7 Do not use flags on disambiguation pages 2 8 Biographical use 2 8 1 Sportspersons 3 Logos 3 1 Non free images 3 2 Free imagesIcons editAppropriate use edit For other uses see Wikipedia Images ShortcutMOS APPROPRIATEICONS Icons may be helpful in certain situations Repeated use of an icon in a table This should only be done if the icon has been used previously with an explanation of its purpose Example Timeline of the far future They are useful in articles about international sporting events to show the representative nationality of players which may differ from their legal nationality Example List of WPA World Nine ball Champions Inappropriate use edit Do not use icons in general article prose edit ShortcutMOS NOICONS Icons should not be used in prose in the article body as in Jackson moved to Bristol England nbsp in April 2004 This breaks up the continuity of the text distracting the reader example Encyclopedic purpose edit ShortcutsMOS DECORMOS DECORATIONMOS ICONDECORATION Icons should serve an encyclopedic purpose and not merely be decorative They should provide additional useful information on the article subject serve as visual cues that aid the reader s comprehension or improve navigation Icons should not be added only because they look good one reader s harmless decoration may be another reader s distraction An icon is purely decorative if it does not improve comprehension of the article subject and serves no navigational function Where icons are used for layout purposes only consider using bullet points as an alternative Do not put icons in section headings this is an accessibility problem Do not use too many icons edit ShortcutsMOS TOOMANYMOS XMASTREE When icons are added excessively they clutter the page and become redundant as in this sportsperson s infobox Pages with excessive icons can also cause loading problems for some people Do not re purpose icons beyond their legitimate scope edit Icons can represent a specific entity and should not be re purposed to represent something else e g because an actually appropriate flag is not available For example do not abuse the flag of the United Nations to represent the entire world as this is not an accurate application of the official flag of that international organization Do not distort icons edit Do not modify or use non generic icons in a way that is not notably used outside of Wikipedia See Wikipedia OR Original images for further clarification One example of such a distortion is a user modified fusing of North American flags to represent a narrow definition of North America as a whole Do not illustrate or introduce unpublished ideas edit Further information Wikipedia No original research Original images Remember accessibility for people with visual impairment edit Main page Wikipedia Manual of Style Accessibility Images Every functional icon should have alt text which is text describing the visual appearance of the image Failure to provide this alt text will often make the icon meaningless or confusing to those using screen readers or text only browsers To provide alt text simply add the description to the end of the image markup for example File Commons logo svg 30x30px link Commons Special Search Search Wikimedia Commons generates an icon nbsp that links to Commons Special Search and has alt text Search Wikimedia Commons Image maps should specify alt text for the main image and for each clickable area see Image maps and English official language clickable map for examples Flags editShortcutsMOS FLAGMOS FLAGS Terms such as country and nation as used below should be understood to also apply to other uses of flags such as national subdivisions and international organisations The bulk of these recommendations are also applicable to official seals coats of arms and other representations which serve similar purposes to flag images Appropriate flag use edit ShortcutMOS WORDPRECEDENCE Flag icons may be relevant in some subject areas where the subject actually represents that country or nationality such as military units or national sports teams In lists or tables flag icons may be relevant when such representation of different subjects is pertinent to the purpose of the list or table itself Words as the primary means of communication should be given greater precedence over flags and flags should not change the expected style or layout of infoboxes or lists to the detriment of words The use of ship registry flags and International Code of Signals flags in infoboxes of ship articles is appropriate See Inappropriate use for when to not use flags even if the information seems pertinent in which case add it in word form User choice Registered users can add a flagicon display none CSS rule to their user specific stylesheet to hide content with the flagicon class which is used by most flag templates Consistency is not paramount edit If the use of flags in a list table or infobox makes it unclear ambiguous or controversial it is better to remove the flags even if that makes the list table or infobox inconsistent with others of the same type where no problems have arisen Avoid flag icons in infoboxes edit ShortcutMOS INFOBOXFLAG Generally flag icons should not be used in infoboxes even when there is a country nationality or equivalent field they could be unnecessarily distracting and might give undue prominence to one field among many Flag icons should only be inserted in infoboxes in those cases where they convey information in addition to the text Flag icons lead to unnecessary disputes when over used A number of common infoboxes e g Template Infobox company Template Infobox film Template Infobox person Template Infobox football biography Template Infobox weapon have explicitly deprecated the use of flag icons Situations where flag icons may be used in infoboxes include Summarizing military conflicts Representing the nationality of participants in sporting events where this practice is otherwise common such as at the FIFA World Cup or Olympic Games Representing the registry of ships as well as use of International Code of Signals flagsHuman geographic articles for example settlements and administrative subdivisions may have flags of the country and first level administrative subdivision in infoboxes However physical geographic articles for example continents islands mountains valleys rivers lakes swamps etc should not Where one article covers both human and physical geographic subjects e g Manhattan which covers both the borough of New York City and the island of the same name or where the status of the territory is subject to a political dispute the consensus of editors at that article will determine whether flag use in the infobox is preferred or not Accompany flags with country names edit The name of a flag s political entity should appear adjacent to the first use of the flag as no reader is familiar with every flag and many flags differ only in minor details Nearby uses of the flag need not repeat the name especially in a list or table For example in this infobox flags of countries involved in a battle are first given with their names Following this the flag alone is used to identify the nationality of military commanders To achieve this the flag and name template a href Template Flag html title Template Flag flag a Japan or a href Template Flag html title Template Flag flag a JPN would be used first and a href Template Flagicon html title Template Flagicon flagicon a JPN in subsequent uses However some editors feel that some tables such as those containing sports statistics example dubious discuss are easier to read if a href Template Flag html title Template Flag flag a is used throughout However first appearances in different sections tables or lists in a long article may warrant a repetition of the name especially if the occurrences are likely to be independently reached via links from other articles targeting an anchor Use of flag templates without country names is also an accessibility issue since the images rendered can be difficult for color blind readers to understand In addition flags can be hard to distinguish when reduced to icon size Historical considerations edit Flags change and sometimes the geographical or political area s to which a flag applies may also change Use historical flags in contexts where the difference matters edit Use a historical flag and associated country name when they have at least a semi officially applicable rationale to use them For example in lists of Olympic medalists the USSR flag and country name should be used for reporting before 1992 not those of the Russian Federation or the CIS In some military history contexts edit It may in some narrow military history circumstances be appropriate to use flags as they were used at the time being written about including naval ensigns provided that the flags are as usual accompanied at first occurrence by their country or more narrow names our readers are not expected to be military historians An example might be an in depth exploration of a famous battle involving numerous forces with known flags such flags might be used in summary tables to make it clearer which force was being referred to for a particular detail Entities without flags until after a certain point in time edit Some subnational entities have not had flags until recently e g the Welsh flag has only been official since 1959 While this flag can still represent Wales generally it should not be used to represent the country when the context is specifically about a time period predating the flag Some countries are also new formed from parts of or entirely subsuming one or more other countries It may need to be decided by consensus on a case by case basis what flag to use when a topic crosses two periods and a conflict arises as to what country the topic pertains to in what contexts Political issues edit Beware of political pitfalls and listen to concerns raised by other editors Some flags are sometimes or always political statements and can associate a person with their political significance sometimes misleadingly In other cases a flag may have limited and highly specific official uses and an application outside that context can have political e g nationalist or anti nationalist implications Use of flags for non sovereign states and nations edit ShortcutsMOS SOVEREIGNFLAGMOS NONSOVEREIGN The exact definition of a state nation or country is often politically divisive and can result in debates over the choice of flag For example England Scotland Wales and Northern Ireland are referred to by the British government as countries within the United Kingdom 1 the Canadian House of Commons recognised the Quebecois as a nation within a united Canada 2 and the United States recognizes many Native American tribal groupings as semi independent nations In general if a flag is felt to be necessary it should be that of the sovereign state e g the United States of America or Canada and not that of a subnational entity even if that entity is sometimes considered a nation or country in its own right This is partly for the sake of consistency across Wikipedia but also because a person s legal citizenship is verifiable whereas nationality within a country can be porous indeterminate and shifting An English person s passport describes them as a British citizen for example not English being English is a matter of self identification not a verifiable legality in most cases Many editors however feel that the UK s subnations in particular are an exception in sporting contexts and disputes are likely to arise if this sovereign state maxim is enforced in articles on subnational British topics See also Do not use subnational flags without direct relevance Overbroad use of flags with politicized connotations edit Some flags are politically contentious take care to avoid using them in inappropriate contexts Some examples are Use of the flags of the Confederate States of America to represent all or part of the Southern United States prior to 1861 or after 1865 Use of the Ulster Banner to represent Northern Ireland in inappropriate contexts see Northern Ireland flags issue and Wikipedia Irish flags for details Use of the apartheid era Flag of South Africa 1928 1994 instead of the present day one Inappropriate use edit ShortcutMOS FLAGCRUFT Do not emphasize nationality without good reason edit Wikipedia is not a place for nationalistic pride Flags are visually striking and placing a national flag next to something can make its nationality or location seem to be of greater significance than other things For example with an English flag next to him Paul McCartney looks like an English singer songwriter from Liverpool who was in the Beatles without the flag next to him he looks like an English singer songwriter from Liverpool who was in the Beatles Emphasizing the importance of a person s citizenship or nationality above their other qualities risks violating Wikipedia s Neutral point of view policy Do not use a flag when a picture of the subject is not available edit ShortcutMOS FLAGPLACEHOLDER A flag or other symbolic image should not be used as an image placeholder such as in biographical articles While it may be appropriate to use a flag or seal as the principal image in an infobox for the organizational entity it represents for example the FBI in most cases these articles have an infobox with the flag or seal image example Do not use subnational flags without direct relevance edit ShortcutMOS FLAGRELEVANCE Subnational flags regions cities etc should generally be used only when directly relevant to the article Such flags are rarely recognizable by the general public detracting from any shorthand utility they might have and are rarely closely related to the subject of the article For instance the flag of Tampa Florida is appropriately used on the Tampa article However the Tampa flag should generally not be used on articles about residents of Tampa it would not be informative and it would be unnecessarily visually distracting A common example of use of subnational flags would be that of a list concerned with subdivisions of a specific country See also Use of flags for non sovereign states and nations Do not use supranational flags without direct relevance edit Supranational flags those of international organizations should generally be used only when directly relevant to the article For instance the Flag of Europe is appropriately used on articles related to the European Union the Council of Europe and other situations where this flag can be used to represent Europe In sport supranational flags should only be used to represent a supranational team or a supranational competition where the team or competition use the supranational flag The European flag should generally not be used alongside a national flag in articles about residents of EU member states it would not be informative and it would be unnecessarily visually distracting Do not rewrite history edit ShortcutMOS COA Do not use the coat of arms of a person as a stand in for a national military or other flag Flags should not be used to misrepresent the nationality of a historical figure event object etc Political boundaries change often over the span of a biographical article subject s lifetime Where ambiguity or confusion could result it is better not to use a flag at all and where one is genuinely needed use the historically accurate flag For example writer Oscar Wilde a native of Ireland while that island was entirely part of the United Kingdom should have neither an Irish flag nor a British flag as either would confuse readers Do not use flags in genocide related lists and articles edit Flags are typically poor or simplistic representations of the sides in such conflicts and do little to aid understanding Any value they might have is outweighed by the excessively inflammatory nature of flags in such contexts Do not use flags on disambiguation pages edit In general flags should not be used on disambiguation pages see MOS DABICON Biographical use edit ShortcutMOS FLAGBIO Flags make simple blunt statements about nationality while words can express the facts with more complexity For example the actress Naomi Watts could be said depending upon context and point of view to be any or all of British English Welsh or Australian She was born a British citizen in England lived in Wales for a long time then moved to Australia and became an Australian citizen There is no single flag for that and using all four flags will not be helpful Flags are discouraged in the individual infoboxes of biographical articles Special care should be taken with the biographical use of flag templates in the following situations Never use a flag for birth or death place since doing so may imply an incorrect citizenship or nationality a great many people have been born or have died abroad For example American actor Johnny Galecki was born in Belgium so putting a Belgian flag in his infobox for any reason might lead the casual reader to assume he is or was Belgian In cases of emigration or periods of foreign residence do not use the flag of the country of residence unless legal citizenship was achieved In a case of reliably sourced renunciation of citizenship of a country do not use the flag and name of that former country to indicate an article subject s nationality if a flag is used at all use that of the later nationality If someone s citizenship has legally changed because of shifting political borders use the historically correct country designation not a later one and perhaps mention in the article prose the new country name e g Belgrade Yugoslavia today in Serbia it may also be best to avoid using any flag at all Use the flag and name of the country be it a state or a nation that the person or team of people officially represented regardless of citizenship when the flag templates are used for sports statistics and the like If a French player is awarded a medal for playing in a German team the German flag would be used in a table of awards The Scottish flag would be used with regard to the FIFA World Cup but that of the UK for the Olympics Caution should be used in extending this convention to non sporting contexts as it may produce confusing results And a countervailing example would be an article about a sports team that officially represents a particular country but is composed of members who are citizens of several countries a table of players at such an article might list them by their country of actual citizenship or professed nationality Avoid flag usage especially to present a point of view that is likely to raise editorial controversy over political or other factual matters about a biography subject See also Historical considerations for other relevant recommendations Sportspersons edit ShortcutMOS SPORTFLAG Flags should never indicate the player s nationality in a non sporting sense flags should only indicate the sportsperson s national squad team or representative nationality Where flags are used in a table it should clearly indicate that they correspond to representative nationality not legal nationality if any confusion might arise Flags should generally illustrate the highest level the sportsperson is associated with For example if a sportsperson has represented a nation or has declared for a nation then the national flag as determined by the sport governing body should be used these can differ from countries political national flags If a sportsperson has not competed at the international level then the eligibility rules of the international sport governing body such as World Rugby FIFA IAAF etc should be used If these rules allow a player to represent two or more nations then a reliable source should be used to show who the sportsperson has chosen to represent If a sportsperson most usually represents a specific country e g Germany but has represented a larger supernational entity on some occasions e g Europe it may be more appropriate to use the national flag this will often need to be determined on an article by article basis Subnational flags e g England rather than UK are traditionally used in some sports and should not be changed to the national flag without consensus Logos edit WP MOSLOGO redirects here For the Wikipedia guidelines on logo usage see Wikipedia Logo ShortcutMOS LOGO The insertion of logos as icons into articles is strongly discouraged While illustration of a logo may be appropriate at the main article on the topic to which the logo pertains use of logos as icons is not useful to our readers and often presents legal problems Non free images edit Use of company logos sports team crests and other images protected as intellectual property including as copyrights trademarks and service marks in articles can only be done on a non free content use basis Use of such images is nearly always prohibited for more information see Wikipedia Non free use rationale guideline and Wikipedia Logos Free images edit While legal problems may not be present no intellectual property right being claimable all of this guideline s rationales against use of icons as decoration still apply Generally addition of logos to article prose or tabular data does not improve the encyclopedia and leads to confusing visual clutter vteManual of StyleOverview Directory TipsContentAccessibility Biography Disambiguation pages Organizing by subject area Gender identity Hidden text Infoboxes Linking Self references Words to watchFormattingAbbreviations Capitalization Dates and numbers Pronunciation Spelling Text formatting Titles of worksImagesCaptions Image placement Icons ImagesLayoutLayout Lead section Tables Trivia sectionsListsLists Lists of works Road junctions Stand alone listsLegalLegal TrademarksArtsAnime and manga Comics Blazons Film Lyrics and poetry Novels Philosophy Television Video games Visual arts Writing about fictionMusicMusic Music samples Record charts Stringed instrumentsRegionalSpecific naming conventions Canada China and Chinese France and French Egypt Hawaii India Indonesia Ireland Japan Korea Malaysia Macedonia Pakistan Philippines Poland Singapore Trinidad and TobagoReligionIslam Latter Day SaintsScienceMathematics Medicine Chemistry Compound classes Chemicals References and external links Safety Structure drawing TaxonomySportsCue sports SnookerRelatedArticle size Article titles Categories lists and navigation templates Categorization Citing sources Contents Hatnotes Military history Notability Signatures Overview Subpages Talk page guidelines Template namespace Tips Understandability User pages Wikimedia sister projects WikiProjectsSearch nbsp Category Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wikipedia Manual of Style Icons amp oldid 1205127178 Inappropriate use 2, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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