WP:Red link#When to create red links

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{{Redirect|WP:RED|redirects|Wikipedia:Redirect|the Reference desk|Wikipedia:Reference desk|the RedWarn counter-vandalism tool|WP:REDWARN}}

{{subcat guideline|editing guideline|Red links|WP:RED|WP:REDLINK|WP:REDLINKS}}

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{{nutshell|Red links are for subjects that should have articles but do not. They are not only acceptable but also needed in articles. They serve as a clear indication of which articles are in need of creation, and encourage it. Remove red links only if you are certain that Wikipedia should not have an article on that subject.}}

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|quote = Most new articles are created shortly after a corresponding reference to them is entered into the system.

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|source = Spinellis and Louridas, "The Collaborative Organization of Knowledge"{{Cite journal |author=Diomidis Spinellis and Panagiotis Louridas |date=August 2008 |title=The collaborative organization of knowledge |journal=Communications of the ACM |at=Vol. 51, No. 8, pp. 68–73 |doi=10.1145/1378704.1378720 |quote=Most new articles are created shortly after a corresponding reference to them is entered into the system.}} See also WP:Inflationary hypothesis of Wikipedia growth.

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A red link, like this example, signifies that the linked-to page does not exist. Either it never existed or it did previously exist but has been deleted.

Add red links to articles to indicate that a page will be created soon or that an article should be created for the topic because the subject is notable and verifiable. Red links help Wikipedia grow. The creation of red links prevents new pages from being orphaned from the start.WP:Wikipedia Signpost/2009-01-31/Orphans Good red links help Wikipedia. They encourage new contributors in useful directions and remind us that Wikipedia is far from finished.

In general, a red link should remain in an article if there is a reasonable expectation that the article in question will eventually be created (either as its own article or as a redirect). Remove red links if and only if Wikipedia should not have any coverage on the subject. It may be possible to turn the red link into a redirect to an article section where the subject is covered as part of a broader topic (see Notability – Whether to create standalone pages). But please do not "kill" red links by redirect because their red color (annoying to some readers) seems to scream for a fix. It is easy to turn any red link blue by creating a redirect, but valid red links exist for a reason and they are the "buds" from which new Wikipedia articles grow. A valid red link should be left in place if the reader agrees on need for a future article with that name but does not want to provide one.

Articles should not contain red links to files; templates; or topics that do not warrant an article, such as a celebrity's romantic interest who is not notable in their own right. Red links should not routinely be made to every chapter in a book, or to all the people mentioned in an article. Nor should red links be made to articles deleted because the topic was judged unencyclopedic or lacking notability. Red links may sometimes be created to articles deleted for some other reason. In addition, even if a page has been deleted because it does not meet Wikipedia's guidelines, you may make a red link to the term if you intend to write an article about an entirely different topic that happens to have the same title.

=To biographical articles=

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As with other topics, red links can be created to biographies of people who would likely meet Wikipedia's guidelines for notability. All the rules that apply to our biographies on living people equally apply to red-linked names.

==Non-unique names==

Red-linking a name that may not be unique bears the risk of the link eventually pointing to an article added later for a different person, company, or place with the same name. This is unlikely for, say, Thomas Howard, 14th Earl of Arundel, but very likely for football player Thomas Howard. Red-linking names of people who are not obviously notable also creates a link that may be unlikely to ever become blue. Adding detail to the link makes a misdirected link less likely (but not impossible); John Alexander Smith (physician) is better than John Smith. Simply red-linking names of people in an article without detail, particularly if not obviously notable, should be avoided.

Checking incoming links is particularly important when creating new biography articles with article names that may not be unique. If some article has a red link to that name but means a different person, the link will become blue but incorrect. This does happen in reality. For example, in 2012 a red link was placed in the article about the book {{oldid2|644038859|Extra Virginity}} to link to a future article about the book's author, Tom Mueller. In 2014 an article was created for a different Tom Mueller, a rocket scientist, without checking for existing incoming links. The red link in the Extra Virginity article thus became blue, but the link was to the wrong person. The error was [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Extra_Virginity&diff=705760355&oldid=702105237 not corrected until 2016], by renaming the link, which remained red, to Tom Mueller (writer). It might have been preferable to unlink the name, as the writer may not be Wikipedia-notable, and even coding the name Tom Mueller (writer) is not guaranteed unique because in this particular case there is [https://www.linkedin.com/in/tom-mueller-84a53a8 at least one more writer of that name]{{#ifexist:Tom Mueller (writer)|, about whom there is now an article|, though without a Wikipedia article as of {{CURRENTMONTHNAME}} {{CURRENTYEAR}}}}.

=In disambiguation pages=

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{{main|Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Disambiguation pages#Red links}}

Use of red links on disambiguation pages should be limited. The whole point of a disambiguation page is to help the reader arrive at the correct existing article from a choice of articles with similar titles. Since a red link is a link to a non-existent article, using red links in disambiguation pages is usually discouraged. Red links can be used in disambiguation pages if existing encyclopedic articles (i.e., not disambiguation pages, because disambiguation pages are not considered encyclopedic) have such red links.

=Tools=

These tools can be auto-installed from Wikipedia:User scripts/List.

See also

References