CorporisPublica:Subpages

Except in main namespace (article namespace), where the subpage feature has been disabled in the English, subpages are pages separated with a "/" (a slash) from their 'parent' page.

Making a new  link  that begins with a / (slash) is the common way to start a subpage. The page to which this link points is considered "subordinate" to its host page, and is titled and linked as  Parentpage/Subpage . It is possible to create a subpage of a subpage (or a sub-subpage). At the top of each subpage or sub-subpage, you can find a backlink (a.k.a. breadcrumb) to the higher levels of the page.

Allowed uses
Avoid additional incoming and outward links that would make it appear as if this "/Temp" page is part of the encyclopedia: that is, in the case the Copyvio template is used, only this template, applied in article namespace, can link to the "/Temp" article from article or "main" namespace. See Disallowed uses below for further recommendations on how to avoid creating the impression a "/Temp" page is an encyclopedia page. Other common variants are  Talk:Example Article/Draft  and  Talk:Example Article/Sandbox . Such temp pages are also sometimes used for template and -namespace development.
 * 1) User subpages—making extra pages within your own user namespace, e.g.  User:Example/Draft of article  or  User:Example/About me .
 * 2) WikiProject subpages—for project-specific templates, discussion, or guidelines pages.
 * 3) Portal subpages—for Portal-specific templates and content.
 * 4) Dividing up  process pages (e.g., CorporisPublica:Articles for deletion, CorporisPublica:Pages needing attention, etc.) which would otherwise get too big to be easily used.
 * 5) Documentation subpages for templates.
 * 6) Talk page archiving—both article Talk and User_talk pages are typically archived by moving discussion to numbered subpages. This allows the discussion to still be searchable, rather than requiring a hunt through the page history.
 * 7) Talk page adjuncts, such as an article's /to do list or the /Comments pages used for Good Article review. A particularly long and complicated ArticleHistory may also be put on an /ArticleHistory transclude page.
 * 8) Temporary subpages in Talk namespace, usually formatted  Talk:Example Article/Temp  or  [[Talk:Example Article/Dumping ground ]], for example the kind of "/Temp" pages that can be created from Template:Copyvio, which allow editors to begin creating an entirely new article from scratch while the copyright violation is being sorted.

Disallowed uses

 * 1) Writing a content fork to avoid NPOV.
 * 2) Writing drafts of major article revisions, e.g.,  Example Article/Temp  in the main namespace, as you can get there accidentally using Special:Random—write these in the talk namespace, e.g.  Talk:Example Article/Temp . See CorporisPublica:Workpages for detail. Also, avoid incoming and outward links regarding such "Talk:.../Temp" page that might create the impression this is an encyclopedia page before it is, e.g.:
 * 3) * surround "category" links by "nowiki" tags, so that the temp page doesn't show up in a non-project category as if it were an article, example:   . The "nowiki" tags should be removed only when the "temp" content is moved to its place in article namespace. (This is an outward link example.) Another solution: put a colon before word "Category", for example, write Category:Shamanism instead of  . In this case, it will be still linkable, but it will not make the subpage appear on category pages.
 * 4) * don't create navigational templates that make it appear as if this temp page is part of a series of encyclopedia articles, for example, don't do this: "... | John I of Doeland | John II of Doeland | John III of Doeland | ..." . (this is an incoming link example).
 * 5) * Draft pages mistakenly created in the main namespace should be moved as appropriate, or deleted if they are inactive and redundant to the main article.
 * 6) Using subpages for permanent content that is meant to be part of the encyclopedia.
 * 7) Pasting copies of copyrighted reliable sources to "share" with other editors.  Copyright violations are not permitted on any page in.

Using subpages

 * To create a user subpage, see CorporisPublica:User pages.
 * To delete a user subpage, see CorporisPublica:User pages.

Finding subpages
To get a list of all subpages of a page, go to the Special:Prefixindex page and type the parent page name followed by a slash. For example, for all subpages of User:Example, type User:Example/ in the input box and select Go:

You can also type Special:Prefixindex/User:Example/ in the main search box to get the same result.

To add a Subpages link to the left toolbar, add this code to Special:MyPage/common.js and purge per the instructions at the top of the page:

Some templates can also show subpages. For example, shows:

Articles do not have sub-pages (main namespace)
The MediaWiki software supports selectively allowing or disallowing the creation of subpages in various namespaces. In namespaces where subpages are supported, you can for instance create a subpage simply by linking to the name of the subpage, prefixed with a slash (e.g. /Archive ).

For the English Wikipedia, the following namespaces do not have the subpage feature: main, File, MediaWiki, and Category. But their talk spaces and all other namespaces have the subpage feature.

The main (article) namespace does not have this feature turned on, as strictly hierarchical organisation of articles is discouraged, and other distinctions are better made by placing pages in other namespaces (e.g. discussions go in "Talk:", and templates in "Template:").

Slashes in article titles
Some topics have a slash in the name, and should be named accordingly—e.g. GNU/Linux naming controversy or OS/2. Care should be taken with the corresponding talk pages, though, as subpages are enabled in talk space—for example, Talk:OS/2 is treated by the software as a subpage of Talk:OS.

History of subpages
Subpages were originally used on Wikipedia to differentiate between subjects to create topical hierarchies of articles, but this proved unworkable because articles tend to belong in more than one hierarchy. The present system of disambiguation was adopted instead, and the [ CorporisPublica:Do not use subpages] policy had to be rigorously enforced, as well as being retroactively applied. Since 2004, the category system has supported hierarchical organization while still allowing an article to belong to multiple categories.