Portal:Contents

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Contents:  Featured content · Overviews · Portals · Topics · Outline of Knowledge(disputed) · Glossaries · A–Z Index · Categorical Index

Wikipedia's contents

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There are two ways to look things up in Wikipedia: by searching or by browsing.

  • If you know the name of an article for which you are looking, simply type it into Wikipedia's search box.
  • If you would like to look around the encyclopedia to see what is on it, use Wikipedia's Contents pages. Lists and indices are examples of contents for a published work, and Wikipedia has many of each, including a complete alphabetical index and indices by category.
    Links to all of Wikipedia's main contents pages are presented below, and they in turn link to the more specific pages.

Wikipedia's reference lists

Contents

Overviews of Wikipedia

An overview is a survey of what is covered in an area. Overviews of Wikipedia's coverage include:

  • Overviews—a one-page outline of the contents of Wikipedia, covering 12 major subjects, providing links to key articles in each.
  • List of academic disciplines—Wikipedia arranged like a college course curriculum.

Featured content

Featured content represents the best Wikipedia has to offer, and undergoes vigorous peer review.
It can be found on the following directories:

  • Featured articles—what we believe to be the best articles in Wikipedia.
  • Featured lists—what we believe to be the best lists in Wikipedia.
  • Featured pictures—images we find beautiful, impressive, and informative.
  • Featured portals—portals we regard as being particularly useful, attractive, and well maintained.
  • Featured sounds—sounds we find beautiful, impressive, and informative.
  • Featured topics—topics we believe have coverage which is both comprehensive and well written.

Lists of lists

Wikipedia has thousands of topic lists; some are even lists of other lists.

  • Lists of topics—a selective collection of article lists, arranged by subject.
  • Category:Lists—a list of lists in the category system, arranged alphabetically.
  • Outline of Knowledge—a small set of outlines that show a subject's structure, and serve as a table of contents to its coverage on Wikipedia. Please note that the status of outlines is disputed and their future direction is not clear. The community is awaiting an RfC to decide the future of this project, which does not yet have consensus. They are not accepted as a valid WP:LIST structure or as a wikipedia navigational tool.

Two of the broadest collections are:

Portals

A portal is an introductory page for a given topic. It complements the main article of the subject by introducing the reader to key articles, images, and categories that further describe the subject. They also include to-do lists that are used mostly by Wikipedia's editors.

Portals can be found at:

Glossaries

Glossaries are lists of terms with definitions:

Timelines

Timelines are lists of articles organized chronologically. These are the top-level timelines and lists of timelines:

Wikipedia's indices

Alphabetical indices

Categorical indices

Wikipedia's main categorization index system is automatically generated from information (category tags) at the bottom of each article. The top-end pages of the category system are:

  • Categorical index —an index of major categories, arranged by subject – that section of the page is an exception to the category autogeneration rule, as it is crafted by hand.
  • Category:Articles—the category in which all article category systems are located.
  • Category:Categories—the highest level or "root" category in Wikipedia – its autogenerated entries are listed at the bottom of the page.
  • Category:Contents—the category equivalent to this page.
  • Category:Fundamental— the category containing the most fundamental ontological categories such that every article category system can reasonably be expected to be within it.
  • Special:Categories—every category listed alphabetically.

Wikipedia's other broad categorical indices are:

Spoken articles


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