Wikipedia:Double redirects
Special pages | Other versions |
---|---|
Broken redirects | ... |
Cross-namespace links | ... |
Dead-end pages | Dead-end pages |
Dormant pages | Dusty articles |
DoubleRedirects | Double redirects |
Lonely pages | Orphaned articles |
Long pages | ... |
New pages | ... |
Protected pages | ... |
Short pages | User:Zorglbot/Shortpages |
Uncategorized | Category needed |
Uncategorized cats | ... |
Uncategorized templates | Uncategorized templates |
Unused categories | ... |
Unused files (images) | ... |
Unused templates | ... |
Without interwiki links | ... |
See also: Maintenance Reports |
A redirect is a special page that automatically causes the text of another page to be displayed in its place. A redirect that points to another redirect is called a double redirect. These pages are unwanted, because Wikipedia's MediaWiki software will not follow the second redirect, in order to prevent infinite loops (to prevent endless looping, a redirect will not "pass through" more than one entry; if someone is redirected to a redirect, the chain stops after the first redirect). These situations create slow, unpleasant experiences for the reader, waste server resources, and make the navigational structure of the site confusing.
Double redirects are usually created after a move when old redirects are left unchanged and pointing towards an old name.
Contents |
[edit] How to fix a double redirect
- Suppose page title A (Morchella esculenta in the example to the right) redirects to B (Morel) which in turn redirects to C (Morchella).
- Upon following the link to A, you will see, as illustrated, a page containing:
- (a) the page title B;
- (b) a large link to C;
- (c) a small notice saying "Redirected from A"
- Click the "A" in "redirected from A".
- You will see a page containing:
- (a) the page title A;
- (b) a large link to B.
- Click "Edit this page" and change B to C.
[edit] Lists
Current list:
- alternate link showing 1000 entries: Special:DoubleRedirects (1000)
Old lists:
[edit] Checking for double redirects
Suppose you want to check whether there are any double redirects to page C. Go to page C and click "What links here". Double (or multiple) redirects are those pages which appear in the list with both of these properties:
- Indented at least one level in comparison to the page at the top of the list, AND
- Labelled "(redirect page)".
Note that if you've just moved page C, then there might be only one page which is not indented, (the page at the top of the list), and everything else might be indented at least one level.
Once all double redirects have been fixed, the "What links here" page will have only three types of pages listed:
- Direct links from ordinary pages (not indented, not labelled "(redirect page)").
- Direct links from redirect pages (not indented; labelled "(redirect page)").
- Indirect links from ordinary pages (indented one level, not labelled "(redirect page)").
The first and third categories do not need to be fixed – see Wikipedia:Redirect#Do not "fix" links to redirects that are not broken.
[edit] When your computer won't follow a redirect
Your computer will not follow a redirect if:
- there are double redirects
- it is a redirect to a Special page
- it is a redirect to a non-existent page
[edit] Old Topbanana method
The Topbanana method to generate a double redirect report from a Link Analysis Database is to use the following SQL:
SELECT concat( '*[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/wiki.phtml?title=', a1.art_title, '&action=edit ', a1.art_title, '] → ', REPLACE( a2.art_title, '_', ' ') , ' → ', REPLACE( a3.art_title, '_', ' ' ) ) FROM art a1 JOIN good_links l1 ON a1.art_id = l1.from_id JOIN art a2 ON l1.to_id = a2.art_id JOIN good_links l2 ON a2.art_id = l2.from_id JOIN art a3 ON l2.to_id = a3.art_id WHERE a1.art_is_redirect = 1 AND a2.art_is_redirect = 1 AND a3.art_is_redirect = 0 ORDER BY a1.art_title;
...and then split into subsections by hand.
The Byrial method builds on this code.