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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by MichaelMaggs (talk | contribs) at 08:54, 22 November 2024 (Strongly disagree, sorry. Perhaps this is just to discourage editors from shortening SDs of 42 characters, but it negates the many months of discussions we have had about SDSHORT, and takes us right back to the early days of interminable arguments with editors insisting that their 50 or 60 word SD is fine because "I need it, and who's to say what 'short' means?". SDSHORT is the single most important guide for keeping SDs within reasonable bounds, and it absolutely must not removed). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Screenshot showing a Wikipedia page in the mobile app, with the short description appearing immediately under the main title
In the mobile app, descriptions appear below the article title.

The short description of a Wikipedia article or of another namespace page is a concise explanation of the scope of the page. These descriptions appear in Wikipedia mobile and some desktop searches,[note 1] and help users identify the desired article. When viewing an article, some mobile Wikipedia apps also display the description below the page title.

Short descriptions do not appear by default when viewing an article in desktop view, but logged-in users who wish to see and edit them can do so easily by enabling the Shortdesc helper in their Preferences "gadgets".

Purposes

Short descriptions provide:

  • a very brief indication of the field covered by the article
  • a short descriptive annotation
  • a disambiguation in searches, especially to distinguish the subject from similarly titled subjects in different fields

Short descriptions are also used as annotations in lists of links, such as "See also" sections and Index list articles, where they provide some context for the link when a local annotation is not provided. The template {{Annotated link}} is available for this purpose.

Pages that should have a short description

All mainspace articles should have a short description (including those that are intentionally blank; see below). Redirects and most pages outside the mainspace do not normally need a description, although one may be added in the rare cases it would be useful.

The short description may appear directly in the wikicode for the page, via the {{Short description}} template, or may be transcluded automatically from a template such as an infobox. Disambiguation pages and list articles both make use of transcluded descriptions, and those do not normally need to be edited manually.

Content

The short description is part of the article content, and is subject to the normal rules on content, including Neutral point of view and Biographies of living persons. The normal editing rules such as Consensus and the Editing policy also apply.

Editors should keep in mind that short descriptions are meant to distinguish an article from similarly named articles in search results, and not to define the subject. Each description should provide a brief overview of the topic, a short annotation, and a way to differentiate it from other similarly titled articles.

Ideally, each page should have its own purpose-written short description. It is the editor's responsibility to ensure the short description is appropriate, accurate and compliant with Wikipedia's policies, particularly for biographies of living people and for medical articles. While the Shortdesc helper tool allows text to be imported from Wikidata, that should be done with caution as Wikidata descriptions do not follow Wikipedia policies, and are often inappropriate: see § Why not simply re-use Wikidata's item descriptions?.

Content text

When visible on desktop or mobile, the short description immediately follows the article title, and should be comprehensible in that location.

A short description is not a definition, and editors should not attempt to define the article's subject nor to summarise the lead. There is no objection to an otherwise-suitable short description that also happens to work as a definition.

As far as possible, it should:

  • focus on the purposes stated above
  • start with the most important information (mobile applications may truncate long descriptions)
  • use universally accepted facts that will not be subject to rapid change, avoiding anything that could be understood as controversial, judgemental, or promotional
  • avoid jargon, and use simple, readily comprehensible terms that do not require pre-existing detailed knowledge of the subject
  • avoid duplicating information that is already in the title (but don't worry too much if you need to repeat a word or two for context)
  • avoid time-specific adjectives like "former", "retired", "late", "defunct", "closed", "current", "new", "recent", "planned", "future", etc.
  • avoid subjective adjectives like "small", "famous", "popular"

Formatting

Each short description should:

  • be written in plain text – without HTML tags, wiki markup, typographic dingbats, emojis, or CSS display manipulation
  • start with a capital letter[note 2]
  • avoid initial articles (A, An, The) except when required for correct grammar and meaning
  • avoid using a final full stop (period)
  • be short – no longer than is needed to fulfill its functions effectively
    • More than 80% of short descriptions use fewer than 40 characters (including spaces).
    • Fewer than 3% of short descriptions are longer than 60 characters, and short descriptions longer than 100 characters will be flagged for attention.
    • Short descriptions exceeding 40 characters may be truncated in some contexts.[note 3]
    • Because they are intended to be scanned quickly, longer, more specific descriptions can be less useful.

Examples

A good way to draft a short description is to consider the words that would naturally follow if you started a sentence like this:

  • "[Article subject] is/was a/an/the ... ".

You can then use those additional words as the short description. So for example if you wanted to write a short description for Stève Nzigamasabo, your sentence would be "Stève Nzigamasabo is a Burundian footballer"; and Burundian footballer becomes your short description.

Here are some examples, though they can all be varied if the context allows something better. See also § Inclusion of dates. Remember to ensure that your description is short (See "Formatting", above).

  • For a person: "[country adjective] [what the person is known for]" (Examples: "American singer/songwriter", "Cuban ice skater")
  • For a location: "[type of location] in [area/region/country as needed]" (Examples: "City in Florida, United States", "University in Oxford, England")
  • For an organism: "[type of organism] of [common name or description]" (Examples: "Species of moth", "Group of flowering plants", "Extinct group of molluscs")
    • Do not include family name or other technical taxonomic terms.
  • Publication: "[year] [type of publication] by [author]" (Examples: "1983 novel by John Irving")
  • Miscellaneous: "Type of [noun]", "Concept in [academic field]" (Examples: "Type of steam locomotive", "Concept in statistics")

Inclusion of dates

Dates or date ranges are encouraged when they enhance the short description as an annotation or improve disambiguation. As long as the formatting criteria are met, biographies of non-living people, articles on specific publications, and dated historical events generally benefit from dating, but since the description should be kept short, other information may need to take precedence. Care should be taken when the biographies of living persons (BLP) policy applies: birthdates for living people should not be included unless sourced within the article.

Recommended date formats are given below, but these can be varied if there is contrary consensus on the talk page. In biographies, distinguish between dates defining a lifespan "(birthyear–deathyear)" and those defining a period in office "from startyear to endyear". For historical biographies, specific dates such as "1750–1810" are preferred over "18th-century" for clarity. Other dated events or ranges can use any format as long as the meaning is clear.

Date inclusion recommendations, by article subject type
Type Criterion Recommended date format Examples
Biography Lifetime most important [Person description] (birthyeardeathyear) English composer (1668–1735)
BLP or year of death unknown: [Person description] (born birthyear) English composer (born 1668)
Year of birth unknown: [Person description] (died deathyear) English composer (died 1735)
Period in office most important [Office description] from startyear to endyear
  • King of Scotland from 1488 to 1513
  • Pope from 965 to 972
Currently in office: [Office description] since startyear President of Mexico since 2012
Term of office contained within one year: [Office description] in start/endyear President of the United States in 1841
Publication Publication in a specific year Publicationyear [Description]
  • 1964 American film
  • 1988 novel by Penelope Fitzgerald
  • 2001 video game
Historical Event in a specific year Eventyear [Description] 1861 American Civil War battle
Period or range [Description] from startyear to endyear Epidemic of plague from 1665 to 1666
[Description] (startyearendyear) Epidemic of bubonic plague (1665–1666)
[Description], startyearendyear Epidemic of bubonic plague, 1665–1666

Where a date is not known exactly, "c. " may be used for "circa". Other examples are given at WP:APPROXDATE, although "fl. " for "floruit" should be avoided as it is not universally understood. Centuries should not be abbreviated "c. " due to the potential for confusion with "circa".

"none" as a short description

All articles should have a short description (and therefore should belong to Category:Articles with short description), but some article titles are sufficiently detailed that an additional short description would not be helpful, e.g., Alpine skiing at the 1960 Winter Olympics – Men's downhill.

In those cases, {{Short description|none}} should be used to add the article to Category:Articles with short description. Occasionally, a default value of "none" may already be transcluded, for example in some Wikipedia list articles; that default should not normally need to be edited, but it can be overridden for a specific page by adding {{Short description|Overriding description}} at the top of the page.

How to edit

Single page

The easiest way to create and edit short descriptions on the desktop is to use the Shortdesc helper gadget. This may be enabled in the Gadgets tab of your Preferences under the "Editing" section.

Alternatively, you can manually amend the {{Short description}} template in the source editor. Short descriptions cannot be added with the VisualEditor.

If you are editing manually on desktop and do not have the gadget loaded, do not add a {{Short description}} solely because the template seems to be missing from the wikicode. Descriptions are sometimes set by another template (such as an Infobox) elsewhere in the article. For more information, see § Why can't I see any short description?.

If you are editing manually, do not start the template with a space — {{ Short description... — this may break other templates which search for the {{Short description... text.

Always use the {{Short description}} template – do not use any alias. See WP:SDNOALIASES

Placement

Per MOS:ORDER and MOS:LEADORDER, the template should be the very first element on the page. There is just one exception to this, namely redirects. If (unusually) you need to add a short description to a redirect, you should add {{Short description}} below #REDIRECT. For more information, see § Short descriptions on redirect pages. Placement is handled automatically if you are using Shortdesc helper.

By transclusion into multiple pages

Where a single short description (or rule for generating one) is suitable for multiple articles that all use the same template/infobox, the description can be transcluded from the template rather than being added one by one to each article. In that case {{Short description}} does not appear in the wikicode for the page.

Such transclusions are normally done after local consensus by template editors. {{Template short description}} is available to simplify the process, and ensures that the resultant description doesn't exceed the recommended length even if a page editor adds some unusually long text to an infobox. All templates that generate a default description should include a |2=noreplace parameter so that the result can be overridden by a manually inserted instance that appears at the top of the wikicode (see T193857 for technical details). {{Auto short description}} should also be added to the documentation page so that the template gets added to Category:Templates that generate short descriptions.

Why can't I see any short description?

By default, short descriptions are not displayed when viewing an article in desktop view. To make them visible on the page and to enable easy editing, enable Shortdesc helper in Preferences. On the desktop platform, short descriptions appear below article titles in search result lists only if you are using the Vector (2022) skin: in Preferences | Appearance, make sure the Vector (2022) radio button is selected.

You can always see whether the page has a manual short description by opening it for source editing (not visual editing); you should find {{Short description}} right at the top. Unfortunately, the absence of {{Short description}} there does not necessarily mean that a short description is missing, as it may be transcluded from some template such as an infobox. That can't be determined from the page code (at least without following through to the template code pages), hence the recommendation to enable Shortdesc helper.

As mentioned above, please don't add a new short description solely on the basis that {{Short description}} is missing from the wikicode.

Why not simply re-use Wikidata's item descriptions?

Wikipedia's short descriptions and Wikidata's item descriptions serve different purposes, and their respective wordings are very often different:

  • A short description is Wikipedia-specific and relates to an individual encyclopedia article here on the English Wikipedia. It provides a brief indication of the field, an annotation, and a disambiguation in searches, not for any Wikidata item but for the encyclopedia article itself.
  • In contrast, a Wikidata item description is designed to disambiguate Wikidata items with the same or similar labels and serves to characterise the Wikidata item, regardless of the content of any corresponding Wikipedia article (or indeed whether a Wikipedia article for the item exists at all).

Wikidata item descriptions are not subject to Wikipedia's policies or recommendations, and in practice are often too long and intricate for use as Wikipedia short descriptions (see WP:SDSHORT, above). There are technical differences, too: for example, short descriptions normally start with an uppercase letter whereas Wikidata item descriptions generally use lowercase.

Short descriptions on redirect pages

Most redirects do not require a short description. Occasionally it may be useful to add one:

  1. on soft redirects where an annotation would make the page clearer
  2. where the redirect page is the target of an {{Annotated link}}
  3. as an indicator that the topic described may be a valid article topic (Redirects with possibilities).

{{Short description}} conflicts with #REDIRECT if placed in the standard position at the top of the page. For such pages only, the template should be placed immediately underneath #REDIRECT.

The short description of a Redirect to section should refer to the section content and should not generally be the same as that of the article itself.

The {{Annotated link}} template can be used to automatically annotate a wikilink with a corresponding short description for the page. This may be useful where links to multiple pages are presented in the form of a list, for example in "See also" sections. {{Annotated link}} does not follow redirects, and if the link has to point to a redirect it may be appropriate to add a short description to the redirect page itself, as it would in this case normally be a redirect with possibilities. In other cases it may be more appropriate to change to a direct link, or use a piped alias. The template should not be used for annotating links on disambiguation pages, for the reasons stated in the template documentation.

The {{AnnotatedListOfLinks}} template may help editors quickly apply {{Annotated link}} to multiple listed links at once.

History

Content of historical interest

Short descriptions were initially implemented in 2017 by WMF developers primarily as a search disambiguator, using item descriptions from Wikidata. After concerns were raised about accuracy, suitability, and the potential for hard-to-detect vandalism on Wikidata, the developers created a SHORTDESC magic word, giving editors the ability to override the Wikidata text directly on Wikipedia:

The magic word approach has been superseded by the Wikipedia template {{Short description}}. At first, mobile devices displayed the Wikipedia-specific short description where that existed, but continued to display the Wikidata text where it did not. In 2020, use of Wikidata text to characterize Wikipedia content was discontinued. Mobile devices now display the Wikipedia description if it exists, and display no short description if it does not.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Enabled by default in the Vector (2022) skin.
  2. ^ Other language Wikipedias typically prefer lowercase; check this if you're planning on editing any of their short descriptions on Wikidata.
  3. ^ Below search results and in suggested article boxes at the bottom of mobile view. See discussion.