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Help:Link


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File:How to link text.ogvPlay media

A video screencast showing how to create links


This page explains how to make the wikilink, interwiki link, or external web link (as hyperlinks) connections on Wikipedia, which give readers one-click access to other Wikipedia pages, other Wikimedia projects, and external websites.


A link has various (changeable) appearances on the "anchor" page, and the "target" page, which owns the "backlinks", and which can count the links to it with the WP:What links here tool.


For a short list of some basic shortcuts, see Wikipedia:Cheatsheet.


For guidelines on how links should be used in Wikipedia, see Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Linking.




Contents





  • 1 Wikilinks (internal links)


  • 2 Interwiki links


  • 3 External links

    • 3.1 http: and https:



  • 4 What is an "anchor"?


  • 5 Section linking (anchors)

    • 5.1 Specifics


    • 5.2 Duplicate section names


    • 5.3 Linking to part of a section



  • 6 Table row linking


  • 7 Piped link

    • 7.1 Using a redirect as alternative


    • 7.2 Automatic conversion of wikitext with the pipe trick


    • 7.3 Inverse pipe trick



  • 8 Subpage links


  • 9 ISBN, RFC and PMID automatic links


  • 10 Changing link appearance


  • 11 Hover tooltips


  • 12 Disallowed characters

    • 12.1 Links containing URL query strings



  • 13 Link reports

    • 13.1 To a page


    • 13.2 To a section


    • 13.3 From a page



  • 14 Additional link-related functions


  • 15 Conversion to canonical form


  • 16 See also


  • 17 Notes and references




Wikilinks (internal links)



A wikilink (or internal link) links a page to another page within English Wikipedia. In wikitext, links are enclosed in doubled square brackets like this:



  • [[abc]] is seen as "abc" in text and links to page "abc".

Use a vertical bar "|" (the "pipe" symbol – see Wikipedia:Piped link for how to type one) to create a link while labelling it with a different name on the original page. The first term inside the brackets is the link (the page you would be taken to), while anything you type after the vertical bar is what that link looks like on the original page. Here are some examples:



  • [[a|b]] is labelled "b" on this page but links to page "a". Example: b.


  • [[a]]b gives ab. So does [[a|ab]]: ab. The code [[a|b]]c gives bc, just as [[a|bc]] does. However, all four of these examples will link to page "a".


  • a[[b]] gives ab.


  • [[a]]:b gives a:b since the colon is outside the end brackets. The same goes for [[Washington]]'s or e-[[mail]].


  • [[a]]''b'' gives ab. (Double apostrophes turn on and off italics.)


  • ''[[a]]''b gives ab.


  • [[a|b]]cd gives bcd, and shows an example of link trailing.


  • [[a]]<nowiki />b gives ab. (The nowiki tag is needed to turn off the so-called "linktrail rules".)


  • [[a|b]]<nowiki />c gives bc.

Links with a specified label are said to be "piped" because the pipe symbol is used ("|"). For certain types of link, the label will be generated automatically if a pipe is typed, even with no label after it (meaning you don't have to type one). See Help:Pipe trick.


The link target is case-sensitive except for the first character (so [[atom]] links to "Atom" but [[ATom]] does not). Other ways in which link targets are reinterpreted are described further: Conversion to canonical form.


If the target of a wikilink does not exist, it is displayed in red color and is called a "red link". Here is a red link example. If a red link is clicked, the user is taken to a blank page where it is possible to create a page using that red linked title. While on that blank page, other red links to this (non-existent) title can be detected using the "What links here" feature.


If the target of a link is the same as the page on which it appears (a self-link), it is displayed in bold font, as with: Help:Link.


Attempting to link normally to an image page, category page or interlanguage link will produce a different effect: this will respectively place the image on the page, add the page to the category, or create an interlanguage link at the edge of the page. To override this behavior, insert an initial colon ":", as in [[:File:Mediawiki.png]], [[:Category:Help]], [[:fr:Help:Link]].


Interwiki links



An interwiki link links to a page on another Wikimedia project website, such as Meta or another language Wikipedia. The target site must be on the interwiki map specified for the source wiki. These links have the same [[...]] syntax as wikilinks (see previously), but take a prefix ":x:" which specifies the target site.


For example, [[m:Help:Link]] links to the "Help:Link" page on Meta, while [[:commons:Athens]] links to page "Athens" on Wikimedia Commons as: commons:Athens.


Interwiki links can be piped, just as with wikilinks. Remember that an interlanguage link should be preceded by a colon if it is to be displayed, where it is inserted in the text, as an inline interlanguage link; otherwise it will be displayed in the list of interlanguage links at the side of the page (which is appropriate only if it is the most closely corresponding page in the other language Wikipedia). Thus (incorporating the pipe trick), [[:ja:Wikilink|]] would be used to link to Wikilink on Japanese Wikipedia. Example: ([[:ja:URL|]] links to URL on Japanese Wikipedia).


Interwiki links (like external links) are displayed in a slightly paler blue than ordinary wikilinks. The MediaWiki page formatting does not detect whether these target pages exist, so they are never displayed in red.


External links



External links use absolute URLs to link directly to any web page. External links are enclosed in single square brackets (rather than double brackets as with internal links), with the optional link text separated from the URL by a space (not a "|" as with internal links). When rendered, external links are followed by an external link icon. For example, [http://www.example.org/ link text] will be rendered as link text.


When no link text is specified, external links appear numbered: [http://www.example.org/some-page][http://www.example.org/some-other-page] becomes [1][2]. Links with no square brackets display in their entirety: http://www.example.org/ displays as http://www.example.org/.


For more detailed information on external linking practices, see Help:URL § Linking to URLs. Also note that Special:LinkSearch can be used to find all pages linking to a given site.


The external link syntax can also be used to link to particular pages within Wikipedia that are not accessible by wikilinks, such as page history, the edit view, an old version of a page, the diff between two versions, etc. It can also be used to create a navigational image.


External links have the associated CSS class "external". To display an external link without the arrow icon, place the external link syntax between <span class="plainlinks">...</span> tags. For instance, <span class="plainlinks">[https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Help:Link&action=history this page's history]</span> will be rendered as: this page's history. If you make frequent use of this, the CharInsert gadget (which can be activated under Preferences → Gadgets → Editing → CharInsert), has an option to insert this text in its "Wiki markup" mode.


http: and https:


In mid-2015, Wikipedia and all other Wikimedia sites were changed to use HTTPS to encrypt all traffic. Accessing a URL like http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Link will result in the webserver redirecting you to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Link. Therefore, when making an external-style link to an internal page (that is, using single square brackets, or a bare URL), https should be specified to avoid the needless redirect, as in https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Help:Link&action=history.


In the past, when Wikipedia could be accessed via either HTTP or HTTPS, a protocol-relative URL could be used to make an external link (or external-style link to an internal page) which would use http: or https: depending on how the page the link appeared on was accessed, as in [//www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Links]. However, as all Wikimedia sites now require HTTPS, this linking style is obsolete and should no longer be used. http: or https: should be explicitly specified as appropriate for the target site (preferring https:, where available).



What is an "anchor"?


The word "anchor" has two opposing meanings:


  • In the context of a link from an anchor to a target, it is the starting place.

  • In the context of the template anchor, an "anchor" is a landing place for a link to jump to.

The anchor template proceeds to automatically create some invisible coding from certain text in the "landing place", taking into account certain parameters in reference templates in general.

So for developers the word "anchor" may refer


  • to the landing place in general,

  • to the mostly invisible code, or

  • to the text and parameters from which the code is created.


Section linking (anchors)





Shortcut

  • WP:ANCHOR


To link to a section or subsection in another page, append a # and the section name to the page name:


[[Page name#Section name|displayed text]]

If linking in the same page, you can omit the page name and use:


[[#Section name|displayed text]]

Note that Section names are entirely case sensitive, in contrast to article links, where the first letter is not case sensitive.


Template

To link to a section so that it is formatted with the section symbol instead (Page name § Section name rather than as Page name#Section name), use the template Section link (or slink):


Page name

When using the template, certain characters [ ] require encoding when linking to a section:











[]
.5B.5D.7B.7C.7D

For example, the section "[Closed] Complaint" can be linked with [[#.5BClosed.5D Complaint]]. Links in the table of contents will automatically make this encoding so the url can be copied from there. However, that url will also encode other characters which do not interfere with templates or wikicode, so the result may look ugly.


For more information, see Help:Section. See also Wikipedia:Redirect § Targeted and untargeted redirects.


Specifics


The section title in fact points to an anchor on the target page. According to the Manual of Style, it may be preferable to define anchors other than explicit section titles, using anchor name or alternatively the HTML code <span id="anchor_name">...</span> (see Anchor syntax). Links to anchors can also be added to external URLs and to interwiki links, again using the # syntax.


Section links still work through pagenames that are redirects. For example, if Danzig redirects to Gdańsk, then Danzig#History will link to the "History" section of the article Gdańsk. Conversely it is also possible to put a section link as the target of a redirect (these work only if JavaScript is enabled). For example, Wikipedia:Section link redirects specifically to the section Help:Link#Section linking (anchors) on this page. However, when adding a section to a link that redirects, the named section will override the section originally in the redirect. So Wikipedia:Section link#Interwiki links will go to the "Interwiki links" section of this page instead.


Duplicate section names





Shortcut

  • WP:DUPSECTNAME

If more than one section on a destination page has the same title, a link to the title is to the first section with that title. If the link should be to another section with the title or a title that differs only in capitalization (Example vs. EXAMPLE), append to the linked title _2, _3, and so on, without a space (or 2, 3, and so on with a space), counting from the top of the destination page and without regard to whether a section is a section or a subsection. For example, multiple sections titled "History" may be linked to as "History", "History_2" (or "History 2"), and so on.


Linking to part of a section





Shortcut

  • WP:LINKPART


Anchors can also be used to link to any part of a section. For example, if you want to link to the fifth sentence of a section, you just place an anchor at the start of that sentence, and you can then link to that anchor in the same way as you would link to any other anchor.


However, you need to choose an anchor name that is unique in that page (that article or that Talk Page) and is likely to remain unique, because when several anchors on the same page have the same name, the link will go only to the first anchor. Using the date and time as part of the anchor name is a simple way to help keep it unique (for example, by naming it "ThisSection2014-09-22-18-05a1" as in Anchor ).


Anchors can also be placed anywhere inside sentences (for example at the start of a clause), and inside notes and citations, though it is advisable to test first in your sandbox before trying some exotic new kind of location for the first time.


There are a small number of special anchor names. See § Table row linking.


Table row linking


To create an anchor for a row of a table, see Help:Table § Section link or map link to a row anchor. However, [[#top]] and [[#toc]] are reserved names that link to the top of a page and the table of contents, respectively.


Piped link


A piped link is an internal link or interwiki link where the link target and link label are both specified. This is needed in the case that they are not equal, while also the link label is not equal to the link target with the last word extended:



  • [[cheese]] (label = target, no pipe needed)
    produces cheese, linked to the article Cheese.


  • [[cheese]]s (label = target + extension ["s"], no pipe needed)
    produces cheeses, linked to the article Cheese.


  • [[Swiss cheese|cheese]] (label = part of target, pipe required)
    produces cheese, linked to the article Swiss cheese.


  • [[cheese|Swiss cheese]] (label = target + additional text ["Swiss"], pipe required)
    produces Swiss cheese, linked to the article Cheese.


  • [[cheese|that stuff]] (label is completely different from target, pipe required)
    produces that stuff, linked to the article Cheese.

This allows linking a word or phrase within the text of a page rather than using "see also", even if the wording does not exactly correspond with the name of the target page. With a suitable browser and depending on the preferences set, one can still see the link target: when you point at the link, the name shows up in a hover tooltip and is also shown in the status bar.


For instance:


[[Train station|station]]

will show: station


This is useful where the word "station" is used in an article on trains; from the context, it would be clear that a train station is meant. The piped link is more convenient to the user than a link to station which might be a disambiguation page.


The word piped refers to the use of the pipe character "|" used to separate the good description from the actual link. This character is named after another use of it; see Pipe (computing).


There are various tricks to get the same result with less typing:


  • Leave the part to the right empty – the "pipe trick"

  • Leave the part to the left empty – the "inverse pipe trick"

  • Just attach text to the link, as in "[[train]]s", see MOS:PIPE.

Using a redirect as alternative


An alternative to a piped link is simply using redirect pages. To create How to set up a coffee house, use [[How to set up a coffee house]] and make this a redirect to coffeehouse setup (note that, unlike previously, the tooltip that shows when you point at the link, if applicable for your browser, is simply the text already shown).


This is convenient if the redirect is already there or will also be of use elsewhere; however, there are a few drawbacks:


  • the tooltip does not show the page one will arrive at

  • "Related changes" gives the changes in the redirect page not the redirect target

  • the redirect message on the target page slightly clutters it

Combining a piped link and a redirect, one can provide some information that is not the name of the page one links to in the hover tooltip, i.e. the following pipe to a redirect [[United Nations Organization|UNO]] will display a tooltip "United Nations Organization" when hovering over UNO, thereby explaining the abbreviation.


Automatic conversion of wikitext with the pipe trick



If in a piped link the part after the "|" is left empty, it is converted to an abbreviated form of the linked page, as follows:


  1. Any word before the first colon (:), as well as the colon itself, is removed. This word may or may not be a namespace prefix (such as "Help:") or an interwiki prefix (such as "commons:"). If the page name is preceded by a colon, "first" refers to "first after this".

  2. If there is text in parentheses at the end it will be removed.

  3. If there are no parentheses but there is a comma, the comma and everything after it are removed.

  4. The link will be in whatever case is used.

Just like for the three or four tildes when signing on Talk pages and the use of subst, in a preview, the result already shows up in the preview itself, but the conversion in the edit box is not yet shown. Press "Show changes" to see the change in the wikitext.


Category tag

The sort key syntax of the category being like a piped link, the pipe trick also works for category tags, even though it is not useful there.

Examples using colons


[[Help:Template|]] is converted to [[Help:Template|Template]], which is rendered as Template.


[[Music: My life|]] is converted to [[Music: My life| My life]], which is rendered as My life – although "Music:" is not a namespace (therefore the space after the colon is not automatically removed), the shortcut works anyway.


[[w:en:Pipe (computing)|]] is converted to [[w:en:Pipe (computing)|en:Pipe]], which is rendered as en:Pipe.

Case examples


[[pipe (computing)|]] is converted to [[pipe (computing)|pipe]] which is rendered as pipe.


[[Pipe (computing)|]] is converted to [[Pipe (computing)|Pipe]] which is rendered as Pipe.

Comma example


[[commons:Boston, Massachusetts|]] is converted to [[commons:Boston, Massachusetts|Boston]], which is rendered as Boston.

Other examples


Parameters and variables:


[[w:1|]] does not give [[w:1|1]].

Calling the template with a value of parameter 1 gives a working link in the case of substitution only.


[[w:en:FULLPAGENAME|]] does not give [[w:en:FULLPAGENAME|en:FULLPAGENAME]].


[[m:FULLPAGENAME|]] does not give [[m:FULLPAGENAME|FULLPAGENAME]]

* [[project:a (b)|]]
* [[w:project:a (b)|]]
* [[:de:project:a (b)|]]
* [[wiktionary:project:a (b)|]]
* [[wiktionary:de:project:a (b)|]]
* [[wikibooks:project:a (b)|]]
* [[wikiquote:project:a (b)|]]
* [[wikisource:project:a (b)|]]
* [[w:en:FULLPAGENAME|]]
** [[w:en:FULLPAGENAME|en:FULLPAGENAME]]
* [[m:FULLPAGENAME|]]
** [[m:FULLPAGENAME|FULLPAGENAME]]

These examples appear as:


  • a

  • project:a

  • project:a

  • project:a

  • de:project:a

  • project:a

  • project:a

  • project:a

  • [[w:en:Help:Link|]]
    • en:Help:Link

  • [[m:Help:Link|]]
    • Help:Link

Inverse pipe trick


On page "A (c)", [[|B]] is automatically converted to [[B (c)|B]].


Similarly, on page "A, c", [[|B]] is automatically converted to [[B, c|B]].


Further examples are here.


Subpage links


A wikilink needs a [[fullpagename]], and this is not optional
except when it links to or from a subpage.
A wikilink to its parent page is [[../]],
and, although no page name is given, the fullpagename is rendered.
On the parent a wikilink to a subpage can use [[/subpagename]] to render a subpagename instead.


Although subpages are created in article space,
subpage linking does not fully function there.


Subpage linking works as expected to link to any pages under a root parent page:


  • section linking: [[../#section]]

  • child-to-child subpage linking: [[../subpagename]]

  • parent's parent [[../../]]

  • including the [[../|pipe trick]]

  • and including transclusions: ../ and /subpagename

Consider that there are about 140 subpages of the Manual of style arranged in 97 branches, 35 of which have two subpages, and 5 of which have three subpages. Subpage links save typing. Say you're editing this closely related group of fullpagenames:


Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Accessibility/Signatures

Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Accessibility/Data tables tutorial

Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Accessibility/Data tables tutorial/Internal guidelines





































On subpagenameYou typeYou getLinks to
Data tables tutorial[[../]]Wikipedia:Manual of Style/AccessibilityParent
Internal​guidelines[[../../]]Wikipedia:Manual of Style/AccessibilityGrandparent
Accessibility[[/Signatures]]/SignaturesChild
Accessibility[[/Signatures/]]SignaturesChild
Data tables tutorial[[../Signatures]]Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Accessibility/SignaturesSibling
Data tables tutorial[[../Signatures/]]SignaturesSibling
Internal​guidelines[[../../Signatures]]Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Accessibility/SignaturesUncle
Signatures[[../Data tables tutorial/Internal guidelines]]Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Accessibility/Data tables tutorial/Internal guidelinesNephew

To see this page's array of subpage variables and markup four levels deep, see /one/two/three/four, and from there go to level two at one/two.


Markup [[../]] addresses the basepagename, except when a pagename includes a / slash character (allowed), the basepagename/subpagename variables' characters are skewed. To see all this, and how adding an extra ../ construct fixes the resulting redlink, see /sub/page/name1/sub/page/name2/subpage level 3, and from there go to sub/page/name2.


Note that the top of every subpage shows the navigation links to all parent subpagenames. From these you can easily gauge levels and linking constructs.


For more information:


  • See Wikipedia:Page name#Subpagename and basepagename.


  • Create a subpage by using a red link.

  • See m:Help:Link#Subpage feature.

  • See examples at m:Link/a/b and m:Help:Link/a/b.


ISBN, RFC and PMID automatic links



Key words ISBN, PMID and RFC will generate internal or external links automatically:














What you typeHow it rendersDescription
ISBN
ISBN 978-0-12-345678-6
An internal ISBN link to Special:Booksources/978-0-12-345678-6
RFC 4321
RFC 4321
A Request for Comments externally linked to http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4321

12345678

PMID 12345678
A PubMed document externally linked to https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12345678?dopt=Abstract

To prevent such automatic linking, use a <nowiki /> between the identifier and the value or a non breaking space.


Changing link appearance


The ways that various links are displayed in browsers, as described above, are the default display styles in the default skin. Users can change the way they see links:


  • By selecting a different skin.

  • By applying a user style using CSS.

  • By changing the "Underline links" or "Format broken links like this" value on the Appearance tab of user preferences.

  • By setting the "threshold for stub display" on the Appearance tab of user preferences. This causes links to pages in mainspace to be displayed in a distinctive fashion – dark red by default – if the wikitext of the target page has less than a specified number of bytes. (Any section markers in the link are ignored. Links to redirects are displayed in the normal style.)

Hover tooltips


In many browsers, holding the cursor over a link (mouseover) shows a hover tooltip containing the text of the link's HTML title attribute. MediaWiki – the software which runs Wikipedia – sets this to the target page name (without any section indication) if it's a wikilink, the page name with prefix if it's an interwiki link, and the link address (URL) if it's an external link. (This can be switched off in the user preferences.) The browser may also show similar information, including any section indication, in the status bar.


For these effects a piped link is useful even if it is not followed; for example, for displaying the meaning of an acronym. It is possible to produce a hover tooltip without a link, using the H:title template.


Disallowed characters


A link whose target contains disallowed characters (see WP:Page name) will be displayed without markup, as in [[Ab]].


Conversions are automatically made to non-literal characters in wiki and interwiki links. For example, "[[Help:Page%20name]]" becomes "Help:Page name". However, the opposite is true for external links; literal characters are converted into non-literal characters. For example, most browsers convert ".../wiki/!" to ".../wiki/%21".


Some characters in a web address link need to be represented as escape characters because they are reserved for Wikipedia edits. Examples include %5B for [, %5D for ], %3C for <, %3E for >, %7B for , %7D for , and %26 for &. More can be found by reading about percent encoding. Numeric character references (e.g. [ or [) should not be used in external links because the ampersand character (&) has a special meaning in a URL.


A code like %70 in a redirect disables it, although the link works from the redirect page. For a redirect that works, the redirect page shows the canonical form of the target, unlike its preview page, which renders the link in the usual way.


Links containing URL query strings


Because the ampersand character (&) is disallowed, it is not possible to create an ordinary link containing &action=edit or &redirect=no in the URL query string. These kinds of links can be helpful in user pages. Also, a redirect page can have categories and you might wish to view or edit these in a single click.


The following syntax shows the use of the magic word fullurl as it would appear in a template constructed to append action=edit to the URL query string:


[action=edit 1]

Note that this will render as an external link rather than as an internal link and for this reason it might not appear in what-links-here queries associated with the target page.


Link reports



The navigable links to a page are wikilinks, redirects, and external-styled wikilinks.
The orphan tag can be placed on pages with no incoming wikilinks.


To a page


Each link to a page is a link to a name.[1] No one report shows all links to the content.


The What links here tool, on every page,
will report all wikilinks and all redirects to the content of that page.
(You get the wikilinks to the redirects too.)
The search parameter linksto will find wikilinks only.
Both report (invisible) wikilinks placed by a transclusion through a template.
The difference between them is that linksto reports a count of links to a page name,
while WhatLinksHere reports a map of links to the page as content.[2]


To a section


The navigable links to a section of a page are wikilinks, redirects, and URL-styled wikilinks.
The difference between a redirect and a wikilink is most pronounced where a redirect targets a section,
when you cannot add your own #section  to it
even though it appears as [[page name]].
A wikilink that links to a section and that appears as [[page name#section name]]
can link to that section through the canonical page name (the title on the page with the actual content)
or through the page name of any redirect to it, in which case the page name is the name of a redirect page.


To find wikilinks to a section requires two or more reports.



  1. Show redirects only, an external tool available from the What links here page, reports redirects to the content of a section. (No matter which page name you give it, you get all the redirect page names.) Look past any "No anchor or section" group of redirects, and any "invalid" sections, to see if your particular section name is explicitly listed, because then the redirect pages under it can have incoming links that will then go to that section.[3] ("What Links Here" also has a "show redirects" report, but it doesn't specify if the redirect goes to any particular section.)

  2. Use "What Links Here" on any redirect pages found in the previous step.

  3. Use Links to to create a group of search links that will each report some links to a section. It can work with only one page name at a time. For each search link given, just change the page name in the query to each redirect in turn.

The more redirects there are, the more reports there are to run.
If there are no redirects involved, one report from "Links to" is enough.


From a page


To report links from a page, you just list all the wikilinks on that page.



  • Wikipedia:Tools/Editing tools § Relink can count wikilinks from a copy of the wikitext on your local machine.

  • Some text editors support the counting and highlighting of the [[...]] pattern occurrences.

  • The Wikipedia web API accepts queries by URL.[4]

One way to send a query to the API is by creating an external link (§ External links).
For example, using an external link very much like a search link, you can
send the API a request to list the link properties of "wp:example".
It should interpret it correctly as "Wikipedia:Example", pageid 25263910.


What you type

[//en.wikipedia.org/w/api.php?action=query&prop=links&pllimit=500&titles=fullpagename your label]

What you get when fullpagename is wp:example

your label

  • The report is in JSON format, as is usual for RESTful APIs.

  • The pageid is available from Page information on every page.

  • The titles parameter is plural. (It is designed to take multiple fullpagenames or pageid, delimited by the | pipe character.)

  • The number of links returned by this query is limited to 500, per the URL you created. See mw:API:Query for how to safely get more. For example, Operating system has 510 wikilinks.

To make a page register as a link to a page, but without actually showing the link,
make a link to it, but label it with a space character using the pipe trick: [[pagename| ]].


Additional link-related functions


For the effect that links have on date formatting, see Help:Date formatting and linking.


Another link-dependent feature is related changes, which make it possible to view recent changes to all pages which are linked from the current page (or which are members of the category, if it is a category page).


For information on how to link to pages from an image, see mw:Extension:ImageMap.


Several templates have been created to make linking easier (although they are not usually used in article space). These include tl and tlx for linking to templates, and cl and lc for linking to categories. More can be found in Category:Internal link templates.


Conversion to canonical form



As described previously, if a link target begins with a lower case letter, it will be interpreted as if it began with the equivalent capital letter. If the target contains a namespace prefix, then the whole prefix and the first character after the colon are case-insensitive (so uSeR:jimbo Wales links to User:Jimbo Wales).


In link targets, spaces and underscores (which are effectively equivalent) are ignored if they come at the start, at the end, or immediately before or after the colon following a namespace prefix. Consecutive spaces / underscores are treated as a single space. Hence _User_: Jimbo_ __ Wales__ links to User:Jimbo Wales.


Also, HTML character references and percent-encoded characters are replaced with their raw character. For example, [[d&eacute;partement]] produces département, and [[%40]] produces @. Links which resolve to invalid page titles are displayed as unmarked-up wikitext.


Titles indicated by wikilinks are displayed in canonical form (with correction of capitalization and excess spaces / underscores removed, as described previously) in the following places:


  • In transclusion tags for non-existent pages: qwsazx gives Template:Qwsazx.

  • In tooltips and in the status bar (if applicable for the browser) when the mouse cursor is moved over the link.

  • On redirect pages.

  • In the category box.

The prefixes in interwiki links are treated similarly to namespace prefixes: they are insensitive to case and to spaces before and after the colon. However the first character after the colon is not automatically capitalized (whether it is interpreted as a capital depends on the configuration of the target wiki).


See also



  • Find link tool: a simple tool that lets you search for articles to consider adding links to.
    • Clean linking

  • MediaWiki help page on links


  • Help:Link color: the color of a link shows the status of the corresponding target page.


  • Help:Pipe trick: uses the pipe character ("|") to save typing the label of a piped link.


  • Help:Permanent link: creating a permanent link to a page revision.


  • Smart Linking tool: a tool for linking and previewing the linked article above the text box with the wiki code.


  • Help:Self link: self links is a link to the page itself. A self-link to a page appears as bold text when the article is viewed.


  • Wikipedia:Shortcut: a specialized type of redirect page that provides an abbreviated wikilink to a project page.


  • Help:Colon trick: a trick when providing category, image or interwiki links.

  • Wikipedia:Orphan § Step 2: Finding related articles

Notes and references




  1. ^
    The aliases for the namespace part of the name are recognized in
    wikilinks and in the parser functions that create URL style links – canonicalurl and fullurl.
    They are also recognized in the navigation box, and in Search,
    except for the insource parameter.



  2. ^
    "What Links Here" does not report URL-style links to a page.



  3. ^ Redirects that link to a section are part of a valiant effort to enable changing a section heading without breaking a link to the name. That effort also must ask editors who want to link to a section to always check the wikitext of the target section, and there find, read and understand the plan to link to a single redirect page instead. Then that redirect page links to the section. ("Invalid" redirects to a non-existing anchor or section occur when this is overlooked.)


  4. ^
    If you will use the API heavily or professionally you should follow its currently listed recommendations at API.
    (Use continue=, use formatversion2, use multiple pages at once, etc.)












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