Those alphabetical listings in the Category pages are automatically generated. I'm guessing it was because of the bad page name. I'm guessing the Category generation thing didn't like the parenthesis. Not sure. Anyhow, I fixed it. I moved it to Tags, because that's what they are, but I also made a Redirect called File Properties, which is also in the FAQ category, so it'll show up in that list if someone looks explicitly.
Page names in the Wiki should really be as simple as is possible. The idea is to use simple phrases that people might search for, and then to handle alternates with #REDIRECTS. When you search on a Wiki, and you get an exact match, it takes you directly to the page (like an I'm Feeling Lucky search). And, the Wiki software is designed for page names to be used inline.
It makes linking within articles much easier. After I'm done writing a section, I scan through looking for keywords. The idea is that you can just look for keywords that should be linked, and the relevant page should probably already have that name (or a redirect for different versions of the same thing). That's why the Wikipedia China page is called:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ChinaYou can scan through other pages easily, highlight the word China, and hit the Internal Link button, and it Just Works. So, the main page is called China, but if you visit:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/People%27s_Republic_of_Chinahttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PRChttp://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Pr_of_chttp://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=State_of_Chinahttp://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Zhonghua_Renmin_Gonghe_GuoThey all redirect to
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/China (on the English language version, anyway).
Make sense?
By the way, I'm not trying to be a rules lawyer about it or anything... Just trying to teach people, because it works better if understand some basics (and it makes for less cleanup later).
Ok - I've stuffed up other ones at the bottom as well then!
I'd already cleaned up a ton on that page (including the two in your new paragraph before I posted about it). As I said, no big deal. It wasn't just you... The JRiver Wiki is littered with them. And badly named pages, and orphaned sections, and... Sigh. There's a bunch of good content in there, though almost all of it is outdated in some way, but it is scattered all over the place. There are many, many pages about the same things (duplicates of duplicates of duplicates of content, with different names, in various stages of outdatedness).
But, I feel like I've made a little dent lately.
I'm also trying to
make the beginnings of a Category hierarchy. That's a long road, and I think it only really stands a chance if the base categories stay limited in number and very broad.
Sweeping sections, not detail. For example, I've made a top-level Category for
View Modes, but not for Theater View (which is a View Mode). If Theater View has a bunch of its own sub-pages, then it can be a category too (like I have for Standard View), that is a subcategory of View Modes. You know?
Ideas here would be welcome.
Be careful with Categories, though. Without a Category management extension they are incredibly difficult to change later. Because they are "created by" making a link on a page, to "delete" or "rename" one, you have to edit the link on every single individual page in the Category.
For example, Mark_h made this
really nice series of pages with real-world examples of Smartlist Searches. But he called the Category:
Category: Smartlist:Examples:AudioThat's not how Category hierarchies work... You couldn't click on Smartlist to be taken to stuff about Smartlists with them colon-separated like that. The "name" of the Category was "Smartlist:Examples:Audio". And he had Smartlist:Examples:Image and I think even a Smartlist:Examples:Video, but the vast majority were all in the Audio section (one of the other two was completely blank, and the other had like two items, one of which was duplicated in the Audio Category). So, that's not how that works... I restructured it like:
Contents >
Search >
Search Examples(Traditionally, the Category structure is rooted in
Category:Contents. I don't know why, or the history, but I'm sure you could look it up on a wiki somewhere.)
If we get
enough to break up Search Examples into subcategories, then it makes sense to break it up. But otherwise it is best to keep them together. Where that line falls is, of course, personal opinion. I'm just trying to make less mess.
One of the things I want ParserFunctions for is to import
Template:Disambiguation. The first place I want to use it is on:
http://wiki.jriver.com/index.php/Views. Right now that redirects to View Modes, but MC has so many different things called Views. One of my long term goals is to restructure and update that stuff.
The rough game plan I've been using for that is:
* View and Views: Disambiguation page.
* View Modes: The "big" UI modes -- Standard View, Theater View, Display View, Mini View, Cover View
* Media Views: The base concept of a "view" in Media Center, whether used in Standard, Theater, or Media Network. Then, that page would be linked to sub-pages with:
** Standard Media Views
** Theater Media Views
** Network Media Views
I've started, the very basics of this, when I reworked the (top of) the
Tree page as part of my
Standard View little editing spurt.
I don't know... There's a bunch of old stuff about this from a variety of eras, but they all refer to "old namings" (MC12 era
View Schemes), with Blue Steel or even older screenshots.
Blah blah blah... I'm rambling.
I'm thinking about starting up the beginnings of a Style Guide, and linking it here:
http://wiki.jriver.com/index.php/Help_the_JRiver_Wiki