This template is used by the WikiProject Council Directory.
{{Wikipedia:WikiProject Council/Directory/WikiProject
|project =
|shortname =
|task-force =
|listed-in =
|active =
|assessment =
|peer-review =
|collaboration =
|portal =
|portal2 =
|portal3 =
|notes =
}}
Please add projects in alphabetical order (with exceptions; key projects in a topic area may go at or near the top) under the most applicable heading in the directory, using this template with parameters as illustrated here:
{{Wikipedia:WikiProject Council/Directory/WikiProject
|project= Wikipedia:WikiProject Tulips
|shortname= Tulips
|active= yes
|assessment= Wikipedia:WikiProject Tulips/Assessment
|peer-review= Wikipedia:WikiProject Tulips/Peer review
|collaboration= Wikipedia:WikiProject Tulips/Collaboration
|portal= Tulips
|portal2= Gardening
|portal3= Biology
|notes= "Endangered tulips" task force under consideration.
}}
Project | Active | Assessment | Peer review | Collaboration | Portal | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tulips | yes | yes | yes | yes | Tulips; Gardening; Biology | "Endangered tulips" task force under consideration. |
Please do not indicate that your project has assessment or collaboration processes established until these actually are established, even if you think it will only take a couple of days. Add them later.
Task forces should always be added directly after the main project:
{{Wikipedia:WikiProject Council/Directory/WikiProject
|project= Wikipedia:WikiProject Tulips/Cultivation task force
|shortname= Cultivation task force
|portal= Tulip Cultivation
|notes=
|task-force= yes
}}
Project | Active | Assessment | Peer review | Collaboration | Portal | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tulips | yes | yes | yes | yes | Tulips | |
→ | Cultivation task force | Tulip Cultivation |
You can add a project to a second, third, etc., categorization by using a different configuration of this template. Task forces should not have secondary listings. A secondary listing need only give a few parameters (the ones not shown aren't used even if you include them):
{{Wikipedia:WikiProject Council/Directory/WikiProject
|project= Wikipedia:WikiProject Tulips
|shortname= Tulips
|listed-in= Wikipedia:WikiProject Council/Directory/Science#Biology
}}
Project | Active | Assessment | Peer review | Collaboration | Portal | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tulips | (main listing here) |
Please do not add your project to every conceivable category! This has been a problem especially with pop culture projects. Superman has a massive presence in the fields of comics (first and foremost), television and film, and belongs listed under all three; the fact that there may also be (very questionably notable) Superman action figures and a Superman video game does not mean that WikiProject Superman should be listed under "Toys" and "Video Games" too. Similarly, the fact that Firefly (TV show) spawned a graphic novel and a definitely notable movie does not mean that it should be listed anywhere but under "American TV shows" (or directly, palpably, obviously relevant future categorizations, perhaps "Science fiction TV shows" or "Fox Network TV shows"). Please, help us keep the listings clean, readable and maintainable.
Rules of thumb for pop culture project cross-listings: If the TV show in question has not spawned several series of comic books of more than a few dozen issues each, or one such series of 100+ issues (or a graphic novel series spanning several years of regular publication), it does not belong in "Comics". If the novel(s) in question have not spawned a truly notable TV show with a strong fanbase, that lasted several seasons, or spawned at least three movies of strong notoriety and influence, it does not belong in a "[Something] TV shows" or the "Films" section. If the film(s) in question have not spawned a video game series that provides a truly significant amount of character development and plot extension, it does not belong in "Video games" (even if the games were popular in their day.)
Examples: WikiProject Middle-earth arguably belongs in both "Fiction series" (of course) and "Films" (3 blockbusters), but not "Video games" — despite there being several games, they were only briefly popular and added virtually nothing to the story. WikiProject Star Wars certainly belongs in "Films" (obviously) and "Fiction series" (very popular and large follow-on novel series), and a case can be made that it also belongs in "Toys" (the most collectible series of action figures in history, effectively creating the genre), "Comics" (at least three series, one well over 100 issues and spanning over a decade of publication), and "Video games" (a great number of games, which taken together provide almost as much canonical storyline as the films) — provided that the project actually covers Star Wars from all of these angles. By further contrast, WikiProject Star Trek should not be added to "Comics"; while it did spawn several comic book series, none of them had staying power. What about WikiProject Pokémon? "Anime and manga", "Video games", and "Card games". Period. It might be tempting to also use "Films" and a "TV" category, but these already cross-reference "Anime and manga"; or "Toys", but those are only incidental to the Pokémon phenomenon — a marketing byproduct.
Note: The comparative-weight concepts above can be used, of course, to extrapolate similar rules of thumb for entirely different areas, such as military history or biological sciences. It boils down to: Use common sense and be kind to your fellow Wikipedians, for whom over-promotion of your project will simply be an irritation.
Although opinions differ, a WikiProject is likely to be considered inactive if any of the following conditions are met:
Inactive projects should be handled in the following ways:
{{WikiProject status|inactive}}
.{{WikiProject status|inactive}}
for about 6 months, replace that tag with {{WikiProject status|defunct}}
.Projects with obvious collaboration and interaction among the participants should generally not be deleted. The WikiProject Council stresses project participant recruitment in order to avoid inactive or abortive projects. A very small but productive project can lapse into inactivity if its low number of members all happen to become busy with other things for an extended period of time.