I tried to find some good advice on structuring articles in wikipedia namespaces. All I found were some pages in the Style and How-to Directory, some pages in the Wikipedia:Manual of Style, and some links on template:FAPath. They mostly deal with the issue from a general stylistic and aesthetic viewpoint, and only touch on the underlying reasons for giving a logical and fairly standardized structure to encyclopedia articles.
I've therefore written up a draft guideline for writing articles in a "pyramid structure". Being mostly based on common sense, it is in part a description of what we already do, but its goal is also to explain why structuring articles in this way is good. Please feel free to improve and comment. Zocky 14:06, 19 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Readers read encyclopedia articles for different reasons and in different ways. The level of detail which readers find interesting and useful will therefore vary. Wikipedia articles should allow the reader to choose the level of detail they are interested in without compromising completeness and NPOV.
A good article is built in a pyramid structure, with each layer summarising the one below and elaborating the one above, while preserving the NPOV. The reader (or processing software) can thus choose the level of detail they're interested and still get rounded, NPOV information. Levels of detail and the layers of the pyramid are:
Apart from accomodating the reader, writing in this way provides several editorial benefits: