Forum:Marching Onward

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Forums: Index > Onion Complex > Marching Onward
To do: Update this page as some elements of it have grown outdated.

Let's face it: the Pikmin Fanon is a huge, huge mess, and cleaning it up has been delayed far too long. I'm writing this to explain my plans on how to fix it and make the Pikmin Fanon look the best it can. This is our version of Project Cleanup, and its purpose is to create an informational, organized, consistent, user-friendly, easy-to-navigate environment that current and future generations can enjoy. Take a look at the to-do list, Project Clean-up, and the "maintenance reports" section of this page to see more of what you can do to help!

General wiki tasks

Help pages

They need to be completed so new users will know what to do and how to do things. They must be informational and have much clarity to them.

Articles and their layout

The new article layout that was agreed upon years ago is inefficient. Having to scroll through the information that is laid out that way is absurdly tedious, and I much prefer the older, simpler article layout where all information pertaining to specific game is all in one place. Not to mention that other users prefer it as well.

When editing an article, either to update it or whatever, feel free to rewrite and organize the information present. There are plenty of poorly-written articles that are difficult to read, for a variety of reasons, and the less sloppily-written articles there are, the better. We strive to offer proofread, easy-to-digest, informational, quality articles.

The infobox templates containing canon information on canon articles are to have their areas, caves, and challenge mode locations omitted. Originally I planned on having those there so users could have an idea of where the article's subject could be located, but then I eventually realized that it doesn't matter in the end, as they could be located anywhere a user wishes in their game. It also reduces the amount of canon information present on the wiki, which is a plus. That being said, I do prefer if, on canon articles, much detail is present there so users can have some ideas of how they want a game's asset to function or behave. Also, the "nocat" parameter or a similar parameter is to be set to true on every infobox below the initial one on any given article, in the case a subject is part of a different group. This is to avoid having an enemy article being placed in two different family categories.

The creation of disambiguation pages may be necessary and should be done as soon as possible.

Links that are broken should become redirects to PikminFanon:Project Clean-Up/Wanted game articles PikminFanon:Project Clean-Up/Wanted location articles, PikminFanon:Project Clean-Up/Wanted enemy articles, PikminFanon:Project Clean-Up/Wanted treasure articles, PikminFanon:Project Clean-Up/Wanted character articles, and PikminFanon:Project Clean-Up/Wanted miscellaneous articles and placed on those lists.

Plans with articles

  • Move obstacles to be on their own articles, with some exceptions.

Templates

Some templates, namely infoboxes, must be fixed and have the capitalization in their titles corrected. Some are also outdated, broken, or unused. Collapsibles that no longer collapse must be fixed as well by putting the prefix "mw-" before "collapsed" and "collapsible", to form "mw-collapsed" and "mw-collapsible".

Broken links

Broken links, be they article or file links, are abundant on the Pikmin Fanon and should be fixed or removed. Broken file links should be fixed unless no file exists for them, in which can they should be removed completely.

Files

Filenames of the Pikmin Fanon now follow a set naming scheme, which is: <game> <enemy name> <possible variation>.extension. An example (that does not include possible variations) of this would be "P2 Orange Bulborb.jpg". All icons, which are png's, also follow the same naming scheme. All instances of ".jpeg" are to become instances of ".jpg". All extensions such as ".jpg" or ".mp3" are to be lowercase. The reason for the naming scheme is to keep files organized, neatly named, and easily accessible to all. Instances of "Image:" should be changed to "File:", and neither of these tags should be included in <gallery> sections.

Low-quality files or files that have no potential purpose are to be deleted. Images that have low clarity are to be brightened up and have their contrast increased, to make the subject more visible.

Categories

When categorizing a page, it is best to look through Category:Categories to decide where it best fits. Categories should always be grouped together by type and those groups should be displayed in a certain order.

Plans with categories

  • The list of wanted categories should be minimized and eliminated.
  • Category:Enemies will contain all enemy articles that do not have an icon in at least one of its enemy infoboxes.
  • The capitalization of some words in many categories must be corrected.
  • Templates and categories must be categorized.
  • Remove both extraneous categories and categories of game-specific image galleries.

Article categories

Many, many, many articles are either uncategorized or categorized incorrectly. This includes mostly enemy categories because it's hands-down the biggest focus of the wiki, but even articles for vegetation, Pikmin, characters, treasures, games, and more are in the same situation. Placing their appropriate infoboxes in their respective article should auto-categorize them:

Note: Category:Enemies will contain any enemy article that does not have an icon in at least one of its infoboxes, necessitating having icons present on each infobox on the article. Other articles that don't belong there are also present but that will be fixed in due time.

When categorizing an enemy article, look through the subcategories of Category:Enemies by hazard and Category:Enemies by characteristics. Read the article, learn what the enemy does, how it attacks, what it looks like, and see what categories that enemy belongs in. An enemy can go in an unlimited amount of categories. These enemy categories are the only required ones, and no more should be made. If the enemy...

At the very bottom of an article, below all of its content, is where categories belong. There are to go in a uniform order, in an organized manner, which is this:

  • If the enemy is a boss: Category:Bosses.
    • Below, put [[Category:<game in which boss appears> bosses]] if the boss appears in a specific game.
  • If the enemy is a final boss: put only Category:Final bosses.
  • If the enemy appears in a specific game, list it here by typing [[Category:<game in which enemy appears> enemies]].
  • Categorize the enemy by the hazards it uses or the characteristics it exhibits.

File categories

Many, many files are also uncategorized, either generally or in terms of licensing. Nothing special must be done, as all that's required is putting them into their respective categories. Refer to Special:UncategorizedFiles to see what's uncategorized, and look through Category:Media to see where they belong.

A small description of the file's subject is necessary and useful to have. A barebones layout of a suitable description is:

==Summary==
{{file info
|summary =
|type =
|game = [[]]
|source =
|license =
}}

If the license is unknown, simply keep it blank. The summary itself can change depending on what the image depicts or if the image is an icon, box art, etcetera, but examples to copy from exist. The "|game = " parameter is not necessary if the image is anything but concept art; if the image is universally used, simply input "N/A". If the image of a subject is from an official Pikmin game, use the corresponding shortener template instead.

~ Cheepy-Cheepy icon.pngCheepy-Cheepy