Wikipedia talk:Articles with slashes in title
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I just removed "IMF/World Bank annual meetings" from the "Can't be renamed" section because it could be renamed: to Annual Meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank Group, after their official title. - dcljr 20:30, 13 Aug 2004 (UTC)
[edit] Can't be linked to
Everything in this section except for /. actually can be linked to by specifying an explicit empty namespace: [[:/]] [[://Gana language]]
etc. The /dev/null entry in the next section uses this and seems to work perfectly. Have I missed something? Bo Lindbergh 00:26, 2004 Nov 8 (UTC)
- No, so I have edited the article to reflect this...it will probably need cleaning up. --Phil | Talk 09:49, Nov 9, 2004 (UTC)
- Looks like I did miss something after all: the various Unix device articles link to each other by doubling the leading slash:
[[//dev/zero]]
etc. Is this documented somewhere? Bo Lindbergh 14:25, 2004 Nov 9 (UTC)- Someone else (I forget who) has pointed out that using &_#_4_7_; (without the underscores) can be used to produce //Gana language, so that is an alternative to
[[://Gana language]]
. Edit this to see better. --Henrygb 01:18, 12 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- Someone else (I forget who) has pointed out that using &_#_4_7_; (without the underscores) can be used to produce //Gana language, so that is an alternative to
- Looks like I did miss something after all: the various Unix device articles link to each other by doubling the leading slash:
The problem with /. is the period rather than the slash (it's interpreted by web browsers). I'd better list all the cases:
- contains /./
- contains /../
- ends with /.
- ends with /..
But the following are not problematical since you aren't allowed to create articles with such names:
- .
- ..
- starts with ./
- starts with ../
Note that the four possible cases all include slashes, so this seems to be the right page for them. Bo Lindbergh 13:47, 2004 Nov 9 (UTC)
[edit] Obsolete
In recent MediaWiki versions, all eight cases are disallowed:
- .
- ..
- starts with ./
- starts with ../
- contains /./
- contains /../
- ends with /.
- ends with /..
This means that the Slashdot redirect is obsolete, so I deleted its section. Bo Lindbergh (talk) 09:07, 1 April 2008 (UTC)