Wikipedia:Soft redirect
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A soft redirect is a very short page that essentially tells users to look at another site to obtain the information they were seeking.
The technique is particularly likely to be used when redirecting users across Wikimedia sister projects—for example Wikipedia:Milestones is a soft redirect to meta:Milestones. Normal or "hard" redirects would be undesirable in these circumstances because they could not be easily edited without hand-crafting the correct URL: clicking on a link to the redirect page would take you straight to the redirect's target and there would be no "Redirected from [foo]" message to click, so it would be impossible to return to the redirect page itself. There would also be infinite loop security considerations. Therefore hard interwiki redirects have been disabled and soft redirects are often used.
A soft redirect can also be useful if one wants to link to it from its target, as an invitation to create an article, like a red link. Just as a red link looks different from an ordinary link, a link to a soft redirect can look different using the stub link feature. See also Redirect and/or link to non-existing page.
[edit] See also
- {{categoryredirect}}, template for category redirects
- {{softredirect}}, template for other soft redirects
- {{wi}}, template for Wiktionary redirects
- Wikipedia:Redirect, for hard redirects
- Wikipedia:Deletion policy#Other projects, where a soft redirect is considered an alternative to deletion
- m:Help:Transwiki, for instructions for using the Transwiki: namespace when moving entries between Wikipedia and Wiktionary