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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Explanation  





2 Exceptions to the law  





3 The converse does not hold  





4 See also  














Wikipedia:Law of infobox inclusion







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


This essay is about the law of infobox inclusion, a ceteris paribus law regarding which articles on Wikipedia contain an infobox(s). The principle is stated as followed:

Explanation[edit]

The principle essentially states that an article on Wikipedia would contain at least one infobox if its topic is a token (an individual person, object, or entity). Here are some examples:

Exceptions to the law[edit]

There are various exceptions to this principle/law, which is what are meant by the 'all else being equal' clause. A notable category of these exceptions is classical music composers, such as Edward Elgar. There are many reasons why an exception might occur, i.e. when an article about a token does not contain an infobox. Possible reasons include opposition by the local WikiProject (because infoboxes are purported to reduce an encyclopedia to a database or a PowerPoint presentation), and the article being still a stub. Attempts to break through this opposition led to the Infobox War that ended in 2013.

The converse does not hold[edit]

It is important to note that the converse of this law does not hold. In other words, it is false that if an article contains an infobox, then it is not also a category with articles in it. The obvious counterexample is the article New York City and its eponymous category.

See also[edit]


Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Law_of_infobox_inclusion&oldid=1173880388"

Categories: 
Wikipedia essays
Wikipedia essays about infoboxes
 



This page was last edited on 5 September 2023, at 00:06 (UTC).

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