User:SMcCandlish/How to promote a WikiProject style essay to a Manual of Style guideline

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Various wikiprojects have long-standing style advice pertaining to the topical category of the wikiproject's scope. This material, which may exist as one or more separate pages or just be inserted into the main wikiproject page, has the authority level of a wikiproject advice-page essay. A small amount of it actually should be integrated into our WP:Manual of Style (MoS) guidelines instead of lost in a wikiproject backwater, but getting there takes some work.

When to do this

Iff such pre-existing wikiproject style material meets all these criteria:

  1. it already clearly represents a consensus about how to write and arrange Wikipedia articles across a particular subject area;
  2. it has advice to give that is pertinent, needed, and not simply repetitive of generic, across-all-topics advice;
  3. it is not in conflict with other advice or policy;
  4. and (not "or") it covers a large number of articles of general interest, not a niche topic area (most of the material for which has already been written anyway);

then it is actually desirable that this material become part of our centralized WP:Manual of Style (MoS) guidelines, which have a number of topic-specific pages. This helps editors (especially new ones) find the pertinent material, invites more compliance with the recorded best practices, aids with dispute resolution (because a guideline has a higher consensus level than essay material), and better enables editors to keep all of our style guidance in sync by centralizing and indexing it.

When not to do this

There are many (likely too many) wikiproject style-advice essays, most of which are old cruft that do not qualify.

What we especially do not need is more "

instruction creep of inventing new writing "rules" that Wikipedia does not need. If you think "your" topic which doesn't have any style advice suddenly needs some and that you should create some with the goal of promoting it eventually into the MoS, you are almost certainly making a mistake. See, for example, Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Computing (failed proposal)
, which was rejected so throughly that not even a single line-item from it was retained in any guideline anywhere. And it is not the only such community rejection of MoS bloat.

After more than two decades, Wikipedia pretty much already has all the rules it needs (and probably some that it doesn't). This page outlines a process for ensuring that the style best practices we already have and use are properly named, tagged, and categorized as such, not for creating more of it.

How to do this

the following is simple step-by-step guide to getting from wikiproject style-advice essay material to official MoS guideline page:

The most important part is making sure that what it contains is what is actually done, i.e. it already represents consensus, and just deserves the {{Guideline}} approval stamp, and renaming and recategorization as an MoS guideline instead of a wikiproject style essay.