Wikipedia:Tools/Navigation popups/About fixing redirects

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Some users of Popups are making inappropriate use of the popupFixRedirs feature. They think their use of the feature is reducing work for the Wikipedia servers, but in fact, they're increasing the work the Wikipedia servers have to do.

Say you come across a perfectly legitimate redirect link, for instance (

morphosyntax redirects to Morphology (linguistics)
):

Wikitext Display
Some languages treat unergative verbs distinctly from other intransitives in [[morphosyntax|morphosyntactical]] terms. Some languages treat unergative verbs distinctly from other intransitives in
morphosyntactical
terms.

The popupFixRedirs feature allows you to hover over the

morphosyntactical
link, click Redirects, and change the text to:

Wikitext Display
Some languages treat unergative verbs distinctly from other intransitives in [[Morphology (linguistics)|morphosyntactical]] terms. Some languages treat unergative verbs distinctly from other intransitives in morphosyntactical terms.

(Note: Please don't try it on this page. Popups fixes every case of a redirect where it finds it on a page, and so this text will make no sense if you "fix" it.)

Myth

The new wikitext avoids the redirect and goes "straight" to the "right page", so it must be "better" on the Wikipedia servers, and you're performing a great service by "fixing" the "bad" link, right?

Fact

Unfortunately, probably not. Here's why:

In other words, readers of Wikipedia would have to use a redirect link about 10,000 times before it would be worthwhile to replace that link with a direct link. In any case, Wikipedia:Don't worry about performance discourages Wikipedians from worrying about performance, so you shouldn't be trying to fix a redirect to reduce the load on the servers in the first place.

There is a final, perhaps more important, reason not to fix many redirects: The redirect page might be about another but related topic from the one redirected to, and someone might want to create the page in the future; such a page is a redirect with possibilities. When such a page is created, "fixed" redirects will point to an incorrect (or less precise) page.

See also