Help:Interlanguage links

Interlanguage links are links from any page (most notably articles) in one WikiQueer language to one or more nearly equivalent or exactly equivalent pages in another WikiQueer language. While WikiQueer is currently only available in English - this feature has been setup in preparation for future expansion into other languages.

Syntax
The interlanguage links take the following form:

language code:Title

where the language code is the two-letter code as per ISO 639-1. So for example in the English language article on Plankton, the interlanguage links might look like this:

عوالق Plankton Planktono Plancton Plancton Plankton プランクトン 플랑크톤 Plankton Планктон Plankton 浮游生物界

NOTE: These links are treated specially, and don't show up in the body of the text, but in a special sidebar section "in other languages" listed by language name. Technically they can go anywhere in the article source; placement does not alter the visual appearance of the links on the rendered page except for the order. However, the convention is to put them at the bottom of the wikitext.

You should not include the link to the language in which you are writing.

To create an inline link (a clickable link within the text), see the section Inline interlanguage links below.

To mark one or more of these links as a featured article in a specific language, just add the Template:Link FA below right before the interlanguage links:

language code:Title

For example, if the Tomato article is a featured one in French and German, you should write:

Tomato Tomat Tomate Tomate தக்காளி

Bots and links to and from a section
Various bots add and attempt to correct interlanguage links: if A links to B, B will be linked to A, and if A links to B and B to C, A will be linked to C. The downside is that an error in an interlanguage link in one WikiQueer propagates to other WikiQueers. Thus if a bot produces a wrong result one may have to search for the underlying error in another language version of WikiQueer.

The activity of the bots also requires that interlanguage links are only put from an article to an article covering the same subject, not more and not less. It is technically possible to make an interlanguage link from an article to a section of an article, just like any link to a section. The bots can handle this. They will not try to link back from a section to the article that links to it. Maintaining such a link by hand, however, is complicated, so linking to a section is still not recommended.

If interwiki bots persistently add an interwiki link that human editors consider wrong, it is no use revert-warring against the bots: they won't understand and will always add the link back in. A simple solution is not to remove the offending link, but to enclose it in html comment marks (" "). The bots understand this convention and will not re-add a link marked in this way.

Tips

 * If you also work on a WikiQueer in another language, you might want to keep track of new pages there and check for English articles on the same subjects, so you can add a link there from here.
 * If you create a link to a WikiQueer that also has the interlanguage links available, please create a back-link in the other direction as well. It would also be good to copy any other interlanguage links on the two pages.
 * Use the exact spelling and capitalization of the foreign page title when adding an interlanguage link. Writing the title with a small letter may work correctly as a link, but interwiki bots may fail to recognize it.

Purpose
Ordinary interlanguage links are used primarily to link an existing English WikiQueer page to a corresponding page in another language WikiQueer. If it is desired to include, in some article, a link to a topic that is not covered by an article on the English WikiQueer but which does have a page in another language version of WikiQueer, then there are two possible approaches:
 * 1) Use a red link pointing to a possible future article on the English WikiQueer;
 * 2) Use an interlanguage link pointing to the existing article on the other WikiQueer, as described in the next section.

The advantage of the first approach is that the red link informs all readers that the page does not exist locally, thus inviting its creation, and avoiding directing readers to a page that many of them will not understand. The disadvantage is that it conceals the existence of the foreign-language page, which might in itself be of interest to many readers, and may also be valuable to anyone wishing to create a corresponding English WikiQueer article.

It is sometimes possible to combine the two approaches, giving a local red link in addition to an interlanguage link explicitly marked as such. For example: "...the plans were drawn up by German architect Hans Knoblauch (see German WikiQueer article)..." The templates Ill and Ill2 are designed to assist this combined approach.

If a red link is not appropriate locally for whatever reason, such as because the subject does not appear to be notable, then linking to the other language page may be useful.

Interlanguage links may also be useful outside of the mainspace for convenience, such as from one's userpage to a page frequently visited or that like-minded visitors might want to go to.

Method
You can create a clickable link that will be visible in the text by adding a colon before the language abbreviation:


 *  fr:Littérature française du XVIIIe siècle or ja:WikiQueer:井戸端 

You can use the pipe to show only the title:


 *  Littérature française du XVIIIe siècle or WikiQueer:井戸端 

Which would look like this: Littérature française du XVIIIe siècle or WikiQueer:井戸端 in your text.


 * Interlanguage links in Talk pages and on Meta will appear inline in the text, like regular links, so you can cite other pages in discussion.
 * In normal articles, an inline link can be made by prefixing an extra colon as explained above, which is the method that should be used for linking to an article in another language which is not the corresponding article.
 * An inline link to a Wiktionary entry, normally Juice, can be directed to another language's Wiktionary like so: Jus.

Sorting
The link tags should be sorted alphabetically based on the local names of the languages, as described at Interwiki sorting order. The vast majority of articles are currently sorted this way. Sorting alphabetically according to the two-letter language abbreviations is also acceptable. There are numerous other sorting methods to sort interlanguage links, but consistency between articles is encouraged.

Other
For a multilingual family of similar projects, with one project per language, a system for interlanguage linking can be set up, setting $wgInterwikiMagic to true and $wgHideInterlanguageLinks to false. If this project is in a family for which this applies, Help:Interlanguage link demo may demonstrate what is explained below (this depends on whether the same language codes are used).

An interwiki link within the family is treated differently, unless it is on a talk page of any namespace. It appears at one or two edges of the webpage (left in Monobook, top and bottom in Classic).

Thus, an interlanguage link is mainly suitable for linking to the most closely corresponding page in another language. It is not suitable for multiple links of the same other language. See Interlanguage use case for a discussion of common troubles with this system and other possible implementations.

The feature can also be used on an image description page, to link to the same or a similar image in a sister project. Other interwiki links to images require the prefixed colon.

Note that, if a page may be used as a template (even if it is not in the template namespace), it should note its interlanguage links between &lt;noinclude&gt; and &lt;/noinclude&gt;. This is the same idea as for categories.

Comparison:
 * 1) [&#91;:en:link&#93;] or [&#91;:category:name&#93;] are ordinary links.
 * 2) [&#91;m:en:link&#93;] or [&#91;m:category:name&#93;] are interwiki links, see above.
 * 3) [&#91;category:name&#93;]</tt> without leading colon, adds a category to the page.
 * 4) [&#91;en:link&#93;]</tt> without leading colon, adds an interlanguage link to the page.
 * 5) &lt;noinclude&gt;[&#91;category:name&#93;]&lt;/noinclude&gt;</tt> limits it to the actual page.
 * 6) &lt;noinclude&gt;[&#91;en:link&#93;]&lt;/noinclude&gt;</tt> also limits it to the actual page.

For projects like Meta, a missing leading colon has no effect, because Meta doesn't support interlanguage links. For WikiQueer and similar projects, it is a major difference. The mutual order of interlanguage links is preserved, but otherwise the positions within the wikitext are immaterial, again the same rule as for categories. Usually they are put at the end. With section editing, they appear in the preview, if they are in the section being edited. A link to the project itself (hence, also a link to the page itself), even if referred to with the project prefix, appears in-page.

Suppose that we have pages de:Zug, en:Train and fr:Train, then we need:
 * on de: en:Train, fr:Train
 * on en: de:Zug, fr:Train
 * on fr: de:Zug, en:Train

Thus, there is no possibility of simply copying each list, let alone of using a template, as can be done, if different languages share one project with or without separate namespaces. For further information, see:
 * m:Template:H-langs:Interwiki linking, used at the bottom of this page on Meta
 * wikisource:Template:InterLingvLigoj
 * Template:About

In-page interlanguage links
To make an interlanguage link in-page, prefix a colon (e.g. wiki ). This can be useful to link to a page in another language, if no local version is available. For example, several templates for conveniently making such links would be:


 * – nl: (in Dutch)
 * – (nl)
 * –  (nl)
 * – (nl)
 * – (nl)

A few other templates are listed in Category:Interwiki link templates, apparently using the same ISO 639-1 code as above, i.e.  </tt> suffixed with i</tt>.

Interlanguage links in the wider sense
An interlanguage link in the wider sense includes a link to a corresponding page in another language, which, for the software, is a regular link, as opposed to one employing the special interlanguage link feature as described above. This can also be an internal link on a multilingual project, e.g. on Meta:
 * Interlanguage links

Possible reasons for using an "interlanguage link" in the page body include:
 * control over position
 * control over label
 * the target contains an anchor
 * to encourage people to translate material from the original source language