Wikipedia:Listcruft
Listcruft refers to indiscriminate or trivial lists. The term derives from the older hacker term cruft, describing obsolete code that accumulates in a program. The term is a neologism largely restricted to Wikipedia and its mirrors; as such, it is inappropriate for use in the text of articles (per Wikipedia:Avoid neologisms and Wikipedia:Avoid self-references), although it is freely (and appropriately) used in certain article tags and on article talk pages.
In general, a "list of X" should only be created if X itself is a legitimate encyclopedic topic that already has its own article. The list should originate as a section within that article, and should not be broken out into a separate article until it becomes so long as to be disproportionate to the rest of the article. It is very appropriate for the article on Zoology to include a list of important zoologists within it, and for the article on the fictional series character Rick Brant to include a list of the Rick Brant books. Valid examples of standalone lists would include List of University of Chicago people and The Oz Books. In both cases, the lists correspond closely to encyclopedia articles—University of Chicago and L. Frank Baum, respectively—and in both cases the length and detail of the list justify breaking them out.
On the other hand, topics such as , , and should be considered highly questionable because there are no articles on those topics.
The term is most often used in AFD debates concerning list articles. Its use is controversial. Although not uncommon in debates, some suggest it should never be used. Its users say it is an abbreviation for the arguments below, but others believe the term is dismissive or insulting to those who disagree. It is helpful to explain which meaning is intended.
The template {{listcruft}} should be added to articles with unnecessary lists.
Meaning
If a Wikipedia editor refers to a list as listcruft, it indicates that the editor believes one or more of the following:
- The list was created just for the sake of having such a list
- The list is of interest to a very limited number of people
- The list is a violation of Wikipedia is not an indiscriminate collection of information
- The content is unverifiable or the underlying concept is non-notable
- The list cannot be expanded beyond a handful of terms
- The list is unlimited and/or unmaintainable
- The list has no content beyond links to other articles, so would be better implemented as a (self-maintaining) category
- The list is unencyclopaedic, i.e. it would not be expected to be included in an encyclopaedia.
Generally speaking, the perception that an article is listcruft can be a contributing factor to someone voting for deletion, but it may not be the sole factor.
List of examples
- List of songs containing the sound of a woodpecker
- List of people who have ears
- List of dog names
- List of groups of eight people
- List of listcrufty lists
- List of software projects whose name is a term offensive to many people with disabilities -- yes, this was a real article, and its AfD is here.
See also
- Wikipedia:Fancruft
- Wikipedia:Cruftcruft
- Wikipedia:Wikipedia is not for things made up in school one day
- Wikipedia:Overlistification
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Style | Manual of Style (lists of works) • Stand-alone lists • Embedded list • Pro and con lists • Naming conventions (long lists) |
Content | What is a featured list? • WikiProject Lists • Portal:Lists |
Philosophy | Categories, lists, and series boxes • Categories vs lists • Lists in Wikipedia • Overlistification • Listcruft • Proposed guideline for lists of people by ethnicity |
Existing lists | Wikipedia:Featured lists • List of lists • List of lists of... • Lists by form |
Templates | Template messages/Lists • Category:List templates |
Technical assistance | Help:List |