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Wikipedia:WTF? OMG! TMD TLA. ARG!

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WTF? OMG! TMD TLA. ARG!

or

What The Fuck? Oh My God! Too Many Damned Three-Letter Acronyms. ARRRGGGHHH!!!!

The message

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WP:WHEN  WP:EDIANS  WP:CITE  WP:PAGES  WP:IN  WP:THE  WP:PRJ  WP:NSWP:THEY  WP:FREQ  WP:REF  WP:CUTS  WP:LIKE  "WP:BEANS",  "WP:BALLS",  WP:AND  "WP:BRD". While these MOS:ABBREVIATIONS WP:ARE  WP:GREAT  WP:FOR  WP:RDRing WP:TO  WP:A  WP:SPECIFIC  WP:PAGE  WP:YOU  WP:USE often, it's probably WP:A  WP:BADIDEA  WP:TO  WP:MAKE  WP:A  WP:POINT  WP:OF  WP:USING these WP:TLAs  WP:IN daily WP:TALK, lest your WP:DISCUSSion  WP:END  WP:UP  WP:AS  WP:NONSENSE  WP:LIKE  WP:THE  WP:TITLE  WP:OF  WP:THIS  WP:PAGE.

English translation

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When Wikipedians refer to pages in the Wikipedia: namespace, they frequently use shortcuts like "WP:BEANS", "WP:BALLS", and "WP:BRD". This jargon is used as a link to a particular, often-used page. While these abbreviations are great for redirecting to a specific page that you use often, it's probably a bad idea to habitually use these in daily discussion, lest your discussions may end up as nonsensical as the title of this page.

Avoid unnecessary jargon

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Editors use jargon for compact communication, especially when doing hundreds of similar laborious important edits, e.g. vandalism patrol. Try toning down odd shouty wikilinks to policies and guidelines. Either explain what they are, or use explanatory text in a piped link. Jargon directly excludes people, even when used with the best of intentions. It can take a conscious effort to avoid it. Don't bite the newbies.

If you use abbreviations all the time, you risk forgetting what the expansion actually is, and might say something you don't actually mean:

e.g., you refer to WP:FORK, meaning the short version of WP:CONTENTFORK – but it links to WP:Mirrors and forks. Another example, you use the shortcut WP:ECU to refer to extended confirmed users, but it links to Wikipedia:WikiProject Ecuador.
A common practice is to write "Recent event, delete per WP:NOTNEWS". But this is a shortcut to WP:NOTNEWSPAPER. The main point of that rule is to proscribe original reporting (e.g <ref>I'm at the scene right now and seeing it with my own eyes</ref>). It also proscribes newspaper-type features such as daily sports scores, trivial social news and gossip, horoscopes, and the like. It expects some immediately recent events to be covered and says so, and only warns against giving extra weight to (say) a battle last week as opposed to a similar-importance battle in 1805, just because it is more recent. An editor, having not read the policy carefully, may be latching on to the title and believing that we actually are told not to cover recent events. Consequent to WP:NOTNEWS's wide use, many editors believe this.

Avoid projecting elitism

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Newer editors will often encounter the first heavy use of these abbreviations in the talk pages of articles, Articles for Deletion discussions, or other administrative areas of Wikipedia. To keep the community open and inviting to newcomers, editors should avoid the use of cryptic language and acronyms, as it projects a sense of elitism that is likely to alienate newer editors.

For example, when indicating the reasons that an article should be deleted, the following may be considered hostile to newer members:

Nominated for deletion, WP:NOR, WP:N, WP:V

Instead of listing an alphabet soup of codes, the following use of Wikipedia's "piped linking" technique improves the clarity of the above sentence:

Nominated for deletion as original research and for lack of notability; in addition, it does not appear to be possible to verify the accuracy of the sources, as the article contains only references that are contained in unpublished manuscripts.

It is longer, but far more understandable, and contains a little context that allows someone to understand particular reasons why a policy might apply. While it may be obvious to you why a given policy applies, it may not be to others – even very experienced editors!

Moral of the story

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Always use a proper name for a Wikipedia namespace page when discussing it. If you find that you are getting sore wrists and fingers from all the typing, try to simplify or summarise the pages you are referring to, so that in future you only need to refer to a single link.

or

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See also

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