Wikipedia:Editors are not mindreaders

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If an article you've created is tagged for deletion, put yourself in other editors' shoes. Should they have known you have grand plans and will be adding more detail and references soon? How should they have known that?

New articles are created every few seconds. Some are well written, thoroughly referenced, and meet notability guidelines without any problems. Many other articles are very brief and unclear in their significance and often lack any references. This creates a dilemma for new page patrol volunteers. Is this the first revision of a future featured article or is it something that will never be improved? Editors who create unreferenced, very short articles or articles consisting mostly of red links can help prevent this head scratching and avoid having their contributions marked for deletion as well.

Use your userspace[edit]

One solution is to create a new article in a subpage of your user or user talk space (example). New pages created in the user or user talk spaces will not show up in the list that new article patrollers regularly review. Once you've completed your work, move it to the main namespace where articles reside. Remember, there is no deadline. Take your time to create a well-crafted, well-referenced article before introducing it to others. This is especially true of biographies and articles that aren't going to garner lots of contributions from other editors immediately.

Let others know you aren't finished[edit]

If you must create the article in the main article space, consider adding the {{underconstruction}} tag to the top of the article. This timestamped tag lets other Wikipedia editors know that it is a work-in-progress that you intend to improve in the very near future. This approach works well when you will complete your planned work on the article within a day or two. If your plans stretch out over several days or weeks, consider using your userspace.

See also[edit]