Revision as of 22:37, 5 July 2007 editCayafas (talk | contribs)197 edits consensus says disputed tag. disputed is the more appropriate tag when the core principles of this guideline are under fire. stop denying the dispute, please.← Previous edit | Revision as of 23:16, 5 July 2007 edit undoTony Sidaway (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers81,722 edits redirect Misplaced Pages:No disclaimers in articlesNext edit → | ||
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#redirect ] | |||
:''For Misplaced Pages guidelines regarding warnings in general, see ] (]).'' | |||
{{subcat guideline|style guideline|Spoiler|WP:SPOILER|WP:SPOIL|WP:SW}} | |||
{{disputedpolicy}} | |||
{{nutshell|Misplaced Pages contains discussions of fictional ]. Spoiler warnings should only be used in articles about fictional subjects. When adding a spoiler warning, be prepared to obtain consensus that this is necessary. Readers are expected to assume that plot and fictional history sections will contain spoilers.}} | |||
A ''']''' is a piece of information in an article about a narrative work (such as a book, feature film, television show or video game) that reveals ] ]s or ]s. | |||
Spoilers on the Internet are sometimes preceded by a spoiler warning.<ref>Examples include ], ], and ].</ref> However, it is unusual for serious reference works (of the sort that Misplaced Pages aspires to be) to warn for spoilers when discussing fictional works. Because of this, spoiler warnings should generally be avoided. | |||
Concerns about spoilers should play no role in decisions about the structure or content of an article, including the article's ]. When adding a spoiler in the lead section, remember that Misplaced Pages is written from a real-world perspective; what is exciting in the context of a fictional universe is almost certainly a standard ] in literary construction. | |||
If a spoiler is added as trivia, and does not contribute to the article in any meaningful way, that information can be removed. However, removal of information should ''not'' be due to the presence of a spoiler alert, but because the information removed was trivial or unnecessary. | |||
==Spoiler warnings== | |||
===When spoiler warnings should not be used=== | |||
*Spoiler warnings must not interfere with ], completeness, encyclopedic tone, or any other element of article quality. | |||
*Spoiler warnings are usually inappropriate in articles discussing classical works of literature, poetry and theatre. Some films may fairly be described as classics, but there is far less agreement on this. ]s should never have spoiler warnings. In grey areas, editors placing spoiler templates should use the article's talk page to discuss the matter. | |||
*Spoilers and spoiler warnings should be avoided in articles on non-fictional subjects. If explicit spoilers<ref>An explicit spoiler mentions the work of fiction concerned.</ref> are mentioned in non-fiction articles (''e.g.'' articles on authors, real-life locations in which (a) fictional text(s) is set, or literary concepts like ]), consider whether the spoiler improves the encyclopedic quality of the article. It may be better to remove the example. | |||
*Spoiler warnings are usually redundant when used to cover an entire "Plot" or "Synopsis" heading, or fictional "History" headings of any sort in articles whose subject is fictional, since spoilers are to be expected in a plot summary. Spoiler tags may be permissible in a subsection of a "Plot" heading, where there is consensus that the spoiler is particularly significant. | |||
*Spoiler warnings should not be used when they can be replaced by more accurate heading information. If a "Themes" heading starts with a plot description, the best thing to do is break the plot description into a separate heading. If there are no headings, it is usually better to add them. | |||
*Articles about fictional characters, objects, or places can be expected to include significant elements of the story. They should not typically need global spoiler warnings. | |||
===When spoiler warnings may be appropriate=== | |||
* Spoiler tags may be appropriate when information appears in unexpected places, such as a "Character" heading, if there is consensus that this is necessary. But spoiler tags shouldn't be used in lieu of organising information properly. | |||
* Spoiler tags are more likely to be appropriate in newer works than in older works. Movies currently in first release, TV shows that haven't aired in all major markets, and books that have only been released in hardcover are more likely candidates for spoiler tags than a film from 1935, though exceptions may exist on either side. Note that this does not imply that spoiler tags become redundant shortly after the work of fiction reaches market. | |||
* Very rarely, a spoiler warning may appear in the article lead. The presumption should be that the article lead should not need to warn about plot spoilers that are significant enough to appear in the lead. | |||
===How to add or remove spoiler warnings=== | |||
* Where it is appropriate, a '''{{]}}''' tag can be used to mark spoiler sections, with '''{{]}}''' to mark the end. Whether one is adding or removing, be sure to do both. '''Do not improvise such warnings in plain text, always use the templates.''' | |||
==Unacceptable alternatives== | |||
The following methods should never be used in relation to spoilers: | |||
* Deleting information from an article about a work of fiction because it spoils the plot. | |||
* Structuring an article around spoilers or confining them to a particular area (e.g. under ==Plot==) when unnecessary or in a way that decreases article quality. | |||
* Making spoiler-free parallel versions (]). Creating parallel versions ''outside'' of Misplaced Pages is acceptable. | |||
* The insertion of blank lines before a spoiler. | |||
* Concealing spoilers using codes such as ]. | |||
* Setting the text and background colors to the same color using ], so the reader has to highlight the text to read it. | |||
==Notes== | |||
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Revision as of 23:16, 5 July 2007
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