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  2. Help:Merging and moving pages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Merging_and_moving_pages

    Merging and moving are two fundamental aspects of how articles are developed, structured, and reformed on Wikipedia. A merger is a non-automated process by which two similar or redundant pages are united on one page. A move renames a page, giving it a new title. These processes are explained at: Wikipedia:Merging; Wikipedia:Moving a page ...

  3. Personal web page - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_web_page

    The use of personal web pages to display an individual's professional life has become more common in the 21st century. Mary Madden, an expert researcher on privacy and technology, did a study that found a tenth of American jobs require Personal web pages that advertise an individual online. [7] Personal web pages have become a source of initial ...

  4. Wikipedia:Moving a page - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Moving_a_page

    A page that is a redirect can be moved like any other page, although it is rarely useful because it has the same detrimental effect on page history as copy-pasting content to a new page, and making the old page a redirect: when moving a redirect page to a new page name, the redirect on the old page (now directing to the new redirect page) will ...

  5. Wikipedia:Merging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Merging

    A merge, or merger, is the process of uniting two or more pages into a single page.It is done by copying some or all content from the source page(s) into the destination page and then replacing the source page with a redirect to the destination page.

  6. URL redirection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/URL_redirection

    URL redirection, also called URL forwarding, is a World Wide Web technique for making a web page available under more than one URL address. When a web browser attempts to open a URL that has been redirected, a page with a different URL is opened. Similarly, domain redirection or domain forwarding is when all pages in a URL domain are redirected ...

  7. Linkback - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linkback

    A backlink is what the person referring to a page creates while a linkback is what the publisher of the page being referred to receives. Any of the four terms—linkback, trackback, pingback, or (rarely) refback—might also refer colloquially to items within a section upon the linked page that display the received notifications, usually along ...

  8. Internal and external links - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internal_and_external_links

    An internal link is a type of hyperlink on a web page to another page or resource, such as an image or document, on the same website or domain. [1] [2] It is the opposite of an external link, a link that directs a user to content that is outside its domain. Hyperlinks are considered either "external" or "internal" depending on their target or ...

  9. Help:Citation merging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Citation_merging

    Either way, it is possible to define them all in one go (possibly as a list-defined reference) and invoke them several times (possibly with different |page= parameters, or to define the citations individually and combine them through the annotation system of template {}. The following examples illustrate the latter form: