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Humour

The law of hats

This essay was originally created by Widefox as Wikipedia:Law of hats.
The Hatter – a note on a hat is not to be confused with a hatnote.

Laws of hats

  • 0th law: Every article evolves until it gains a hatnote.[note 1][note 2][1][2]
  • 1st law: Disambiguation scales with articles.[note 3][note 4]
  • 2nd law: Every disambiguation page evolves until it gains a hatnote.[note 5]
  • 3rd law: Disambiguation disambiguation is needed.[note 6][note 7]
Notes
  1. ^ Put another way: "Survival of the hattest."
  2. ^ "Articles which cannot so expand are merged into ones which can." or Hatnote extinction
  3. ^ is based on the number of combinations of n items . This assumes the factors: 1. reduction due to the coefficient of ambiguous titles , 2. plus additional contributions due to WP:DABMENTIONs which scales with the average size of articles times their ambiguous coefficient , giving: , i.e.
  4. ^ Disambiguation scales are not to be confused with fish scales
  5. ^ Widefox's law or "Did you mean A, B, C?, but before that, did you mean X, Y, Z?, repeat." When iterated due to hatnotes on all dabs, leads readers progressively further from the term they input, which already wasn't enough, without ever converging on an article."
  6. ^ That event is notable which leads to a new article - see 0th, plus Disambiguation (disambiguation)[disambiguation needed].
  7. ^ As of 2017, disambiguation disambiguation does not exist, but the redlink here is acceptable as it has possibilities, as any redirect would have. The redlink should be retained, based on the precautionary principle (see The Disambiguation Singularity)

How-to

Allowed, considering:


More notes
  1. ^ As of 2017, Wikipedia is 16, so that's currently at
  2. ^ See Carbon emission trading for tips of how to offset edits on paper, rather than actually doing it
  3. ^ See also entries may suffice per "Did you mean A, B, C?, but during that, did you mean X, Y, Z?, repeat"
  4. ^ Typos, plurals, foreign languages may be of use. If a reader doesn't know which article, that will no doubt assist in finding other dab pages before the dab page they were first at. Job done.

Current research

The Disambiguation Singularity

Artist's impression of an article near The Disambiguation Singularity

The Disambiguation Singularity – a term used cautiously, as it is ambiguous – singularity may refer to:

"Arts and entertainment" problem

Evolution time-series prediction (when we can only access "Arts and entertainment")

The "Arts and entertainment" problem is disambiguation page section overloading – research on the scaling of dab pages is ongoing. Current assumptions are a solution to the NP-hard problem of popular culture overloading or "Arts and entertainment" disambiguation page section overloading, which may refer to:

  • The Use of previously unambiguous terms for the titles of notable new popular culture, thereby overloading the previously unambiguous terms.
    • Remakes thereof, or remakes of remakes etc
  • Some numerical solutions do not converge on the number of hatnotes required to successfully disambiguate those topics.
  • A practical consideration is that due to the unfortunate coincidence of Arts and entertainment being listed at the top of dab pages, but with exponential growth, they must at some point expand at a rate faster than readers can scroll, thus preventing access to all but Arts and entertainment.[4] As only primary topics would be accessible, disambiguation may attain The Disambiguation Singularity.

See also

People wearing hats in Human evolution – main image used in the article, coincidence?

Further reading

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  1. ^ Magioladitis' law March 9, 2012 Hypothesis: "Due to expansion of Wikipedia all pages will end up having a hatnote to a dab page. At least all pages without parentheses in their title." User:Magioladitis
  2. ^ Similar to Zawinski's law of software envelopment "Every program attempts to expand until it can read mail. Those programs which cannot so expand are replaced by ones which can."
  3. ^ Put a ring on it (disambiguation)
  4. ^ Howto articles could be written about that, but similarly would not be reachable.
  5. ^ The Selfish Gene

















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