W13 / After reading “Categorization” / Jeongyoon Oh

 I could learn about how to organize categories in Wikipedia through writing. In fact, I've been writing articles all the time, so I thought I only needed to classify articles. However, a few days ago, I published a picture of myself in a Wikipedia article, and I realized that I also categorize images. I became interested in classification after seeing more classifications than I thought. Files as well as articles and images can be classified in detail, and the method is described in detail in the article.

 The most interesting thing is that the classification of articles should not overlap. For example, the article Paris does not require a "populated place in France" category if there is a "French city". I thought these two categories convey different information, but they overlap because the information "city" can infer that there will be a large population.
 It was also interesting that the classification was not organized in alphabetical order, but in order of importance that best represents the article.

Comments

  1. I was also interested in the classification of articles, as Jeongyoon learned. We've learned that we don't need to add subcategories if they belong to a parent category, so what do we do when the parent and subcategories are not clear? I think it makes sense to add to both categories when the hierarchy of categories isn't clear, but I'm curious to see what others think.

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