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![]() | This page in a nutshell: If an article is getting too big, consider refocusing the page rather than branching it off into other pages. |
When an article gets too big, sometimes splitting is the best solution. But what's left out of the all the policy listed above is the fact that sometimes, big sections may seem notable when they actually aren't. People feel the need to add everything Bush is criticized about to Criticism of George W. Bush, but many don't stop to realize that that page is really just a branch of "George W. Bush" and adding more facts, while encyclopedic, is not really adding to the page it was originally meant for.
The best option in this case is to shrink, don't split: add your new information if you think it's necessary, and maybe remove some extra stuff that's just cluttering up the page. Most of the time, pages like Criticism of George W. Bush can be summarized into the main text without including other extraneous information that would otherwise be of little value. Instead of branching off right away when you see a section is getting too big, ask yourself whether a move like that would be beneficial to the page as a whole. If a section documents a minor part of a person's life or a negligible fact about a certain something, even if it can be well verified by many sources, be advised that the content in a new branch may be lacking encyclopedic value.
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