From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Overlinking in a webpage or another hyperlinked text is the characteristic of having too many hyperlinks (links). [1] [2]

It is characterized by:

  • A large proportion of the words in each sentence are rendered as links.[ citation needed]
  • Links that have little information content, such as linking on specific years like 1995, or unnecessary linking of common words used in the common way, for which the reader can be expected to understand the word's full meaning in context, without any hyperlink help.[ citation needed]
  • A link for any single term is excessively repeated in the same article. "Excessive" is usually more than one link for the same term in a line or a paragraph, since in this case, one or more duplicate links will almost certainly then appear needlessly on the viewer's screen. The purpose of links is to direct the reader to a new spot at the point(s) where the reader is most likely to take a temporary detour due to needing more information. Providing more link samples for the same word in a short space (as in the bad example of this paragraph) doesn't help much.[ citation needed]

Related concepts

The opposites of overlinking are "null linking" and "underlinking", which are phenomena in which hyperlinks are reduced to such a degree as to remove all pointers to a likely-needed context of an unusual term, in the text-area where the term occurs. [2] This results in reader frustration. Underlinking results whenever a reader encounters an odd term in an article (perhaps not even for the first time) and wants to briefly browse more deeply at that point, but finds they cannot, but rather is required to conduct an extensive search far up near the beginning of the article, in order to locate the only instance of the word or term being linked— or perhaps even to find that it hasn't been linked at all.[ citation needed]

References

  1. ^ "PCMag.com Encyclopedia". PC Magazine. Archived from the original on 2012-06-14. Retrieved 2007-01-19.
  2. ^ a b Dvorak, John C. (April 2002). "Missing Links". PC Magazine.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Overlinking in a webpage or another hyperlinked text is the characteristic of having too many hyperlinks (links). [1] [2]

It is characterized by:

  • A large proportion of the words in each sentence are rendered as links.[ citation needed]
  • Links that have little information content, such as linking on specific years like 1995, or unnecessary linking of common words used in the common way, for which the reader can be expected to understand the word's full meaning in context, without any hyperlink help.[ citation needed]
  • A link for any single term is excessively repeated in the same article. "Excessive" is usually more than one link for the same term in a line or a paragraph, since in this case, one or more duplicate links will almost certainly then appear needlessly on the viewer's screen. The purpose of links is to direct the reader to a new spot at the point(s) where the reader is most likely to take a temporary detour due to needing more information. Providing more link samples for the same word in a short space (as in the bad example of this paragraph) doesn't help much.[ citation needed]

Related concepts

The opposites of overlinking are "null linking" and "underlinking", which are phenomena in which hyperlinks are reduced to such a degree as to remove all pointers to a likely-needed context of an unusual term, in the text-area where the term occurs. [2] This results in reader frustration. Underlinking results whenever a reader encounters an odd term in an article (perhaps not even for the first time) and wants to briefly browse more deeply at that point, but finds they cannot, but rather is required to conduct an extensive search far up near the beginning of the article, in order to locate the only instance of the word or term being linked— or perhaps even to find that it hasn't been linked at all.[ citation needed]

References

  1. ^ "PCMag.com Encyclopedia". PC Magazine. Archived from the original on 2012-06-14. Retrieved 2007-01-19.
  2. ^ a b Dvorak, John C. (April 2002). "Missing Links". PC Magazine.

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