Disambiguation | ||||
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nama erfan {kebangsaan indonesia
tinggal di parteng Gg.kurniaI
A disambiguation page is not an article, nor is it a dictionary page. It is a page for disambiguating Wikipedia articles. If there's no article for the term, and no article to link to that discusses the term, then it doesn't belong on the dab page. If you think the subject deserves its own article, then start it on its own page. But in this case, it still wouldn't belong on this dab page, because it is not something known as (or that might be known as) simply hardcore. -- ShelfSkewed Talk 17:07, 8 February 2008 (UTC)
The first line of the Manual of Style for disambiguation pages: "Disambiguation pages ("dab pages") are, like redirects, non-article pages in the article namespace." From the guidelines for individual entries: "Never include external links, either as entries or in descriptions. Disambiguation pages disambiguate Wikipedia articles, not the World-Wide Web. To note URLs that might be helpful in the future, include them as comments or on a talk page." Because dab pages disambiguate only Wikipedia articles, they don't require citations: The sourcing should be done in the article. As far as I can tell, the term "hardcore" does not appear in the article European Union, so that usage should not be on the dab page. And, to repeat Cheeser1's point, even if it were used in the article, the meaning is merely an extension of the dictionary definition. And to repeat my own point, the term Hardcore Cadre wouldn't belong here because it's not ambiguous--that is, it is not something known as just hardcore and likely to be confused with other uses of the word. -- ShelfSkewed Talk 22:36, 8 February 2008 (UTC)
Sorry if this is a weird question, but are comic books considered "literature"? -- Cheeser1 ( talk) 19:00, 15 February 2008 (UTC)
I have added a reference to hardcore used as a foundation. It was discussed before, which can be found in the archive. "Hardcore" is definitely used on its own in the UK to mean a very coarse gravel or even bits of brick etc. used as a foundation for concrete. It's quite hard to find sources for it but there are some like here: [5] -- Borb ( talk) 13:18, 14 May 2009 (UTC)
I rem'd
They love to use the "word" in titles, but no album Hardcore.
--
Jerzy•
t
04:52, 26 October 2009 (UTC)
Yesterday's "dab cleanup" merged all the various types of hardcore music simply into "hardcore music". I'm not going to revert this without knowing more about what dab cleanup is for, but there is no such thing as "hardcore music"; Wikipedia doesn't even have a page for it. There are three unrelated genres of music that have the word "hardcore" in them: hardcore punk, hardcore techno, hardcore hip hop. (And the page correctly listed these until yesterday.) This is exactly what disambiguation is for: completely unrelated things that share a name. All three should be listed, no? -- 173.48.248.79 ( talk) 16:21, 27 October 2009 (UTC)
In reference to this: Hardcore (The opposite of "softcore"), a video game character dies permanently forcing the player to create a new character or restart a game. Also, a measure of difficulty to the extreme and not for casual gamers.
This definition is inappropriate for games as permadeath, when not referred to as permadeath, is referred to as ironman mode. Extreme difficulty is called hard, not hardcore. Hardcore is used by both industry and gamers, but usually in the slang sense of intense when referring to games, or as praise, connoting dedication when referring to gamers. Hardcore should also not be confused with core rules, an infrequent technical term. 69.168.144.136 ( talk) 04:54, 28 August 2014 (UTC)
Disambiguation | ||||
|
nama erfan {kebangsaan indonesia
tinggal di parteng Gg.kurniaI
A disambiguation page is not an article, nor is it a dictionary page. It is a page for disambiguating Wikipedia articles. If there's no article for the term, and no article to link to that discusses the term, then it doesn't belong on the dab page. If you think the subject deserves its own article, then start it on its own page. But in this case, it still wouldn't belong on this dab page, because it is not something known as (or that might be known as) simply hardcore. -- ShelfSkewed Talk 17:07, 8 February 2008 (UTC)
The first line of the Manual of Style for disambiguation pages: "Disambiguation pages ("dab pages") are, like redirects, non-article pages in the article namespace." From the guidelines for individual entries: "Never include external links, either as entries or in descriptions. Disambiguation pages disambiguate Wikipedia articles, not the World-Wide Web. To note URLs that might be helpful in the future, include them as comments or on a talk page." Because dab pages disambiguate only Wikipedia articles, they don't require citations: The sourcing should be done in the article. As far as I can tell, the term "hardcore" does not appear in the article European Union, so that usage should not be on the dab page. And, to repeat Cheeser1's point, even if it were used in the article, the meaning is merely an extension of the dictionary definition. And to repeat my own point, the term Hardcore Cadre wouldn't belong here because it's not ambiguous--that is, it is not something known as just hardcore and likely to be confused with other uses of the word. -- ShelfSkewed Talk 22:36, 8 February 2008 (UTC)
Sorry if this is a weird question, but are comic books considered "literature"? -- Cheeser1 ( talk) 19:00, 15 February 2008 (UTC)
I have added a reference to hardcore used as a foundation. It was discussed before, which can be found in the archive. "Hardcore" is definitely used on its own in the UK to mean a very coarse gravel or even bits of brick etc. used as a foundation for concrete. It's quite hard to find sources for it but there are some like here: [5] -- Borb ( talk) 13:18, 14 May 2009 (UTC)
I rem'd
They love to use the "word" in titles, but no album Hardcore.
--
Jerzy•
t
04:52, 26 October 2009 (UTC)
Yesterday's "dab cleanup" merged all the various types of hardcore music simply into "hardcore music". I'm not going to revert this without knowing more about what dab cleanup is for, but there is no such thing as "hardcore music"; Wikipedia doesn't even have a page for it. There are three unrelated genres of music that have the word "hardcore" in them: hardcore punk, hardcore techno, hardcore hip hop. (And the page correctly listed these until yesterday.) This is exactly what disambiguation is for: completely unrelated things that share a name. All three should be listed, no? -- 173.48.248.79 ( talk) 16:21, 27 October 2009 (UTC)
In reference to this: Hardcore (The opposite of "softcore"), a video game character dies permanently forcing the player to create a new character or restart a game. Also, a measure of difficulty to the extreme and not for casual gamers.
This definition is inappropriate for games as permadeath, when not referred to as permadeath, is referred to as ironman mode. Extreme difficulty is called hard, not hardcore. Hardcore is used by both industry and gamers, but usually in the slang sense of intense when referring to games, or as praise, connoting dedication when referring to gamers. Hardcore should also not be confused with core rules, an infrequent technical term. 69.168.144.136 ( talk) 04:54, 28 August 2014 (UTC)