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This is a list of commonly used edit summary abbreviations. This page does not lay down any official guidelines on how to fill out an article's edit summary. Wikipedians are encouraged to write accurate and detailed summaries. For more information, see Help:Edit summary.
A more concise list is available in the quick reference. You can find other Wikipedia terms in the glossary.
Wikipedia's article titles are case-sensitive, except for the first letter of the article, which always appears as a capital. Also, according to Wikipedia:Manual of Style, only the first letter of the first word in section headings should be capitalized. The above abbreviations indicate fixing of capitalization mistakes, or lowercasing or uppercasing specific words. cap, capital, cpt indicate general fixing of capitalization. caps is for those instances when every letter of a word is capitalized, when the word is to be made ALL CAPS. lc and lcase mean lowercasing the first letter of some word, and uc and ucase mean uppercasing the first letter of some word.
Cleanup
cl, cleanup
Meaning: "I have made some general "tidying-up edits." These may include reformatting, spelling and grammar fixes, markup fixes, and other such minor edits. Useful if you make many different kinds of small changes in a single edit.
Meaning: I have discussed / explained this edit on the article's talk page.
If possible, combine with other text, e.g rephrased, see Talk.
Formatting
fm, fmt, frmt, formatting, MoS, mos, MOS
Meaning: "I have applied formatting to this article". For example, to adhere to Wikipedia's Manual of Style, or to make the look consistent, etc.
There is no need to specify the formatted text.
Grammar
gm, gr, grmr
Meaning: I have fixed the grammar of a sentence.
Headers
head, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6
Meaning: I have fixed header markup or changed header wording. Often seen when a page has been incorrectly laid out with level 3 headers at the top level (=== text ===) instead of level 2 headers (== text ==).
Horizontal rule
hr
Meaning: I have added (or removed) a horizontal rule (----).
Examples:
+hr
-hr
Merge
mrg, mrgd, merged in
Meaning: I have merged some other article(s) into this article.
All the articles merged should be specified.
Example (for United States of America):mrgd: USA & United States of America
Miscellaneous
misc
Miscellaneous edits
Use only when a more specific and more useful edit summary is not practical.
Move
mv
Meaning: I have moved the article or part of it to another location. (The new location should be specified.)
Or: I have added some material which comes from another article.
(Where it comes from should be specified)
Examples:
mv to 'United States' (mrgd)
mv from 'America'
Null edit
null, nx, ø
The edit window has been opened and the page re-saved with no change of text (occasionally necessitated by non-automated changes, like those to templates included in the page).
Original research
OR, NOR
Meaning: I believe something to be in conflict with the no original research policy.
Point of view
POV, NPOV
Meaning: I believe something to be in conflict with the neutral point of view policy.
Punctuation
punc, punct
Meaning: I have made edits to rectify punctuation. (Elaborate as needed).
Re-categorization
re-cat, recat
Meaning: I have made changes to a pre-existing category link or links.
If the change is specified, put the category link(s) between single apostrophes (') or double brackets (e.g., [[Category:Category name]]).
Examples:
re-cat
recat 'Old category' to 'New category'
recat [[Category:Old category]] to [[Category:New category]]