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Wikipedia:Avoid statements that will date quickly

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by CatherineMunro (talk | contribs) at 02:30, 14 November 2005 (Another option: update. :)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Preferred style: use precise language

Unless you are writing on pages that are regularly refactored, such as Current events, you should avoid statements that will date quickly. Phrases to avoid include "recently", "in modern times", "now considered", "is soon to become", and "the sixties"; instead use phrases such as "as of October 2001" or "the 1960s." In many cases, such statements are also more precise.

Imagine someone is reading your words in six months, five, ten, fifty years. Will they still make sense?

Using precise language that will not sound dated if the article is never edited again is considered the best practice.

Related: Wikipedia:Time-resistant grammatical forms


Another option

That said, it sometimes suits the article to include time-sensitive statements that will need to be updated in the future.

The As of mechanism helps us to include current and timely information with less risk that someone browsing the Wikipedia in 2009 will read an article about that new album that is due in spring of 2004...

A link to As of 2005 will redirect to the 2005 page, acting the same as a 2005 link. However, once redirected, you can click the subtitle "(Redirected from As of 2005)" to return to the actual "As of 2005" article, and from there you can use the "What links here" link to find pages that may need updating.

In most cases, you'd create a standard link, such as: [[As of 2004]] or [[As of 2004|Currently]]

See List of "As of" pages

In special cases

If you believe that the article is not likely to need review until a different year (perhaps after the next Olympics or the like), you can break the link in half, so that the As of and 2004 link to different pages:

[[As of 2009|As of]] [[2004]]

which would appear as:

As of 2004

The "As of" would link to As of 2009 while the "2004" links, as usual, to 2004. The link to As of 2009 means that near the end of 2009 or the beginning of 2010, someone can go to As of 2009 and use the "What links here" link to see a list of articles that need reviewing.

For articles on subjects in fast-developing fields, it may be a good idea to add a line such as "This page is scheduled for review in 2005" at the end of the article. This would be written like this:

This page is scheduled for [[As of 2004|review in 2005]]

Discussion

See debate and more debate on the subject.