Powerbase:How to rename a page
If you discover that you've created a page with the wrong title (maybe you misspelled it or maybe you didn't follow the naming conventions and you want to make it fit in more cleanly with the rest of Powerbase), you can rename it by moving it to a new title.
Note that you have to be logged in to rename a page this way; regarding the set preferences:
- there is no button for this in the nostalgia skin;
- the button is in the quickbar, so this must be on.
When you've got your article up, click on the "Move page" link in the sidebar. You'll be asked for a new name for the article, and given the option to also move the article's talk page. (Unless you know what you're doing, it's safest to say yes.) Click the magic button, and the page will be renamed using the new title. The old title will become a redirect page, so any links to the old title will still go to the new page.
Notes
The nice thing about using the "move page" function is that it keeps the entire edit history of the article, before and after the move, in one place; it's as if the article were always named that way. So, it's preferable to use this method over just cutting text out of one article and cramming it into a new one; old revisions, notes, and attributions are harder to keep track of if you do that. (But you may have to if, for instance, you're splitting a page into multiple topics. If you do, please include a note in the new article's summary and talk page of where you took the text from.)
The move itself is shown in the edit history of the page with the old title. However, if the page is moved back, the edit history of the page with the previous title shows the latest move only, with the corresponding user name, but with the date and time of the first move(!).
If the new title already exists and isn't just a redirect with no history, it will tell you that you can't rename the article. You'll either have to manually merge the two pages together, or -- only if there's no real content in the page -- ask to have it deleted to make room for moving the page.
Another thing to remember is that redirects to redirects aren't automatically followed (this prevents infinite loops and spaghetti linking). Always check the What links here for your page, and if there are multiple levels of redirects, go fix the links to point to the new location directly.
See also:
- How to edit a page
- How to use redirect pages
- Practice editing pages in our Powerbase sandbox!
Acknowledgement: the content of many of the help pages in Powerbase has been adapted from Wikipedia.