Manual:Page title/fr

Un page title est un titre de page. Il est sauvegardé dans la table. When one is specifying a certain page by typing it into the search box, or putting it in an article as a wikilink, the input consists of a (or no namespace, if it's mainspace) followed by a colon (optional if it's mainspace) and then the database key. Par exemple, spécifie l'espace de noms Manual:  et la clé de la table page de la base de données.

Le titre de page est dépendant de la casse sauf le premier caractère. Vous pouvez mettre à   pur rendre le premier caractère dépendant de la casse. N'éanmoins, il n'est actuellement pas possible de rendre le titre de page indépendant de la casse en totalité (T2453).

Titres de page non valides
Les titres de pages suivants ne sont pas valides :


 * Noms de base commençant par une minuscule (quelque soit l'alphabet), en fonction de la valeur de . Notez qu'un titre peut être affiché avec une première lettre en minuscule, en utilisant ou le modèle lowercase title . This does not fix every occurrence, like the history, edit, or log pages (T55566) - or the browser address bar (T63851), but only affects the page title on the rendered HTML page and tab/window title bars.
 * Les titres qui commencent par une minuscule ont leur première lettre automatiquement convertie en majuscule
 * Titles containing the characters  (which have special meanings in Wiki syntax), the non-printable ASCII characters 0–31, the "delete" character 127, or HTML character codes such as &amp;amp;. Note that the plus sign + is allowed in page titles, although in the default setup for MediaWiki it is not. This is configured by setting the value of  in.
 * Special characters like  are translated into their equivalent %-hex notation
 * Base names beginning with a colon (:).
 * Base names equal to "." or "..", or beginning "./" or "../", or containing "/./" or "/../", or ending "/." or "/..".
 * Base names whose length exceeds 255 bytes. Be aware that non-ASCII characters may take up to four bytes in UTF-8 encoding, so the total number of characters you can fit into a title may be less than 255.
 * Titles containing "Talk:" in front of a namespace.
 * Titles with an invalid UTF-8 sequence.
 * Titles beginning with a namespace alias (WP:, WT:, Project:, Image:, on Wikipedia). For example, the name is not possible if Project: is set as a namespace alias.
 * Titles beginning with a prefix that refers to another project, including other language Wikipedias, e.g. "fr:" (see and ). For example, an article about the album "Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo!" cannot have that exact name, as the "q:" prefix leads to Wikiquote. (The restriction includes the prefixes "w:" and "en:" that refer to English Wikipedia itself. This self-reference restriction does not apply on all projects. For example, Wikiquote supports titles beginning "Q:".) A list of all these interwiki prefixes can be found on Special:Interwiki.
 * Titles beginning with any non-standard capitalization of a namespace prefix, alias or interwiki/interlanguage prefix, or any of these with a space (underscore) before or after the colon. For example, it is not possible for a title to begin such as: "HELP:", "HeLp:", "Help :", "Help:_"
 * Titles consisting of only a namespace prefix, with nothing after the colon.
 * Titles beginning or ending with a space (underscore), or containing two or more consecutive spaces (underscores).
 * Titles containing 3 or more consecutive tildes.
 * A title can normally contain the character %. However it cannot contain % followed by two hexadecimal digits (which would cause it to be converted to a single character, by percent-encoding).

Note also that it is not possible for editors to create page titles beginning with the prefixes Media: and Special:.

Voir aussi

 * Manual:Page_table#page_title
 * w:Wikipedia:Page name
 * w:Wikipedia:Naming conventions_(technical restrictions)
 * - The page title can be used in wiki text programmatically without knowing what it is using wiki code and suchlike
 * - The page title can be used in wiki text programmatically without knowing what it is using wiki code and suchlike