Talk:Analytics/Metric definitions

"Countable namespaces"
The blog post links a non-existing section about them, anyway I suggest to drop this very confusing term and use Content namespaces instead. See 35198. Thanks, Nemo 21:45, 31 August 2012 (UTC)
 * The anchor link in the blog post has been fixed, thanks for pointing that out. Regards, Tbayer (WMF) (talk)


 * Now there's this confusing sentence in the introduction:
 * In the context of wikistats edits are updates to countable pages in countable namespaces (aka mainspace).
 * but "Content namespaces" goes on to describe other namespaces besides the main namespace. I changed the sentence but I have no idea what's intended. -- S Page (WMF) (talk) 18:49, 13 May 2013 (UTC)


 * Technically speaking, "countable namespace" doesn't mean anything; it's been recently invented by the analytics team. Countable pages (for the "article count") are pages that meet the count method and are in content namespaces; [countable] edits are just all edits in content namespaces. However, the WMF has not yet aligned its stats to content namespaces: it's just a bug, but carelessly "fixing" it would make some stats hard to compare, so until the things are unified they're using "countable namespaces" to define the weird ad hoc mix used by WMF stats. :) Or at least, this is my understanding. IMHO it would be easier to just drop this useless distinction, don't bother about "rewriting history" and update all counts, translating all strategic goals to relative rather than absolute amounts so that count errors of 2010 become irrelevant. --Nemo 22:18, 13 May 2013 (UTC)

Confusing definitions for page views
From the definitions: What about special pages that contain /wiki/ in the url? In MediaWiki, an "article" namespace is sometimes used to mean any namespace with an even non-negative namespace id. However, that definition is not used very often. Is that what is meant here? Bawolff (talk) 03:41, 7 January 2014 (UTC)
 * The url in a logline contains /wiki/. This excludes /w/index.php? and SpecialPages.
 * Any article namespace qualifies (unlike the dump based reports (see 'Content' above)).


 * Special pages are indeed included in the raw data, I didn't check if there's some additional filtering on WikiStats (there should be for at least some like ).
 * The second should just mean content namespaces, but I don't know if the API-based definition is already in use by WikiStats for this piece too. --Nemo 06:40, 7 January 2014 (UTC)

Clarificaton needed
I have several questions about how Wikistats counts articles: I only really need #2–4 answered if the answer to #1 is "yes". - dcljr (talk) 22:18, 19 April 2015 (UTC)
 * 1) The "Countable pages" section says, "most Wikistats reports are based on so called stub dump[s]" — does this include the article counts shown at, for example, EN/TablesArticlesTotal.htm?
 * 2) If so, what determines whether a "full" or "stub" dump will be used for each wiki? Is there a list somewhere?
 * 3) When "stub" dumps are used, is the effective defintion of an article simply "all pages in all content namespaces"?
 * 4) Are the "historical" article counts recalculated every time, whether or not the dump used is "full" or "stub"?
 * Statistics for past months are always recalculated entirely, except for the sections of wikistats which have an archive of course. --Nemo 22:58, 19 April 2015 (UTC)