XTools/Edit Counter

The Edit Counter tool provides detailed summary statistics about a single user on a single project.

Note that depending on the number of edits the user has made, this tool can be rather slow. To speed it up, you can select which specific statistics you want using the checkboxes at https://xtools.wmflabs.org/ec. In addition, each heading in the result view (i.e. "Month Counts") is a link that will bring you to a page showing only that section.

General statistics
The general statistics section contains lots of statistics about the user and their work on the project, as well as some data about other projects that they’re active on. If the user is a current or former sysop, various counts of administrative actions are also shown.

Note that for performance reasons, some statistics (denoted with an asterisk *), only apply to the last 5,000 edits made by the user.

Edit counts
XTools counts the number of revisions made by a user by making real-time queries to the database. For this reason, your system edit count as shown at Special:Preferences may be different. The system edit count is a running tally of all edits made by the user (even if they were later deleted or suppressed). In addition, the definition of what constitutes an edit towards your system edit count has changed over time. For instance, page moves have only been counted as edits since June 2017.

For this reason, the system edit count can be considered approximate, while XTools is more exact as it does live counts on the database.

Note that the "Global edit counts" on the right are system edit counts, as retrieved from Special:CentralAuth. For the reasons stated above, these are considered approximate counts. You can click on the wiki link (i.e. "fr.wikipedia.org") to run the XTools Edit Counter for that user on that wiki, which will give you a more exact count.

Deleted edits
The deleted edits figure is sometimes a source of confusion. This is the number of edits the user made to pages that are now deleted. If a user has a large number of deleted edits, it is not by itself any indication of wrongdoing. For example, page patrollers will often have a high deleted edit count because they tag problematic pages for deletion.

Pages created
This figure is the total number of pages a user has created on the project, in any namespace, and including those created as a redirect when moving a page. For more detailed statistics on the pages a user has created, use the Pages Created tool.

Namespace totals
This shows the total edit counts in each namespace (all time), along with a pie chart showing the relative number of edits.

Note that you can hover over the rows in the table and an X symbol will appear over the color icon. Clicking this will hide that namespace from the statistics – not just in the Namespace Totals section, but also the Year Counts and Month Counts sections.

Year counts
This is a stacked bar chart showing total edit counts made in each year, with each bar being divided into namespace sections so that it’s possible to get an idea of how a user’s namespace activity has changed over the years. You can selectively show/hide specific namespaces by hovering over the table in the Namespace Totals section and clicking on X symbol on the left.

Month counts
This section is the same as the year counts, except the columns are months instead of years. You can selectively show/hide specific namespaces by hovering over the table in the Namespace Totals section and clicking on X symbol on the left.

Time card
This is a punchcard chart showing the total number of edits made by a user during each hour of day and day of week. The times given are in UTC.

Top edited pages
This shows the most-edited pages the user has edited in each namespace. Click the "Top edited pages" heading to go to the dedicated Top Edits tool which will display more results.

Rights changes
This section shows both local and global rights changes made to the user's account. If temporary rights were granted, a grayed out entry is displaying, showing when the rights will automatically be removed in the future.