I joined Wikipedia in 2008, but began regularly editing in 2019. Though I am a chemist, I find myself working on a wide variety of topics. I would consider myself a gnome, but do add content and have started a handful of articles.

Most of my gnoming involves redirects; I create them often, participate frequently at Redirects for discussion to address problematic redirects, and add/update redirect categories. Directly related, I also find myself working on disambiguation issues and performing page moves to achieve consistency in article titles and apply naming conventions. The goal is to get users to the content they seek quickly and for articles to have logical and appropriate titles.

I also propose and perform page merges to combine closely related topics into a larger, more developed article where the added context means the whole is superior to its parts. Except in rare cases, I tend to favor initiating a merge proposal discussion just to check for objections prior to proceeding with a merge, and then closing the discussion myself prior to performing the merge, rather than performing a merge boldly. Merge discussions often have low participation and a large backlog, but I find that the procedures laid out at WP:MERGE are quite logical, if only more users would follow them. Overall, then, I consider myself a mergist; while no doubt there is always plenty of junk around that should be removed from the encyclopedia, I fail to understand users who think the best way to improve the encyclopedia is deletion of anything that they can argue violates their (often questionable) interpretation of some shred of policy. The solution instead is better navigation and organization.

Philosophy & thoughts

"People are going to want to see this"

Inspired by a joke by comedian Bob Marley regarding the Anthony Weiner sexting scandals, I refer here to the common urge within editors, including myself(!), to add a new bit of information that they find particularly interesting to an article. The problem is that all too often editors add this new information without due regard for how it fits into the rest of the article, often throwing it in as a single-sentence paragraph, at times in an inappropriate section. In my opinion, this phenomenon is a much more significant cause of disjointed, poorly constructed articles than is proseline.

I encourage everyone to carefully incorporate new bits of content into the existing structure of the article, which probably means adding it to an existing paragraph in a manner that adds to rather than detracts from the message of the paragraph. That said, some of the most helpful edits can be those that rearrange scattered one-sentence bits of information into cohesive, flowing paragraphs. Thus, when someone has displayed the symptoms of this syndrome, do not simply revert their addition as a disruptive edit, try to weave the added information into the article if it does add to the article.

Articles I've started