Yet it appears that this is exactly what happened here (Revision 1 has a single character “2” for the entire text), and also in many other cases.
What happens is that once you click on a red link, it focuses on the input textbox, and pressing any key will add a character to the input box.
]]>Clicking on a red link does not automatically create the article. It takes you to an empty edit page where you have to write something to be on the new page, click “Save”, and then the article is created. It’s not clear to me that a human being would do that accidentally.
]]>Which is what I usually try to do, but sometimes I run out of time filling out all the missing articles.
However, not everybody does this, and I was speaking from a practical viewpoint: dangling links exist, whether we like it or not, and the current setup causes problems.
]]>Good practice is to at least create a stub entry for each new link you introduce.
Namely, if you know enough about a subject to refer to it, then you will at least know one reference (and be it Wikipedia), or have at least one sentence to say about it, and that suffices to start an entry.
]]>Is it a good idea for a link to a not-yet-created article to automatically create the referenced article?
This does seem to produce a lot of accidentally created articles.
Perhaps we could modify the relevant template to instead produce a “article not yet created” page?
]]>@Urs #3 I see what you did there ;-)
]]>And I have cross-linked now with Dirac measure and with law of a random variable.
]]>Have added the definition now.
Has someone just clicked on the link from Dirac measure?
Almost surely.
]]>Has someone just clicked on the link from Dirac measure?
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Anonymous
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