On Thu, Jul 5, 2012 at 12:08 AM, Gregor Hagedorn <g.m.haged...@gmail.com>wrote:

>
> In my observation, numeric-URI-based systems like Drupal tend to have
> minimal Links inside their content pages (i.e. beyond the menu
> system), mediawiki-based system tend to have hundreds of links inside
> their content. I believe this is so because links inside Drupal pages
> usually point to something like http://drupal.org/node/21947/ which
> makes it impossible for humans to easily check whether this is an
> intentional or erroneous link.
>

This is off-topic, but for Drupal this is a configuration issue. One of the
early lessons in books and tutorial series is how to configure this, and
many Drupal sites are configured to use human-readable paths. Drupal.org is
not because it has millions of nodes which often change names.

You are correct that most Drupal sites have fewer internal links than
wikis, but I think that holds for Drupal sites that are configured to use
human-readable paths as well. The cause is more likely in a different
interface issue.

I don't mean to spin this out into a tangent about Drupal, just wanted to
point out that correlation doesn't imply causation in this case.

-Lin

-- 
Lin Clark
Drupal Consultant

lin-clark.com
twitter.com/linclark
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