Body Communication:Main Page design
This is an information page. It is not one of Wikipedia's policies or guidelines, but rather intends to describe some aspect(s) of Wikipedia's norms, customs, technicalities, or practices. It may reflect varying levels of consensus and vetting. |
This page in a nutshell: Re-designing Wikipedia's main page has been a perennial proposal since the last major revamp in 2006. |
There have been periodic attempts to revamp the design of Wikipedia's main page. In 2003, 2004, and 2006, there were successful main page redesign proposals.
Since 2006, there have been no successful proposals to significantly redesign the main page. However, it is always possible to request feedback from other editors on proposed changes, usually through discussion or requests for comment at Talk:Main Page, Wikipedia:Village pump (proposals) or Wikipedia:Village pump (idea lab). You can test changes in your user sandbox or another subpage.
Enacted changes
Changes to content used in the main page, such as to the list of sister projects, are not listed. All archives linked display the current content; for archives of the content on particular days, see Wikipedia:Main Page history. TFA, OTD, ITN, DYK and POTD were added in 2004, and TFL was added in 2011. Some content may or may not be displayed depending on the day of the week.
This table does not list all of the changes that have been made and may be incomplete. Some changes, such as styling improvements, do not result in obvious or noticeable differences.
Failed proposals
This list does not include all failed proposals, but many proposals by individual users are linked from these pages.
See also
- Wikipedia:FAQ/Main Page#Is there some way to make the Main Page look better?
- Wikipedia:Main Page alternatives
- Other discussions, notes, and attempts
- Wikipedia:Requests for comment/Main Page features (2011)
- Search (intitle:) for: Main page redesign; about 200 related pages
- Wikimedia main page – d:Q5296, to see what our neighbours use
- Wikipedia:Unsolicited redesigns (essay)