NB - This is userspace experiment based on the present Manual of Style: Wikipedia:Record charts

This page gives some guidelines for formatting record chart information in music-related articles. The chart positions should be organized into one table, and the table should be formatted using class="wikitable sortable".

Basic rationale

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Charts should be arranged by country in alphabetical order.

Within the table, charts should be properly named as listed by the source and peaks should not appear boldfaced, as this violates Wikipedia's policy regarding neutral point of view and breaches WP:MOSBOLD.

All of these example tables include indicators to show correct location of references. (These are not legitimate references for information contained in this article.) References should be as specific as possible, and generally should be to a URL that will display the exact charting information being included, not simply to the website where the chart may be found. Thus sources should be archived meaning that they can be accessed at later dates. 'Outside' archive sources such as the Wayback Machine or WebCite are also acceptable.

Please note that while the charting action is active or on-going within a specific market area (country), that non-archived reference(s) from reliable sources may be used as it pertains to that specific chart due to the fact it is too early for such information to appear in official archives. Where possible 'outside' archiving is also preferred.

Original chart format

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Note that references should be individual and specific to each chart that is being used. Sources per column or table are insufficient.

Chart (2008) Peak
position
Australian Singles Chart[1] 1
Canadian Singles Chart[2] 2
French Singles Chart[3] 3
German Singles Chart[4] 4
Norwegian Singles Chart[5] 5
Swiss Singles Chart[6] 6
UK Singles Chart[7] 7
US Billboard Hot 100[8] 8
US Billboard Hot Dance Club Songs[9] 9
US Billboard Hot R&B/Hip Hop Songs[10] 10

Albums and singles which appear on different charts during different years are formatted with the charts for the most recent year furthest down the table:

Chart (2006) Peak
position
Australian Singles Chart[11] 1
Canadian Singles Chart[12] 2
Spanish Singles Chart[13] 3
UK Singles Chart[14] 4
US Billboard Hot 100[15] 5
US Billboard Alternative Songs[16] 6
Chart (2007) Peak
position
Japanese Airplay Chart[17] 7

Alternative versions, such as remixes or radio edits, of the same song should be indicated in the table as an additional line within the Chart name cell:

Chart (2007) Peak
position
Australian Singles Chart[18] 1
German Singles Chart[19]
  • German radio version
2
UK Singles Chart[20]
  • Extended dance remix
3
US Billboard Hot 100[21] 4
US Billboard Hot Mainstream Rock Songs[22] 5

Chart macros

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The {{singlechart}} template is available for formatting chart tables for single articles. The use of the macro is strongly encouraged, as it automatically creates a correct reference for the chart entry, allows changes to sourcing sites to be accommodated by editing a central location instead of edits across thousands of articles, and will permit future implementation of a bot to assist in vandalism reversion. Documentation on the use of {{singlechart}} is available at the template page.

The macros will look something like this on pages:

Chart (2008) Peak
position
Australia (ARIA)[23] 1
Canada (CRIA)[24] 2
France (SNEP)[25] 3
Germany (Media Control AG)[26] 4
Norway (VG-Lista)[27] 5
Switzerland (Media Control AG)[28] 6
United Kingdom (Official Charts Company)[29] 7
US Billboard Hot 100[30] 8
US Dance Club Songs (Billboard)[31] 9
Notes
  • For the German macro you must format the artist name "last,first" and the song must be written like it is on their website for example "I Want to Know What Love Is (2-track)".
  • The United States Billboard charts visually look the same as the original chart format.
  • Although the macros are not compulsory they are not to be reverted if they have been upgraded.

See also

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  1. ^ fake ref
  2. ^ fake ref
  3. ^ fake ref
  4. ^ fake ref
  5. ^ fake ref
  6. ^ fake ref
  7. ^ fake ref
  8. ^ fake ref
  9. ^ fake ref
  10. ^ fake ref
  11. ^ fake ref
  12. ^ fake ref
  13. ^ fake ref
  14. ^ fake ref
  15. ^ fake ref
  16. ^ fake ref
  17. ^ fake ref
  18. ^ fake ref
  19. ^ fake ref
  20. ^ fake ref
  21. ^ fake ref
  22. ^ fake ref
  23. ^ fake ref
  24. ^ fake ref
  25. ^ fake ref
  26. ^ fake ref
  27. ^ fake ref
  28. ^ fake ref
  29. ^ fake ref
  30. ^ "Ke$ha Chart History (Hot 100)". Billboard.
  31. ^ "Ke$ha Chart History (Dance Club Songs)". Billboard.