List of Wikipedians by number of edits
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This is a list of Wikipedians ordered by number of edits in the English-language Wikipedia. Edits performed by Wikipedians in all namespaces (articles, talk pages, user page, user talk, templates, files etc.) are counted. Some types of edits that may be included in certain page count tools, such as page moves, are not captured by the counting method employed to compile this list, so there may be a disparity between the counts listed below when compared with other counting methods. This page includes the top 5,000 contributors; the next 5,000 are listed here. This list is normally updated daily by a bot which updates the separate tables located elsewhere, but displayed below (se
revision history for one of these tables
. Click Special:Preferences or the "Preferences" link of the Wikipedia page menu, here, to see your most accurate and recent edit count. For a mathematical relationship between rank on this list and number of edits, see this 2009 post by Wnt (constants are in need of updating). Please note that total edit count is considered a crude measure of an editor's overall contribution to the project, as it may be inflated or deflated based on the types of work an editor undertakes.


Purpose of this list

Visitors to this page may well ask themselves, "Why does this list exist? What is the value of organizing editors by number of edits (especially in light of the section below)? Are all editors not considered equal in the eyes of Wikipedia regardless of how many edits they may have made? Does having a record of a large number of edits entitle a person to some special rights or privileges? Does appearing anywhere on this list mean that my own contributions aren't valuable or important? Should it be the goal of any individual editor to accrue as many of these counted edits as possible in hopes of making it onto or increasing their ranking on the list?" These are all fair questions. Having a user account with a large number of edits implies that the user is knowledgeable, experienced, knows what they are doing, is familiar with Wikipedia policies and procedures, has a handle on most of Wikipedia's acronyms and abbreviations, understands the difference between things like a template and a tag, a meatpuppet and a sockpuppet, can direct other editors on the correct format and venues to express their concerns or problems, and understands helpful editing tools. New articles created by high edit count editors may not face the same scrutiny or be as likely to be nominated for deletion as those created by newcomers. None of this is because of the edit counts themselves, but because a high edit count is a reasonable indicator of higher experience. Should it become your goal to get your own account on this list, or to increase your ranking on it? If that means you are willing to contribute your time and energy to creating a better online encyclopedia, then absolutely! But Wikipedia is not a game and few people who are serious about editing are focused on how many "experience points" they are accruing along the way. Even editors whose high edit counts are partly the result of a series of automated edits had to learn how to perform that automation. We all learn as we go, and if we are here for the right reasons, then our edit counts are only interesting commentary on our participation—not on the quality or value of it! This is not a race, this is a collaborative project, and it can always use more level-headed collaborators willing to learn how it all works.


Let the reader beware: this list is a reference summary only. It should be taken with a large
grain of salt To take something with a "grain of salt" or "pinch of salt" is an English idiom that suggests to view something, specifically claims that may be misleading or unverified, with skepticism or to not interpret something literally. In the old-fa ...
and not viewed as a definitive measure of any individual editor's worth. There are many reasons why a total number of edits usually does not indicate quality of work, quality of an editor, or significance of contributions. Here are some of the most obvious: # Due to a bug, the edit counts reported by Wikipedia are not always reliable for editors with high edit counts and may show extreme discrepancies in some cases. # Some editors have chosen to take advantage of some of Wikipedia's (e.g.,
bots The British Overseas Territories (BOTs), also known as the United Kingdom Overseas Territories (UKOTs), are fourteen territories with a constitutional and historical link with the United Kingdom. They are the last remnants of the former Bri ...
and assisted systems) which are capable of fixing many simple errors per minute (spelling, links, etc.), or that place many informational and other notices on a series of articles or talk pages in a short time, while other editors work on tasks where such tools are not useful such as content creation and reworking, manual copyright review, and editorial dispute resolution. A simple edit count does not differentiate between these types of edits. # Some "bot" users (users who have created or edited or take advantage of some of Wikipedia's automated "robot" tasks) route their bot edits through while others include them in their own edits. This means that some editors may appear to have comparatively low edit counts in multiple accounts, but would be able to show a much higher edit count if the edits from all the accounts were to be included. The following table does not differentiate between these types of accounts, and this fact should be kept in mind when viewing them. If you wish to find out more information about an editor's contribution history, you need only click on the "History" tab of any article or talk page to which they have made a contribution and then click on the "contribs" link that appears in blue font next to that person's username to see a full list of every contribution that editor has ever made, back to the very first one (likewise, other editors may always view your own edit history the same way). # Others may use one or more to segregate their contributions for various legitimate reasons. Again, the edit counter will record edits from these as separate accounts, which may then appear to be misleadingly low. # Many editors who are high on the list perform such as
reverting Reversion may refer to: * ''Reversion'' (2012 film), a computer animated short film * ''Reversion'' (2015 film), an American science fiction thriller film * Reversion (genetics), a back mutation * Reversion (law) * Reversion (software developme ...
vandalism, requesting article protection, warning users, or removing spam; conversely, users who create a number of long new pages or make major additions might easily spend a week or more undertaking research before editing, and appear much lower on the list, if at all. This is another reason why the edit counts may not reflect actual experience or degree of contribution of a given editor. # Some editors use the
Show preview Below the edit box is a "Show preview" button. Pressing this will show you what the article will look like without actually implementing your edits (i.e. publishing your changes online.) It is strongly recommended that you use this before hittin ...
button until they are satisfied with a particular (possibly very long) edit, while others will habitually save a succession of small changes as they go; a third class may combine these editing styles. All other things equal, the second group will ultimately accrue the highest formal edit count, even though the end result of these edits may be more or less the same for all three groups. # Earlier versions of the list listed separately. The current list counts the total number of edits, including to talk pages and project pages. This is only important to take into consideration if a person wishes to distinguish types of edit versus total edit count. # Many people edit at all, and many anonymous non-logged in editors regularly make valuable and well-established edits. # Some Wikipedians work in , for example, email-mediated matters such as arbcom-en, mediation, unblock-l, or services such as checkuser. # Editors who have become VRT volunteers have the responsibility of regularly interacting with the general public over sometimes highly complex, difficult, and protracted issues related to Wikipedia; few of these interactions are counted towards the following edit counts on these tables because those interactions are not (and should not be) considered "edits" to Wikipedia (though they often result in some). Nevertheless, VRT volunteers—whose work is critical to the existence of our freely licensed material—are frequently very familiar with Wikipedia policy and procedure in ways that are seldom evaluated or itemized in terms of things such as edit counts. # The edit count you see below does not include any edits that an editor may have done to Wikimedia Commons, which is another very important part of the Wikimedia movement. Commons editors are assigned separate edit counts on the Commons website, though many of these edits are also critical to the operation of the English language Wikipedia. A global "edit count" of all contributors to Wikimedia projects might include edits to the Wikipedias of other languages as well as any edits or uploads to Wikimedia Commons; however, the count below does not include these things. In light of all of that, we encourage you to consider that edit count alone does not directly correlate with the effort put into improving Wikipedia, nor does it, in isolation, reflect actual competence, knowledge, or authority. We encourage as many people as possible (including you!) to get involved, including those whose only edit may be to fix a simple typo. Everyone's contributions are equally welcome! Contributors on this list provide the clear majority of edits on Wikipedia. When the total number of edits on this list reached 132,000,986 in 2011 it included roughly 29% of all edits to this project at the time. The following charts therefore reflect only one measure of participation, that of edit counts, information which should be understood in context.


Charts

The charts are periodically updated, and are not as up to date as the lists.


List of Wikipedians by number of edits


Determination of ranking as a percentage


List

This is a list of Wikipedians sorted by edit count as of . The list on this page is limited to the first 5,000 entries on the English language version of Wikipedia. It is continued at /5001–10000/. Note: Unflagged bots have been removed entirely, and users wishing to opt out have been replaced with " laceholder. A user name in black (unlinked) has not been used for editing in the last 30 days. This list is normally updated daily by a bot. Use the search box below to find your rank. (Note: This only works if you are one of the top 10,000 users.)


Opting out

Users who do not wish to be on this list are welcome to replace their names with "Placeholder" and add themselves to this anonymizing list for future versions.


Key


5001–10000

Continued for /5001–10000/ in a separate page.


Past versions

The following shows the number of edits registered by whichever user occupied various rankings (#1 most prolific, #500 most prolific, etc.) at different points in time since September 18, 2002. Note: Due to changes in counting methodology, entries in this table may not be directly comparable to each other.


Userboxes

The following userboxes are for people who are on this list, were on this list, want to be on this list or even those who think this list is rather silly.


See also

* Edit count * Bots by number of edits * Global ranking Wikimedians by number of edits in particular projects (outdated) * Wikipedians by article count * Wikipedians by number of recent edits (outdated since 2013) * Historical archive: administrators by edit count (2006) * Wikipedia:Editcountitis * Wikipedia:List of Wikipedians by featured article nominations * Wikipedia:Wikipediholic


Notes


External links


XTools Edit Counter


{{Wikipediholicism Number of edits