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  1. A percentage point or percent point is the unit for the arithmetic difference between two percentages. For example, moving up from 40 percent to 44 percent is an increase of 4 percentage points (although it is a 10-percent increase in the quantity being measured, if the total amount remains the same). [1]

  2. Page view statistics (or Pageview stats) is a tool for Wikipedia pages which shows how many people have visited an article in a given time period. Like the search engine tests, it has some limitations. Before using such statistics in a discussion about the page, several things must be considered.

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  4. Articles make up 11.24 percent of all pages on Wikipedia. As of 2 July 2023, the size of the current version of all articles compressed is about 22.14 GB without media. [1] [2] Wikipedia continues to grow, and the number of articles on Wikipedia is increasing by about 14,000 a month (as of January 2024).

    • 11.37%
    • 6,728,199
    • 19.86
    • 59,168,960
  5. List of Wikipedians by article count – top 10,000 editors by article creation. Registered editors by edit count – how many registered editors have made a given number of edits. WRating — evaluates the contribution of Wikipedia contributors to its traffic over the past month.

  6. What percentage of Wikipedia searches come up empty? (This would measure what percentage of things Wikipedia readers think should be in the system are already there.) Of the internal links inside Wikipedia, what percentage point nowhere? How many have non-stub articles at the endpoint?

  7. Wikipedia. : Words per article. One of the metrics in the Wikipedia:Size comparisons page is the number of words per article. Some Wikipedians anticipate the rate of new article creation eventually slowing down, and effort going instead to improve the quality of existing articles.

  8. Percentage point refers to the arithmetical difference between two percentages. 10% is one percentage point more than 9%. If a country’s GDP (gross domestic product) grew by 2% in 2016 and by 1% in 2015, it means that GDP in 2016 was one percentage point higher than in 2015, but not one percent (1%) higher – it was 100% higher (2% is double 1%).

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