Jump to content

User:Tompw/bookshelf/doc

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Usage

[edit]

To insert this chart, use the text {{User:Tompw/bookshelf}}

Its main use is on the page Wikipedia:Size in volumes

Assumptions

[edit]
Encyclopædia Britannica, 15th edition: two rows of volumes in shelves
  • As of 21 August 2024, Special:Statistics showed 4,685,752,743 words across 6,870,428 articles implying an average of 682 words per article.
  • As of 2021, 33.997 GB (=33,997,900,893 bytes) across four billion words, implying 8.3 bytes/word. ASCII uses 1 byte/character which in turn implies 8.3 characters/word. However, this includes wikimarkup, and 5 char/word plus one for space or punctuation mark is standard, so 6 characters/word will be assumed.
  • There are currently 6,912,984 articles, which means 4.71479334768×10^9 words, which means 2.828876008608×10^10 characters.
  • One volume: 25cm high, 5cm thick. 500 leaves, 2 pagefaces per leaf, 2 columns per pageface, 80 rows/column, 50 characters per row. So one volume = 8,000,000 characters, or 1,333,333 words, or 1,963.3 articles. (Pictures not included!)
  • Thus, the text of the English Wikipedia is currently equivalent to 3,536.1 volumes of Encyclopædia Britannica.
    • In other words, Wikipedia is approximately 110.5 times the size of Encyclopædia Britannica and that's excluding pictures for Wikipedia.
    • The total size would be 8.8m3. This is substantially less than stated in this video, which has 300m3 – but that figure is based on Rob Matthews' artwork Bookifying Wikipedia. Matthews included all featured articles, with images and tables, and unknown text density. Different assumptions, different results.

Transcluded pages

[edit]

Maths articles

[edit]

Source: User:Tompw/bookshelf/mathematics (no longer updated as of 2015)

                                       

10 volumes

Other languages

[edit]