<P> It shows that </P> <Ul> <Li> A subpagename is just a label inside its pagename, with a software - added / slash delimiter . </Li> <Li> The basepagename is just the pagename of the parent, so it absorbs child subpagenames . </Li> <Li> A fullpagename is a namespace: basepagename / subpagename, or a.../ subpagename . </Li> <Li> The pagename includes the subpagename . There really is a sub-pagename, (although there is no full - pagename or full pagename). </Li> <Li> The pagename of a subpage is basename / subpagename . </Li> <Li> Basepagename only lacks the namespace needed for linking or navigating . </Li> <Li> When not on a subpage: <Ul> <Li> the terms are synonymous: pagename, subpagename, basepagename . </Li> <Li> ((... /)) renders ((... /)), ((... /.../)), etc . </Li> </Ul> </Li> <Li> When the subpagename has a / slash character in it, a subpage link to it ((... /)) renders a redlinked fullpagename . </Li> </Ul> <Li> A subpagename is just a label inside its pagename, with a software - added / slash delimiter . </Li> <Li> The basepagename is just the pagename of the parent, so it absorbs child subpagenames . </Li>

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