Forum:Is there a way to search Wikia for wikis on the basis of number of characters in the URL?

For example, I know of w:c:DC (DC Comics) and w:c:PW (Picture Wars) as being rare two-character URLs. This is because now, the policy for creating Wikis is that they must have a 3-character minimum.

I'm not sure why these two have 2, perhaps they might've been made prior to Wikia choosing to instate the 3-char min policy or something?

Anyway I was wondering if there was some kind of search function where I could search to find other wikis which also have two characters in the URL? Or ones that have 3 characters?

I guess I just have an interest in acronyms/initialisms and conciseness and out of curiosity would love to know of them all on this basis as opposed to other forms of organization like genre. +Yc 02:38, August 6, 2012 (UTC)


 * I don't know of such a pre-existing convenient feature, but I do know that you can query the API to retrieve this kind of information. This requires a tiny bit of technical expertise though. For example, I went to


 * http://community.wikia.com/api.php?action=query&list=wkdomains&wkfrom=1&wkto=1000


 * to retrieve a list of the first 1000 wikis. Then, I copy/pasted all of that into Notepad++, and did a regex search for  (find all occurances of >**.wikia.com -- these will be wikis that have 2-char urls). I found 8 wikis out of 1000: w:c:cm, w:c:pc, w:c:ib, w:c:qb, w:c:24, w:c:vb, w:c:hh, w:c:zb. With some JavaScript knowledge, you could write a user script to more or less automate this process I suppose. Not that I personally have the time or desire to build such a tool, I'm just saying that you could do so if you want to.


 * I believe the full list of all wikis that only consist of 2 names (not counting the ones that have a different language prefix) are cm, pc, ib, qb, 24, vb, hh, pr, u2, oc, oz, ei, fx, dj, xm, dc, sy, mu, ck, f1, ed, nt, p2, fi, ja, es, d8, zh, 30, ai, rv, pt, fa, ca, go, ps, oi, wa, qi, ev, ec, pw, vs, bi, ek, er, ko, im, fb, no, et, cp, hu, os, bg, 3d, ro, ar, de, fr, lt, on, and vi. 03:34, August 6, 2012 (UTC)