+--[[tschwinge]]
+
+> I believe, that doesn't entirely solve the problem. Just assume, your hierarchy is `/foo/bar/foo/bar`.
+
+> How do you access from the page `/foo/bar/foo/bar` the `/foo/bar` and not `/foo/bar/foo/bar`?
+
+> Do we have a way to implement `\[[../..]]` or `\[[/foo/bar]]`?
+
+> Even worse, trying to link from `/foo/bar` to `/foo/bar/foo/bar` ... this will probably need `\[[./foo/bar]]` --[[Jan|jwalzer]]
+
+>> There is no ".." syntax in wikilinks, but if the link begins with "/" it
+>> is rooted at the top of the wiki, as documented in
+>> [[subpage/linkingrules]]. Therefore, every example page name you listed
+>> above will work unchanged as a wikilink to that page! --[[Joey]]
+
+----
+
+How do I make images clickable? The obvious guess, \[[foo.png|/index]], doesn't work. --[[sabr]]
+
+> You can do it using the img plugin. The syntax you suggested would be ambiguous,
+> as there's no way to tell if the text is meant to be an image or displayed as-is.
+> --[[Joey]]
+
+----
+
+Is it possible to refer to a page, say \[[foobar]], such that the link text is taken from foobar's title [[directive/meta]] tag? --Peter
+
+> Not yet. :-) Any suggestion for a syntax for it? Maybe something like \[[|foobar]] ? --[[Joey]]
+
+I like your suggestion because it's short and conscise. However, it would be nice to be able to refer to more or less arbitrary meta tags in links, not just "title". To do that, the link needs two parameters: the page name and the tag name, i.e. \[[pagename!metatag]]. Any sufficiently weird separater can be used instead of '!', of course. I like \[[pagename->metatag]], too, because it reminds me of accessing a data member of a structure (which is what referencing a meta tag is, really). --Peter
+
+> I dislike \[[pagename->metatag]] because other wikis use that as their normal link/label syntax.
+> I'm not sure that it is a good idea to refer to arbitrary meta tags in links in the first place - what other meta tags would you really be interested in? Description? Author? It makes sense to me to refer to the title, because that is a "label" for a page.
+> As for syntax, I do like the \[[|foobar]] idea, or perhaps something like what <a href="http://www.pmwiki.org">PmWiki</a> does - they have their links the other way around, so they go \[[page|label]] and for link-text-as-title, they have \[[page|+]]. So for IkiWiki, that would be \[[+|page]] I guess.
+> --[[KathrynAndersen]]
+
+----
+
+I am thinking that it would be useful to parse parts of one wiki page into another. Here something like `\[[page=anchor]]` would be really nice to simply parse the content of that section, as opposed to `\[[page#anchor]]` which only creates a link to that section. -- [[Timoses]]
+
+> When you say "parse parts" do you mean taking a section of a wiki page and including its text
+> in a different wiki page? So for instance you might want `/installation` to include the
+> `Downloading binaries` section of `/download`, but not the rest of that page?
+>
+> That's really a separate feature request (inlining isn't linking), and is also rather difficult
+> to do in IkiWiki's processing model: at the time that [[wikilinks|ikiwiki/wikilink]] and
+> [[directives|ikiwiki/directive]] are processed, the page content is still Markdown or
+> whatever other format is relevant, not HTML. That makes sections difficult to identify.
+>
+> I would suggest making the desired section a separate page (for example you might
+> call it `/download/binaries`), and including that whole page everywhere it should
+> appear (for example in both `/download` and `/installation`) using
+> `\[[!inline pages="download/binaries" raw=yes]]`. --[[smcv]]