MikeyW said:
Reading the wikipedia totally confused me and I'm sure there's more to it, but for everything I ever needed in physics, the above understanding was sufficient.
Most explanations I've ever received were either incorrect (in failing to distinguish between a tensor and a tensor field, and therefore giving me parts of explanations of two different things) or too complex, usually the latter coming from a mathematician.
There's kind of a few problems with Wikipedia. If you're reading any article, don't take what you read as 100% correct. Look at the talk page. There's a lot more disagreement and messing going on with the pages.
Someone only asks you for an explanation of something if they don't understand it. Otherwise they don't ask. So, if you're ever explaining something to someone, you have to think through what you're explaining. You don't play Gotcha with someone - if they ask you about a maths topic you have think through it, and explain the crucial terms they may not know either. If that's too much for ya, keep your mouth shut.
Wikipedia has a nerd problem. Some of the editors, I've spotted a few on the maths topics, are going in and deliberately making things more obscure and harder to understand. And then putting notes in the talk like "I removed the explanation of such and such, because Wikipedia is not a maths book, or a substitute for a university education. If the reader doesn't understand such and such they shouldn't be looking at wikipedia.". The insane idea that if you don't know the subject already, you're not fit to be looking it up in an encyclopaedia.
Then you just get meaningless gibberish like "An eigenstate is the measured state of some object possessing quantifiable characteristics such as position, momentum, etc." From introduction to Eingenstates. A nerd will tell you that description is correct. It may be, but it tells you absolutely nothing.
If you can't explain something, it's a good sign that you don't understand it yourself. Nerds can do exam questions and get the correct results - it doesn't mean they understand topic, just they've rote learned the answers to the questions. Nerds will deliberately mystify because it gives them a kick.
If you see a bad explanation of something on Wikipedia. Do your bit - either edit it, or put a note in the talk page.