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==Format unacceptable==
I am afraid that the format of this poll will not permit me, and those who agree with me (if any) to express their opinion. I therefore intend to dispute it, and present a FoF that it is unacceptable.

I thank Ryan for his efforts, and regret that they have been derailed by a successful effort to distort the results. ] <small>]</small> 23:08, 29 March 2009 (UTC)
:Whilst I am disappointed that you dispute it, I thank you for your efforts with helping to create the poll. ''']<sup>See ] or ]</sup>''' 23:13, 29 March 2009 (UTC)
::Although I concur with PManderson, I'm not going to comment (much) further until the polls close, to avoid generating more confusion. — ] ] 23:39, 29 March 2009 (UTC)
<s>:::While I haven't looked over this page's archives, I am somewhat confused. What about this poll do you feel is unacceptable? This poll is quite fair in identifying various viewpoints, I believe. <font color="navy">]</font>''''' <sub>(<font color="green">]</font>)</sub>''''' 00:54, 30 March 2009 (UTC)</s>
:::*That it does not permit opposition to the four choices, which makes my position (which ranges from strong opposition to #1 to weak opposition #3) hard to express.
:::*That if it must be an approval poll, it did not permit '''first choice''', '''second choice''' and so on, which all other approval polls do.
:::*Both are widely discussed in the second archive page, and a majority opposes both; on the basis of this, I have ventured to strike the second requirement, which was produced solely by a single editor's editor's edit-warring and Ryan's complaisance.
::: ] <small>]</small> 01:04, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
:::: Oh, it's the 'I don't agree with this poll and I reserve my right to dispute the outcome' argument. I think ArbCom and Ryan are already wise to that. ] (]) 01:34, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
::::: I wasn't going to reply unless an idiotic argument was presented by the date delinkers. Congratulations.
::::: Ryan specifically said, on the archived talk page, that "vote for one" is ''not'' acceptable. That he agreed is probably an oversight on his part. It certainly was only inserted by one editor. — ] ] 01:50, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::: God bless your kind words, Arthur. I would just point out that this objection and signalling of the dispute appears to be straight out of the Locke Cole playbook. Ryan launched the RfC without making any such amendment to the poll, and that speaks volumes to me. ] (]) 02:58, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::::I already said this on the main page's comments section - but yeah, this format is broken. It doesn't allow voters to express a spectrum of preferences correctly, and the result of trying to compress things into one "support" vote is going to result in splitting votes that don't represent an accurate picture of people's opinions. It ought to be an up/down vote on each item. Of course, changing it now would mean potentially distorting the votes of early voters. Not well done, guys. <span style="white-space:nowrap">— ] (])</span> 03:18, 30 March 2009 (UTC)

'''Comment''' We all know that this poll is not perfect—far from it. However, it is better, more specific, and was worked on more than previous RfCs combined, and I think we need to appreciate that. Whatever the problems are, we must accept that this is the RfC to end it all. The community nor the editors who have debated and debated over date autoformatting and linking can take another one. All we can do now is wait for phase 1 to end. ] (]) 03:19, 30 March 2009 (UTC)

Excuse me, guys above ... the instructions make it amply clear that comments are important in the interpretation of consensus. Everyone is invited to write comments after their choice (and to choose "Neutral" if they wish). There is even a separate comments subsection beneath each response section. There should be no doubt that the RfC provides lattitude for expressing individual feelings. At the same time, let's be practical: the community ''has'' to come to some kind of decision, and making it likely that the results will be melted treacle spattered all over the place is not practical. I think Ryan has come to a reasonable solution, and both camps had a lot of prep. time in which they were able to comment on the structure and shape. ] ] 09:07, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
:Why on earth should anyone feel constrained to only vote for one option? If ever there was a place to ignore all rules, then it's in ignoring one line of instructions in multiple pages of text. I'm just not understanding why everyone's suddenly feeling so constrained. ] (]) 09:41, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
::Ah, one reason is that it would distort the numbers in what is a poll. Some people vote once; some vote multiple times. How that would be interpreted would need to be agreed beforehand. The process cannot be treated seriously if it allows such looseness in registering choice. The latitude comes from our ability as voters to express our views in writing after we have declared our first preference. This does not seem to be bothering people. I wonder why you are concerned? ] ] 10:14, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
:::I don't know what your definition of "people" is, but numerous editors appear to be complaining both here and in the poll itself... this last minute change (the change to "approval voting" was made within the last 72-96 hours before the poll went live) was terrible IMO. I've never participated in an RFC on Misplaced Pages which used this method of voting (and up until now, I thought I never would). —] • ] • ] 11:08, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
::::If it is important to you, why then, did you not express your order of preferences within your comments, as invited to? It doesn't add up. ] ] 11:14, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::It does add up Tony. Approval voting was the wrong way to go for this RFC. '''End of story'''. I support only one of the options and strongly oppose the remaining, but there's no way for me to express that sentiment, so this discussion stifles dissenting views in favor of only hearing what people like. That is not how Misplaced Pages should work, and these kinds of polls should never be encouraged. —] • ] • ] 16:34, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
::::::Because you thought that you couldn't type "Support this one; I '''strongly oppose''' the other three options" on the page? Other people have certainly done so. Presumably comments were solicited because there's interest in interpreting the responses in some fashion other than simply totting up the number of !votes. ] (]) 18:52, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::::I can type that, but to what end? The discussions regarding the other proposals have their own sections, which is where such comments (dissenting comments) belong. However I am being silenced by the poor format of this RFC. I suspect others are silenced as well, and the remaining editors are being lead to believe that there is a consensus forming because of the lack of opposition. Approval voting was added in the 72-96 hours prior to this RFC launching (despite it having areas for opposition in the weeks preceding that change). Little opportunity for objection was given, and this RFC was hastily launched with this broken format. It's unfortunate, but there it is. —] • ] • ] 19:05, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
::::::::So why exactly do you think comments, instead of bare votes, are being solicited? The better to waste editors' time? Could you ] and add your comments, instead of trying to argue that your personal choice to withhold your comments means that someone else is silencing you? I'm prepared to guarantee that non-existent comments will be disregarded. ] (]) 21:49, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
::I'm certainly not bothered! I just note that it's pretty silly to get all up in arms about a rule that you can just ignore if you feel like it. You certainly feel that votes can be weighted by some sort of interpretation based on the comments section, and I don't see this as different. ARBCom voting is approached using multiple votes where variant rulings are concerned, and I do not in any way feel that the process is less serious due to multiple votes. I do not see one process as being inherently better than the other, in either direction. ] (]) 11:19, 30 March 2009 (UTC)

*I'm only going to make a general comment about this. It's true to say that I've been flip flopping over which method to use for a couple of weeks now - and the honest answer why is because I see it making very little difference. Even from Saturday I've flipped again from approval voting to this method. What we want is for the poll to get one proposal from each section, therefore it does seem right that each user gets one vote from each section. We aren't taking the top two and trying to work something from them, we're taking one only - people need to make up their mind as to what they want. Looking at the comments on the poll page, I see one (possibly two) people who aren't happy with the polling method used - I might open my eyes a little more if it was 10 or 20, but it isn't. I also doubt very much if any other polling method would give a different result. By all means people can argue this to the death, and if they feel it's disputed then so be it. However, I suspect myself and other administrators will be willing to enforce the end result when the poll comes to a conclusion. The comments on the poll show that many people are sick of this dispute and want to put an end to it as soon as possible. ''']<sup>See ] or ]</sup>''' 21:47, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
::Many of the editors who have discussed second choices support #4; #1 is expressly opposed by most of those who support something else. A voting method which permitted either opposition or multiple supports would make this clearer, but I hope it will be taken into consideration. ] <small>]</small> 03:31, 31 March 2009 (UTC)

:Well, it's at least one new person (Gavia) and 3 established editors who helped participate in construction of the poll who object. But, we'll see. — ] ] 22:31, 30 March 2009 (UTC)

*For the record, once again, this is exactly the type of game played throughout the last RfCs, and I'm glad Ryan has seen through this ploy. It was not a further invitation for ], or for all and sundry who may disagree with the likely outcome of the poll to seize this argument in an attempt to discredit the result. As has also been said, this is a poll - in other words a straight vote. It's not your party anymore, and nobody will let you piss on the cake. ] (]) 04:16, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
**Please note that this discussion began when there was ''one'' vote registered. I claim no prescience in anticipating the result of this rigging; but we did anticipate it, not react to it.
**As for the rest of this urinological abuse, I can only conclude that Ohconfucius knows little about polling on or off Misplaced Pages; he should start with ], the system which most Misplaced Pages approval polls approximate. ] <small>]</small> 04:24, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
***I will merely address the issues, and ignore the ]: one of the advantages of this poll is that, based on the previous RfCs, close approximations to the answer were already known. It is now increasingly likely that one option in each will gain an overall majority, so the STV is really quite moot. ] (]) 05:06, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
I recommend a quick trip to ]. Sincerely, ] (])
*] Check. Guilty. Thanks, ] (]) 06:19, 31 March 2009 (UTC)


* Quoting Ryan: {{xt|However, I suspect myself and other administrators will be willing to enforce the end result when the poll comes to a conclusion. The comments on the poll show that many people are sick of this dispute and want to put an end to it as soon as possible.}} ''(*sound of quiet, gasping weeping due to giddy joy*)'' <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 02:55, 1 April 2009 (UTC)

== Early start ==

Unfortunately, I started the poll an hour early - yup, ] started on Sunday and I've been caught out. I'm going to leave it open, because I've already made all the notifications and I would hope that 1 hour will make little difference. Apologies to all parties. ''']<sup>See ] or ]</sup>''' 23:12, 29 March 2009 (UTC)

== Editnotice ==

You may want to consider putting your "comment" box from <span class="plainlinks"></span> into an editnotice, so people are more likely to see it. ]] 23:17, 29 March 2009 (UTC)

== Options missing ==

There seem to be a series of choices missing, such as the one we used to have .. -- User:Docu
:wut?? ] (]) 19:55, 30 March 2009 (UTC)

== Target audience ==

I think the main question that needs to be resolved is: who the target audience of autoformatting? If all remains as it is then we can foresee some very basic and obvious problems:
#If autoformatting is to be the preserve of registered users with the activated user preferences (who, let's face it, are primarily editors and form a very small minority of the readership as a whole) then we have the undesirable state of affairs where much work is carried out for a minor preference of a small number of readers.
#Furthermore, on the main space articles, these registered users will be unable to see and correct mixed dates, which unregistered (i.e. the majority of users) would see.
It is clear that we must move away from this current state of affairs, it does not benefit the majority. The two most appropriate solutions are the "magic word/set dates for all users" solution and the conflicting "remove all autoformatting" solution.

Which brings me to my main point: '''''I don't see anyone supporting the use of autoformatting through linking.'''''

It appears that options #1 and #4 of month/year linking are gaining consensus and there is much overlap between those two choices, in that #4 is in some ways the non-instruction creep version of #1. Yet, despite this growing consensus, wikilinking still seems to be a major aspect of people's reasoning to oppose autoformatting.

We need to disentangle these two issues and first of all have a '''''vote on the deprecation of autoformatting through wikilinks'''''. I think we will find consensus on that issue and it will mean people's responses to further polls on autoformatting will not be diluted with reference to "overlinking" etc. ] (]) 18:35, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
:Auto formatting can be fixed to work for unregistered readers/editors. Deprecating it will have the effect of making this type of system difficult to implement in the future (because the markup will be gone and people will be hesitant to re add it later). —] • ] • ] 19:08, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
::I understand that. I thought that the magic word system did not demand the use of wikilinked dates? Note that I did not ask for ''autoformatting deprecation'' but only that the method of autoformatting ''by the use of wikilinks'' be rejected. ] (]) 19:14, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
:::I think that reading through ] and ] shows that autoformatting by wikilinking is already clearly rejected. --] (]) 19:55, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
::::If this is so clear then why is wikilinking mentioned in oppose !votes numbers: 12, 13, 22, 37, 42, 49, 54? Some of which come from very experienced users. User preferences objections seem to form another large part of people's reasoning. Given that the application of autoformatting would demand extra work on all our articles, surely we are only left with two "nuclear" options of autoformatting for all, or none at all? Is anyone seriously suggesting that we do this work for just logged in and "date preferenced" users? If not, then we should make the question clear: We should be choosing AF for everyone, or for no one. ] (]) 20:40, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::I have no idea why it is mentioned. Perhaps these very experienced users might be unaware of the previous RfCs, or perhaps it's not as clear as I think. Why not take a look and see for yourself? I'm certainly in no doubt that the community has rejected using links to implement autoformatting. --] (]) 23:44, 30 March 2009 (UTC)

== Complaint department for discussing how the RfC is structured ==

:''Since PMAnderson in to discuss his complaints about the structure here on the talk page, I’ve copied <s>part</s> '''all''' of ] to here, which is the proper venue for this. Note also, that he had been instructed in the ANI to come here with his concerns ({{xt|If you have concerns, please voice them on the talk page}}) <u>17 hours before his rant on this issue over on the RfC, where he wasn’t supposed to go</u>. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 21:01, 30 March 2009 (UTC)''
<hr/>

======Option 1 is an overreaction======
**''(To whom it may concern): Please don't remove this subsection. That is uncalled for. I've been in several polls like this, all of which had several subsections of discussion. Thanks. ] (]) 17:20, 30 March 2009 (UTC)'' '''<small>No, admins at an ANI have made it clear that topics like this are to be discussed here in order to not disrupt an ongoing RfC.''' <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 01:27, 31 March 2009 (UTC)</small>
I don't like overlinking any more than the next guy, but I really think that option 4 will lead to editors overreacting. We don't want to kill ''all'' year links, and if you have a ''special'' guideline for year links that says they can only be linked in X, Y, or Z situations, then people will think: "If year links have a special section, then that means they must be judged ''more strictly'' than any other links." I don't think that is what most people supporting the first proposal intend to support. I much prefer option one. Year links need to just quietly slide into the same mass of rules all other links abide by. If we overreact, then we will, I guarantee you, be back in a few months, after several edit wars, having another poll. ] (]) 17:11, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
*The only issue I see with #4 is that there appears to be a disagreement over when a year is relevant. Some people think birth/death years are relevant; many don't. Some people think a year link is relevant if the article subject is listed at the year article; other's don't. Without some guidance, we're likely to continue to have a lot of edit-warring and talk page disagreements that waste everyone's time. ] (]) 17:12, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
**Looks to me, then, like we're doomed to see edit warring with any and all of these options, and we're also doomed to have this poll again in the near future. ] (]) 17:37, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
*The format of this poll, imposed as it was by revert-warring by the most partisan of editors, is under discussion on the talk page, ]. A {{tl|disputedtag}} would seem appropriate. ] <small>]</small> 18:21, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
:* PMAnderson: Could you if it was necessary to save your life?? I didn’t “impose” anything on this RfC. I made a suggestion via some edits (something you obviously aren’t shy of doing either). The question is whether or not my suggested format was '''''properly endorsed and adopted as the method to use in this RfC'''''. Let’s check out whether the evidence supports this.<p>'''First''', I ]. What was the response by Ryan, the clerk overseeing this RfC? He responded {{xt|fine by me. I was thinking of propsing something like that myself.}}<p>'''Then''' there is ] on Ryan’s talk page. He responded to you as follows: {{xt|As it happens, Greg was right with the formatting - it's a poll and we need to be clear about that. … Sorry, I know that's not what you wanted to hear.}}<p>'''Then''' it was fully discussed ] where many editors from all sides of the issue weighed in and the issue received a full and fair hearing.<p>'''Then''' Ryan, the clerk responsible for fairly overseeing and structuring this RfC, helped to restore the format to my suggested method .<p>'''Then''', when you complained about the structure of the RfC ], Ryan responded to you as follows: {{xt|Whilst I am disappointed that you dispute it, I thank you for your efforts with helping to create the poll.}} Ryan has shown spectacular patience and fairness in all of this. That little jewel of a response to your '''''''''' comes about as close as any admin can get to “tough; go pound sand in your damned ear if you don’t like it.”<p>'''Finally''', In my for all over an ongoing RfC that had been ''thoroughly'' and ''fairly'' developed and properly supervised, you were advised there in the ANI as follows: {{xt|I strongly urge all contributors who have been involved in this dispute to not make any further modification to the RFC page. None! You have had your chance to have a say in how the RFC is conducted. If you have concerns, please voice them on the talk page and let someone who is uninvolved make any changes deemed necessary.}} If you, PMAnderson, haven’t yet learned how to heed advise in the face of not always getting what you want, I suggest you start with that tidbit. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 20:27, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
**Although this section was not supposed to be for linked comments, as they were to be moved to the talk page, I leave you with Ryan's last comment on the "vote for one" issue:
{{cquote|The more I think about this, the more I believe "One vote per section" is a bad idea. It's highly likely that some of the community won't have a preference between a number of the proposals - They may for instance broadly agree with 1 and 4 so wish to support those and I can't see a good reason to exclude them. I'm not seeing a good reason at present for one vote per section. ''']<sup>See ] or ]</sup>''' 03:24, 29 March 2009 (UTC)}}
** The "one vote per section" language was added to the actual poll ''after'' that statement. — ] ] 20:53, 30 March 2009 (UTC)

::* PMAnderson had in , (17 hours before the above rant) that the proper venue to discuss his complaints about the structure of this RfC is ]. If history is any teacher, complaints like this can go on endlessly. I’ll see you all there. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 21:07, 30 March 2009 (UTC)

*First, I thought all this stuff was going to be moved to the talk page - at least that was my understanding when the poll opened. Second, I think it's a '''very bad''' idea to edit the poll other than the votes once it's been opened. You're leave yourself open to all kinds of accusations of attempts to misconstrue the rules, and change the actual desires of the !voters. Huge dis-enfranchisement risk there. Change it on the next go round. I hate to play a game when someone changes the rules in the middle of said game. Maybe I've just seen to much of the American political scene lately ;). — ] ~ <sup><i> ]</i></sup>/<sub>]</sub> 21:34, 30 March 2009 (UTC)

<hr/>
:''Indeed, you are correct. I moved the entire thread over here. The RfC page is for discussing alternative proposals, not for disagreeing with how the RfC is structured. The administrators have made it clear at the that such disputes are to be discussed here. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 01:27, 31 March 2009 (UTC)''
<hr/>

::* Yeah, well the next day (twenty hours later, at 23:13, 29 March), Ryan essentially told PMAnderson, “]”. Go take it up with Ryan if you think he’s confused himself. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 21:08, 30 March 2009 (UTC)

:::* Well, I ''do'' think Ryan is confused, and the "vote for one" means it will be very difficult to interpret the results of the poll in a way which indicates whether there is a consensus, unless a single option gets a clear supermajority and there are no overriding arguments opposing it. But I'm willing to wait until after the poll closes to argue that Greg, with Ryan's help, killed another perfectly good poll. — ] ] 22:25, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
:::*:Greg has also made it impossible to determine whether we should treat dates like other linkables; supporters of all four proposed texts are citing that goal as the reason for their proposal. This is unfortunate, if not ridiculous. ] <small>]</small> 22:55, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
::::*The good news is that, at the moment, one option does have a clear majority in both of the linking sections. If that trend continues, it's reasonable to adopt it as provisional guidance, and do an approve/disapprove poll after the selected guideline has been tried out in practice. If we do such a followup poll, though, it ought to be conducted by someone who was not involved in drafting this one. <span style="white-space:nowrap">— ] (])</span> 23:15, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::*I don't think the community would accept ''another'' separate poll. Also, remember that this is only Phase 1 of the poll. ] (]) 23:46, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
::::::*I don't think the community would especially like to go through another poll, either - but I also don't see the community accepting the argument that we somehow have to accept a broken poll forever regardless of the consequences - and remember, guidelines do need the support of the community, not only poll results. Meanwhile, this is currently speculative until the poll gets closed - the community can decide if the result is useful after they have a result in hand. <span style="white-space:nowrap">— ] (])</span> 00:03, 31 March 2009 (UTC)

* And, by the way, PMAnderson. Even if it this RfC been structured the way you wanted (Chicago-style voting: “vote early - vote often”), the linking-related issues would still be a bloody slaughter. So stop your bellyaching. As for ''autoformatting,'' at 92 against and 63 for (as of this writing), there is '''''clearly''''' no consensus that the community desires the cockamamie autoformatting schemes you’re selling. So give it up and find something else to do. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 01:53, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
**More incivility from the revert-warrior who dares not have this poll ask "should we treat date links like other links?"; many of the supporters of wording 1 support it ''because'' it treats all links alike. ] <small>]</small> 02:08, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
::* Thank you for your thoughtful reply. I wish every opponent was like you. Let the community respond to the RfC maybe? In case you haven’t been keeping up on current affairs, Ryan had a bit of a hand in making the RfC ''just'' the way he wanted during the lockdown when he made his final edits before taking it live. If you think the RfC is poorly structured, take it up with him.<p>And cease with this “Greg is a witch who caused our crops to fail and our midwives to {{nowrap|weep”-horsecrap.}} The villagers just might look at each other with that wide-eyed look of epiphany, shrug their shoulders, and decide to burn ''your'' hut down so they don’t have to listen to your “waaa-waaa.” <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 02:22, 31 March 2009 (UTC)

==Vandalism by Ohconfucius==
For about two hours, almost a day ago, Ohconfucius spent his time vandalizing this page:
*Blanking the protest against format recorded above.
** 30 March, as all of these
**
**
**
*Breaking up a !vote
**
*Blanking comments
**
**
Recommendations for how to deal with this? ] <small>]</small> 21:52, 30 March 2009 (UTC)

* The only true disruption to Misplaced Pages was your slapping {disputed} tags on an ongoing RfC. False accusations that others are vandalizing Misplaced Pages is an actionable offense (with ample remedies) so I advise you to not be quite so bold in your attacks on other editors. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 01:56, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
**I ask that Pmanderson remove "vandalism" from the section header. This is a bad-faith accusation. ] (]) 01:59, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
***Do you assert that none of these diffs, which include splitting a !vote, are vandalism? You are free to argue that case eelsewhere. ] <small>]</small> 02:10, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
****Disagreement about WP-internal process is not vandalism. See ], last line of table. --] (]) 02:36, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
*****Blanking can be vandalism. Manipulating other people's posts, as with , is.] <small>]</small> 02:49, 31 March 2009 (UTC)

****** Of the diffs you provided, only 01:42 could potentially be vandalism. I don't believe any are, but I'll stop short of making a bad-faith accusation. ]<small> (] | ])</small> 20:45, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
*******Please explain why 02;24, which is refactoring in such a way as to change meaning, is not. ] <small>]</small> 04:10, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
******** I think you've reversed the ]. ]<small> (] | ])</small> 12:51, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
*********No. I've presented evidence that Ohconfucius has vandalized a vote, and blanked comments, and gotten no substantive response whatever. ] <small>]</small> 00:58, 3 April 2009 (UTC)

==I'm Confused...==
I have never voted on Misplaced Pages before, however I cannot access any other pages except help articles and this. Hence, when I noticed the topic I was only looking for SIMPLE INFO. In other words, I just wanted THE FACTS AND OPTIONS IN SIMPLE TERMS. Not "hick/idiot" terms, mind you, just the basic facts and options for the common man.

However, I got none of this - and even more confused. The suggestions and comments don't help, as they are all made by people who know more technical terms in regard to this site and its inner workings than I ever will.

I am merely an editor and reader - I do not use programs to revert edits, nor do I use them to MAKE edits; I merely go into an article, make my edits, and leave.

Hence, I wish to request a SIMPLE explanation of the issue at hand and the options. I know it regards the formatting of the dates seen in articles and Infoboxes...maybe. My point is, I request a "simple" version of this and future polls for those who know of the subject (and those who don't) and don't know Misplaced Pages's technical terms, not wishing to look through scores of help articles only to result in more confusion. ] (]) 23:47, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
:I don't think I'm permitted to do that. Please ask Ryan. — ] ] 23:53, 30 March 2009 (UTC)
::OK, I will try to explain this the best I can:

::Misplaced Pages operates a system of ''autoformatting'', which means that dates can be formatted to look a certain way to registered editors who set their . There are four formats (first of Jan 2000 used as example): ''January 1, 2000''; ''1 January 2000''; ''2000 January 1''; and ''2000-01-01''. These dates are autoformatted through markup; that is, the dates used for autoformatting text are marked up with some sort of syntax. The current autoformatting markup is the double square brackets, which are used to ] text. In recent months, many have complained that the usage of linking as markup is harmful because of overlinking resulting from the fact that date links often have little to do with the articles that they are linked on. This led to the practice of date linking being ] in August. Users began to remove date links (and therefore remove date autoformatting) through a variety of methods. However, some have complained that there was not enough ] to deprecate autoformatting or to even remove date links. Previous date polls have established that using links to autoformat text is not a widely supported practice. This poll aims to 1) establish whether autoformatting is desirable at all; and 2) determine how often dates should be linked, regardless of autoformatting.

::I hope that helped. Please feel free to ask more questions. ] (]) 00:02, 31 March 2009 (UTC)

:::I don't have much objection to that, although "many" is probably an overstatement, and there is considerable disagreement as to what was agreed to in August, and whether there were more than 4 editors who agreed at that time. There have also been bots written to rapidly delink dates, assuming that '''no''' "date fragment" should be linked, except from articles on other date fragments.
:::Still, the first part has to do with the ''concept'' of autoformatting, rather than the current implementation(s). {#dateformat was added while the poll was being constructed.)
:::The second and third parts have to do with the rules for links to date fragments, years, such as ], and month-day combindations such as ]. Due to the previous consensus that autoformatting and autolinking '''was''' done on full dates, there are a lot of linked dates. Many editors think there are too many such links, but there have been various changes made to ] and ] without consensus. There have also been at least 3 RfCs (]s) on date linking, none of which has a consensus as to the consequences of the results. There also have been a couple of user RfCs, and a ]. One of the proposals was that ArbComm draft an RfC which would decide consensus. This is Ryan's attempt to put one together.
::: Does that seem a neutral description of the problem? — ] ] 01:16, 31 March 2009 (UTC)

::::*Thanks, I appreciate that. I've already voted, if I understand the arguments correctly. ] (]) 01:27, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
::::*Sorry, but "''... on date linking, none of which has a consensus as to the consequences of the results''" is incorrect. Have a careful read of the comments ] and perhaps try to work into your future posts reasoning based on the fact that over 94% of respondents at that RfC had serious reservations with the linking of dates. Please don't reply too rapidly as it will take you some time to properly read the comments there (you can also examine a summary ]). ] 01:42, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::*There ''may'' be consensus against linking ''all'' dates, although there is considerably more support for it ]. The poll HWV258 cites is an attack on a straw man, posted by a user who began by voting against his own proposal. ] <small>]</small> 03:24, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
::::::*I can only reiterate that anyone interested in this should have a careful read down the list of comments posted by the 94% of '''oppose''' respondents (]). Even detached from the poll question, those comments are illuminating, and undeniable. ] 03:55, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::::*''we should link to dates, as to other words and phrases, when the link is useful to readers.''
:::::::*''Linking dates should stay as the exception, rather than the rule, ''
:::::::*''Date links should not be treated any differently than other links.''
:::::::These are some of the 94% which have serious reservations about linking all dates; decide for yourself if they sre reservations with the linking of ''any'' dates. Misrepresentations of this point grow tiresome. ] <small>]</small> 04:13, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
::::::::*No, I refer to the multitude of comments along the lines: "''Such links provide nothing useful to the reader, and only serve to confuse''". Please read the ''entire'' list of '''oppose''' comments (]) and see if your views are still so strong (misrepresentations?). I agree that you will be tired though after reading the entire list of '''oppose''' comments. :-) ] 04:22, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
::::::::::I have done so; such comments are less than 50% of the total; many oppose the idea of linking ''every'' date, which was the question asked. ] <small>]</small> 04:31, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
{{Hat|Irrelevance removed, per request}}
* '''Daniel Benfield:''' The information you seek is simple. See ]. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 01:36, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
**It is characteristic of Greg L to represent his opinions as information. ] <small>]</small> 02:05, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
::* Less “waah-waah” please, PMA. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 02:34, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
::**If anyone cares to factor out Greg's animal noises, they are welcome to do so. But he'll probably resort to scatology; he ]. ] <small>]</small> 02:51, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
::::* “Animal noises”? Jeez, I thought I was clear. ''Baby'' noises. It’s an appeal to you to act like a grownup and stop endlessly complaining about what is clearly out of your control now. It is what it is. I’m going to ignore you now on this thread. Post more {{nowrap|“waaah-waaah”}} below. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 02:59, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
::::::I really wish both of you would factor yourselves out of this whole situation. You are making this dull affair even more tiresome than it should be. ] (]) 03:08, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::::'''Done'''. ] <small>]</small> 03:17, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
{{Hab}}
There is an essay at ], but that's already linked in the text. Dabomb's and Arthur's explanations above are clearer and more neutral than the existing explanation, and should be considered if the unfortunate plan of more RfC's is contemplated. ] <small>]</small> 03:17, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
* ''Very good'', PMA. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 04:21, 31 March 2009 (UTC)

== Threaded discussion ==

I've removed all threaded discussion from the support/oppose/neutral columns on the poll page. I've left discussion in the comments section for now because I feel it's important (although should it get out of hand, I'll start moving things to the talk page). ''']<sup>See ] or ]</sup>''' 11:19, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
:Unfortunately this leaves no way to address the current dynamics with 4 of the last 5 oppose voters to autoformatting (108–111) apparently thinking this is about date ''linking''. For 3 of them I have no idea how they would have voted without the misconception. I am pretty sure that this kind of thing, when uncontradicted, makes the following voters more likely to make the same mistake. There are similar misconceptions among support voters, but of course the losing side is more likely to claim the poll was invalid because of such issues. --] (]) 12:30, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
::Hans: I do not agree with the assessment that these four voters have confused formatting with linking. Voters are under no obligation to give ''all'' of their reasons. A challenge should be regarded as exceptional, and should be via Ryan, now and not after the poll closes. We do not want unseemly horse-trading on the validity of individual votes after the close. In any case, I think (1) challenges would result in very few, if any, changes by voters; and (2) there would be challenges on both sides (I can see ''plenty'' of "Supports" I'd like to challenge). Is it worth all the fuss, or should we trust voters' inner reasoning? ] ] 14:03, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
:::I am not talking about challenging voters. I am talking about ways to avoid that we get even more such votes which, while opposing autoformatting, enable certain editors' predictable attempts to declare the vote invalid. I want autoformatting to lose this poll fairly, and transparently so. --] (]) 15:31, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
:::(ec) Currently the latest support rationale reads: "Its really confusing if you're editing an article in one format and your display is in the other format". The latest oppose rationale reads: "We should stop date linking for the sake of auto-formatting. There may be other, less intrusive, ways to auto-format dates." No, we can't trust the inner reasoning of such voters. They are obviously confused to the point where they had better not bothered to vote. If we can't respond to such obvious mistakes, others obviously follow their lead. --] (]) 22:47, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
== Notice placed at top of ] ==

To try and clear up any confusion regarding autoformatting and linking, I've at the top of the autoformatting responses. It's important that people commenting are 100% sure of what they are commenting on. ''']<sup>See ] or ]</sup>''' 22:43, 31 March 2009 (UTC)
:Thanks Ryan—helpful. However, I believe that there is ''not'' the confusion of the two terms that is being assumed. The headings are clearly labelled "I support the ''general'' concept of date autoformatting" and "I oppose the ''general'' concept of date autoformatting". People know what DA is, and if there was any confusion in their minds, it would soon have been dispelled when they proceeded to Questions 2 and 3, specifically on "linking".
:Critically, I want to scotch ''now'' any sense that Locke Cole et al. will wait until the poll closes and then brand it invalid on the basis that there was such confusion. I say now to the linking camp: If you seriously believe this, you should post a query at the talk page of every voter of whom you suspect such confusion. I do not believe this is necessary, but here is your chance—'''not''' after the poll. ] ] 04:42, 1 April 2009 (UTC)

::"you should post a query at the talk page of every voter of whom you suspect such confusion" - for the record, apparently this is being done: are one editor's notes to !voters. ] (]) 05:30, 1 April 2009 (UTC)

would it be worthwhile to repeat the "this section is about autoformatting not linking" statement as a so-called ] that would appear above the edit boxes? i don't know how to create editnotices, so this is a suggestion for someone else to follow up on if it seems worthwhile. ] (]) 06:21, 2 April 2009 (UTC)

I'm not sure it would help, and I don't see any problem with contacting each person who provides an inappropriate reason for their vote. As you (and others, but you at least saw what I was doing for what it really was) have already noticed, I contacted all the people who have given "confused" votes so far, and most of them have already clarified their positions on their talk pages. I just re-contacted those that replied and asked that they do so again on the poll page, so hopefully that will resolve the issue. If a few more trickle in (as things seem to be trailing off) then it's not a big deal to contact them, as well. In all honesty, my eyes kinda glaze over when I'm reading things I already agree with, so if somebody on the "oppose" side could look over the "support" !votes and see if any of ''those'' are providing inappropriate reasons, that'd be good. I did do that a couple times already, and didn't see any, but I may have missed some, especially if there aren't many (which there don't seem to be &mdash; even on the ''oppose'' side.) --] (]) 06:57, 2 April 2009 (UTC)

== Mailing list ==


== Bug filed ==
I posted a note on wikien-l telling them about the poll. There may be some people who are interested who have missed our other notices. Worst case we get no extra opinions - I don't think any harm will be done by prodding people a little more :-). ''']<sup>See ] or ]</sup>''' 22:59, 31 March 2009 (UTC)


With a great deal of thanks to ], I finally managed to get disabling DynamicDates (setting $wgUseDynamicDates = false in LocalSettings.php) tested on a private wiki. The results are good - autoformatting of article text is disabled, whilst date preferences in article histories/logs are left intact. I've therefore gone and filed a bug ] to make the change. '''Please keep discussion here, so to avoid filling the bug request up with threaded discussion and I'll link from the bug to here'''. ''']<sup>See ] or ]</sup>''' 22:19, 15 April 2009 (UTC)
==''Deprecation''==
Not the right venue for this, I know, but ''deprecation'' is simply Wikijargon. See ]: "It is often helpful to wikilink terms not obvious to most readers".


:* Good point. I think I spent something like ten minutes researching the term the first time I encountered it. Sometimes we combatants tend to get too accustomed to wikiwords. We should deprecate the practice and refactor posts that use such verbiage. ;-) <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 04:39, 1 April 2009 (UTC) * Where can we look at the results of what you are talking about? Are you saying that all the date formats shown in the big table, above, look OK simply by turning DynamicDates off? <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 22:58, 15 April 2009 (UTC)
**Yes, I would like to have access to this (or a similarly serving) test wiki. ] (]) 23:02, 15 April 2009 (UTC)
** No, but the vast majority of dates are fine. If there are any that are broken, they can be fixed manually. This isn't something we need to worry a lot about. By far the greatest number of linked dates are in the format ] or ]. ''']<sup>See ] or ]</sup>''' 23:05, 15 April 2009 (UTC)
***About how long will it take for this request to be actioned upon? ] (]) 23:07, 15 April 2009 (UTC)
****Most probably quite a long time - hence why I've got it in early. Although it could be quick - it's really hard to tell. ''']<sup>See ] or ]</sup>''' 23:10, 15 April 2009 (UTC)


:::* With regard to turning off DynamicDates: I sure hope you know what you’re doing, Ryan. I’ve only got about two hours where I ''think'' I understand some of the ramifications. Anyway… What about date de-linking?? The community consensus on that issue couldn’t be clearer. With millions of linked dates, only a bot can handle it. What’s the plan? <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 23:18, 15 April 2009 (UTC)
Yes, it simply means ''discontinue the use of.'' ] (]) 05:10, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
::::*Indeed, I'll get to that in the morning - That's going to be part two of the discussion as the autoformatting is close to being resolved. I'm about to go to bed, so it'll give me time to think. Hope that's ok. ''']<sup>See ] or ]</sup>''' 23:20, 15 April 2009 (UTC)
(outdent). Well, from Bill Clark’s reaction on the ], he has a firm grasp of the risks. He sounds to be someone with wherewithal, as he will be gathering statistics on just how many of the above junk-style formats will be junked with this move. I especially liked his quick grasp of the big picture at the end: {{xt|I expect to have that list ready later tonight, at which point a decision could be made to either fix those pages before disabling DynamicDates, or that the problem isn't widespread enough to be concerned with (since bots will be starting delinking of ALL lesser-relevant dates soon anyway.}} Sweet. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 23:58, 15 April 2009 (UTC)


=== Tcncv's table===
:I always thought it meant "expressing strong disapproval", so I checked it. It seems it originally meant "pray for deliverance" from something. Maybe it's the right word after all? --] (]) 15:27, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
:Below is what I believe may be a fair demonstration of the before and after effect of setting <code>$wgUseDynamicDates = false</code> on both well and poorly formatted dates. Many of these examples are contrived and some look just as bad either way. Best viewed with date preferences set to none. Feel free to add examples if needed.
:::{| class="wikitable collapsible expanded" style="text-align: center; width: 50em;"
! Code || Recognized || Before || After
|-
| <code><nowiki>]]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}} || ]] || ]]
|-
| <code><nowiki>] ]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}} || ] ] || ] ]
|-
| <code><nowiki>],]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}} || ],] || ],]
|-
| <code><nowiki>], ]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}} || ], ] || ], ]
|-
| <code><nowiki>]]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}} || ]] || ]]
|-
| <code><nowiki>] ]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}} || ] ] || ] ]
|-
| <code><nowiki>],]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}} || ],] || ],]
|-
| <code><nowiki>], ]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}} || ], ] || ], ]
|-
| <code><nowiki>]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}} || ] || ]
|-
| <code><nowiki>]-]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}} || ]-] || ]-]
|-
| <code><nowiki>]]</nowiki></code> || {{N}} || ]] || ]]
|-
| <code><nowiki>] ]</nowiki></code> || {{N}} || ] ] || ] ]
|-
| <code><nowiki>] - ]</nowiki></code> || {{N}} || ] - ] || ] - ]
|-
| <code><nowiki>]]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}} || ]] || ]]
|-
| <code><nowiki>] ]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}} || ] ] || ] ]
|-
| <code><nowiki>],]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}} || ],] || ],]
|-
| <code><nowiki>], ]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}} || ], ] || ], ]
|-
| <code><nowiki>] , ]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}} || ] , ] || ] , ]
|-
| <code><nowiki>]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}} || ] || ]
|-
| <code><nowiki>]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}} || ] || ]
|-
| <code><nowiki>] ,]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}} || ] ,] || ] ,]
|-
| <code><nowiki>] , ]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}} || ] , ] || ] , ]
|-
| <code><nowiki>]··]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}} || ] ] || ] ]
|-
| <code><nowiki>]··,··]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}} || ] , ] || ] , ]
|-
| <code><nowiki>],,]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}}{{N}}† || ],,] || ],,]
|-
| <code><nowiki>]&amp;nbsp;]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}}{{N}}† || ]&nbsp;] || ]&nbsp;]
|-
| <code><nowiki>],&amp;nbsp;]</nowiki></code> || {{Y}}{{N}}† || ],&nbsp;] || ],&nbsp;]
|-
| colspan="4" align="left" |
'''''Recognized''''' indicates whether or not the coded format is currently recognized and is reformatted.
<br />'''''Before''''' shows the current presentation and is dependent on your date preferences.
<br />'''''After''''' shows the expected presentation when <code>$wgUseDynamicDates = false</code>.
<br />†For these cases, the Day-month part is recognized, but is formatted separately from year.
|}
:(I suspect LightMouse can script a fix for these cases in next to no time.) -- ] (]) 00:51, 16 April 2009 (UTC)


===…and back to our regularly scheduled programming===
If WP uses it often enough to mean ''discontinue the use of'', eventually the dictionaries may list it, provided the compilers are keeping an eye on Wiki usage. (Let's hope not.) Sincerely, ] (]) 20:29, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
::* Thank you very much for you list, Tcncv: Items #1, 3, 5, and 7 appear to me that they should be rather common on Misplaced Pages. We will have to await Bill Clark’s statistics to be sure just ''how'' common they are. I will certainly have a difficult time understanding the rush to turn off DynamicDates if instances of those four types prove as common as I suspect they might be.<p><!--


-->It would make much more sense to leave DynamicDates alone until after bots have deleted unnecessary links. Then we will have the opportunity of having a bot go through and revise the syntax on these. Changing, for instance, <code><nowiki>]]</nowiki></code> to <code><nowiki>] ]</nowiki></code> would be trivial for a bot, and it could do so <u>fast</u>. ''Then'' we can turn off DynamicDates. I’m an engineer. This conservative, stepped approach is least disruptive to our I.P. users and is how things would be handled in "the real world" of engineering. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 01:15, 16 April 2009 (UTC)
:We should start a campaign to bring back the original use. I'll begin:
{{cquote|Our Jimbo, who art in wikiheaven, thy wikiwill be done; thy wikikingdom come ... and deliver us from date linking ...}}
:Think it will work if we all join in? --] (]) 21:02, 1 April 2009 (UTC)


:::*Well, I now understand why DD wasn't turned off back in December after the two marathin RfCs. It's also good to know that UC Bill (Bill Clark) hasn't bailed out on us totally. Based on current knowledge, I would still be inclined to support swithing off DD immediately. Unfortunately, the only person who is able to tell us in detail how Lightbot works, cannot.<p><!--
:] is a perfectly acceptable term in a software context, for features and practices that are "superseded and should be avoided".&nbsp;–&nbsp;] (]) 21:18, 1 April 2009 (UTC)


-->In my travels, I have found that formatting errors are rife throughout WP. I already see many of those abominations because I have my preferences disabled. While there are a majority of correctly formatted dates, there is a significant incidence of errors which Lightmouse's scripts work to address. However, Lightbot nor the scripts touch any ISO date formats, nor any of the more weird and wonder permutations such as the ambiguous "12/12/06" and "12-12-06" which also exist across WP. The function was disabled because, I believe, there were a significant number of false positives - most frequently with web links and image names. This may be a significant challenge because the vast majority of references/footnotes I have come across use the ISO format in part or in full. Although MOSNUM guides us to use a uniform date format within the body of an article, the issue of harmonising date links to include footnotes may still need to be discussed. It seems that switching off DD would lead to some red-linked ISO dates, which some editors may be inclined to fix rather than simply remove. Incidentally, I use the code written by Lightmouse in my own script, and need to review all the changes to weed out those false positives. <p><!--
== War & peace posts ==


-->Another issue which isn't addressed by Lightbot is the inconsistent date formats. It is a bot, and as such is unable to determine the rule as to whether dmy or mdy should apply. However, the monobook scripts perform that function under human supervision/discretion, and can be applied to categories in semi-automated mode in conjunction with ]. I think there may still be false negatives when running the script, but false positives are now few and far between because the script has been continuously revised following error reports from users. ] (]) 02:04, 16 April 2009 (UTC)
Post comments like autoformatting-support #90 really should have its treatise moved off the main page. The space afforded in an RfC is a bit like toilet paper at a highway rest stop: sure, it’s there for everyone, but how about not walking off with three whole rolls of the stuff? <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 04:44, 1 April 2009 (UTC)


::::*I added a few more examples above. It appears that the current date formatting process handles any number of spaces and at most one comma between the day-month and year parts, replacing whatever it finds with a single space or comma-space combination, depending on selected format. --] (]) 02:39, 16 April 2009 (UTC)
== Large essays starting to appear in the voting section ==


:::::*I have actually seen most of those forms manifest, so it's not contrived. ] (]) 07:58, 16 April 2009 (UTC)
Ryan, two more in the past few hours, (Numbers 90 and 92 in the Support section). Rather long for a vote, don't you think? I wonder what the "Comments on date autoformatting" section is for? Where is the boundary. I'd have though four or five lines maximum.


(outdent) Wait a minute. Quoting you, Ohconfucius: {{xt|It's also good to know that UC Bill (Bill Clark) hasn't bailed out on us totally.}} Do I understand this correctly? If Bill Clark, the individual who responded to ] and pledged to come back soon with more statistics, is, in turn, UC Bill, who is a , who is under an , then it appears we are in a rather awkward working relationship with Bill Clark, who is UC Bill, who is now ] for , particularly using an account known ]. Misplaced Pages is one odd place. And I’ve worked in odd places before. I don’t think I would ''ever'' want to be an admin. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 06:37, 16 April 2009 (UTC)
I see that Ckatz a much smaller post by HWV258 earlier, and , but has acted to reinstate the essay (No. 90) I earlier relocated to the Comments section.


*Well <wiping a bit of egg off face>, that was before I became aware of the ] which was 'UC Sapphic'. 'His' anger and disruption are clearly no longer welcome here. ] (]) 07:55, 16 April 2009 (UTC)
I want to take issue with these points. Why are people being allowed a soap box to '''push poll'''? If this is not redressed, I'll be expanding ''my'' vote into a huge essay, responding to these other essays. It will lead to a migration of long discussions from the talk page and "Comments" section right into the voting sections. Unwieldy and probably an introduction of a whole lot of push polling. ] ] 06:50, 1 April 2009 (UTC)


It appears that User:Sapphic has taken to heart the idea of challenging voters on their Oppose votes, on their talk pages. This appears to be a campaign, whereas what we need is an orderly notification here that a vote is believed to be mistaken, with supervision by Ryan. As I said above, this should be exceptional. Otherwise, both sides will be encouraged to go around to a large proportion of voters, challenging their stated reasoning. It will be chaos.


:* Confirmed. We will need luck and a large amount of goodwill on Sapphic’s part to obtain date syntax statistics from “Bill Clark.” The that was blocked as a sockpuppet of Sapphic/UC Bill is the e{{nbhyph}}mail address (wclark@xoom.org) of the “Bill Clark” upon whom we are/were waiting upon for statistics in ]. ] (from the account Wclark_xoom and from wclark@xoom.org) is a web{{nbhyph}}hosting service and Sapphic made a to that article. I believe the truest identity of this individual is female—the one that does yoga and pilates—and is best described by that used to be on the userpage of “Sapphic” (aka Bill Clark, UC Bill, I.P. User:169.229.149.174, Wclark_xoom, and the e-mail wclark@xoom.org).<p>I would be mildly surprised if Sapphic provides us further statistics on Ryan’s bugzilla given the latest events (a series of permanent or indefinite bans). Do we have someone else who can step up to the plate and provide statistical information as to whether problematical date syntaxes shown in Tcncv’s above table are rare or common?<p>Or can we use the ol’ *grin test* and intuition to advance an assessment as to whether or not it would be a wise thing to ''first'' (maybe ''ever)'' shut DynamicDates down? I should think that the date syntax that generates {{nowrap|]]}} ought to be extraordinarily common. I can see no reason at all to cause so many dates to break. I, frankly, am quite skeptical that it would be a good thing to turn off DynamicDates ''before'' a bot can first clean this up (even though doing so anyway might be emotionally appealing at some levels).<p>Frankly, I’m not catching on with how turning off DynamicDates can be all that appealing; doing so doesn’t get rid of '''''any''''' of the links (other than to turn a few of the blue ones into broken red ones), it just makes many of the dates look incorrectly written, and still others to become essentially unreadable. Come on guys. Lose (most of the links), and keep the blue-linked dates that remain looking half-way nice until there is a sensible plan here. Baby steps. You don’t cut off your nose to spite your face. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 15:14, 16 April 2009 (UTC)
http://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=User_talk:Dominus&diff=prev&oldid=280986568
::* How about of Sapphic, before some of the more interesting userboxes (ancestries, UC Berkeley) were removed? ] (]) 02:57, 17 April 2009 (UTC)
:::!! <rest pre-emptively self-censored>--] (]) 08:32, 17 April 2009 (UTC)


===An important point===
Please note that at the above post, Sapphic admits that she edits through another account nowadays. I want to be reassured that push polling is not occurring through that other account. What is the name of that account? ] ] 07:00, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
The majority of people don't have date preferences set. We're worrying what will happen to the people that have date preferences set, well we should thing of what's happening right now. If a date is linked as ], then the majority of users see a red link - it's already broken and will stay broken if dynamic dates are turned off. These dates need to be fixed regardless of what happens to dynamic dates and it shouldn't effect our thinking at all here. ''']<sup>See ] or ]</sup>''' 18:58, 16 April 2009 (UTC)


::that's apparently not quite right, Ryan Postlethwaite - according to the discussion above Dynamic Dates masks certain errors - like your example - even for people who don't have preferences set. i don't have preferences set, and i see your example as a healthy blue link; some of the charts above show what i'll see when DD is turned off. a bot can start spotting and fixing those errors even before DD is turned off, and GregL is right that that should start ASAP. (but for me that doesn't mean there's a reason to postpone turning off DD - both things should happen.) ] (]) 19:20, 16 April 2009 (UTC) ] (]) 19:20, 16 April 2009 (UTC)
*I echo Tony's comments above. In addition to the essay by ], , under the apparent guise of a vote by ] appears to by another ]. ] (]) 07:21, 1 April 2009 (UTC)


:::* OK, Sssoul. I see you are pretty much on my side here. Thanks. But I would love to see some explanation from you justifying how turning off DynamicDates right now could ''possibly'' be a good thing for our I.P. users and Misplaced Pages. Doing so would obviously generate a bunch of undecipherable and poor-looking dates while bots scramble to clean up the mess. Do you have reasoning that wouldn’t fall under the heading of “I would have a mind{{nbhyph}}numbing orgasm when DynamicDates is shut off”?? <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 20:07, 16 April 2009 (UTC)
**Difficult to say. I only have a few reasons for my !vote, so I didn't think a detailed list of points is needed. Others may differ. — ] ] 07:32, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
::::smile: okay, i'll try. if DD is kept on, diehards will keep marking up dates just to see them autoformatted; and pages where there are some linked dates and some unlinked dates will look inconsistent to some users (those who have their preferences set to a different format than the fixed-text dates for a given page). meanwhile, you predict that a whole lotta "ungodly ugliness" will be revealed when DD is turned off, but i don't expect it to be too dire. and i trust that the enlisted bots will clean up any ugliness really quickly, and will be given thanks & praises, which they'll enjoy. 8)
::::in short, as noted above: sure, let the bots start cleaning up faulty formats without waiting for DD to be turned off, but let's not delay turning off DD either. ] (]) 21:09, 16 April 2009 (UTC)
::::* Hmm. Then what do you think of this, Sssoul: What if the decision was to get a bot quickly going (within, say, a week from now), that swept through Misplaced Pages and did cleanup like this:
:::::#<code><nowiki>]]</nowiki></code> → <code><nowiki>], ]</nowiki></code>
:::::#<code><nowiki>],]</nowiki></code> → <code><nowiki>], ]</nowiki></code>


::::: Without these fixes, the above two syntaxes will render as ]] and ],] respectively once DynamicDates is turned off. The bot would do the sweep, with the objective that DynamicDates is to be turned off in the next month. I take note of your …{{xt|diehards will keep marking up dates just to see them autoformatted}}-concern. We can change the advise ] to advise that support for autoformatting will soon be turned off and dependencies orphaned.
::::: The two key distinctions of this is we would 1) Do some cleanup ''first'' so we aren’t scrambling to fix stuff the world can see, and 2) Before even doing so, a formal statement goes onto MOSNUM formally declaring the impending inactivation of DynamicDates and the resultant orphaning of autoformatting. What do you think of this? <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 23:07, 16 April 2009 (UTC)


::::::GregL, that sounds way more reasonable than keeping DD on indefinitely. i'm still not that bothered by the idea of the world seeing some of the typos that DD has been masking, and then seeing (and assisting the bots with) some of the clean-up, but yes, that sequence of events you've outlined above sounds sensible.
Tony, sorry, but two out of almost one hundred "support" comments go long, and now you wish to limit what people can say? As for your comment regarding HMV258's posts, there is a marked difference between your actions and mine: you and Greg L refactored and moved ''large portions of original vote text'' to new locations. (While you didn't edit the text, you both arbitrarily split it up and relocate it, once to the talk page and the other time to the bottom of the page.) This is unacceptable behaviour, especially while the RfC is under way. On the other hand, the two sections of text I moved were both ''responses'' to votes, ''not'' the original user's vote and comment. This was identical in nature to Ryan's earlier action to maintain the stated "no threaded responses" requirement. (Note that if Ryan objects to my actions, and prefers to be the only one doing so, I'll certainly stop.) If you have a concern regarding the length of a posted vote, your response should be to notify Ryan or the original posters, not to rework it yourself. --''']'''''<small><sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub></small>'' 09:32, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
::::::i also understand Tcncv's reasoning below about commissioning a separate bot to do just the date-typo-fixing - but i do want to know where delinking fits into the proposed sequence of events. commissioning a separate typo-fixing bot wouldn't collide with lifting the temporary injunction against delinking, would it? obviously bots are needed for these tasks but people can assist in the meantime, using Lightmouse's script to correct errors <u>and</u> delink. ] (]) 06:09, 17 April 2009 (UTC)


* Indeed, you aren’t understanding the technical issues correctly, Ryan. Please examine ], above. I don’t give a dump either about what registered editors, (those who have their date preferences set to something other than “No preference”) see or don’t see. In the above table, the '''Before''' column shows what regular I.P. users see <u>now</u>. The '''After''' column shows what all I.P. users would see if we turned DynamicDates off. ''Everyone'' (I.P. users and the privileged elite) would see a bunch of crap in many cases. We don’t want to do that. It is ''not'' a viable solution because there are many instances on Misplaced Pages of syntaxes coded in ways that would become {{nowrap|]]}} and {{nowrap|]]}}. Please see my 5:14, 16 April 2009 post above; particularly the last two paragraphs. Turning off DynamicDates is not a solution we can avail ourselves of, at least not early on. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 19:35, 16 April 2009 (UTC)<p><!--
:But ... "sorry", you left your ''own'' "response to a vote (No. 85), which I felt so biassed I had to say something directly after it. Why one rule you and one for HWV?
:If there is more push-polling via either large essay-type posts—especially in the Support section, which enjoys the benefit of being first—or by challenging users on their talk pages (without prior notification here), I believe action should be taken. I'm quite happy for dialogue in the voting zone to be removed, too. I'm still very unhappy about the two essays. These are far beyond what counts as a vote comment, and belong ''down in the comments section''. These supporters should be content with four, even six or seven lines. ''These'' are over the top—one is about 40 lines, the other nearly 50 lines. These are equivalent to more than a page each. ] ] 10:59, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
::There's only one rule, period... to be perfectly honest, I'd presumed that our dialogue had been moved along with the other comment of mine that Ryan had relocated during his cleanup of all responses to comments. --''']'''''<small><sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub></small>'' 16:47, 1 April 2009 (UTC)


-->'''P.S.''' The red-checkmarked entries in the '''Before''' column are ‘what-ifs’, most of which wouldn’t be found on Misplaced Pages because they instantly generate broken red links for all editors. These are for illustrative purposes to show us they were examined to evaluate what DynamicDates is or is not capable of parsing. The point is that the syntax shown in rows 1, 3, 5, and 7 should be very, very common on Misplaced Pages. Even if Lightbot unlinks everything it is supposed to, there will be articles like ] that will continue to contain lined dates. Many of the dates in these intrinsically chronological articles have been coded with syntax that will generate the hammered dog shit shown in the '''After''' column were we to turn DynamicDates off. ''Everyone'' would see that. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 19:51, 16 April 2009 (UTC)


*I added footnotes to the table above to clarify the column meanings. Below is my suggestion for fixing the problem dates.<br /><!--
::<big>Hear me. READ MY POST. '''Hear <i>meeeeeee!</i>'''</big>
--><u>'''Proposed date fix up process'''</u><br /><!--
:* I don’t oppose the practice of long- treatise-like vote comments because I think the practice gives anyone an advantage of any sort. Indeed not. I oppose the practice because it’s an ineffective form of cheating. Editors who come late to RfCs and spew gigantic comments fifty times bigger than the average Joe have, in my opinion, an overinflated sense of self-esteem because they 1) think they have something ''new'' to say, and 2) have deluded themselves that anyone ''actually reads'' these tomes. For the most part, they are wrong on both counts. It’s just a form of “hear ''me'' – hear '''''meeeee!'''''<p>Further, it’s just a desperation move by those who now recognize there isn’t a ] chance that a consensus could ''ever'' form that the Misplaced Pages community wants UC Bill’s “Son of autformatting” (I thought he deleted his code and quit Misplaced Pages) or any of the other ideas being proposed by a small cabal of volunteer developers. Ignore these long RfC comments and take satisfaction that they now perceive the need to fly their Kamikaze posts into the flotilla of inevitability. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 14:50, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
-->1. Hold off disabling auto-formatting until the majority of the potential poorly formed dates can be cleaned up.<br /><!--
*Whilst there are some very large comments on the poll, they all form part of a vote. At the minute, I don't think it's getting out of hand and the comments are useful - my main concern was the poll turning into a load of threaded discussion making it difficult to navigate. I've removed a few replies from the poll, but for now I'm going to leave the vote comments. ''']<sup>See ] or ]</sup>''' 22:25, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
-->2. Confirm with someone who knows the software that we have properly identified the cases that need fixing.<br /><!--
-->3. Commission a limited scope bot to perform the task of changing the poorly formatted dates into well formatted dates.<br /><!--
-->&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;a) The bot would fix the spacing and comma usage to be appropriate for the date style.<br /><!--
-->&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;b) The bot would ''not'' remove the links. (This can be done later.)<br /><!--
-->&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;c) The bot would ''not'' change the currently coded the date style (even if inconsistent within the article).<br /><!--
-->&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;d) For yyyy-mm-dd style dates, the code would be changed to <code><nowiki>]-]</nowiki></code> to simulate current link behavior.<br /><!--
-->4. Get bot approved. The rules defined above should hopefully minimize controversy and potential objections.<br /><!--
-->5. Identify and update affected main space pages.<br /><!--
-->6. Revisit the request for disabling auto-formatting.<br /><!--
-->I believe the limited function bot can get the job done fairly quickly once approved. Also, with the limited functionality should minimize the risk of having undesirable or controversial results, and would also require little operating supervision and intervention (once testing is satisfactorily completed). I expect that even dates in quoted text would not be an issue, because any poorly formatted, linked dates are already being modified by auto-formatting. I suspect the number of pages that need to be fixed will be numerous (1000's?), but not overwhelming.<P><!--
-->One loose item I can think of is templates: Are there any templates that currently emit portly formatted dates? If so, these will need to be fixed manually. Such cases may not be apparent until after the switch, but I would expect their number to be few (if any) and they should be easy fixes.<P><!--
-->Although some might prefer to rush this through, I think a slow methodical approach is better. -- ] (]) 00:01, 17 April 2009 (UTC)
::* Remember that these ISO dates are deemed acceptable within tables to save space and enable sorting. In these cases, it would make more sense to simply delink the dates altogether, rather than this conversion in step 3 above. ] (]) 08:36, 17 April 2009 (UTC)
:*This proposal makes sense in general. But why hold off delinking? Greg's suggestion <s>that it all be done in one shot</s> seems like a more efficient way forward, bearing in mind just how unpopular the vast majority of date links are... ] (]) 02:49, 17 April 2009 (UTC)


::* '''Woa.''' Where did I make such a suggestion? Hold off; don’t start quoting me. If I made such an assertion (that it “all be done in one shot”) it was purely unintentional.<p>I strongly, ''urgently'' suggest that DynamicDates be left '''on''' until bots have A) removed all the overlinking on Misplaced Pages, ''and'' B) searched through the remaining dates for code syntax that would read improperly if DynamicDates was turned off. '''''Then''''' we can turn off DynamicDates. There is simply no justification for a rush to set some parameter to “false” (oh, soooo easy) and instantly make hundreds, perhaps thousands of dates look like crap (or worse: become unreadable or have broken links).<p>I wholeheartedly agree with Tcncv’s enumerated plan, above. Good job, Tcncv. By design, since his preamble stated he was intending to address only the the challenge of “fixing the problem dates”, the only important step unmentioned is that a bot also needs to get to work removing the excess links and converting them into plaintext. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 03:45, 17 April 2009 (UTC)
== Suspected ] by ] ==
:::* Sorry, now struck. ] (]) 04:58, 17 April 2009 (UTC)
::*I don't know how long it would take to delink 2,800,000 articles, but I assume that it would be quicker to initially concentrate on the poorly formatted dates so that auto-formatting can be turned off sooner. As for not delinking, I am assuming that there are some dates that should remain linked (not that this is well defined at this point or that I have any idea what they might be), so some operator monitoring might be needed in the general delinking process. I also expect that the general delinking process might involve decisions on date formatting consistency in those articles with a mix. My intent was to define limited activities that are pretty much no-brainers with no decision-making needed, so the bot would be pretty much autonomous. The limited activity might also make it easier to review edits to confirm expected results without seeing unrelated activity. But I'm not a bot expert, so I may be seeing imaginary advantages. -- ] (]) 04:22, 17 April 2009 (UTC)
:::* Most of the commonest formatting problems are satisfactorily dealt with by Lightmouse's script, which will also render a uniform date format per article (except ISO). One pass of the script over articles will sort out most of them in a non-piecemeal manner. However, it would involve semi-automated editing would be most efficient. ] (]) 04:58, 17 April 2009 (UTC)
*You will all be happy to learn that Bill Clark is still working on the data concerning the various incorrect date formats. He should have some statistics tomorrow. Furthermore, he advises: "''DynamicDates should NOT be turned off until we at least know how many links will be affected, and maybe not until they've been corrected. ''" By correction, I presume this must mean 'with or without delinking'. To repeat what I have said earlier, I see the best way is to set our gnoming/AWB editors free to run Lightmouse's monobook script which delinks dates and corrects most of the badly formatted ones; we could set a target of switching off only the relevant part of Dynamic Dates, say, three months after the injunction has been lifted. By then, the incidence of any messy dates should be minimised. ] (]) 09:07, 17 April 2009 (UTC)
::Ohconfucius wrote: "I see the best way is to set our gnoming/AWB editors free to run Lightmouse's monobook script which delinks dates and corrects most of the badly formatted ones" - do you mean in addition to commissioning a bot like the one Tcncv has described? letting the script-users go to work makes sense, certainly, but a bot is needed too.
::someone above said Lightbot can almost certainly make this kind of typo-correction at the same time as it delinks - has that been confirmed? can someone ask Lightmouse? ] (]) 09:17, 17 April 2009 (UTC)
::*Of course. While script users can go to work immediately once the injunction is lifted (and apply judgement to whether to use dmy or mdy), bot action is needed as bots work faster and more systematically. I have asked Lightmouse for clarification, and he will no doubt reply on ]. ] (]) 09:36, 17 April 2009 (UTC)
:::thanks for the clarification, and for asking Lightmouse for more detail. i see he's already pointed out that Lightbot isn't currently authorized to delink autoformatted dates - which means either getting the authorization changed or turning off DD before Lightbot resumes its work. ] (]) 09:46, 17 April 2009 (UTC)


== It is time to hear from Lightmouse ==
I believe that ] may be canvassing in the above. She has been leaving messages on talk pages of 19 editors in an apparent attempt at influencing the debate. , , , , , , , . (see ] for full list)


Ryan, all:
Although she is not trying to influence the debate, it is difficult to arrive at that conclusion as the unescapable fact is that she is contacting only opponents to autoformatting, with arguments which may undermine their support. , she uses an alternative account which is not apparently declared. ] (]) 07:12, 1 April 2009 (UTC)


In trying to figure out the roll of bots in moving forward, we now have a bunch of Wikipedians wandering around in dark caves, curious as to which tunnel to head down to avoid dead ends or pitfalls—and ''Lightmouse has the torch at the cave’s entrance!'' Can you address the “naughty naughty—''you”'' stuff in a different venue and time and politely and graciously invite him to this discussion? Misplaced Pages needs his volunteer services and, right now, we could <u>greatly</u> benefit from his expertise and counsel (and his services to Misplaced Pages should he elect to contribute them). <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 14:35, 17 April 2009 (UTC)
:Yes, canvassing seems to be a real problem. Just look at the RfC-related spamming , , , , , and , along with at least 25 other instances all listed ]. The editor has even gone so far as to create and distribute promoting his position on the RfC. --''']'''''<small><sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub></small>'' 09:44, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
::It seems to me that the "canvassing" by Ohconfucius was directed to those who had already voted the way he would like them to – so where is the problem, that they might change their mind or that Ohconfucius instantly radicalises them to the point where they try to sockpuppet? (Note that I don't agree with the concept of divisive userboxes, but that's an unrelated matter.) What Sapphic is doing is much more problematic. Actually I was thinking about doing something similar, but not restricted to one side, and strictly pointing out only the apparent confusion with no advocacy. --] (]) 11:50, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
:::I think some of those posts are leading to a certain POV but also some are asking for clarification (as I did with ] ). The ideas of date linking and autoformatting are often confused. Hence my above proposal to "vote to discontinue autoformatting through the use of wikilinks", but no one seemed to be listening. ] (]) 13:55, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
::::I was listening, but it seems you weren't. The issue of "vote to discontinue autoformatting through the use of wikilinks" was settled conclusively in the Nov/Dec RfCs as "Deprecate". The problem that then arose was that some editors posited that those RfCs showed support for "date autoformatting without creating links". In other words, the issue of "date autoformatting by some other means" was raised. This RfC is designed to answer that specific question and not to go over old ground where the consensus is already clear. I'm sorry I've been so blunt about it, but it does nothing to help move forward, if editors continually raise questions that have already been settled. Hope that helps. --] (]) 15:41, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
:::::If this was really the case then why do we have an RFC based on autoformatting ''and'' how to link dates? If the result was deprecate then why are these two unrelated topics ''still'' coupled together? It's too late now (again, for the third time) but people will continue to misunderstand what they are voting for if we keep holding joint RFCs on these topics. ] (]) 09:49, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
::Ckatz: as you have taken an interest in this issue (by responding to Ohconfucius' post), and based on the information supplied by Greg_L below, could you please respond to the content of the original post? Thanks. ] 21:27, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
* Ohconfucius is just giving voters a lapel pin to wear as they exit the polling booth. He gave one to me. That isn’t disruptive. Sapphic is badgering Wikipedians who voted one particular way in an effort to get them to go back in and change their vote. <u>That must stop right now</u>. She should be warned and taken to an ANI if the ] persists. I doubt that the effort—and the trouble she could find herself in as a result—will pay off with a change of a single vote; it’s just that she is cheating, which doesn’t impress. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 15:08, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
**In an actual election, providing lapel pins (which support, as Ohconfucius' do, a particular side) to those leaving the polling booth would be unlawful; this analogy needs work. ] <small>]</small> 05:36, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
*I've had a look at this and I believe it is canvassing. I've therefore asked Sapphic not to contact any other users on their talk page for the remainder of the poll. ''']<sup>See ] or ]</sup>''' 22:23, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
::No disrespect, but you're wrong here, Ryan. Maybe I violated some ''other'' policy/guideline/whatever (though if that's so, I can't find it anywhere) but ] applies to messages sent to people ''who have not already participated'' in a poll. I explain my actions in a lot more detail in the sub-section immediately below. So, unless you can point me at some policy I actually ''did'' violate, I'm going to just keep doing what I've been doing. Glad you're feeling better. --] (]) 23:35, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
::*As it is common practice in WP for editors to change their votes up to the closure of polls in light of new information and arguments made, it remains arguable that your actions could be considered canvassing as they appear to be aimed at influencing a voting intention. ] (]) 07:07, 3 April 2009 (UTC)
* Hi all. I'd like to give my support to Sapphic. I'm one of those that were contacted by her and, even if our opinions diverge, I ''did'' appreciate she took contact with me and asked for clarification. To my opinion, this is legitimate. Apparently, she invested a lot of time and efforts in debates about autoformatting. All those, like you and her, that involved deeply in this issue, deserve that those like me that did not take part of past discussions, respect your work and do not vote lightly on false basis. If she had a doubt on my understanding of the vote, she was right to bring me information I didn't have and ask me to clarify myself. And if some editors changed their mind after discussing with her, I don't see any wrong in this. Sincerely, how would you value a vote outcome if half the voters display a clear misconception of what they are voting for? I just hope she also took contact with unclear voters that were on her side, but I would not condemn her if she didn't: everyone that has a true interest in a fair vote should be welcome to do the same.
:In addition, I do agree with her understanding of what canvassing is and is not. In the past, I've seen some wikipedians attempting to twist the outcome of an RfD or a poll by massively drawing attention of others to it, either by IRC on on their talk page, no matter they were not concerned by the subject. This is exactly what I call canvassing. What Sapphic did is in no way comparable. She started a discussion with people that 1. have shown an interest in the topic, 2. have already made up their mind and expressed themselves with a vote, but 3. didn't make themselves clear, at least in her opinion. This has nothing to do with raising an army of voters from nowhere.
:It doesn't matter we do not agree on date autoformatting, I believe what she did was right, and I wish you would see things the way I do. — ], 22:27, 3 April 2009 (UTC)


* To heck with this. I’m going to ] and am going to find out what can and can not be done technically and what he would like to do. That all is, after all, a bit relevant here. Anyone interested can look on and participate there. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 16:44, 17 April 2009 (UTC)
===Possible canvassing===
(Copied from my talk page.) --] (]) 03:41, 2 April 2009 (UTC)


== Conclusions ==
It has come to my attention that you may be attempting to influence the voting at ], and may be in breach of ]. Please be informed that a complaint has been filed at ]. ] (]) 07:28, 1 April 2009 (UTC)


When all the dust has settled, could someone please remember to add in a prominent place at the top of the main poll page a summary of the poll's results and any consequent actions taken. Thanks! ] (]) 03:50, 18 April 2009 (UTC).
:On my reading, ] only applies to notifying editors about a poll ''who haven't already participated''. However, even if you want to try applying it to what I've been doing, it's ''still'' okay because I'm attempting to "improve rather than to influence a discussion." I've been contacting only those people who have justified their opposition !vote by some inappropriate (a.k.a. "confused") manner &mdash; something along the lines of "I'm against autoformatting because I hate all the bluelinks" or "I support autoformatting because I click on date links all the time" which clearly show a lack of understanding of the question being asked. It just so happens that there are no examples of the second kind, and I've only been contacting people on the "oppose" side. Maybe I'm just not reading closely enough and have missed some in the "support" side, but out of over 200 replies (at the time) there were only a dozen or so in total that seemed to be genuinely "confused" about the question. Most of them have now expanded on their reasons for their opposition (on their talk pages, but perhaps they could still be persuaded to do so on the poll page too) so if anything, I've done a favor for the opposition. But I've also eliminated one possible source of contention in interpreting the results, which was my actual goal. So will you '''please''' just cut me some slack and have a little faith? Jeez. --] (]) 03:41, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
::We still haven't been apprised of ]'s other account. Without this information, it is impossible to know whether she has voted twice, and whether she has engaged in canvassing. ] ] 12:42, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
:::I was going to ask you what the hell you were talking about, but I just now saw that part of Ohno's comment above. Ohno misinterpreted my statement. I have ''not'' been editing with another account, I've simply ''stopped'' editing with this one, which is what I said originally anyway. I may be a rude bitch at times, but I'm not ''stupid'' and wouldn't advertise being a sockpuppet, if that's what I was doing. I'm probably going to abandon this account once this date fiasco is concluded, and maybe I will and maybe I won't register a new account... but it won't be for a while, if I do, and it won't be any of your business, as long as I don't continue to use the old account. --] (]) 14:23, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
::::I did not mean to offend you. You did announce yesterday that you edit on the dates issue with the "Sapphic" account and on all else with another account. I was understandably concerned, but I accept what you say. ] ] 14:36, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
:::*I'm sorry to have misinterpreted your remark. Of course, I felt it made little sense to write what you wrote, which is why I got it wrong. However, on re-reading, it ''is'' indeed what you wrote. I stand corrected that you did not say you run another account concurrently with User:Sapphic. ] (]) 14:38, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
::::No offense taken, and apology accepted. For once I wasn't actually angry over being falsely accused of something, just confused. The reason I was pointing out my account status was because I didn't expect to be checking either that talk page or my own, so I wanted any reply to be made on the poll page.. although I seem to be sticking around longer than I'd planned, so the point ended up being irrelevant anyway. Also, ohconfucius, I wasn't trying to make fun of your name by calling you "ohno" I just couldn't remember how to spell it (and was editing in a new subsection so I couldn't just scroll up) and for some reason thought it was "ohnoconfucius" by mistake. (I only just noticed the mistake now, and figured I'd join the merry apology-go-round.) --] (]) 23:42, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
:::::Wait, the new subsection I was replying in had other comments by you. So I was really just being lazy and have no excuse for getting your name wrong. I suspect you don't care and may not have even noticed, but nonetheless, happy merry apology-go-round an all, you know. --] (]) 23:49, 2 April 2009 (UTC)


== Linked dates statistics ==
*Sapphic: Whatever your reading of what "canvassing" is, you are clearly irritating voters. Take response, from earlier today:
<blockquote>I still think you're taking a lot upon yourself to hassle people (especially me) over their vote. Doesn't WP:CANVAS prohibit this? I'm not unsympathetic that some people oppose autoformatting because "date links are useless" but that's life - all the time people vote and proffer their opinions without understanding the issues and it's just something we have to learn to put up with or ignore.</blockquote>
And then ]:
<blockquote>Do you have a userbox that tells people that I do not want spam on my user talk page?</blockquote>
Pestering voters whose decision doesn't happen to suit you is a little desperate, don't you think? I see what ''I'' would take as misrepresentations at some users' talk pages, too. ] ] 07:22, 3 April 2009 (UTC)


I have created a bunch of new pages, whose directory is ''']''' as sub-pages of this discussion. I will rename this and continue using this as the central link when more data are available. So far, the data-extraction of ISO formatted dates indicates that ISO dates are far more commonly linked as <nowiki>]</nowiki> (some 58,000 articles concerned), whilst the <nowiki>]-]</nowiki> form appears only in about 2000 articles throughout the various spaces of WP. Data is courtesy of Bill Clark. ] (]) 04:24, 18 April 2009 (UTC)
== Exit strategies ==


:Thank you both very much. It would also be useful to scan for dates with non-standard space-comma combinations between the parts. These are the ones that look good now, but will show their faults when autoformatting is turned off. I've done quite a bit of testing and it appears that in addition to the yyyy-mm-dd style formats, autoformatting recognizes dates with the following formats:
It's probably too early to say, but I think this poll is hopelessly compromised, as well.
:* <code><nowiki>]...]</nowiki></code>
:* <code><nowiki>]...]</nowiki></code>
:* <code><nowiki>]...]</nowiki></code>
:* <code><nowiki>]...]</nowiki></code> - A very poor format, but it is recognized.
:Where:
:* <code><nowiki>...</nowiki></code> is a combination of zero or more spaces and zero or one comma anywhere in the string <code><nowiki>(·*(,·*)?)</nowiki></code>. This could be no characters. This could be many spaces with a comma at the beginning, end, or anywhere in the middle.
:* <code><nowiki>Day</nowiki></code> is one or two digits <code><nowiki>(\d{1,2})</nowiki></code>
:* <code><nowiki>Month</nowiki></code> is the ''case insensitive'' full month name or three letter abbreviation <code><nowiki>(Jan(uary)?|Feb(ruary)?|Mar(ch)?|Apr(il)?|May|June?|July?|Aug(ust)?|Sep(tember)?|Oct(ober)?|Nov(ember)?|Dec(ember)?)</nowiki></code> - (Adapted from Lightmouse's scripts)
:* <code><nowiki>Year</nowiki></code> is one to four digits <code><nowiki>(\d{1,4})</nowiki></code>
:Note that the above are less-that-formal pseudo- regular expressions. They will need to be tailored to whatever tool is used. I used "·" to represent a space. Autoformatting does not appear to recognized other types of whitespace such as tabs or newlines. Three digit days (001), five or more digit years, and alternate month abbreviations such as "Sept" are not recognized. The month-day and day-month part must have exactly one space between day and month. Note that this is the result of testing and reverse-engineering. It would be nice if someone who knows the software could independently confirm these results.
:To locate for problem cases (those with other than the expected space-comma combination), I would propose running another scan using search strings similar to the following:
:*<code><nowiki>](·*|,|,··+}|·+,·*)]</nowiki></code> - Excludes the comma + single space case.
:*<code><nowiki>](|··+|·*,·*)]</nowiki></code> - Excludes the single space case.
:*<code><nowiki>](|··+|·*,·*)]</nowiki></code> - Excludes the single space case.
:*<code><nowiki>]·*(,·*)?]</nowiki></code> - All such cases need reformatting.
:It would also be useful if Lightmouse could update his scripts to recognize and correct the general spacing variations before they are used for any large-scale delinking. Although I would expect the number poorly formatted dates to be relatively small (compared to the yyyy-mm-dd date counts), I think they still need to be identified and fixed before turning autoformatting off. -- ] (]) 07:15, 18 April 2009 (UTC)


::The doc is at ]. You're essentially right except it also recognizes lowercase months and years BC. --] (]) 09:42, 18 April 2009 (UTC)
Comment about Ryan's "What we want is for the poll to get one proposal from each section....". It can no longer be done for the linking sections. Because of the biased subtitles (link only to relevant dates), the only conclusion possible is that '''that statement''' has consensus, but not necessarily proposal 1. It's still ''conceivable'' that a clear consensus for one of the proposals could develop, but it's unlikely, as we have to consider a !vote for any of the options which says ''only'' "link only to relevant dates" as a vote not showing a preference between 1, 2, and 4. I'm not saying I think this is the only fatal flaw in the linking sections, but it seems sufficient.


:::Got it covered with the ''case insensitive'' qualification. I've found that the software also recognizes odd cases such as <code><nowiki>]]</nowiki></code>, although the result is typically a red-link like: "] ]". It also doesn't like months outside the range 01-12, so <code><nowiki>]]</nowiki></code> displays as "]-]" (empty). However, these cases are already broken. My goal here is to identify those cases that display correctly now, but will break when autoformatting is turned off.
As for the autoformatting, a large number of voters seem confused as to whether this refers to linking; probably enough to effect whether "oppose" gets a supermajority. I think Ryan needs to clarify that it '''does not''' refer to linking, and spam '''all''' !voters who voted before the change. (He made a change, but it doesn't seem to have helped.)
:::If the above appears sufficiently well defined, who should we contact to request another scan? -- ] (]) 15:26, 18 April 2009 (UTC)


A new batch of processed wikilinks &mdash; involving articles with incorrectly formatted mdy dates &mdash; have now been posted (see ]). So far, the data-extraction of mdy formatted dates indicates that these dates are far more commonly {incorrectly) formatted as <nowiki>]</nowiki><without comma> (some 120,000 articles are concerned). Note that some of the formatting of foreign language titles are incorrect due to char substitution, which I will attempt to remedy. Data is courtesy of Bill Clark.] (]) 12:47, 19 April 2009 (UTC)
But we don't have an exit strategy, unless Ryan or ArbCom has one hidden. — ] ] 15:45, 1 April 2009 (UTC)


== "other brands" of DA ==
]
* ''“Oh dear! Nothing but confusion, confusion, confusion. What is an editor with *pinky promise* good faith to do??”''<p>Nothing is confusing, Aurthur. You guys have had your asses handed to you on a plate. As Ryan above (21:47, 30 March 2009):


just before the poll opened a new (?) autoformatting template was announced: <nowiki>{{formatdate|dmy}}</nowiki> or something like that. i've also recently become aware of the {{tl|date}} template (it's worth checking out that page for a description). so what happens to those now - will they be deactivated along with Dynamic Dates? ] (]) 07:12, 18 April 2009 (UTC)
{{cquote|By all means people can argue this to the death, and if they feel it's disputed then so be it. However, I suspect myself and other administrators will be willing to enforce the end result when the poll comes to a conclusion. The comments on the poll show that many people are sick of this dispute and want to put an end to it as soon as possible}}


*Indeed, it seems to involve perhaps 2 thousand article-level transclusions. These templates will indeed be affected as these go against the agreed position. The templates support a wide number of date formats. ] (]) 16:11, 18 April 2009 (UTC)
:So cease with your posturing about how the entire Wikipedian community is doomed to have this issue drag on endlessly like a herpes infection because you can reach into your wikilawyering bag of tricks and spew B.S. about how there is this or that <u>''you''</u> don’t like about how the RfC was conducted. Tough. The community has spoken: just write out the damned dates in non-linked, fixed text and be done with it. You don’t like that outcome? Fine. How about accepting that the community has spoken and accept its will with grace and dignity? <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 17:05, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
::Define "Relevant" in a way so as to distinguish between the options. The options basically boil down to:
::# Link some dates
::# Link some more (but not all) dates
::# Link all dates
::# No guidance.
:: Have a look at the spread of the votes as to what "some dates" means, and tell me that you could write a MOSNUM guidance based on that. You've got the whole band between linking nothing and treating dates like other links. How on earth do you distill that down? About the only thing which is clear from this poll so far is that there is no consensus on autoformatting in either direction. The other stuff is just too non-specific.] (]) 17:19, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
:::Isn't the MOSNUM guidance exactly what people are voting on? Each option lists what text should be inserted into MOSNUM. Am I misunderstanding your response? I think the next RfC is supposed to further clarify how to implement the guidance. ] (]) 18:36, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
Arthur Rubin: You appear to be building a case to challenge yet another RFC result that you do not like. Perhaps it is time to accept the vote after more than three RFCs on this matter. Attempts thus far to query voters' reasoning, on their talk pages, have apparently resulted in no changes in their vote and, in a few cases, irritable responses. ] ] 17:28, 1 April 2009 (UTC)


:Wikitext marked up with the {{tl|date}} template is probably there for a reason, such as in an infobox. All of its occurrences ought to be relatively easy for a bot to find. As it outputs text correctly formatted for wikipedia, its formatting is not really a problem. That is, it doesn't ''auto''format, but outputs a style dictated by the second parameter (e.g. |dmy) - what you might call "fixed formatting". Nevertheless, it is also capable of producing linked dates by using a second parameter like |ldmy or |lmdy. I would again suggest that changing an |ldmy parameter to |dmy would be trivial for a bot, where the linking is to be removed. --] (]) 21:39, 18 April 2009 (UTC)
:It sounds like the cases of William Penn and others. The jury found them not guilty and the judge wasn't happy with the verdicts. He said:
:* ''"You will not be dismissed until we have a verdict--a verdict that the court will accept. And, until we do, you will be locked up, without meat, drink, fire, and tobacco; you will not think to abuse the court. By God, we will have a verdict, or you will starve for it!"
:] (]) 17:46, 1 April 2009 (UTC)


::but ... 1] where i saw it in use it was in the main body of the article, not an infobox (and the template description specifies that it's for use in articles as well as infoboxes); <br />2] <s>it looks to me like when the second (optional) parameter isn't set, it <u>does</u> format according to user settings (and when</s> if it's used for "fixed formatting", why not just enter the dates as fixed text??<s>)</s>; and 3] it goes right against a view that a whole lot of people expressed in the poll: that date formatting doesn't warrant complicating the mark-up at all. sorry, but it (and the other <nowiki>{{formatdate}}</nowiki> template) seem way too much like potential fodder for months of further strife over whether/how to mark up dates. ] (]) 06:33, 19 April 2009 (UTC)
:* AKAF: Your arguments fall on the deaf ears of any rational person. As of this writing, the voting on “month-days” is 159 - 5 - 4 - 23. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out how one should proceed. What part of ''“Accepting what life throws at you with grace and dignity”'' don’t you understand? <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 18:17, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
::For what it's worth, I ''would'' agree with you about month-days, ''except'' that some said, and I quote "link only to relevant dates" for their vote reasoning on option 1. And I did object to the subtitle before the vote, but, since I'm not on 24/7, it was after the lockdown. I also objected in the comment section, but I really don't expect most editors to read down that far. — ] ] 01:05, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
:::As for "any rational person": "Any rational person" would assume that any situation where where the proposer votes "no" on his proposal, is hopeless. — ] ] 01:05, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
:::I don't see your problem about month-day links. Option 1 is essentially option 4 plus a clarification that such links are almost never relevant. It draws attention to the fact that there is no longer a special exemption for them. This clarification has become necessary because of the past practice of making irrelevant date links for autoformatting purposes. I searched for "relevan" among voters for option 1. Most of them specifically express the sentiment that such links are almost never relevant and seem to feel (like me) that this needs saying to prevent conflicts with the minority of editors who disagree. --] (]) 01:46, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
::::No, it does more, and been used to assert much more. ] <small>]</small> 05:31, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
:::::Care to give an example of a relevant link forbidden by this language? --] (]) 08:03, 2 April 2009 (UTC)


::: When the second parameter isn't set, it uses the day-month-year format. As for "why not just enter the dates as fixed text", I guess it is used for stuff such as <code><nowiki>{{date|{{{year}}}-{{{month}}}-{{{day}}}|myd}}</nowiki></code> (doing that without the template would require <code><nowiki>{{#switch:{{{month}}}|January|February|...}}</nowiki></code>). --] (]) 10:26, 19 April 2009 (UTC)
Rubin's right. Barring some unlikely surge in the polls, it's pretty obvious that the result is going to be "no consensus" on the question of autoformatting (a roughly 60-40 split is hardly definitive) so ''which'' status quo do we preserve? Each side is obviously going to argue for their own preference, and absent any clear consensus from the community, I don't see how to break the deadlock. If autoformatting is kept (and fixed) the other questions are basically irrelevant, so it's really the central issue. I wish people had taken it to heart when I pointed that out last month, and if we'd gone with a simple up/down <s>vote</s> "poll" on that one issue, I bet we'd have a clearer way to proceed now. I don't mind the prospect of "losing" the poll as much as I do having the cloud of uncertainty continue. That said, I'm not going to give up my argument based solely on that factor. So where do we go from here? --] (]) 06:22, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
:Well, that's a skewed argument if ever I saw one. Autoformatting has been deprecated since August on the style guides; it is totally absent from the Featured Content process, without a blink. It is whistling in the wind for a few people who don't like the results of this poll 38.5% (versus 61.5%) to claim that the clock should be turned back to the old days. Move on and get over it: the WP community has matured and is telling you yet ''again'' that it does not want dates messed around with. How many RFCs that say the same thing on this do we have to have? ] ] 09:41, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
::Not to throw around firecrackers but (given equal strength of argument) doesn't 61/39 give a majority? Albeit a slim majority but why are these polls regarded as "no consensus"? I know that "Misplaced Pages is not a democracy" but surely if there is a prevailing view out of two opposing views then we should go with that one? Why can't we just remove the current double brackets autoformatting system (as people have been blocked for) and then discuss a proposal for a new autoformatting system when a better (non-date-linking) system/syntax is created? If past polls show that "autoformatting through wikilinks" is deprecated then why can't we remove that old system? ] (]) 13:16, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
:::For some issues (such as deciding what default date format we should use, some kinds of style guidelines, etc.) a majority is fine, but when you're talking about altering core software features and editing millions of articles, there should be ''overwhelming'' support, and here there isn't. We usually won't even delete a ''single article'' (through AfD) with as slim a majority as there is here. Also, the double-bracket markup around dates isn't the autoformatting system, it's just the way of ''triggering'' the autoformatting system. We could remove (or better, just disable.. since it's one true/false setting in the config file) the existing autoformatting system, but while that would stop dates from being autoformatted, they'd still be linked and the markup would need to be removed. Just removing the markup ''without'' disabling the autoformatting software would make it too complicated when editors ''do'' want to link to a date (they'd have to use either the <nowiki>]</nowiki> stynax or <nowiki>]</nowiki> syntax to avoid triggering the still-active autoformatting software.) The problem with removing all the markup (and disabling the software) ''before'' a replacement system is put in place is that it would result in a lot of duplicated effort, since any replacement system would need its own markup similar to the double brackets. Removing the markup is easier than adding it back (mostly because of quotations of dates, which should ''never'' be autoformatted, and which are hard to distinguish from other unlinked-but-potentially-autoformattable dates) so it's not even a matter of just "undoing" what bots already did... unless of course we kept detailed logs of all the unlinking. --] (]) 14:35, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
::::How many quotations of dates are there? What fraction of currently linked dates are going to remain linked? I'm not convinced that unlinking is going to be any simpler than re-linking, since nobody is going to argue over whether a date is inside a quotation, but lots of people might argue about whether a date should remain linked or not. As for exit strategy, I think it might be reasonable to look at all the "support" votes and see which ones actually support the ''existing'' autoformatting software and which support autoformatting "in general" and see if we can get a supermajority in favor of at least getting rid of the old autoformatting system. Then, assuming there ''is'' such a supermajority, we could disable the existing autoformatting immediately by changing whatever config setting you're talking about. That'll let ''every'' editor see the inconsistent formats, and get more people involved in fixing that problem. At the same time, we can start working on a detailed specification for the replacement software, which enough people seem to want that it's probably worth at least looking into. Yes, it might mean a lot of wasted effort in de-linking and then re-linking dates, but a lot of the effort ''won't'' be wasted, such as fixing format inconsistencies and figuring out which dates are more relevant than others, etc. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 15:55, 2 April 2009 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
::::*'''Point of information''': the community voted in August 2008 to deprecate date autoformatting, and endorsed it overwhelmingly (i.e. by a supermajority) in ] and ] specific questions in December 2008. Therefore, '''Date autoformatting as we knew it is dead''', and the software should have been disabled at that point. What we are now discussing is the desirability in principle of a <u>new system</u>. Any eventual consensus to adopt would need to be followed by a formal consultation process and vote on detailed specifications. Looking at the stability of the 60%+ vote opposed to that principle, it is likely that a consensus will not be attained. ] (]) 06:28, 3 April 2009 (UTC)
Hmm.. I guess you have a point about de-linking being ''harder'' than re-linking would be, once you factor in having to deal with disputes over linking particular cases in individual articles. Figuring out which date-like-things are actual dates and which are quotations of dates (or other things that should never be autoformatted) is hard for computers, and simple for humans &mdash; but figuring out which dates are really ''relevant'' to an article is hard for ''both'' computers ''and'' humans. In other words, a date re-linker bot would probably have a low error rate and the errors would be simple for any editor to fix in a way that everybody agrees with (like reverting ''obvious'' vandalism.)


(outdent) okay, thanks for the correction about it defaulting to dmy - some comments from editors who use the template indicate that they think it formats dates in accordance with user settings, but i guess they're wrong, so i'll strike that misconception from my earlier post.
'''So as one of the most ardent (i.e. loudest and annoying) supporters of date autoformatting, I endorse the immediate disabling of the existing date autoformatting (set <code>$wgDynamicDates = false</code>) on the English Misplaced Pages, followed by the resumption of manual and/or (semi-)automated "mass" de-linking of articles with human correction (according to an as-yet-to-be-determined set of criteria) &mdash; coupled with the establishment of a community specification and review process for developing a replacement system, which will be presented in a subsequent poll for final approval or rejection (with possible abandonment of the development process, pending any changes in community opinion and/or new information and experiences gained in the intervening time.)'''
but i don't understand - at all - what you wrote about "stuff such as " . maybe i don't have to understand it, but if it can be explained simply/briefly i'd be interested. thanks ] (]) 12:02, 19 April 2009 (UTC)


== When can we expect results? ==
The key piece in getting my (and I suspect a lot of other autoformatting supporters') backing for that proposal is that the development process receive some kind of official blessing (by ArbCom?) with enforcement against anybody trying to "derail" it. If we accept that practically nobody wants the ''old'' date autoformatting, then you accept that enough people want a ''new'' autoformatting that we have to at least give it a serious go. In the meantime, you get your way 100% and don't interfere with the development process. Deal? --] (]) 00:20, 3 April 2009 (UTC)


I have asked this above in another section and haven't heard back, so perhaps I should ask in a new section. I've never been involved in arbitration before. When can we expect a decision from ArbCom and go back to editing dates (i.e. when will the date editing injunction be lifted)? ] ] 06:15, 19 April 2009 (UTC)
* Quoting you, Sapphic: {{xt|(a roughly 60-40 split is hardly definitive) so which status quo do we preserve?}} and {{xt|…coupled with the establishment of a community specification and review process for developing a replacement system }}. And you see a consensus that the Wikipedian community wants a new system of autoformatting… uhm… ''where?'' The old system of autoformatting with it’s attendant linking to trivia is gone. Dead as a door nail.<p>So what to do next? It was conceded by Locke and UC Bill that such “specifics” as UC Bill’s “son of autoformatting” idea would be rejected out of hand by the community. So Locke insisted that the RfC be put forth just in terms of the “generalities of autoformatting”. So that’s just how we structured the RfC: on the “generalities”. Really, though, what few specifics snuck in were based on Werdna’s “specifics”. And the community’s reaction to this? There is clearly a significant '''''majority''''' of Wikipedians who <u>don’t want some newfangled autformatting technology</u>. Yet, you cite the community rejection (it wasn’t a colossal rejection, just a sound drubbing) as evidence that you should get busy, roll up your sleeves, and start working on some newfangled methods of autoformatting. Because… ''why???'' &thinsp;Fine. You go ahead and work your head off. But in case you haven’t been keeping up on current affairs, the community is sick to death of this issue and doesn’t want to see it darken their doorstep for a long, long time. So if you come up with some new autoformatting idea that is the coolest thing since steam power and antibiotics, just keep it to yourself.<p>You see, just because Sapphic and a handful of enthusiastic volunteer programmers really, ''really'' want something just isn’t good enough. Misplaced Pages’s Chief Technology Officer and a clear majority of Wikipedians ''<u>don’t</u>''. Maybe we ought to listen to what ''they'' want, huh? Or does your right to hound the community on this issue exceed the majority’s right to be free of houding? <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 05:14, 3 April 2009 (UTC)
:I have the same question. I did not align with either side but don't see why a portion of the issues that are decided on should continue to block editing. For example it seems to me there is consensus on the common sense position that date links should have no special status- that although we could link every single word in an article we instead eliminate links that readers would most likely would see no reason to click on. It is baffling to me why after 4 months there is still a ban on removing date links that make no sense and there is consensus support for allowing their removal. It seems to me that the consensus position is pretty simple to understand, but surely we could have a single document that spells the rules out crisply and thoroughly, then the link ban could be lifted.
:Whether or not we can phase in certain aspects of what has been decided, I echo RainbowofLight's question. Is there any sort of guesstimate on when this arbcom ruling is going to finished with? I have family of date templates whose consideration at MOSNUM is crying out for an RFC but it's pointless to solicit wider input now since the results of the arbcom decision will undoubtedly have dramatic impact the opinions solicited. To remove doubt of the validity regarding any consensus positions reached, I would have to rerun the RFC. From where I stand, everything having to do with dates is in gridlock. I'm a patient guy, but I'd like to have a reading on how much time I should be expecting on resolution of this matter. -] (]) 21:37, 20 April 2009 (UTC)
::The problem right now is that auto formatting has not been rejected (at present it's "no consensus"), and delinking dates would also remove the auto formatting (which still has the previously existing consensus until such time as it is rejected). I'm not willing to sacrifice all the marked up dates we have currently, especially if any agreed upon auto formatting system ultimately utilizes the link syntax (which would mean all the effort to delink dates would be for naught). It makes more sense to continue discussion and try to determine what would satisfy people regarding auto formatting. —] • ] • ] 21:57, 20 April 2009 (UTC)
:::But auto formatting would use that new wikitext thing (sorry, I forget the syntax- that recent mediawiki extension that does what the date links did). So date linking for the purposes of formatting is obsolete and there aren't any scenarios where we would still be using the old date link approach, right? I've not been following this super closely, but I don't see why all editors can't be removing links that make no sense just because they happen to link to a year article with a kajillion inbound links that also make no sense. Either auto formatting is approved or not, you keep the meaningful date links, but the rest of them get the red pen. If that is not fair to some side for some reason, then fine, I'll sit down. I just thought there was agreement from both sides on that much. -] (]) 01:08, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
::::I think we should leave Locke alone with his rather "unique" interpretation of the consensus. He didn't get it on 25 December 2008, it doesn't look like he's getting it any better on 13 April 2009. ] (]) 02:16, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
:::::I think we should leave Ohconfucius alone with his rather silly ideas regarding "consensus". —] • ] • ] 11:30, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
::::::Ohconfucius and Locke, just carry on hitting each other on the head with your sandbuckets if you’d like to see me propose a page ban for you on ANI. At a minimum, please say something actually witty to each other next time. ] | ] 15:26, 21 April 2009 (UTC).
::::::: Trout, anyone? ;-) ] (]) 15:35, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
::::::::''Bishonen slaps Ohconfucius around a bit with a ginormous shark.'' ] | ] 15:42, 21 April 2009 (UTC).
::::::::*Hey, I hope you're gonna be even handed with the shark, Locke will be extremely jealous. ] (]) 15:51, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
::::The formatdate parser function? People argued that the existing systems syntax was "too complicated" by virtue of it using square brackets (as with normal links). I can only imagine the kind of complaints we'd receive if we forced people to mark dates up using <nowiki><code>{{#formatdate:November 11, 2001}}</code></nowiki>... There's been a proposal to simply remove the linking in the software, but for whatever reason this continues to be resisted. It's simpler, doesn't involve the use of bots, and keeps dates auto formatted. (And of course the other issues can be fixed with time, assuming opponents don't try for RFC5 and a half...). —] • ] • ] 11:30, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
:::::Off topic... What's formaldehyde got to do with anything? ] (]) 15:41, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
*Ohconfucius, yeah, it's an attempt at humour, but please be sensitive to the feelings of people on both sides of this former argument. It is in everyone's interest that the temperature be cooled down. We all need to live with each other productively. ] ] 15:45, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
* This dispute has raged an absurd length of time due to intransigent wikilawyering. It should receive it deserves. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 15:41, 22 April 2009 (UTC)


== Throwing fuel onto the fire - Google Timeline ==
::I don't see a consensus ''at all'', at least on the issue of autoformatting. That's the point. We need to figure out a way to proceed from here, with no clear consensus in the poll results. Yes, a ''majority'' have opposed autoformatting, but that's not enough. At roughly 40% of the respondents indicating ''support'' for autoformatting, you can't dismiss the supporters as "a handful" like you have been previously.


Google has recently (last few days?) put up a new method of data aggregation, . It combined metadata from several sources to create a at-a-glance timeline for the information and probably will be expanded in the future. Presently it is pulling three streams of data from WP: "Misplaced Pages events", "births" and "deaths".
::So, '''as a compromise''', I'm suggesting we try it your way while those who want a new software system work in peace, then we put it to another poll to see if we try that. I'd think you'd be delighted, you're getting what you want and all you have to do is not try to poison the effort to develop a new software replacement. Given how long it took to put this poll together, and the need for even more transparency and community buy-in for the new software, I imagine you'd be getting your way across the site for at least a month or two. If we agree to have the existing date autoformatting system turned off right away, it would speed up the process of getting inconsistent date formats fixed and get more people aware of the issue, because right away ''every'' editor would see the site as anonymous editors currently do, regardless of what their (now non-functional) date preferences specify. ''Addendum:'' Disabling it in the config also allows dates that ''should'' be linked (whichever those may be) to be linked using the simple <nowiki>]</nowiki> syntax instead of some more cumbersome variety needed to defeat the autoformatting, if it were left turned on.


Unfortunately, I can't find out how they are pulling date data, but the last thing we want to do is limit what they are doing. I realize it is entirely possible they are pulling from unlinked data, but it would be helpful to know if they are in any way taking advantage of date autoformatting or if they're using other means. --] (]) 01:33, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
::If after a month or two of that we ''don't'' see an increase in date format or date linking edit-warring, complaints from editors who start demanding their preferences start working again, etc. then it's entirely likely that the poll to approve the new software will show that people no longer support it at the same level as now. Maybe it really will dwindle to "a handful" and a clear consensus will emerge. Or maybe you'll see that date autoformatting (even in its current, flawed form) is really protecting us from worse headaches, and welcome the new improved replacement.


::Either way, I'm willing to run a little experiment to get some real-world feedback, if you're willing to keep your nose out of the development process (unless it's to genuinely contribute to developing the specification or something, which I doubt you'd ever want to do anyway.) --] (]) 05:16, 3 April 2009 (UTC) * Google's success isn't an accident. I don't think the sages there would built an entire timeline system relying on something which they couldn't control, and which could change at any minute. ] (]) 02:13, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
**And even if they did, Google shouldn't have any bearing on how we do things here. That's not our problem. ]<small> (]) (])</small> 02:21, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
::: I agree we are not a back end for google applications, but regarding all these map and now timeline applications, if Misplaced Pages is not the premier destination for their links, we are doing something wrong. Strategically, I think we should feel little threat from them, and ought to regard them as doing valuable R&D for the Foundation. Here's what I mean. In 1994, the commercial publishers were the last word in electronic encyclopedias. Misplaced Pages has left them in the dust. Similarly, long term, it is inevitable that the Foundation will provide free software that supplants Google Earth and these Timeline things. As an engineer, I recognize that these visualization systems are not trivial, but the technology is a relatively stationary target, and ultimately the power of collaborative systems will leave Google Earth and Timelines in the dust. So we should welcome them and see how our material best works with theirs.
::: As for the specifics of the Google timeline as of the time of this post: They really have not done much work on the data extraction. If you take a look at Year 1865 by Month, you will see that all the graphics for all the battles are the same, and they all link to the same article: American Civil War. Really, they don't need to do much more than code filters for a half dozen infoboxes, and they basically have all they need regardless what we do.
:::An obvious improvement is to link the time coordinates to location coordinates using google earth. Google Earth now allows the encoding of timespans inside markers, and ] supports them so basically all the other virtual earths will be able to follow suit. Some geewhiz and technical observations ]. Some elaboration of time, metadata, and strategic implications for Misplaced Pages as a global knowlegbase for these sorts of applications (]). -] (]) 04:27, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
::::And just to reinterate, it is inconceivable that Google would use the old square-bracket system to locate dates. It is blindingly easy to automatically locate dates in WP's text without them. ] ] 04:34, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
:::::Completely agree.-] (]) 04:54, 21 April 2009 (UTC)


== "Dates" case and temporary injunction: likely timing? ==
::* Quoting you: {{xt|I don't see a consensus ''at all'', at least on the issue of autoformatting.}} The trouble is, you need one to push what you’re pushing. I’m quite content to let the RfC run its course, and for the ArbCom committee and the other admins to look at how the community has spoken, and for them to instruct you handful of volunteer developers as to whether or not they think the community has asked you to keep coming back again and again, pushing your latest & greatest. I’m just not seeing this invitation from the community so far. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 05:24, 3 April 2009 (UTC)


I have made ] for information about when we are likely to see movement on these matters. ] ] 09:00, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
* You think they're sick to death about date-related arguments '''now?''' Just wait until they've experienced life entirely without autoformatting for a while, without a way to end the arguments by saying "just go set your preferences that way, then." If you're so convinced that any replacement system is doomed to fail, why do you care if it's developed by other people who want it and believe it's useful. Let it be developed, and let the community decide whether to use it or to '''continue on''' without autoformatting. You seem to keep missing the fact that you can have autoformatting gone as soon as Ryan (or whoever on ArbCom) convinces the Wikimedia sysadmins to turn off autoformatting '''for real''', and not just the work-around way you've been doing so far. It could seriously be gone in a day or two from now, if we go this route. You'd still need to deal with the links, but I'd support whatever bot or scripted delinking method you wanted to use, as long as there was a clear way of dealing with disputes over whether to keep specific date links. With a large part of the dispute (autoformatting) made moot for at least a month or two, I bet those link-specific disputes would be less stressful and easier to resolve. Seriously, what have you got to lose, except the right to sabotage the development process? --] (]) 05:27, 3 April 2009 (UTC)


== Turning date linking off in one fell swoop ==
:* {{xt|Just wait until they've experienced life entirely without autoformatting for a while.}} Not '''that!''' '''' <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 05:33, 3 April 2009 (UTC)


In the discussion around the DynamicDates config option, I think we missed something discussed very early on. Someone, and I unfortunately think it was UC Bill (what a sad situation that is, regardless of position) who suggested a one line change to the autoformatting code to turn off date linking within the current version of autoformatting. This would *not* turn off autoformatting, it would just fix the "sea of blue" All without editing one article, let alone millions. Before we unleash the bots, I thought it would be good to at least consider that option for a minute. Personally, I think this is just a first step, but I like the effect it would have of addressing the clear consensus regarding unlinking dates quickly while giving time for the options where there was more balance and which might require more discussion. ] (]) 11:27, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
:* '''P.S.''' Sorry. I’m tweaking your nose and I see you are sincere. I just looked at your edit summaries and I see your mood and intentions are quite different from the last time I had the pleasure of encountering you. Now I feel bad. Please, just let the RfC run its course and accept with grace and dignity that the community isn’t asking you do do what you’re doing. Moreover, they’re really, ''really'' fatigued of this RfC issue. Let it die. At least, give it a rest for a week until this RfC concludes. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 05:37, 3 April 2009 (UTC)
:As you say, this could be a decent first step. It definitely wouldn't be appropriate as the only solution, as many of us opposed because we don't like the increased complexity for editing. It also assumes that autoformatting will continue, and I don't think there is consensus for that. ] (]) 15:57, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
::... there are two long sections above ("action plan" and "bug filed") discussing that very idea, its repercussions, why it's not that simple, etc. ] (]) 16:03, 21 April 2009 (UTC)


::: I believe we're talking about two different things Ssoul. Above is discussion about the Dynamic Dates config line which would disable autoformatting entirely. I'm referring to a patch which would not touch autoformatting per se (which is what all the complication above appears to be about) but merely modify it to not link dates. ] (]) 02:58, 22 April 2009 (UTC)
:Wow, okay, thanks for the apology. I probably don't even deserve it, given how shitty I've been toward you in the past. Anyway, I'm concerned that the poll isn't going to resolve anything (I seriously doubt ArbCom will want to endorse one side with only a 60% majority, despite what you seem to think) and we'll remain stuck in limbo forever unless we work out some kind of compromise. If you don't come around heckling the development process, I think we really can come up with something pretty good as a replacement, and I'm convinced that when they see it (and have had a taste of the old date format wars coming back.. I don't think people have become quite so "enlightened" on the matter as you seem to believe, either) that a lot more than 60% will want it. A lot of the opposition is because of how the current software works, and if people see a working, tested, fully-specified system developed through a transparent community-driven process that doesn't suffer from the same flaws, I think they'll embrace it. Maybe I'm wrong, but wouldn't it be easier to just find out, rather than continue arguing about it forever? --] (]) 05:47, 3 April 2009 (UTC)


(outdent) ah - sorry! you mean the patch that uses linking markup for dates but instead of linking them it autoformats them, apart from serious problems handling punctuation and date ranges? that was thoroughly discussed while the last RfC was being constructed, and even the pro-DA people decided it was not a good idea to propose that route to the community. someone else can i'm sure direct you to that discussion. meanwhile it's very hard to see any justification at all for a "first step" that would entail complicating the editing process simply to prolong the existence of a function that the community doesn't want: that patch would entail eye-glazing instructions for using double square brackets to link/not to link and for punctuating bracketed dates. ] (]) 04:47, 22 April 2009 (UTC)
:* Time for bed. Goodnight. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 05:53, 3 April 2009 (UTC)
:* I think I'll stop trying to explain this now, because clearly what I thought in Good Faith would help move this forward is something that you're prepared to keep arguing will not. At this point, I'm sure we could find arguments against gravity thoroughly discussed in the talk pages of MOSNUM, but I'll let you find those for yourself. ] (]) 11:09, 22 April 2009 (UTC)
::*This has been the problem all along. Any solution, no matter how intuitive or well reasoned, will be shunned or argued against if it doesn't involve mass delinking of dates via bots. Apparently Lightmouse is the way, the truth and the light, and anything else is... well, clearly not good enough. They've apparently "won" something, and they want their trophy (all dates sans square brackets), even if that doesn't have consensus. —] • ] • ] 13:58, 22 April 2009 (UTC)


That would be a silly ] which would turn off all autoformatted links, including the ones which do comply with the new ] guidelines, and wouldn't turn off any non-autoformatted link, including the seventeen occurrence of ] (without a day link) in the same section. --<span style="font-family: monospace; font-weight: 600; color: #00F; background-color: #FFF;">]</span> (formerly Army1987)<small>&nbsp;—&nbsp;''],&nbsp;not&nbsp;]''.</small> 17:52, 22 April 2009 (UTC)
*Sapphic, a > 61% versus > 39% result is not what you wanted, is it, to claim that people want ''any'' kind of date autoformatting. Now you are trying to twist the result around in contortionist ways to claim that you should still have your way, as though it were the converse result. Ah ... let me think about that ... I don't think ''any''one would buy that, except for you, Cole, Katz and a few other devotees. Six months of plain fixed-text dates has rapidly convinced Wikipedians that there is absolutely no problem to solve ... as though they are concerned about "realize" versus "realise"; they are ''not''. Nor are they concerned that some people pronounce "either" with an ''ee'', and others with an ''ei'' as in "bite". It's all too silly. We do not want dates messed with; that is what people are saying, again and again and again. Now you're talking of ''another'' RFC as though you can force people through tiring them out. ] ] 07:32, 3 April 2009 (UTC)
:I don't know that I'd call it a kludge so much as a stop-gap solution so auto formatting can be salvaged without keeping all the links intact. And from my perspective it's a reasonable compromise considering I want to keep all date links (the effect here is that I lose all the date links, but they can be manually added where appropriate). —] • ] • ] 19:21, 22 April 2009 (UTC)
:*Yes, a very clear sub-text to the feedback is that the community is thoroughly sick of this whole ] debate. Most agree there is no problem to solve, and some have stated their annoyance at being asked their views again and again. We all know the reason for this is that the ] is still nailed to its perch although it is "pining for the fjords". Just put the "ex-parrot" in its box, and let it rest in peace. ] (]) 08:44, 3 April 2009 (UTC)


== Article list ==
:It seems to me that a lot of the votes in favour of the ''principle'' of autoformatting were empty. It's a bit like being against sin - nobody could possibly argue with the principle, but the reality is a bit harder. The difficulty would come when the ''principle'' butts up against the ''reality'' of having to mark up millions of articles and dates. If the developers want to spend time trying to come up with a neat autoformatting solution, some work was done a while back on trying to develop a minimum spec. But we shouldn't be discussing it again unless and until there's a working system that meets the minimum requirements. It may indeed be that we'll welcome it with open arms in a few months as an escape from an outbreak of formatting wars, but I doubt it. And absent that, I think there would be no possibility of persuading the community to take on the massive task of building in the necessary markup, just for a 'nice to have' feature. There are plenty more productive ways to spend our time. ] (]) 12:51, 3 April 2009 (UTC)


{{See also|User talk:Ryan Postlethwaite#Article list}}
I'm not asking to preserve markup anymore &mdash; that's the compromise part. '''Go ahead and de-link.''' My offer even still stands from long ago (remember the date formatting wikiproject?) to generate work lists from analysis of the wikipedia dumpfiles to help in fixing articles with the worst mismatch of date formats. All I'm asking in return is that nobody try to derail/naysay/heckle or otherwise interfere in a non-constructive way (enforced by ArbCom) with the development of some replacement software, which will be put to a ''final'' RfC whenever it's ready. In the meantime, the ''existing'' date autoformatting software is disabled by a change in the site's config file (takes effect basically instantly, across the entire site) and then de-linking and format fixing can proceed however it's decided upon. --] (]) 04:39, 4 April 2009 (UTC)
Apologies for the misuse of the {{tl|seealso}} template, but I think it's important to keep discussion as centralised as possible, or at least have links to where discussion has taken place.


I see that Ryan is suggesting that removal of date links should not be done by bot. I'd like to disagree with that opinion and give the reasons:
:(ec) Oh sorry, I just realized you were probably alluding to the work needed to ''re-''link (or otherwise mark up) dates, if some new software were to be used. It has been pointed out to me that there really aren't many cases where a bot would fail, and correcting its errors would be simple for human editors ("is this inside a quotation, or not?" will people really disagree on that?) as opposed to the error rate and need for correction/disputes over which dates should be linked on their own merit. So putting markup back around dates could be done almost entirely by bot. It has also been pointed out to me that de-linking actually adds more useful metadata (in virtue of the ''more relevant'' date links that are left behind) than it destroys (by failing to distinguish between less important dates and quotations of dates) so de-linking isn't as bad as I thought, even if I hope to eventually re-mark-up the dates anyway (but at that point, preserving the new information about which ones are more and less relevant.) --] (]) 04:58, 4 April 2009 (UTC)
# In my humble estimation, there are millions of links within articles leading to date articles which are not germane to the subject and offer no value to the reader of the article. I submit that the community has clearly made its wishes known and that those links should be removed;
# In my humble estimation, there are no more than a handful of links within articles leading to date articles which are germane to the subject. So few, in fact, that they could be easily enumerated.
If I am correct, then a list of articles containing useful date links would be simple to compile. This could then be used as an exclusion list for any bot tasked with delinking dates. The "thought need to go into each and every one to decide whether that is important" (actually ''relevant'' is the correct adjective) would then all be done prior to a bot run. Manually delinking millions of dates is a complete waste of editors' time, when a bot could accomplish the identical task far more accurately and rapidly. The other advantage of making a page which lists exceptions is that the arguments about whether the articles ] or ] are relevant to the article ], etc. could be kept in one place and out of the article itself.


As I believe I'm right about the paucity of relevant links to date articles, I'll start by nominating an article that I believe contains a germane date link. If I'm wrong, then other editors should be able to list far more examples. I don't believe that can happen.
*How can it be a compromise if more than half the voting public don't want it??? It is not how consensus works. What you are offering 'in exchange' for the "compromise" is the ability to delink. Well, it's mighty kind of you, but I think we have that already if you fail to achieve consensus for this principle - and I really don't see a cat in hell's chance of that now with the share of vote of the supporters hovers just below 40%) the community is getting a raw deal if the opposers stand aside and let the techies run riot; that would be irrresponsible of us knowing it will be another big mistake. The writing is already on the wall: well over half the voting members of the community do not want it. ] (]) 04:54, 4 April 2009 (UTC)
* Article ] contains a relevant link to date article ]
--] (]) 23:59, 23 April 2009 (UTC)


:*I agree that bots should be used, and that an exclusion list might be a solution; but remember that an article could have a relevant date link as well as irrelevant date links. I'd have to be honest and say that I don't believe the link to 2000 is relevant in the MM article. Someone might be interested to find out that MM and 2000 can be synonymous, but why that means they would be interested in finding out what else happened in 2000 is beyond me. ] 00:31, 24 April 2009 (UTC)
=="Option 0"==
::*Well, MM is a disambig. page, whose function is supposed to point readers to different articles; if you think the reader wouldn't be interested in the contents of ] there shouldn't be any entry about it on the page; --<span style="font-family: monospace; font-weight: 600; color: #00F; background-color: #FFF;">]</span> (formerly Army1987)<small>&nbsp;—&nbsp;''],&nbsp;not&nbsp;]''.</small> 01:24, 24 April 2009 (UTC)
I'm moving this from the main page to here, as no discussion took place before this was added to the RfC. Should this be added or not? ] (]) 19:23, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
:::*I understand the point you are making, however I still feel it is okay to associate MM with 2000, but without necessarily linking to 2000. For example, a reader might plug "MM" into WP and say "ah, so it means 2000 does it". Note that there are other entries on that page that have no link, e.g. "Missing Men, a Sky Sports game" (although that might be because no one has created the page yet). ] 01:58, 24 April 2009 (UTC)
<blockquote>
::::The purpose of a dab page is to direct readers to articles. From ]: "Each bulleted entry should, in almost every case, have exactly one navigable (blue) link". Anyone searching for "MM" (for example, if they saw it at the end of a film) ought to be able to reach ] from that dab page. Annoyingly, they ought to be able to reach ] as well, but can't! Frankly, I'd either remove "Missing Men, a Sky Sports game" or red-link it, then remove it if nobody creates it after a short time (and that's being generous). --] (]) 13:43, 24 April 2009 (UTC) On second thoughts, I've red-linked it myself. Please feel free to delete the entry if I forget. --] (]) 13:56, 24 April 2009 (UTC)
=====I support Option #0 (don't link years)=====


*Can we all be very careful to specify whether we mean full (three-part) dates or date ''fragments'' (month-day items and years)? I can see confusion creeping in here. First, the proposal ''was'' that a Lightbot remove the square brackets around only ''full'' dates (February 5, 1972). These full items are what we normally think of as date autformatting. Although it's true that month-day links (July 19) are by default autoformatted because of the unfortunate piggybacking of DA on top of wikilinking, these two-component dates were never part of the proposal for mass treatment by Lightmouse (see his talk page). The reason is that Option #1 in the month-day question (Q2) of the RFC left open the rare possibility that a month-day item might indeed meet the relevance test for linking to its month-day article. Solitary year links, the subject of Q3, were excluded from the Lightbot proposal for the same reason. The proposal deliberately avoided the administrative and political issue of mass bot removal of these items because the community has endorsed a relevance test, albeit a very tight one. On the contrary, three-item full dates are not subject to a relevance test, and this was never at issue in Q1 of the RFC. ] ] 12:41, 24 April 2009 (UTC)
#'''Support''' - I prefer not linking year numbers at all. If you want to link the year, then do a proper link that more clearly says what it is linking. --] (]) 18:55, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
: I take your point, Tony, but please consider this: a full (three-part) date not only autoformats, but produces links, because of the crazy system we have at present. Any of the date-delinking objectors could claim that the original editor intended not only to autoformat, but also to produce one or two links. They then have a perfect excuse to object to using a bot to remove the markup around full dates, "since the bot cannot determine the original intention and may be removing a relevant link". It is far better to sideline these objections before a bot run. I am sure that a bot will eventually have be used to remove the massive amount of useless date links, both of the full- and fragment- variety. For that reason, I feel we need a solution that is applicable to both varieties, although I can see sense in proceeding carefully. --] (]) 13:43, 24 April 2009 (UTC)
#'''Support''' - I was disappointed that the date linking poll didn't have this obvious option as an option. ] (]) 19:00, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
:: Why are we still acting as if autoformatting has support for remaining? The poll went clearly against it. The best action is probably to remove the misguided javascript that does autoformatting. ] (]) 23:25, 27 April 2009 (UTC)


</blockquote>


==What does this solve?==
===Discussion===
Although I mostly agree with the sentiment, I feel it is too late to add any more options at this point (after so many editors have already registered their opinions). I encourage people who feel this way to use comments. ] (]) 19:23, 1 April 2009 (UTC)


Does this result actually solve anything or make edit warring any less likely? surely we will now get into arguments over what 'germane to the subject' actually means in practice. It could be argued that year links are in some cases by definition germane to the subject if they add historical context to a subject of international politics say. ] <sup>]</sup> 23:15, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
:You first changed my vote to another option. Then when I reverted that you deleted my vote. That is you doing vote fraud and vote censoring.
:Well, it sorted out the autoformatting issue. The rest can percolate through at whatever speed. ] (]) 00:20, 28 April 2009 (UTC)
:Had you just moved my vote down to the comment section, then at least it wouldn't have been a clear case of vote fraud.
:--] (]) 19:57, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
::Please calm down, and note that I left a message on your talk page explaining the situation and pointing you towards this section, where I had copied and pasted your new section in full. ] (]) 20:00, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
:This should be removed asap - it can go in the comments section if needs be. I'm on my iPod now so I can't deal with it.--''']<sup>See ] or ]</sup>''' 20:05, 1 April 2009 (UTC)


== Cleanup up poorly formatted dates ==
:* I contacted David on his talk page and suggested how he can get his point across more effectively by working within the structure of the RfC. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 20:25, 1 April 2009 (UTC)
*It is customary for approval polls to add new options; when evaluating the new option, its late appearance can be taken into consideration. Since a belligerent minority supports Option 1 as a form of Option 0, and another section of opinion supports Option 1 because it is ''not'' option 0 adding it should help to clarify the real situation. ] <small>]</small> 04:05, 2 April 2009 (UTC)


Please see a discussion at ]. -- ] (]) 06:05, 25 May 2009 (UTC)
:* Yeah, I understand the point, PMAnderson. But can you imagine the chaos when new options that weren’t available at the start of an RfC are introduced piecemeal midway through? Throwing out new options in RfCs is better suited for the '''first''' RfC to address a new issue; it’s not a good fit at this late stage, where we are on our ''fourth'' RfC and have a ''well discussed'' understanding of the implications of all the nuances.<p>If a user wants to add a comment into the ''comments'' section saying they think there should be an “Option&nbsp;0” for no links at all, or an Option&nbsp;ΘβΔ” for some other whiz bang idea, that is ''still'' input that can be considered when trying to determine the nature of the community consensus on the matter. But the ''numbers'' of votes means a lot too in RfCs and it is probably wiser—if an editor wants to have the maximum voice in the outcome—to vote for the option that ''best'' represents their views and explain precisely what they really desire in their vote comment.<p>It’s also a bit more, uhm… ''*humble*'' of an approach, since it doesn’t assume that the editor is throwing out something new that hadn’t been considered and discarded for a good reason. We had discussed this option but previous RfCs made it clear that the overwhelming number of Wikipedians felt that linking dates was appropriate in some circumstances. So there was no point in throwing out a space-filling option that we knew didn’t have a snowball’s chance in hell of winning. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 04:45, 2 April 2009 (UTC)<p>'''P.S.''' We could also have an option for “Negative 1: Don’t link ''any'' dates; and those editors who agitated to keep on linking the crap out of them should be given an eye{{nbhyph}}bulging Misplaced Pages wedgie.” I bet that would have received 20+ votes. But it wouldn’t have won so there is no point siphoning votes off options that have a prayer of becoming the community consensus. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 05:11, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
::*Minus 1 is redundant, unless someone manages to support 0:Never link month-day, and 0:Never link years, without supporting ''Don't link any dates''. Possible, I suppose, but not likely.
::*''An overwhelming number of Wikipedians felt that linking dates was appropriate in some circumstances.'' Thank you; I shall quote you on that.
::*That the present !votes for Option 1 contain 20 votes for Option 0, (and a comparable number that would personally prefer #4 but think it bad strategy) would be very interesting. ] <small>]</small> 05:29, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
:::* You can also quote me on this one: “…previous RfCs made it clear that the overwhelming number of Wikipedians felt that linking dates was appropriate in some circumstances.” This RfC has added greater specificity as to what “some” means. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 15:42, 2 April 2009 (UTC)


== Date unlinking bot proposal ==
:::**Not much specificity, even on the question of birthdates. As llwyrch comments, much of the support for #1 is likely to assume that birth and death dates are relevant; for such people, #1 is equivalent to #2 but with less verbiage. ] <small>]</small> 19:29, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
:::::* Wikilawyering. There will always be editors who stand with pouted lower lip and their arms folded across their chest and say “I think the guideline leaves wiggle room to link day-month in the birthdate of the asshole who invented trivia” or some such nonsense. I’m not even ''thinking'' of trying to argue with them. Never try to teach a pig to sing; it only wastes your time and annoys the pig.<p>The wording for Month-Day Option&nbsp;#1 says this: {{xt|Month-day articles (February 24 and 10 July) should not be linked unless their content is germane and topical to the subject. Such links should share an important connection with that subject other than that the events occurred on the same date}}. Moreover, year linking Option&nbsp;#1 has similar verbiage: {{xt|Year articles (1795, 1955, 2007) should not be linked unless they contain information that is germane and topical to the subject matter}}.<p>Together, they are infinitely clear for Wikipedians in the middle of the bell curve (and your ordinary, 50th-percentile 6th-grader). And notwithstanding your protestations that you are utterly confused about what both Option&nbsp;#1s portend for linking birth dates, I know you really aren’t so confused. So stop with your pre-verdict posturing (accomplished via proxy by citing other editors) about how the '''''crushing''''' support for both Option&nbsp;#1s is *actually* a validation by the community allowing you to link birth dates and all the other horsecrap you’ve wanted to link all along. No, it doesn’t. And to suggest as much sounds like just the sort of argument from another editor I’m familiar with; it doesn’t impress. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 21:19, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
:::::*Remember that this is only ''Phase 1'' of the poll, we can always address "relevance" in the next phase. ] (]) 12:40, 3 April 2009 (UTC)
::::::*The difficulty is this poll doesn't really address any of the questions of importance (except perhaps ''which'' ambiguous language is to be inserted in the worthless MOSNUM; I don't care what it says, only whether it is used to harass other editors). It doesn't decide whether date links are to be treated like other links, which is the question really being disputed; it doesn't decide whether there is consent for bottery, since bots cannot decide whether a sentence is ''germane'', ''topical'', or ''relevant''.] <small>]</small> 00:53, 3 April 2009 (UTC)
:::::::* Quoting you: {{xt|The difficulty is this poll doesn't really address any of the questions of importance}}: Well, silly us. <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 01:16, 3 April 2009 (UTC)
::::::::*I don't ''fully'' agree with PMAnderson's statement, although any of the options (including option #2, for which I can take primary credit/blame; remember I started drafting it less than 2 weeks before the vote), without further guidance, ''could'' be used to harass editors who do not agree with your interpretation. — ] ] 02:56, 3 April 2009 (UTC)
::::::::*However, a large number of votes for option #1 state "link only to relevant dates", or some similar verbiage, which may suggest that they didn't actually read the option. — ] ] 02:59, 3 April 2009 (UTC)
:::::::::* Americans voted for Bush… ''twice.'' That would suggest they weren’t listening to the debates. But we respect the vote—even if their reasoning is “I voted for the dude who wouldn’t look funny with a six-shooter on his hip.” <span style="white-space:nowrap;">''']''' (])</span> 05:50, 3 April 2009 (UTC)
:::::::::* Arthur, I already asked PMAnderson the same question and so far he hasn't replied: Can you give an example of a ''relevant'' link that would be forbidden by option 1? People like me have voted for option 1 exactly because it is option 4 ''plus'' a clarification that linking the year of death of an obscure Albanian writer was previously considered right not because it's a relevant link (it's obviously not) but because there was an ''exception'' for such links which is no longer in effect. --] (]) 11:19, 3 April 2009 (UTC)
It's not a vote. The categories are to help with interpreting the results of the ''opinion poll'', nothing more. If people place themselves in one category, but give reasons more relevant to a different category, it's perfectly valid to question what they really meant. It's more like the invalid ballots in Florida when people voted for more than one candidate &mdash; and those ended up being thrown out entirely. Since the total count isn't really the point, just determining if there's an obvious consensus view, then there's no reason to "throw out" anyone's comments, but they do need to be considered more carefully. I honestly haven't paid much attention to the linking part of the dates debate, but I'd think we'd need some kind of more flexible policy to let regular editors decide on (''somewhat of'') an article-by-article basis which dates were "relevant" enough to warrant links. Too strict and black-and-white a policy is just going to invite arguments. I guess I'll actually go and look over the options, so I have a more informed opinion here on some of the specifics, then maybe I'll comment further. --] (]) 06:05, 3 April 2009 (UTC)


The community RFC about a proposal for a bot to unlink dates is now open. Please see ''']''' and comment ]. --] (]) 10:37, 22 June 2009 (UTC)
:i'm not sure "it's perfectly valid to question what they really meant". some of the comments sound strange to me too, but being gifted at summing up all one's reasoning in succinct unambiguous statements is not a prerequisite for !voting in the poll. !voters are entitled to assume that when they've chosen "i support Option X" it's clear enough that they support Option X. ] (]) 06:56, 3 April 2009 (UTC)
::That is '''not''' reasonable, if they give a justification which supports option W or Z, but not X. If they give no justification, and the subtitles are clearly misleading (as they are in this case), I'm just not sure. — ] ] 00:22, 4 April 2009 (UTC)
:::Bear in mind also, that people may express their opinion that seems contradictory, if that's the only way to express their opinon within the (bogus) constraints of the poll structure itself. That's what I did - and my opinion is intended to convey support for two options even in the face of any rule forbidding support for two options. Reading it otherwise, as support for only one of the two, is a misinterpretation. Likewise, ignoring part of some other voter's opinion in order to better pigeonhole it is probably also a misinterpretation. <span style="white-space:nowrap">— ] (])</span> 04:05, 4 April 2009 (UTC)


== Protected edit request on 8 June 2022 - Deprecated source tags ==
I just gave my opinion, and I agree that the choices are a bit confusing. I don't think it matters much though, because I think the clear (and in the first case ''overwhelming'') majority is against almost ''any'' date linking. I like date links, but I don't think of them like regular links, and don't think they are usually "relevant" to the topic in the same way that normal topic links are. I think they're a different kind of tool, equally useful, but different nonetheless. I don't think people should be ''forced'' to see those kinds of date links, if they don't find them useful. I'd rather see us distinguish between dates that are linked by ''default'' and those that aren't, with users being able to override those defaults via preferences &mdash; but I still think the default should be pretty conservative. Then we'd have ''even better'' metadata, with the ability to distinguish between dates that are just dates, and those that are also more specifically relevant ''in their capacity as a date'' to the topic of the article (like with Christmas and 25 December, for example &mdash; or a person's birthday, in my opinion.) People that wanted more date links could have more date links, etc. You know the routine. I like the software solution. But I think on the linking issue, the outcome is pretty clearly on the side of fewer date links. So I say delink most of them using bots and/or scripts, then let people add back ones they think are important &mdash; and don't be too concerned about challenging people on that, at least right away. --] (]) 06:29, 3 April 2009 (UTC)


{{edit fully-protected|Misplaced Pages:Date formatting and linking poll/Month-day responses|answered=yes}}
Back to discussing "Option 0". Comment: why would we want to forbid a link from the article ] to the article ]? The latter article clearly helps and expands an understanding of the 1340s. What would David Göthberg think was a "proper link that more clearly says what it is linking" in this case? --] (]) 22:27, 3 April 2009 (UTC)
Could all the <code><nowiki><source></nowiki></code> tags please be replaced with <code><nowiki><syntaxhighlight></nowiki></code> tags per ]? ] <sub>(])</sub> 17:57, 8 June 2022 (UTC)
:{{not done}} however, I've unprotected this old page; that being said I don't see any of that tag in the text - so check carefully. — ] <sup>]</sup> 13:25, 9 June 2022 (UTC)
::{{ping|xaosflux}} Unfortunately, you unprotected the ''wrong'' page. The issue is on a subpage of this page (See the precise edit request location), and that page is still protected, so I can't fix the issue. ] <sub>(])</sub> 14:29, 9 June 2022 (UTC)
:::{{re|Aidan9382}} unprotected that one too now - go for it! — ] <sup>]</sup> 14:37, 9 June 2022 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 18:48, 3 March 2023

Peace dove with olive branch in its beakPlease stay calm and civil while commenting or presenting evidence, and do not make personal attacks. Be patient when approaching solutions to any issues. If consensus is not reached, other solutions exist to draw attention and ensure that more editors mediate or comment on the dispute.

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Bug filed

With a great deal of thanks to MZMcBride, I finally managed to get disabling DynamicDates (setting $wgUseDynamicDates = false in LocalSettings.php) tested on a private wiki. The results are good - autoformatting of article text is disabled, whilst date preferences in article histories/logs are left intact. I've therefore gone and filed a bug here to make the change. Please keep discussion here, so to avoid filling the bug request up with threaded discussion and I'll link from the bug to here. Ryan Postlethwaite 22:19, 15 April 2009 (UTC)

  • With regard to turning off DynamicDates: I sure hope you know what you’re doing, Ryan. I’ve only got about two hours where I think I understand some of the ramifications. Anyway… What about date de-linking?? The community consensus on that issue couldn’t be clearer. With millions of linked dates, only a bot can handle it. What’s the plan? Greg L (talk) 23:18, 15 April 2009 (UTC)
  • Indeed, I'll get to that in the morning - That's going to be part two of the discussion as the autoformatting is close to being resolved. I'm about to go to bed, so it'll give me time to think. Hope that's ok. Ryan Postlethwaite 23:20, 15 April 2009 (UTC)

(outdent). Well, from Bill Clark’s reaction on the Bugzilla, he has a firm grasp of the risks. He sounds to be someone with wherewithal, as he will be gathering statistics on just how many of the above junk-style formats will be junked with this move. I especially liked his quick grasp of the big picture at the end: I expect to have that list ready later tonight, at which point a decision could be made to either fix those pages before disabling DynamicDates, or that the problem isn't widespread enough to be concerned with (since bots will be starting delinking of ALL lesser-relevant dates soon anyway. Sweet. Greg L (talk) 23:58, 15 April 2009 (UTC)

Tcncv's table

Below is what I believe may be a fair demonstration of the before and after effect of setting $wgUseDynamicDates = false on both well and poorly formatted dates. Many of these examples are contrived and some look just as bad either way. Best viewed with date preferences set to none. Feel free to add examples if needed.
Code Recognized Before After
]] Green tickY 15 April2009 15 April2009
] ] Green tickY 15 April 2009 15 April 2009
],] Green tickY 15 April,2009 15 April,2009
], ] Green tickY 15 April, 2009 15 April, 2009
]] Green tickY April 152009 April 152009
] ] Green tickY April 15 2009 April 15 2009
],] Green tickY April 15,2009 April 15,2009
], ] Green tickY April 15, 2009 April 15, 2009
] Green tickY 2009-04-15 2009-04-15
]-] Green tickY 2009-04-15 2009-04-15
]] Red XN 200904-15 200904-15
] ] Red XN 2009 04-15 2009 04-15
] - ] Red XN 2009 - 04-15 2009 - 04-15
]] Green tickY 2009April 15 2009April 15
] ] Green tickY 2009 April 15 2009 April 15
],] Green tickY 2009,April 15 2009,April 15
], ] Green tickY 2009, April 15 2009, April 15
] , ] Green tickY 2009 , 15 April 2009 , 15 April
] Green tickY 15 April 15 April
] Green tickY April 15 April 15
] ,] Green tickY 15 April ,2009 15 April ,2009
] , ] Green tickY 15 April , 2009 15 April , 2009
]··] Green tickY 15 April 2009 15 April 2009
]··,··] Green tickY 15 April , 2009 15 April , 2009
],,] Green tickYRed XN† 15 April,,2009 15 April,,2009
]&nbsp;] Green tickYRed XN† 15 April 2009 15 April 2009
],&nbsp;] Green tickYRed XN† 15 April2009 15 April2009

Recognized indicates whether or not the coded format is currently recognized and is reformatted.
Before shows the current presentation and is dependent on your date preferences.
After shows the expected presentation when $wgUseDynamicDates = false.
†For these cases, the Day-month part is recognized, but is formatted separately from year.

(I suspect LightMouse can script a fix for these cases in next to no time.) -- Tcncv (talk) 00:51, 16 April 2009 (UTC)

…and back to our regularly scheduled programming

  • Thank you very much for you list, Tcncv: Items #1, 3, 5, and 7 appear to me that they should be rather common on Misplaced Pages. We will have to await Bill Clark’s statistics to be sure just how common they are. I will certainly have a difficult time understanding the rush to turn off DynamicDates if instances of those four types prove as common as I suspect they might be.

    It would make much more sense to leave DynamicDates alone until after bots have deleted unnecessary links. Then we will have the opportunity of having a bot go through and revise the syntax on these. Changing, for instance, ]] to ] ] would be trivial for a bot, and it could do so fast. Then we can turn off DynamicDates. I’m an engineer. This conservative, stepped approach is least disruptive to our I.P. users and is how things would be handled in "the real world" of engineering. Greg L (talk) 01:15, 16 April 2009 (UTC)

  • Well, I now understand why DD wasn't turned off back in December after the two marathin RfCs. It's also good to know that UC Bill (Bill Clark) hasn't bailed out on us totally. Based on current knowledge, I would still be inclined to support swithing off DD immediately. Unfortunately, the only person who is able to tell us in detail how Lightbot works, cannot.

    In my travels, I have found that formatting errors are rife throughout WP. I already see many of those abominations because I have my preferences disabled. While there are a majority of correctly formatted dates, there is a significant incidence of errors which Lightmouse's scripts work to address. However, Lightbot nor the scripts touch any ISO date formats, nor any of the more weird and wonder permutations such as the ambiguous "12/12/06" and "12-12-06" which also exist across WP. The function was disabled because, I believe, there were a significant number of false positives - most frequently with web links and image names. This may be a significant challenge because the vast majority of references/footnotes I have come across use the ISO format in part or in full. Although MOSNUM guides us to use a uniform date format within the body of an article, the issue of harmonising date links to include footnotes may still need to be discussed. It seems that switching off DD would lead to some red-linked ISO dates, which some editors may be inclined to fix rather than simply remove. Incidentally, I use the code written by Lightmouse in my own script, and need to review all the changes to weed out those false positives.

    Another issue which isn't addressed by Lightbot is the inconsistent date formats. It is a bot, and as such is unable to determine the rule as to whether dmy or mdy should apply. However, the monobook scripts perform that function under human supervision/discretion, and can be applied to categories in semi-automated mode in conjunction with AWB. I think there may still be false negatives when running the script, but false positives are now few and far between because the script has been continuously revised following error reports from users. Ohconfucius (talk) 02:04, 16 April 2009 (UTC)

  • I added a few more examples above. It appears that the current date formatting process handles any number of spaces and at most one comma between the day-month and year parts, replacing whatever it finds with a single space or comma-space combination, depending on selected format. --Tcncv (talk) 02:39, 16 April 2009 (UTC)

(outdent) Wait a minute. Quoting you, Ohconfucius: It's also good to know that UC Bill (Bill Clark) hasn't bailed out on us totally. Do I understand this correctly? If Bill Clark, the individual who responded to Ryan’s Bugzilla 18479 and pledged to come back soon with more statistics, is, in turn, UC Bill, who is a the puppetmaster of Sapphic, who is under an indefinite block, then it appears we are in a rather awkward working relationship with Bill Clark, who is UC Bill, who is now also blocked for other sockpuppetry violations, particularly a threat using an account known Wclark xoom. Misplaced Pages is one odd place. And I’ve worked in odd places before. I don’t think I would ever want to be an admin. Greg L (talk) 06:37, 16 April 2009 (UTC)


  • Confirmed. We will need luck and a large amount of goodwill on Sapphic’s part to obtain date syntax statistics from “Bill Clark.” The Wclark_xoom account that was blocked as a sockpuppet of Sapphic/UC Bill is the e‑mail address (wclark@xoom.org) of the “Bill Clark” upon whom we are/were waiting upon for statistics in Ryan’s Bugzilla #18479. XOOM (from the account Wclark_xoom and from wclark@xoom.org) is a web‑hosting service and Sapphic made a series of edits to that article. I believe the truest identity of this individual is female—the one that does yoga and pilates—and is best described by the profile that used to be on the userpage of “Sapphic” (aka Bill Clark, UC Bill, I.P. User:169.229.149.174, Wclark_xoom, and the e-mail wclark@xoom.org).

    I would be mildly surprised if Sapphic provides us further statistics on Ryan’s bugzilla given the latest events (a series of permanent or indefinite bans). Do we have someone else who can step up to the plate and provide statistical information as to whether problematical date syntaxes shown in Tcncv’s above table are rare or common?

    Or can we use the ol’ *grin test* and intuition to advance an assessment as to whether or not it would be a wise thing to first (maybe ever) shut DynamicDates down? I should think that the date syntax that generates April 152009 ought to be extraordinarily common. I can see no reason at all to cause so many dates to break. I, frankly, am quite skeptical that it would be a good thing to turn off DynamicDates before a bot can first clean this up (even though doing so anyway might be emotionally appealing at some levels).

    Frankly, I’m not catching on with how turning off DynamicDates can be all that appealing; doing so doesn’t get rid of any of the links (other than to turn a few of the blue ones into broken red ones), it just makes many of the dates look incorrectly written, and still others to become essentially unreadable. Come on guys. Lose (most of the links), and keep the blue-linked dates that remain looking half-way nice until there is a sensible plan here. Baby steps. You don’t cut off your nose to spite your face. Greg L (talk) 15:14, 16 April 2009 (UTC)

!! <rest pre-emptively self-censored>--Goodmorningworld (talk) 08:32, 17 April 2009 (UTC)

An important point

The majority of people don't have date preferences set. We're worrying what will happen to the people that have date preferences set, well we should thing of what's happening right now. If a date is linked as 2009-04-15, then the majority of users see a red link - it's already broken and will stay broken if dynamic dates are turned off. These dates need to be fixed regardless of what happens to dynamic dates and it shouldn't effect our thinking at all here. Ryan Postlethwaite 18:58, 16 April 2009 (UTC)

that's apparently not quite right, Ryan Postlethwaite - according to the discussion above Dynamic Dates masks certain errors - like your example - even for people who don't have preferences set. i don't have preferences set, and i see your example as a healthy blue link; some of the charts above show what i'll see when DD is turned off. a bot can start spotting and fixing those errors even before DD is turned off, and GregL is right that that should start ASAP. (but for me that doesn't mean there's a reason to postpone turning off DD - both things should happen.) Sssoul (talk) 19:20, 16 April 2009 (UTC) Sssoul (talk) 19:20, 16 April 2009 (UTC)
  • OK, Sssoul. I see you are pretty much on my side here. Thanks. But I would love to see some explanation from you justifying how turning off DynamicDates right now could possibly be a good thing for our I.P. users and Misplaced Pages. Doing so would obviously generate a bunch of undecipherable and poor-looking dates while bots scramble to clean up the mess. Do you have reasoning that wouldn’t fall under the heading of “I would have a mind‑numbing orgasm when DynamicDates is shut off”?? Greg L (talk) 20:07, 16 April 2009 (UTC)
smile: okay, i'll try. if DD is kept on, diehards will keep marking up dates just to see them autoformatted; and pages where there are some linked dates and some unlinked dates will look inconsistent to some users (those who have their preferences set to a different format than the fixed-text dates for a given page). meanwhile, you predict that a whole lotta "ungodly ugliness" will be revealed when DD is turned off, but i don't expect it to be too dire. and i trust that the enlisted bots will clean up any ugliness really quickly, and will be given thanks & praises, which they'll enjoy. 8)
in short, as noted above: sure, let the bots start cleaning up faulty formats without waiting for DD to be turned off, but let's not delay turning off DD either. Sssoul (talk) 21:09, 16 April 2009 (UTC)
  • Hmm. Then what do you think of this, Sssoul: What if the decision was to get a bot quickly going (within, say, a week from now), that swept through Misplaced Pages and did cleanup like this:
  1. ]]], ]
  2. ],]], ]
Without these fixes, the above two syntaxes will render as April 152009 and April 15,2009 respectively once DynamicDates is turned off. The bot would do the sweep, with the objective that DynamicDates is to be turned off in the next month. I take note of your …diehards will keep marking up dates just to see them autoformatted-concern. We can change the advise here on MOSNUM to advise that support for autoformatting will soon be turned off and dependencies orphaned.
The two key distinctions of this is we would 1) Do some cleanup first so we aren’t scrambling to fix stuff the world can see, and 2) Before even doing so, a formal statement goes onto MOSNUM formally declaring the impending inactivation of DynamicDates and the resultant orphaning of autoformatting. What do you think of this? Greg L (talk) 23:07, 16 April 2009 (UTC)
GregL, that sounds way more reasonable than keeping DD on indefinitely. i'm still not that bothered by the idea of the world seeing some of the typos that DD has been masking, and then seeing (and assisting the bots with) some of the clean-up, but yes, that sequence of events you've outlined above sounds sensible.
i also understand Tcncv's reasoning below about commissioning a separate bot to do just the date-typo-fixing - but i do want to know where delinking fits into the proposed sequence of events. commissioning a separate typo-fixing bot wouldn't collide with lifting the temporary injunction against delinking, would it? obviously bots are needed for these tasks but people can assist in the meantime, using Lightmouse's script to correct errors and delink. Sssoul (talk) 06:09, 17 April 2009 (UTC)
  • Indeed, you aren’t understanding the technical issues correctly, Ryan. Please examine Tcncv's table, above. I don’t give a dump either about what registered editors, (those who have their date preferences set to something other than “No preference”) see or don’t see. In the above table, the Before column shows what regular I.P. users see now. The After column shows what all I.P. users would see if we turned DynamicDates off. Everyone (I.P. users and the privileged elite) would see a bunch of crap in many cases. We don’t want to do that. It is not a viable solution because there are many instances on Misplaced Pages of syntaxes coded in ways that would become April 152009 and 15 April2009. Please see my 5:14, 16 April 2009 post above; particularly the last two paragraphs. Turning off DynamicDates is not a solution we can avail ourselves of, at least not early on. Greg L (talk) 19:35, 16 April 2009 (UTC)

    P.S. The red-checkmarked entries in the Before column are ‘what-ifs’, most of which wouldn’t be found on Misplaced Pages because they instantly generate broken red links for all editors. These are for illustrative purposes to show us they were examined to evaluate what DynamicDates is or is not capable of parsing. The point is that the syntax shown in rows 1, 3, 5, and 7 should be very, very common on Misplaced Pages. Even if Lightbot unlinks everything it is supposed to, there will be articles like 1985 that will continue to contain lined dates. Many of the dates in these intrinsically chronological articles have been coded with syntax that will generate the hammered dog shit shown in the After column were we to turn DynamicDates off. Everyone would see that. Greg L (talk) 19:51, 16 April 2009 (UTC)

  • I added footnotes to the table above to clarify the column meanings. Below is my suggestion for fixing the problem dates.
    Proposed date fix up process
    1. Hold off disabling auto-formatting until the majority of the potential poorly formed dates can be cleaned up.
    2. Confirm with someone who knows the software that we have properly identified the cases that need fixing.
    3. Commission a limited scope bot to perform the task of changing the poorly formatted dates into well formatted dates.
        a) The bot would fix the spacing and comma usage to be appropriate for the date style.
        b) The bot would not remove the links. (This can be done later.)
        c) The bot would not change the currently coded the date style (even if inconsistent within the article).
        d) For yyyy-mm-dd style dates, the code would be changed to ]-] to simulate current link behavior.
    4. Get bot approved. The rules defined above should hopefully minimize controversy and potential objections.
    5. Identify and update affected main space pages.
    6. Revisit the request for disabling auto-formatting.
    I believe the limited function bot can get the job done fairly quickly once approved. Also, with the limited functionality should minimize the risk of having undesirable or controversial results, and would also require little operating supervision and intervention (once testing is satisfactorily completed). I expect that even dates in quoted text would not be an issue, because any poorly formatted, linked dates are already being modified by auto-formatting. I suspect the number of pages that need to be fixed will be numerous (1000's?), but not overwhelming.

    One loose item I can think of is templates: Are there any templates that currently emit portly formatted dates? If so, these will need to be fixed manually. Such cases may not be apparent until after the switch, but I would expect their number to be few (if any) and they should be easy fixes.

    Although some might prefer to rush this through, I think a slow methodical approach is better. -- Tcncv (talk) 00:01, 17 April 2009 (UTC)

  • Remember that these ISO dates are deemed acceptable within tables to save space and enable sorting. In these cases, it would make more sense to simply delink the dates altogether, rather than this conversion in step 3 above. Ohconfucius (talk) 08:36, 17 April 2009 (UTC)
  • This proposal makes sense in general. But why hold off delinking? Greg's suggestion that it all be done in one shot seems like a more efficient way forward, bearing in mind just how unpopular the vast majority of date links are... Ohconfucius (talk) 02:49, 17 April 2009 (UTC)
  • Woa. Where did I make such a suggestion? Hold off; don’t start quoting me. If I made such an assertion (that it “all be done in one shot”) it was purely unintentional.

    I strongly, urgently suggest that DynamicDates be left on until bots have A) removed all the overlinking on Misplaced Pages, and B) searched through the remaining dates for code syntax that would read improperly if DynamicDates was turned off. Then we can turn off DynamicDates. There is simply no justification for a rush to set some parameter to “false” (oh, soooo easy) and instantly make hundreds, perhaps thousands of dates look like crap (or worse: become unreadable or have broken links).

    I wholeheartedly agree with Tcncv’s enumerated plan, above. Good job, Tcncv. By design, since his preamble stated he was intending to address only the the challenge of “fixing the problem dates”, the only important step unmentioned is that a bot also needs to get to work removing the excess links and converting them into plaintext. Greg L (talk) 03:45, 17 April 2009 (UTC)

  • I don't know how long it would take to delink 2,800,000 articles, but I assume that it would be quicker to initially concentrate on the poorly formatted dates so that auto-formatting can be turned off sooner. As for not delinking, I am assuming that there are some dates that should remain linked (not that this is well defined at this point or that I have any idea what they might be), so some operator monitoring might be needed in the general delinking process. I also expect that the general delinking process might involve decisions on date formatting consistency in those articles with a mix. My intent was to define limited activities that are pretty much no-brainers with no decision-making needed, so the bot would be pretty much autonomous. The limited activity might also make it easier to review edits to confirm expected results without seeing unrelated activity. But I'm not a bot expert, so I may be seeing imaginary advantages. -- Tcncv (talk) 04:22, 17 April 2009 (UTC)
  • Most of the commonest formatting problems are satisfactorily dealt with by Lightmouse's script, which will also render a uniform date format per article (except ISO). One pass of the script over articles will sort out most of them in a non-piecemeal manner. However, it would involve semi-automated editing would be most efficient. Ohconfucius (talk) 04:58, 17 April 2009 (UTC)
  • You will all be happy to learn that Bill Clark is still working on the data concerning the various incorrect date formats. He should have some statistics tomorrow. Furthermore, he advises: "DynamicDates should NOT be turned off until we at least know how many links will be affected, and maybe not until they've been corrected. " By correction, I presume this must mean 'with or without delinking'. To repeat what I have said earlier, I see the best way is to set our gnoming/AWB editors free to run Lightmouse's monobook script which delinks dates and corrects most of the badly formatted ones; we could set a target of switching off only the relevant part of Dynamic Dates, say, three months after the injunction has been lifted. By then, the incidence of any messy dates should be minimised. Ohconfucius (talk) 09:07, 17 April 2009 (UTC)
Ohconfucius wrote: "I see the best way is to set our gnoming/AWB editors free to run Lightmouse's monobook script which delinks dates and corrects most of the badly formatted ones" - do you mean in addition to commissioning a bot like the one Tcncv has described? letting the script-users go to work makes sense, certainly, but a bot is needed too.
someone above said Lightbot can almost certainly make this kind of typo-correction at the same time as it delinks - has that been confirmed? can someone ask Lightmouse? Sssoul (talk) 09:17, 17 April 2009 (UTC)
  • Of course. While script users can go to work immediately once the injunction is lifted (and apply judgement to whether to use dmy or mdy), bot action is needed as bots work faster and more systematically. I have asked Lightmouse for clarification, and he will no doubt reply on his talk page. Ohconfucius (talk) 09:36, 17 April 2009 (UTC)
thanks for the clarification, and for asking Lightmouse for more detail. i see he's already pointed out that Lightbot isn't currently authorized to delink autoformatted dates - which means either getting the authorization changed or turning off DD before Lightbot resumes its work. Sssoul (talk) 09:46, 17 April 2009 (UTC)

It is time to hear from Lightmouse

Ryan, all:

In trying to figure out the roll of bots in moving forward, we now have a bunch of Wikipedians wandering around in dark caves, curious as to which tunnel to head down to avoid dead ends or pitfalls—and Lightmouse has the torch at the cave’s entrance! Can you address the “naughty naughty—you” stuff in a different venue and time and politely and graciously invite him to this discussion? Misplaced Pages needs his volunteer services and, right now, we could greatly benefit from his expertise and counsel (and his services to Misplaced Pages should he elect to contribute them). Greg L (talk) 14:35, 17 April 2009 (UTC)

Conclusions

When all the dust has settled, could someone please remember to add in a prominent place at the top of the main poll page a summary of the poll's results and any consequent actions taken. Thanks! 86.161.41.37 (talk) 03:50, 18 April 2009 (UTC).

Linked dates statistics

I have created a bunch of new pages, whose directory is here as sub-pages of this discussion. I will rename this and continue using this as the central link when more data are available. So far, the data-extraction of ISO formatted dates indicates that ISO dates are far more commonly linked as ] (some 58,000 articles concerned), whilst the ]-] form appears only in about 2000 articles throughout the various spaces of WP. Data is courtesy of Bill Clark. Ohconfucius (talk) 04:24, 18 April 2009 (UTC)

Thank you both very much. It would also be useful to scan for dates with non-standard space-comma combinations between the parts. These are the ones that look good now, but will show their faults when autoformatting is turned off. I've done quite a bit of testing and it appears that in addition to the yyyy-mm-dd style formats, autoformatting recognizes dates with the following formats:
  • ]...]
  • ]...]
  • ]...]
  • ]...] - A very poor format, but it is recognized.
Where:
  • ... is a combination of zero or more spaces and zero or one comma anywhere in the string (·*(,·*)?). This could be no characters. This could be many spaces with a comma at the beginning, end, or anywhere in the middle.
  • Day is one or two digits (\d{1,2})
  • Month is the case insensitive full month name or three letter abbreviation (Jan(uary)?|Feb(ruary)?|Mar(ch)?|Apr(il)?|May|June?|July?|Aug(ust)?|Sep(tember)?|Oct(ober)?|Nov(ember)?|Dec(ember)?) - (Adapted from Lightmouse's scripts)
  • Year is one to four digits (\d{1,4})
Note that the above are less-that-formal pseudo- regular expressions. They will need to be tailored to whatever tool is used. I used "·" to represent a space. Autoformatting does not appear to recognized other types of whitespace such as tabs or newlines. Three digit days (001), five or more digit years, and alternate month abbreviations such as "Sept" are not recognized. The month-day and day-month part must have exactly one space between day and month. Note that this is the result of testing and reverse-engineering. It would be nice if someone who knows the software could independently confirm these results.
To locate for problem cases (those with other than the expected space-comma combination), I would propose running another scan using search strings similar to the following:
  • ](·*|,|,··+}|·+,·*)] - Excludes the comma + single space case.
  • ](|··+|·*,·*)] - Excludes the single space case.
  • ](|··+|·*,·*)] - Excludes the single space case.
  • ]·*(,·*)?] - All such cases need reformatting.
It would also be useful if Lightmouse could update his scripts to recognize and correct the general spacing variations before they are used for any large-scale delinking. Although I would expect the number poorly formatted dates to be relatively small (compared to the yyyy-mm-dd date counts), I think they still need to be identified and fixed before turning autoformatting off. -- Tcncv (talk) 07:15, 18 April 2009 (UTC)
The doc is at meta:Help:Date formatting and linking. You're essentially right except it also recognizes lowercase months and years BC. --80.104.235.89 (talk) 09:42, 18 April 2009 (UTC)
Got it covered with the case insensitive qualification. I've found that the software also recognizes odd cases such as ]], although the result is typically a red-link like: "ApRiL 1 2009". It also doesn't like months outside the range 01-12, so ]] displays as "2009-13-01" (empty). However, these cases are already broken. My goal here is to identify those cases that display correctly now, but will break when autoformatting is turned off.
If the above appears sufficiently well defined, who should we contact to request another scan? -- Tcncv (talk) 15:26, 18 April 2009 (UTC)

A new batch of processed wikilinks — involving articles with incorrectly formatted mdy dates — have now been posted (see Misplaced Pages:Date formatting and linking poll/List of articles with potential issues post Dynamic Dates). So far, the data-extraction of mdy formatted dates indicates that these dates are far more commonly {incorrectly) formatted as ]<without comma> (some 120,000 articles are concerned). Note that some of the formatting of foreign language titles are incorrect due to char substitution, which I will attempt to remedy. Data is courtesy of Bill Clark.Ohconfucius (talk) 12:47, 19 April 2009 (UTC)

"other brands" of DA

just before the poll opened a new (?) autoformatting template was announced: {{formatdate|dmy}} or something like that. i've also recently become aware of the {{date}} template (it's worth checking out that page for a description). so what happens to those now - will they be deactivated along with Dynamic Dates? Sssoul (talk) 07:12, 18 April 2009 (UTC)

  • Indeed, it seems to involve perhaps 2 thousand article-level transclusions. These templates will indeed be affected as these go against the agreed position. The templates support a wide number of date formats. Ohconfucius (talk) 16:11, 18 April 2009 (UTC)
Wikitext marked up with the {{date}} template is probably there for a reason, such as in an infobox. All of its occurrences ought to be relatively easy for a bot to find. As it outputs text correctly formatted for wikipedia, its formatting is not really a problem. That is, it doesn't autoformat, but outputs a style dictated by the second parameter (e.g. |dmy) - what you might call "fixed formatting". Nevertheless, it is also capable of producing linked dates by using a second parameter like |ldmy or |lmdy. I would again suggest that changing an |ldmy parameter to |dmy would be trivial for a bot, where the linking is to be removed. --RexxS (talk) 21:39, 18 April 2009 (UTC)
but ... 1] where i saw it in use it was in the main body of the article, not an infobox (and the template description specifies that it's for use in articles as well as infoboxes);
2] it looks to me like when the second (optional) parameter isn't set, it does format according to user settings (and when if it's used for "fixed formatting", why not just enter the dates as fixed text??); and 3] it goes right against a view that a whole lot of people expressed in the poll: that date formatting doesn't warrant complicating the mark-up at all. sorry, but it (and the other {{formatdate}} template) seem way too much like potential fodder for months of further strife over whether/how to mark up dates. Sssoul (talk) 06:33, 19 April 2009 (UTC)
When the second parameter isn't set, it uses the day-month-year format. As for "why not just enter the dates as fixed text", I guess it is used for stuff such as {{date|{{{year}}}-{{{month}}}-{{{day}}}|myd}} (doing that without the template would require {{#switch:{{{month}}}|January|February|...}}). --80.104.234.195 (talk) 10:26, 19 April 2009 (UTC)

(outdent) okay, thanks for the correction about it defaulting to dmy - some comments from editors who use the template indicate that they think it formats dates in accordance with user settings, but i guess they're wrong, so i'll strike that misconception from my earlier post. but i don't understand - at all - what you wrote about "stuff such as " . maybe i don't have to understand it, but if it can be explained simply/briefly i'd be interested. thanks Sssoul (talk) 12:02, 19 April 2009 (UTC)

When can we expect results?

I have asked this above in another section and haven't heard back, so perhaps I should ask in a new section. I've never been involved in arbitration before. When can we expect a decision from ArbCom and go back to editing dates (i.e. when will the date editing injunction be lifted)? RainbowOfLight 06:15, 19 April 2009 (UTC)

I have the same question. I did not align with either side but don't see why a portion of the issues that are decided on should continue to block editing. For example it seems to me there is consensus on the common sense position that date links should have no special status- that although we could link every single word in an article we instead eliminate links that readers would most likely would see no reason to click on. It is baffling to me why after 4 months there is still a ban on removing date links that make no sense and there is consensus support for allowing their removal. It seems to me that the consensus position is pretty simple to understand, but surely we could have a single document that spells the rules out crisply and thoroughly, then the link ban could be lifted.
Whether or not we can phase in certain aspects of what has been decided, I echo RainbowofLight's question. Is there any sort of guesstimate on when this arbcom ruling is going to finished with? I have family of date templates whose consideration at MOSNUM is crying out for an RFC but it's pointless to solicit wider input now since the results of the arbcom decision will undoubtedly have dramatic impact the opinions solicited. To remove doubt of the validity regarding any consensus positions reached, I would have to rerun the RFC. From where I stand, everything having to do with dates is in gridlock. I'm a patient guy, but I'd like to have a reading on how much time I should be expecting on resolution of this matter. -J JMesserly (talk) 21:37, 20 April 2009 (UTC)
The problem right now is that auto formatting has not been rejected (at present it's "no consensus"), and delinking dates would also remove the auto formatting (which still has the previously existing consensus until such time as it is rejected). I'm not willing to sacrifice all the marked up dates we have currently, especially if any agreed upon auto formatting system ultimately utilizes the link syntax (which would mean all the effort to delink dates would be for naught). It makes more sense to continue discussion and try to determine what would satisfy people regarding auto formatting. —Locke Coletc 21:57, 20 April 2009 (UTC)
But auto formatting would use that new wikitext thing (sorry, I forget the syntax- that recent mediawiki extension that does what the date links did). So date linking for the purposes of formatting is obsolete and there aren't any scenarios where we would still be using the old date link approach, right? I've not been following this super closely, but I don't see why all editors can't be removing links that make no sense just because they happen to link to a year article with a kajillion inbound links that also make no sense. Either auto formatting is approved or not, you keep the meaningful date links, but the rest of them get the red pen. If that is not fair to some side for some reason, then fine, I'll sit down. I just thought there was agreement from both sides on that much. -J JMesserly (talk) 01:08, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
I think we should leave Locke alone with his rather "unique" interpretation of the consensus. He didn't get it on 25 December 2008, it doesn't look like he's getting it any better on 13 April 2009. Ohconfucius (talk) 02:16, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
I think we should leave Ohconfucius alone with his rather silly ideas regarding "consensus". —Locke Coletc 11:30, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
Ohconfucius and Locke, just carry on hitting each other on the head with your sandbuckets if you’d like to see me propose a page ban for you on ANI. At a minimum, please say something actually witty to each other next time. Bishonen | talk 15:26, 21 April 2009 (UTC).
Trout, anyone? ;-) Ohconfucius (talk) 15:35, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
Bishonen slaps Ohconfucius around a bit with a ginormous shark. Bishonen | talk 15:42, 21 April 2009 (UTC).
The formatdate parser function? People argued that the existing systems syntax was "too complicated" by virtue of it using square brackets (as with normal links). I can only imagine the kind of complaints we'd receive if we forced people to mark dates up using <code>{{#formatdate:November 11, 2001}}</code>... There's been a proposal to simply remove the linking in the software, but for whatever reason this continues to be resisted. It's simpler, doesn't involve the use of bots, and keeps dates auto formatted. (And of course the other issues can be fixed with time, assuming opponents don't try for RFC5 and a half...). —Locke Coletc 11:30, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
Off topic... What's formaldehyde got to do with anything? Ohconfucius (talk) 15:41, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
  • Ohconfucius, yeah, it's an attempt at humour, but please be sensitive to the feelings of people on both sides of this former argument. It is in everyone's interest that the temperature be cooled down. We all need to live with each other productively. Tony (talk) 15:45, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
  • This dispute has raged an absurd length of time due to intransigent wikilawyering. It should receive all the dignity it deserves. Greg L (talk) 15:41, 22 April 2009 (UTC)

Throwing fuel onto the fire - Google Timeline

Google has recently (last few days?) put up a new method of data aggregation, Google Timeline. It combined metadata from several sources to create a at-a-glance timeline for the information and probably will be expanded in the future. Presently it is pulling three streams of data from WP: "Misplaced Pages events", "births" and "deaths".

Unfortunately, I can't find out how they are pulling date data, but the last thing we want to do is limit what they are doing. I realize it is entirely possible they are pulling from unlinked data, but it would be helpful to know if they are in any way taking advantage of date autoformatting or if they're using other means. --MASEM (t) 01:33, 21 April 2009 (UTC)

I agree we are not a back end for google applications, but regarding all these map and now timeline applications, if Misplaced Pages is not the premier destination for their links, we are doing something wrong. Strategically, I think we should feel little threat from them, and ought to regard them as doing valuable R&D for the Foundation. Here's what I mean. In 1994, the commercial publishers were the last word in electronic encyclopedias. Misplaced Pages has left them in the dust. Similarly, long term, it is inevitable that the Foundation will provide free software that supplants Google Earth and these Timeline things. As an engineer, I recognize that these visualization systems are not trivial, but the technology is a relatively stationary target, and ultimately the power of collaborative systems will leave Google Earth and Timelines in the dust. So we should welcome them and see how our material best works with theirs.
As for the specifics of the Google timeline as of the time of this post: They really have not done much work on the data extraction. If you take a look at Year 1865 by Month, you will see that all the graphics for all the battles are the same, and they all link to the same article: American Civil War. Really, they don't need to do much more than code filters for a half dozen infoboxes, and they basically have all they need regardless what we do.
An obvious improvement is to link the time coordinates to location coordinates using google earth. Google Earth now allows the encoding of timespans inside markers, and KML supports them so basically all the other virtual earths will be able to follow suit. Some geewhiz and technical observations here. Some elaboration of time, metadata, and strategic implications for Misplaced Pages as a global knowlegbase for these sorts of applications here (link to entire thread). -J JMesserly (talk) 04:27, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
And just to reinterate, it is inconceivable that Google would use the old square-bracket system to locate dates. It is blindingly easy to automatically locate dates in WP's text without them. Tony (talk) 04:34, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
Completely agree.-J JMesserly (talk) 04:54, 21 April 2009 (UTC)

"Dates" case and temporary injunction: likely timing?

I have made a formal request for information about when we are likely to see movement on these matters. Tony (talk) 09:00, 21 April 2009 (UTC)

Turning date linking off in one fell swoop

In the discussion around the DynamicDates config option, I think we missed something discussed very early on. Someone, and I unfortunately think it was UC Bill (what a sad situation that is, regardless of position) who suggested a one line change to the autoformatting code to turn off date linking within the current version of autoformatting. This would *not* turn off autoformatting, it would just fix the "sea of blue" All without editing one article, let alone millions. Before we unleash the bots, I thought it would be good to at least consider that option for a minute. Personally, I think this is just a first step, but I like the effect it would have of addressing the clear consensus regarding unlinking dates quickly while giving time for the options where there was more balance and which might require more discussion. dm (talk) 11:27, 21 April 2009 (UTC)

As you say, this could be a decent first step. It definitely wouldn't be appropriate as the only solution, as many of us opposed because we don't like the increased complexity for editing. It also assumes that autoformatting will continue, and I don't think there is consensus for that. Karanacs (talk) 15:57, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
... there are two long sections above ("action plan" and "bug filed") discussing that very idea, its repercussions, why it's not that simple, etc. Sssoul (talk) 16:03, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
I believe we're talking about two different things Ssoul. Above is discussion about the Dynamic Dates config line which would disable autoformatting entirely. I'm referring to a patch which would not touch autoformatting per se (which is what all the complication above appears to be about) but merely modify it to not link dates. dm (talk) 02:58, 22 April 2009 (UTC)

(outdent) ah - sorry! you mean the patch that uses linking markup for dates but instead of linking them it autoformats them, apart from serious problems handling punctuation and date ranges? that was thoroughly discussed while the last RfC was being constructed, and even the pro-DA people decided it was not a good idea to propose that route to the community. someone else can i'm sure direct you to that discussion. meanwhile it's very hard to see any justification at all for a "first step" that would entail complicating the editing process simply to prolong the existence of a function that the community doesn't want: that patch would entail eye-glazing instructions for using double square brackets to link/not to link and for punctuating bracketed dates. Sssoul (talk) 04:47, 22 April 2009 (UTC)

  • I think I'll stop trying to explain this now, because clearly what I thought in Good Faith would help move this forward is something that you're prepared to keep arguing will not. At this point, I'm sure we could find arguments against gravity thoroughly discussed in the talk pages of MOSNUM, but I'll let you find those for yourself. dm (talk) 11:09, 22 April 2009 (UTC)
  • This has been the problem all along. Any solution, no matter how intuitive or well reasoned, will be shunned or argued against if it doesn't involve mass delinking of dates via bots. Apparently Lightmouse is the way, the truth and the light, and anything else is... well, clearly not good enough. They've apparently "won" something, and they want their trophy (all dates sans square brackets), even if that doesn't have consensus. —Locke Coletc 13:58, 22 April 2009 (UTC)

That would be a silly kludge which would turn off all autoformatted links, including the ones which do comply with the new WP:LINK#Chronological items guidelines, and wouldn't turn off any non-autoformatted link, including the seventeen occurrence of 2007 (without a day link) in the same section. --A. di M. (formerly Army1987) — Deeds, not words. 17:52, 22 April 2009 (UTC)

I don't know that I'd call it a kludge so much as a stop-gap solution so auto formatting can be salvaged without keeping all the links intact. And from my perspective it's a reasonable compromise considering I want to keep all date links (the effect here is that I lose all the date links, but they can be manually added where appropriate). —Locke Coletc 19:21, 22 April 2009 (UTC)

Article list

See also: User talk:Ryan Postlethwaite § Article list

Apologies for the misuse of the {{seealso}} template, but I think it's important to keep discussion as centralised as possible, or at least have links to where discussion has taken place.

I see that Ryan is suggesting that removal of date links should not be done by bot. I'd like to disagree with that opinion and give the reasons:

  1. In my humble estimation, there are millions of links within articles leading to date articles which are not germane to the subject and offer no value to the reader of the article. I submit that the community has clearly made its wishes known and that those links should be removed;
  2. In my humble estimation, there are no more than a handful of links within articles leading to date articles which are germane to the subject. So few, in fact, that they could be easily enumerated.

If I am correct, then a list of articles containing useful date links would be simple to compile. This could then be used as an exclusion list for any bot tasked with delinking dates. The "thought need to go into each and every one to decide whether that is important" (actually relevant is the correct adjective) would then all be done prior to a bot run. Manually delinking millions of dates is a complete waste of editors' time, when a bot could accomplish the identical task far more accurately and rapidly. The other advantage of making a page which lists exceptions is that the arguments about whether the articles 12 February or 1809 are relevant to the article Charles Darwin, etc. could be kept in one place and out of the article itself.

As I believe I'm right about the paucity of relevant links to date articles, I'll start by nominating an article that I believe contains a germane date link. If I'm wrong, then other editors should be able to list far more examples. I don't believe that can happen.

  • Article MM contains a relevant link to date article 2000

--RexxS (talk) 23:59, 23 April 2009 (UTC)

  • I agree that bots should be used, and that an exclusion list might be a solution; but remember that an article could have a relevant date link as well as irrelevant date links. I'd have to be honest and say that I don't believe the link to 2000 is relevant in the MM article. Someone might be interested to find out that MM and 2000 can be synonymous, but why that means they would be interested in finding out what else happened in 2000 is beyond me.  HWV258  00:31, 24 April 2009 (UTC)
  • Well, MM is a disambig. page, whose function is supposed to point readers to different articles; if you think the reader wouldn't be interested in the contents of 2000 there shouldn't be any entry about it on the page; --A. di M. (formerly Army1987) — Deeds, not words. 01:24, 24 April 2009 (UTC)
  • I understand the point you are making, however I still feel it is okay to associate MM with 2000, but without necessarily linking to 2000. For example, a reader might plug "MM" into WP and say "ah, so it means 2000 does it". Note that there are other entries on that page that have no link, e.g. "Missing Men, a Sky Sports game" (although that might be because no one has created the page yet).  HWV258  01:58, 24 April 2009 (UTC)
The purpose of a dab page is to direct readers to articles. From WP:DAB: "Each bulleted entry should, in almost every case, have exactly one navigable (blue) link". Anyone searching for "MM" (for example, if they saw it at the end of a film) ought to be able to reach 2000 from that dab page. Annoyingly, they ought to be able to reach 2000 in film as well, but can't! Frankly, I'd either remove "Missing Men, a Sky Sports game" or red-link it, then remove it if nobody creates it after a short time (and that's being generous). --RexxS (talk) 13:43, 24 April 2009 (UTC) On second thoughts, I've red-linked it myself. Please feel free to delete the entry if I forget. --RexxS (talk) 13:56, 24 April 2009 (UTC)
  • Can we all be very careful to specify whether we mean full (three-part) dates or date fragments (month-day items and years)? I can see confusion creeping in here. First, the proposal was that a Lightbot remove the square brackets around only full dates (February 5, 1972). These full items are what we normally think of as date autformatting. Although it's true that month-day links (July 19) are by default autoformatted because of the unfortunate piggybacking of DA on top of wikilinking, these two-component dates were never part of the proposal for mass treatment by Lightmouse (see his talk page). The reason is that Option #1 in the month-day question (Q2) of the RFC left open the rare possibility that a month-day item might indeed meet the relevance test for linking to its month-day article. Solitary year links, the subject of Q3, were excluded from the Lightbot proposal for the same reason. The proposal deliberately avoided the administrative and political issue of mass bot removal of these items because the community has endorsed a relevance test, albeit a very tight one. On the contrary, three-item full dates are not subject to a relevance test, and this was never at issue in Q1 of the RFC. Tony (talk) 12:41, 24 April 2009 (UTC)
I take your point, Tony, but please consider this: a full (three-part) date not only autoformats, but produces links, because of the crazy system we have at present. Any of the date-delinking objectors could claim that the original editor intended not only to autoformat, but also to produce one or two links. They then have a perfect excuse to object to using a bot to remove the markup around full dates, "since the bot cannot determine the original intention and may be removing a relevant link". It is far better to sideline these objections before a bot run. I am sure that a bot will eventually have be used to remove the massive amount of useless date links, both of the full- and fragment- variety. For that reason, I feel we need a solution that is applicable to both varieties, although I can see sense in proceeding carefully. --RexxS (talk) 13:43, 24 April 2009 (UTC)
Why are we still acting as if autoformatting has support for remaining? The poll went clearly against it. The best action is probably to remove the misguided javascript that does autoformatting. Shoemaker's Holiday (talk) 23:25, 27 April 2009 (UTC)


What does this solve?

Does this result actually solve anything or make edit warring any less likely? surely we will now get into arguments over what 'germane to the subject' actually means in practice. It could be argued that year links are in some cases by definition germane to the subject if they add historical context to a subject of international politics say. G-Man 23:15, 27 April 2009 (UTC)

Well, it sorted out the autoformatting issue. The rest can percolate through at whatever speed. Shoemaker's Holiday (talk) 00:20, 28 April 2009 (UTC)

Cleanup up poorly formatted dates

Please see a discussion at WT:Manual of Style (dates and numbers)#Cleanup up poorly formatted dates. -- Tcncv (talk) 06:05, 25 May 2009 (UTC)

Date unlinking bot proposal

The community RFC about a proposal for a bot to unlink dates is now open. Please see Misplaced Pages:Full-date unlinking bot and comment here. --Apoc2400 (talk) 10:37, 22 June 2009 (UTC)

Protected edit request on 8 June 2022 - Deprecated source tags

This edit request to Misplaced Pages:Date formatting and linking poll/Month-day responses has been answered. Set the |answered= or |ans= parameter to no to reactivate your request.

Could all the <source> tags please be replaced with <syntaxhighlight> tags per Category:Pages using deprecated source tags? Aidan9382 (talk) 17:57, 8 June 2022 (UTC)

 Not done however, I've unprotected this old page; that being said I don't see any of that tag in the text - so check carefully. — xaosflux 13:25, 9 June 2022 (UTC)
@Xaosflux: Unfortunately, you unprotected the wrong page. The issue is on a subpage of this page (See the precise edit request location), and that page is still protected, so I can't fix the issue. Aidan9382 (talk) 14:29, 9 June 2022 (UTC)
@Aidan9382: unprotected that one too now - go for it! — xaosflux 14:37, 9 June 2022 (UTC)