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*Sorry to bother you again. After the addition of a toggle option in the tab atop the page, one editor requested a revised version in which the toggle link appears in the "Tools" section of the page's left sidebar. So now there are two versions of this tool. If you prefer the links in the Toolbar section on the side, the slightly altered script is named User:Lingzhi2/reviewsourcecheck-sb.js (just add "-sb" before the ".js"). Finally, both versions should now also store the page state (whether reference errors/warnings are "hidden" or "shown"). The state persists between page loads and between the browser closing and reopening (unless cleared by the user, for example by deleting data in your browser's cache etc.). Huge thanks to User:Evad37 for much coding help. If you have any questions or problems, please drop me a line. Thanks again.&nbsp;♦&nbsp;]&nbsp;] 08:26, 5 February 2019 (UTC)


== Sabana Grande, Caracas ==
== Robotic edits of "the fact that" ==


Dear Sir or Madam,
Please don't edit robotically, as you are doing now. Instead, take the time to consider what the best possible phrasing is for each specific circumstance. You are bound to run into trouble if you edit as if one size fits all.


I opened a peer review request. The user did not edit the article, but deleted 110,000 characters. What is the name of that? I contacted the people that previously edited the Sabana Grande (Caracas) article. I rarely edit Misplaced Pages these days because I am very busy with my PhD application and work. I had no time to send personalized messages.
You're also not editing the resulting sentences after removing "the fact that" to make them grammatically correct. Because it will be time consuming to look at every one of your "I shall purge..." edits, I shall now proceed to revert them. You're welcome to make them again when you do so in a thoughtful way, and correct the resulting sentences.


He could have ping me before deleting a whole article, but he deleted it instead. Nevermind.
Also, you don't need to number your edits. If you click on "Contributions" at the top of your Misplaced Pages page, and look at the bottom opf the resulting page, you'll find a link to an "Edit counter", which you can use any time to see how many edits you have made. This number is available in other places as well, such as on the front page of your "Preferences".


] (]) 03:35, 1 March 2018 (UTC) ] (]) 19:09, 13 March 2019 (UTC)


:{{ping|QuinteroP}} Sending messages to 14 different users is generally not appropriate regardless. The article's talk page is the appropriate place to discuss such matters, not many other user's talk pages.
:If you're going to revert them, at least diff them first. I'm not editing them robotically, as you may think, although perhaps I should be more careful. --] (]) 03:41, 1 March 2018 (UTC)
::What do you mean "diff them first"? If you mean look at them, no, I'm not going to do that. I'm going to assume that there are enough errors in the batch (as in the handful that I looked at) to make it worthwhile to roll them back. The ball is now in your court to take mnre care. ] (]) 03:44, 1 March 2018 (UTC)
:::The diff button takes only 5 seconds to click on and review. While some of my edits may have been grammatically dubious (I realize now), many of them ''were'' carefully considered, and taking into account the context, where I spent 2 minutes on them. But by the same token, undoing your edits for the non egregious changes should not take me too long. --] (]) 03:50, 1 March 2018 (UTC)
:::::The way I spend my time is my own concern. I have over 6,000 articles on my watchlist, and I'm working on re-building several articles right now. I don't have the time to hold your hand and babysit you. You should have taken the time yourself, when you made the edits, to see that they were improvements, and not force other editors to spend '''''their''''' time to fix '''''your''''' errors. 06:23, 1 March 2018 (UTC)
::::::I see that you have chosen to continue to edit robotically, changing 18 instances of "due to the fact that" into "because" in 25 minutes. As I look into my crystal ball, I predict that your time on Misplaced Pages will be short, and unhappy. ] (]) 06:25, 1 March 2018 (UTC)
:::::::That's unnecessarily harsh. A few things:
:::::::* ''the way I spend my time is my own concern'': And I respect that. Note the "But by the same token...", where I apply my logic to myself. I was simply hoping for some respect in ''my'' edits (for example, you could have told me that I was creating ungrammatical sentences, given me an example of one, and given me one chance to fix it myself. I would argue mass-reverting for "the greater good" misses a teaching opportunity, but we may diverge slightly in the lessons we think should be learned from this experience, which I will address in another point): but I can understand the mass rollback because I'm not an established editor on this account. I used to have an older account for Misplaced Pages, so I had a memory of being logged as an older user (which doesn't necessarily mean I'm better for it, but at least it establishes a basic experience. I may not look it, but I know quite a bit about editing Misplaced Pages; I often read the guidelines and templates (usually to the detriment of the free time I have to actually edit.))
:::::::* ''chosen to continue to edit robotically, changing 18 instances of "due to the fact that" into "because" in 25 minutes'': I am not editing "robotically", because I am '''not''' doing a simple find-and-replace. I am reading it in the context of the article, and adjusting accordingly. In most cases "due to the fact that" can be substituted with "because". In cases where it cannot, I have either skipped the article, or made more nuanced edits (for example, , , and .) If you feel there is a case where "due to the fact that" does contribute meaning, we can discuss that, but in most cases, it is just overly verbose. Also, edit rate should not be the metric; quality should, especially since submission rate is not necessarily equivalent to edit rate.
:::::::* ''not force other editors to spend their time to fix your errors'': Which is why I would have preferred you had given me a chance to fix my own mistakes, instead of reverting indiscriminately. But what's done is done.
:::::::* ''your time on Misplaced Pages will be short, and unhappy'': This makes me laugh a bit. I'll be on Misplaced Pages till the day I die (or it does.) But my perspective is short. I've only been editing wikis since 2014 (Misplaced Pages since early 2015, ) Compared to <strike>2009</strike> 2005*, when you started, I am humbled.
:::::::Anyway, I'm not trying to destroy this wiki or edit for glory. My only hope is to try to improve it and myself, and hopefully contribute in some small way to this massive project which I believe to be one of the most important internet projects. If you have any other suggestions or critiques, I am willing to listen to them. --] (]) 17:51, 1 March 2018 (UTC)
::::::::Actually, your research is not good. I've been here since 2005, not 2009, . ] (]) 00:03, 3 March 2018 (UTC)
:::::::::...
:::::::::That doesn't change my point. You could perhaps make an argument that I'm a poor researcher (which I do not believe myself to be, but it's hard to speak from the position of error and actions speak louder than words) because I didn't do extensive research on the year your ''original'' account was created, but the exact date wasn't an important point, more the recognition of experience. Anyway, I think this thread is ready to die, unless you have anything else you'd like to add, ]. --] (]) 04:21, 3 March 2018 (UTC)


:People delete and add content all the time, and it's not their responsibility to personally tell you about it (see also: ]). If you disagree, you can always revert. But immediately assuming bad faith and calling an edit 'vandalism' is overly aggressive, especially when it's sent to 14 different user's talk pages. Instead, if you have a problem, you can always seek ], but allow the natural bold, revert, discuss cycle to run its course first. ] (] &#124; ]) 19:19, 13 March 2019 (UTC)
This guy ], ''regardless'' of their usefulness. ] (]) 05:23, 9 March 2018 (UTC)


:{{Ping|Primergrey}} While I do agree with you, I must point out that WP:ROLLBACK says that rollback may be used "To revert widespread edits (by a misguided editor or malfunctioning bot) which are judged to be unhelpful to the encyclopedia provided that you supply an explanation in an appropriate location, such as at the relevant talk page". Whether Ken's actions were justified depends on your definition of "widespread": I did 16 original edits of "the fact that". There's also the context that I had immediatly prior done ~75 changes to a boilerplate descriptions of lists prior to that, so it set off alarm bells for Ken. However note also, in my changes from "due to the fact that" -> "because", he did not rollback (or even revert) them. I think this has been resolved in a satisfactory way (minus some civility, but life goes on) and it is probably best to move on. --] (] | ]) 17:04, 9 March 2018 (UTC) :I would also discourage you from . ] (] &#124; ]) 19:22, 13 March 2019 (UTC)
:{{ping|E to the Pi times i}} Okay. Good to know. I am not a frequent user of Misplaced Pages/Wikimedia. Thanks for the info. ] (]) 19:29, 13 March 2019 (UTC)


Much later note for the archives: ] is more directly relevant here than ]. ] (] &#124; ]) 06:02, 5 May 2019 (UTC)
::No doubt. ] (]) 19:18, 9 March 2018 (UTC)


== Re: NP mag == == Prostitution in India ==


Hi. I notice you added an anchor to the section heading "Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act". When wikitext is parsed to html a span with an id of the same name as the heading is added as an anchor to the heading. It's not necessary to add a second span. Regards --] (]) 17:32, 17 April 2019 (UTC)
I'm sure I have it, although I have put all of my NPs into storage, so I will have to retrieve from the storage unit. Will let you know when I go over there. ''']'''] 02:20, 20 March 2018 (UTC)
:{{ping|John B123}} I think you missed the difference in section headers in ]. The original section header read "Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act", while the anchor I added was "Immoral Traffic {{em|Persons}} (Prevention) Act" (which I added to account for some section-targeted redirects). ] (] &#124; ]) 17:38, 17 April 2019 (UTC)
== Nomination for deletion of Template:LBGT films list lead ==
:: In which case the redirect on the page ] should be changed rather than adding unnecessary anchors. Nothing links to the redirect page so it's not as if there's lots of pages to change. --] (]) 17:58, 17 April 2019 (UTC)
]] has been ]. You are invited to comment on the discussion at ].<!--Template:Tfdnotice--> —&thinsp;]&thinsp;<small>(]'''·'''])</small> 05:04, 4 April 2018 (UTC)
:::{{ping|John B123}} Your point is fair. There are only three redirects to that section (1 created by me today), and their targets could be replaced painlessly. Additionally, the anchor does slightly increase the complexity of the ]'s article source.
:::However, this makes no material difference to the encyclopedia's readers, and I request that you allow it to remain at present. I ask this because this specific situation shows a bug in the Rdcheck tool, and I would like to file a Phabricator ticket for this bug (or a bug report in general, if I mistakenly assumed this tool's bugs are managed on Phabricator). The bug is that , while if you actually try the links for yourself (], ], ]), you'll notice that they work as intended. The bug appears to be related to how the tool url-encodes parenthesis.
:::I do plan to try to replicate the bug on my own user pages, and not use actual articles directly for the Phabricator report, but if I can't manage to replicate the bug, it would be ideal for the page to be online for reference. ] (] &#124; ]) 18:31, 17 April 2019 (UTC)
:::: No problem. I did notice that in the anchor you added there are spaces between the words, whereas the page generated anchors have underscores instead of spaces. Thinking the spaces may be causing a problem with urlencode, I changed the spaces to underscores, but this made no difference. --] (]) 19:00, 17 April 2019 (UTC)
:::::{{re|John B123}} Alright, I've finally gotten around to playing around with this a bit, and figured out the issue.
:::::Since you expressed some interest in determining the problem, I though I might offer an explanation; hopefully it's understandable. If there's anything you don't understand from my explanation below, I'd be interested in knowing where my explanation failed (don't feel obligated, though).
:::::For the most part, the bug isn't actually a fault in Rdcheck (though there's a bit that could be improved), but more a phenomenon of how section headers are encoded in HTML. Take for example the following two headers:


== Bot? == ===Header 1===


===2 (parenthesis required)===
Are you running a bot/fully automated account? 24 edits in a single minute seems to be quite a lot, especially considering they are page moves. <span style=font-size:11px>] <span style="color:#9090C0;letter-spacing:-2px;font-size:9px">❯❯❯</span>]</span> 16:05, 6 April 2018 (UTC)
:{{reply|Chrissymad}} No, I was actually editing manually, but I had them lined up in a queue. {{u|E^pi*i batch}} is my semi-automated account. If I were to do a mass page-move like that again, I would do a bot request, because it was actually quite annoying to do it manually. ] (] &#124; ]) 16:10, 6 April 2018 (UTC)


:::::Looking at the HTML for the headers (if you're using Firefox or Chrome, you can inspect the source by using {{kbd|Ctrl}}-{{kbd|Shift}}-{{kbd|i}} or right clicking and selecting "Inspect Element" (Firefox) or "Inspect" (Chrome)), you will notice the first header looks like this:
{{reply|Chrissymad}} Since you brought this to my attention, I think restricting mass page moving is a common sense extension of ], and I have <span class="plainlinks"></span> to reflect this. Thank you for pointing out this; it's definitely useful to reflect on for future semi-automated or automated edits I may do. ] (] &#124; ]) 20:18, 7 April 2018 (UTC)
:::::*{{code|1=<span class="mw-headline" id="Header_1">Header 1</span>}}
:::::And the second one looks like this:
:::::*{{code|1=<span class="mw-headline" id="2_(parenthesis_required)">2 (parenthesis required)</span>}}
:::::Both headers look similar: they're both surrounded by a {{tag|span|o}} element with {{code|1=class="mw-headline"}} and an {{code|id}} equal to the text in the header. The {{code|id}} is important, because it's the part that the site actually needs to be able to link to the sections; it's the part that is searched for when one creates a section link like ].
:::::But I actually told a bit of a fib there; a lie of omission. Because while these two headers look the same on the surface, there's an important difference. The second header {{em|actually}} looks like this in full:
:::::*{{code|1=<span id="2_.28parenthesis_required.29"></span><span class="mw-headline" id="2_(parenthesis_required)">2 (parenthesis required)</span>}}
:::::What I recently learned is that when section headers generate with non-standard characters like parentheses, the site adds an extra {{tag|span|o}} with a separate {{code|id}} that contains a modified version of the section's name. In this case the modified name is {{code|2_.28parenthesis_required.29}}; in this version of the section's name, {{code|.28}} replaced the {{code|(}} and {{code|.29}} replaced the {{code|)}}. This means that there's two ways to wikilink to this section:
:::::*] (wikitext: {{code|]}})
:::::*] (wikitext: {{code|]}})
:::::These {{code|.##}} replacements may seem a bit strange, but there's a reason they exist. Take for example the following section:


===Vertical bar | in the middle===
== Talk page edit ==


:::::How would you wiki link to that section?
Please spare me your Wikilawyering lecture. I stand by my action: if they're blocked, they're fucking blocked. --] | ] 03:41, 11 April 2018 (UTC)
:::::If you try to copy the wikitext {{code|]}}, it produces ]; you can't include {{code|{{!}}}} in the link because it gets interpreted as a ]. The only way to wikilink to that section is by using {{code|.7C}} instead of {{code|{{!}}}}, like ].
:::::So to sum all this up, the reason why Rdcheck fails is because while section headers do produce an extra {{tag|span|o}} with an alternate {{code|id}}, {{tlx|Anchor}} does not produce an extra {{tag|span|o}}, and thus when Rdcheck tried to use {{code|.##}}, it didn't work because the section link in question didn't exist. ] (] &#124; ]) 00:32, 9 May 2019 (UTC)


== Lemmings ==
Also, what the hell was the point of going back through edits from January? Don't you have paper clips that need sorting? --] | ] 03:43, 11 April 2018 (UTC)


Hi there. I refer to your edit here: . I overhauled the Lemmings article and successfully nominated it for GA back in 2015. In the process I spent a considerable amount of time searching for a reliable source that Canon in D appears in the game. I unfortunately could not find one, so accordingly did not include this information. After seeing your addition, I have just spent another hour searching for such a source. These three sources were the closest things I found, but I'm fairly confident none of them meets the criteria for ]:
:{{ping|Calton}} My problem is that you failed to evaluate the context of the IP editor's comment. Constructive comments are useful regardless of the source. And I'm not ], I was explaining how the edit was not justified based on the original edit summary given. ] also supports this, with {{tq|" The basic rule—with some specific exceptions outlined below—is that '''you should not edit or delete the comments of other editors''' without their permission."}}


Being somewhat of an immediatist and perfectionist, and also being aware the source you're requesting does not exist, I'd rather not have the stain of a 'citation needed' tag on the article. Incidentally I can't say I've ever seen someone add information to a Misplaced Pages article and then request a citation for it themselves before. If you cant find a citation either I'd much prefer to remove this information entirely, even though we both know it is true. Let me know if you have any problems with removing it, or if you think we could just remove the citation needed tag as the information is self-evident by playing the game. Thanks and have a nice day. ] (]) 00:47, 18 April 2019 (UTC)
:In regards to the paperclip comment, I was going through the page history for another reason, and noticed a harmful use of strikethrough. ] (] &#124; ]) 03:52, 11 April 2018 (UTC)


:{{ping|Damien Linnane}} I appreciate your diligence, and I certainly do not object to you keeping an article you care about high quality. It's the price we pay for our ] policy (though I think the benefits of the policy outweigh the negatives). Perhaps someday someone will write a reputable article mentioning the song legitimately. I've seen a similar case in my own personal curation '']'' that I will probably end up removing (the OST for it has a hidden track, but I haven't yet seen any reliable sources mentioning it).
::Yes, you are goddamned well wikilawyering -- or maybe I should say wikiLECTURING -- about things you couldn't possibly understand, which are none of your business, and pointless busywork under the best of interpretations. You are neither qualified nor have any authority -- moral, supervisorial, knowledge-based, or experience-based -- to leave smarmy warnings for me. Continuing to assert such authority -- especially absent any evidence for it -- is going to ensure a short-ish career on Misplaced Pages, as this place has a low tolerance for people who parachute in and claim to know how things work better than the editors with years of experience. --] | ] 16:23, 11 April 2018 (UTC)


:As for including it as self evident, I think the guidelines discourage that, because anyone can dispute uncited claims. I don't think edit warring over a relatively minute piece of information is worthwhile. My personal philosophy in this area has been if it wasn't important enough for the sources to mention, then it's probably not important enough for it to require mentioning in the article.
== April 2018 ==
] Please stop your ].
* If you are engaged in an article ] with another editor, discuss the matter with the editor at their talk page, or the article's talk page, and seek ] with them. Alternatively you can read Misplaced Pages's ] page, and ask for independent help at one of the ].
* If you are engaged in any other form of dispute that is not covered on the dispute resolution page, seek assistance at Misplaced Pages's ].
If you continue to disrupt Misplaced Pages, you may be ]. ''Making significant changes to major policy pages in the name of simplification is disruptive. Please stop making these unilateral changes across many major policy and guideline documents or you may be blocked.''<!-- Template:uw-disruptive3 --> ] (]) 15:28, 11 April 2018 (UTC)
:{{ping|TonyBallioni}} Really? Calling <span class="plainlinks"></span> "disruptive editing"? Users are allowed to edit policy pages, and it does seems you have not actually evaluated my edit beyond seeing that a large piece of content was changed. ] specifically says: {{tq|"Disruptive editing is a '''pattern''' of editing that may extend over a long time or many articles, and '''disrupts progress toward... building the encyclopedia.'''"}} My edits satisfy neither of the basic criteria in the lead of the policy on disruptive editing. Also see ]. ] (] &#124; ]) 15:40, 11 April 2018 (UTC)


:But take my thoughts with a grain of salt. I am not the best person to tell you about policies or guidelines; I've been topic banned from discussing changes to them and have taken an 11 month break, so I'm basically relying on my old memory. ] (] &#124; ]) 01:03, 18 April 2019 (UTC)
== ANI ==


== Some notes re: ] ==
] There is currently a discussion at ] regarding an issue with which you may have been involved. <!--Template:ANI-notice--> ] (]) 15:50, 11 April 2018 (UTC)


Please peek at ] for transclusion counts for the individual templates.
== Unblock request ==


I've got other notes (in text, not on WP) but not formatted or made pretty. I'm probably the most paranoid person you'll never meet because I stay in my lair under the volcano, but I look wildly around at all sorts of things in my paranoia.
{{tlx|unblock|"{{u|TonyBallioni}} {{em|never mentioned}} {{tq|"I consider reversion of a major change to the notability policy that took place without discussion to be administrative in nature"}} in their {{em|one reversion}}. Editing policy pages in {{em|not against}} the rules. A block is premature in any case, given the limited amount of discussion before bringing this to ANI. I only got a warning without any specific response to my talk page section, or discussion of my reply to the warning. ] (] &#124; ]) 15:58, 11 April 2018 (UTC)"}}


of {{tl|Zh_icon}} found
:{{reply|Boing! said Zebedee}} Please at least reply to this. ] (] &#124; ]) 15:59, 11 April 2018 (UTC)
* ] (redirect page) 192 transclusion(s) found
* ] (redirect page) 67 transclusion(s) found
So I'm wondering how you'll find the ''all'' the various places that could/should be fixed up? Would you like me to do the equivalent of the above search for all your listed templates, in order to find the indirect templates?


Interesting:
::I also had no opportunity to respond to the accusations at ANI. ] (] &#124; ]) 16:00, 11 April 2018 (UTC)
* ] {{nb5}} counts from 2015 ]
:::Being administrative in nature means that I felt I would have been justified blocking you on my own without discussion, but because I am cautious, I preferred having others discuss the matter. Boing! blocked you for edit warring on one of the most significant guidelines we have. There is nothing wrong with bold edits to policies and guidelines (I do it myself probably more than most.) There is an issue, however, with consistently making changes to some of our most significant project space pages without discussion that are almost universally reverted. That is disruptive editing. ] (]) 16:04, 11 April 2018 (UTC)
* ] {{nb5}} O M G
:::Also even in article space if you are reverted by a user you take your justification to the talk pages, you do not revert back (yes we all do it, but it is still not right).] (]) 16:06, 11 April 2018 (UTC)
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]


Later (must leave for awhile) ] (]) 07:31, 10 June 2019 (UTC)
*Edit warring is forbidden, and that should be obviously so on policy pages where you do not get to change them unilaterally. If you agree to not edit anything other than that ] report until this issue is resolved (with any admin empowered to reinstate the block should you make any other edit outside that remit), I am prepared to suspend your block pending its outcome. ] (]) 16:06, 11 April 2018 (UTC)
:{{re|Shenme}} Actually, ] (beware! My SQL code is probably suboptimal.)
:As for handling the redirects, I assume the methodology there could be chainwise substitution, where the main wrapper is substituted to the redirect and then the redirects are substituted (but it would probably be good to check each redirect before marking it as okay through a bot task).
:I don't necessarily think all the implementation details need to be worked out here and now though; I plan to make a post on ] so experienced bot operators can offer further technical feedback before before filing a ] (or before someone else offers to do it using functionality in an existing bot). ] (] &#124; ]) 12:40, 10 June 2019 (UTC)


Ahhh. It took me a minute to understand why I was pinged here. I haven't been directly involved with the wiki page ], but I did create ], which the wiki page is based off of. --] (]) 00:40, 11 June 2019 (UTC)
:{{ping|Boing! said Zebedee}} Unblock conditional is agreeable. ] (] &#124; ]) 16:15, 11 April 2018 (UTC)
::{{reply|Boing! said Zebedee}} My main problem with this block is that I did not actually edit war (] says {{tq|"An edit war occurs when editors who disagree about the content of a page '''repeatedly''' override each other's contributions.}}; I did {{em|one}} revert.) As to the accusations of disruptive editing, I was drafting a response at ANI when I was blocked. ] (] &#124; ]) 16:22, 11 April 2018 (UTC)
*Unblocked as per agreed conditions. ] (]) 16:25, 11 April 2018 (UTC)


== TfD notices broke language icon templates ==
== April 2018 ==
<div class="user-block" style="min-height: 40px">]<div style="margin-left:45px">You have been ''']''' from editing for a period of '''31 hours''' for ]. Once the block has expired, you are welcome to ]. </div><div style="margin-left:45px">During a dispute, you should first try to ] and seek ]. If that proves unsuccessful, you are encouraged to seek ], and in some cases it may be appropriate to request ].</div><div style="margin-left:45px">If you think there are good reasons for being unblocked, please read the ], then add the following text below the block notice on your talk page: <!-- Copy the text as it appears on your page, not as it appears in this edit area. Do not include the "tlx|" code. -->{{tlx|unblock|2=reason=''Your reason here &#126;&#126;&#126;&#126;''}}. &nbsp;] (]) 15:54, 11 April 2018 (UTC)</div></div><!-- Template:uw-ewblock -->


Hi, {{u|Retro}}. Just letting you know that adding ] at the top of ] broke them, because notice was not wrapped in <nowiki><noinclude></noinclude></nowiki> properly. It seems that invocation of ] in these edits was intended to wrap the notice, but it did not do so. At the moment of writing, {{u|DannyS712}} has helpfully fixed three templates after template-protected edit requests. —⁠] (]) 17:08, 10 June 2019 (UTC)
<div class="user-block" style="min-height: 40px">]<div style="margin-left:45px">You have been ''']''' from editing for a period of '''48 hours''' for repeatedly breaching the terms of your unblock. You agreed to ]'s offer to unblock you "''if you agree to not edit anything other than that WP:ANI report until this issue is resolved''", and then after being unblocked you went ahead with these edits . <small>''The editor who uses the pseudonym''</small> "]" (]) 12:51, 12 April 2018 (UTC) </div></div>
: In the article namespace, it seems that most uses are inside references, so issue is not seen in the prose sections. For example, ]. —⁠] (]) 17:12, 10 June 2019 (UTC)
::{{re|Andrybak}} Can you show an example? They seemed to work fine when I checked how the rendered in article-space; if they're working properly, they should simply add <code><see TfD></code> with a link to the TfD (I intentionally did not put them in {{tag|noinclude}} for this reason). If there is a problem, I will do what I can to help fix it. ] (] &#124; ]) 17:19, 10 June 2019 (UTC)
:::{{re|Andrybak}} You linked to ], but I don't see the problem; it seems to be working as expected. ] (] &#124; ]) 17:21, 10 June 2019 (UTC)
{{re|Andrybak}} Ah, I see; in the edit requests, you linked to {{tl|User SUL Box}}, where {{tl|Link language}} is used in a piped link; that appears to be causing problems. It's arguably misuse on the part of {{tl|User SUL Box}}, rather than the fault of {{tl|Link language}}, but I'll look into it further.


I think it's a bit premature to {{tag|noinclude}} them all, since that's one specific issue which may be easily resolved; I would prefer editors be able to see they're being discussed at TfD in articles. But you are welcome to make more edit requests if you see fit. ] (] &#124; ]) 17:30, 10 June 2019 (UTC)
== BAGBot: Your bot request E^pi*i batch ==
:I haven't had a chance to dig in to this, but making the TFD notices "tiny inline" shouldn't break anything. Broken templates/userboxes/pages should be looked into and dealt with, but we don't need to be putting {{tag|noinclude|open}} on everything. ] (]) 17:39, 10 June 2019 (UTC)
Someone has marked ] as needing your input. Please visit that page to reply to the requests. Thanks! ]] 13:32, 12 April 2018 (UTC) <small style="color:gray">To opt out of these notifications, place <nowiki>{{bots|optout=operatorassistanceneeded}}</nowiki> anywhere on this page.</small>
:{{re|Andrybak|Primefac}} Alright, I've ]; {{tl|Link language}} is supposed to be used outside of the piped link, so that usage is a bit invalid. If you see any problems with this edit, you are welcome to revert. If not, I think it's appropriate to revert the {{tag|noinclude}}. If there's any other problems, they can be investigated, but for the vast majority of usage (which is in articles), it shouldn't cause any problems. ] (] &#124; ]) 17:40, 10 June 2019 (UTC)
:: Thank you! —⁠] (]) 17:44, 10 June 2019 (UTC)
:::{{re|Primefac}} Does reverting the edit requests seem reasonable? I think the TfD notice small link should be shown so interested parties have any easy link to participate in the discussion. ] (] &#124; ]) 17:48, 10 June 2019 (UTC)
::::If it's already been enacted, then it's not worth it for just a couple of templates. ] (]) 18:05, 10 June 2019 (UTC)
:::::{{yo|Primefac}} Well, it was only for a couple of templates, but those were among the most widely transcluded templates in the nomination, totalling to about 1/3 of the transclusions. ] (] &#124; ]) 18:14, 10 June 2019 (UTC)
{{re|Primefac}} *sigh* I'm been too inconsistent in this situation. Following this discussion, I thought most of the transclusions were {{tag|noinclude}}ed, so I ended {{tag|noinclude|o}}ed most of the language templates on another editor's request (I withdrew my edit requests on the highly transcluded ones, though). Pppery kindly informed me that there was no consensus for {{tag|noinclude|o}}ing templates that aren't subst-only.


Ideally, I just shouldn't have acquiesced to that other editor, so they could all the template just consistently be visible. But at this point, I don't see any purpose in sweeping through a third time for a relatively small percentage of the transclusions (all of the highly transcluded templates have the notice, so most of the transclusions have the notice).
:{{ping|Xaosflux}} I meant to close that request as no longer valid (I intended to convey that in ). I realize that bot-flagging an account that also did non-automated edits would be problematic, so I'm sorry I did not close the request earlier. I had assumed it might be closed after my AWB RfP but I should have been more explicit. If you could close the request for me, I would appreciate it. ] (] &#124; ]) 21:24, 12 April 2018 (UTC)
::Will do, marking as withdrawn. — ] <sup>]</sup> 21:43, 12 April 2018 (UTC)


Obviously, this is my action, so I take full responsibility for it. I guess this is a sort of lesson learned about the dangers of flip-flopping in template-editing. For me, this situation shows the benefits of passivity where consensus seems uncertain or nonexistent. ] (] &#124; ]) 13:31, 13 June 2019 (UTC)
== ANI Response ==


==Ray McDonald (actor)==
Pinging relevant ANI participants: {{reply|TonyBallioni|Amorymeltzer|Boing! said Zebedee|EEng|Bbb23|Ivanvector|Beyond My Ken|isaacl|Jbhunley|Tide rolls|Davey2010|power~enwiki|Courcelles}}
{{hatnote|Archive note: this is in reference to ]}}
Iused the AfCH . It should have left a redirect to the talk page but didn't. Such errors are rather common with AFCH. ''']''' (]) 16:32, 2 July 2019 (UTC)
:{{re|DGG}} From that it sounds like the tool is not sophisticated enough to remove the scaffolding (e.g. {{tlx|AFC submission|...}})? Or does the tool normally remove those templates, and this article just happened to be an edge case? ] (] &#124; ]) 16:36, 2 July 2019 (UTC)
::If the page is refreshed before AFCH finishes its job it can often result in the templates not being removed. Sometimes there's a hitch in the system. There are many reasons why it ''doesn't'' remove the templates, but 99% of the time it does. ] (]) 16:52, 2 July 2019 (UTC)
:::{{re|Primefac}} It'd be nice if one could do a page move and a page edit as an atomic action; it seems like problems like this will always happen unless that is possible. ] (] &#124; ]) 16:57, 2 July 2019 (UTC)
::::I'm not sure what you mean. AFCH moves the page, removes the AFC templates, adds relevant categories/WikiProject templates. What other functions should it be performing? ] (]) 17:01, 2 July 2019 (UTC) {{ppor|no}}
:::::I'm actually talking about the ] itself, not AFCH. It would require a change to the current revision model to allow pages to be edited when moving, but a null edit is already added to the revision history when a page is moved. If the MediaWiki API allowed this, then it seems AFCH would be much less likely to miss making the necessary edit. ] (] &#124; ]) 17:06, 2 July 2019 (UTC)
::::::Feel free to file a phab task. ] (]) 17:07, 2 July 2019 (UTC)
:::::::Filed: {{phab|T227119|}}. This is not to say that there might not be a bug in AFCH, but what you describe sounds more like a timing issue. Of course, this might not be the best solution for solving it, and I can imagine many problems.
:::::::And actually, AFCH could probably implement some kind of check internally so such things are quickly detected and presented to the actioning admin. I'm not hugely familiar with JS scripting unfortunately, but maybe I will become more familiar in the near future and be able to help with that.
:::::::And sorry for the initial ping; I realized it was silly right after I sent it, and it's a reflex I need to work on. ] (] &#124; ]) 17:30, 2 July 2019 (UTC)
::::::::No worries about the ping, I often forget to add {{t|ppor}} and there ''are'' a fair number of editors who never watch user talks. ] (]) 18:28, 2 July 2019 (UTC)
Another case where manual fixing was necessary: ] ] (] &#124; ]) 17:40, 4 July 2019 (UTC)
:Is this happening (regularly) only with DGG or is it happening with other editors? If it's just DGG, then it might be something on their end as opposed to something "wrong" with AFCH. ] (]) 13:59, 14 July 2019 (UTC)
::I don't know. I just happened to notice it because I've recently been systematically tracking userspace links in articles, and drafts moved improperly generate such links.
::I do think two diffs can still be put down to coincidence, especially if DGG is one of the more active AfC reviewers. For now, I will continue to note any future occurrences, but I caveat this by noting this is not a particularly sophisticated method of analysis. In the future, I will likely go back and systematically analyze previous AfC moves in detail to better understand the scope of the problem. ] (] &#124; ]) 14:12, 14 July 2019 (UTC)


=== AfC template retention list ===
----
Cases where manual removal was necessary (last updated 12:00, 20 July 2019 (UTC)): {{flatlist|
*] {{small|DGG}}
*] {{small|DGG}}
*] {{small|DGG}}
}} ] (] &#124; ]) 12:00, 20 July 2019 (UTC)


== Texas Veterans Hall of Fame ==
First, I will agree to a voluntary restriction on directly editing policies and guidelines (i.e. I would still be able to comment on P&G talk pages and obviously be able to reference them in other discussions). I was initially hesitant because I made to ], but when I look back at edits like <small>(; not previously mentioned in this ANI discussion.</small>), I realize I am indeed inexperienced and deserving of restriction. I will note I have discussed my edits when they are reverted; I was not trying to sneak changes in.


I could really use some help with what I'm doing wrong with ] article. I'm on the board of the TVHOF... does that mean I can't edit the article? And I really don't get the COI templates. ] (]) 01:10, 9 July 2019 (UTC)
Regarding the time I have taken to respond, I addressed it in . My delay was not intended as an {{tq|"attempt to improve chances of not being sanctioned by putting some distance between the complaint and the action to correct the behavior"}}. Instead, I needed some time to honestly reflect on my previous edits. If I had insincerely agreed to community sanctions, the underlying problem would not be acknowledged, and acknowledgement is the first step towards making permanent changes to behavior. It's not always easy to admit one's mistakes.


:Hi, ]! I've taken a closer look at the article you created, and unfortunately, I do not think the article's topic currently meets our ] criteria, so I have ]. You can find more details and comment there.
Regarding my block evasion: I explained this when {{tq|"I only request that I can edit the talk space because I'd like up to tie some loose threads that I left hanging."}}. The violating edits consisted of , , and . I did not continue my disruptive edits to P&G, which was the area of contention for the ANI discussion; I was simply carrying out my queued changes so they would not be lost or obsoleted; the first edit was a courtesy to the affected user. I was technically wrong to do so, and I acknowledge that, but I do not think this merits an indefinite block by reasonable standards. ] (] &#124; ]) 00:20, 13 April 2018 (UTC)

:In regards to the conflict of interest, you are strongly encouraged to avoid editing the article directly, instead requesting edits through {{tlx|request edit}}. However, in this case, since you created the article, it would have been preferred that you ] of your article first, so then it could be reviewed and improved by experienced editors. ] (] &#124; ]) 03:32, 10 July 2019 (UTC)

== ] moved to draftspace ==

An article you recently created, ], does not have enough sources and citations as written to remain published. It needs more citations from ], ]. <small>(])</small> Information that can't be referenced should be removed (] is of ] on Misplaced Pages). I've moved your draft to ] (with a prefix of "<code>Draft:</code>" before the article title) where you can incubate the article with minimal disruption. When you feel the article meets Misplaced Pages's ] and thus is ready for mainspace, please click on the "Submit your draft for review!" button at the top of the page. ] (]) 04:34, 9 July 2019 (UTC)
:{{re|Jack Frost}} As ] noted, this is not a draft I actually authored. I just moved to draftspace from a talk page after the author kept moving their talk page into mainspace. ] (] &#124; ]) 11:07, 9 July 2019 (UTC)
::{{u|Retro}}, Apologies! I did realise that; I forgot to untick the box to automagically notify you of the move. My fault entirely! ] (]) 22:36, 9 July 2019 (UTC)

== Recent Portal changes ==

I see your AWB alter-ego made changes like and , but I am not aware of what exact effect it had besides being ]. I see you posted ] that you were working on a script, but the discussion didn't even close yet. So mind sharing why you've started implementing this change? <br />I really kind of found it disruptive; ]. {{smh|text=no}} &#8211;<span style="font-family:CG Times">]&thinsp;]<sup>]</sup></span> 16:04, 12 July 2019 (UTC)

:{{re|MJL}} I'm sorry if you found it disruptive.
:Currently, yes, the change doesn't affect the appearance of the template on the portals. However, once the parameter is added, the year parameter will be required to render properly, or there would have to be messy conditionals to make the template display properly in all cases. Multiple participants in the discussion have expressed support for date-marking the template in some way, and even if that doesn't happen, the parameter could still be used in other ways, like populating a maintenance category,
:Of course, I can see your point: I probably should have drafted the appearance and then added the parameter to all related templates after an appearance was agreed upon. I implemented the template transclusions before adding support to the template because I wanted to have the parameterized template transclusions ready to ease the transition into them, but since you have raised concerns, I will probably reconsider doing so if I run into a similar situation in the future. ] (] &#124; ]) 16:19, 12 July 2019 (UTC)
::{{re|Retro}} <small>]]</small><!--User:MJL/ty4p--> Well, I appreciate you acknowledging that things went wrong in that one regard. All is forgiven! {{(:}} &#8211;<span style="font-family:CG Times">]&thinsp;]<sup>]</sup></span> 16:32, 12 July 2019 (UTC)

:::Hi Retro, I saw you added the {{tl|Featured portal}} template back into ] last night and your AWB alternative account added the FPOCyear parameter to it today. Thanks for that, but it's probably jumping the gun a bit, don't you think? The TfD is technically still open, even though it's almost certainly a snow close to keep, but we've probably got too many rules and procedures to follow as it is, so No Big Deal IMHO. My other question is about the technicalities: I see that the template doesn't contain the FPOCyear parameter yet, so why doesn't it throw a wobbly and generate an error message about "unknown parameter" or some such? It's displaying fine on the Portal page. Apologies if this is a dumb question, I've just always avoided the technical side of templates, they're much too scary for me.

:::As a side note, in case you never noticed, I slept on your advice overnight, and struck my final paragraph of my opening comment on the ]. On reflection it was a bit too personal and over the top. The problem is that BHG has been the main driver behind this portal deletion campaign for many months now, and has become effectively the cheerleader or official spokesperson for them. So when I'm making a point, or having a complaint about something dubious her Username somehow emerges from my keyboard. No excuse, I know, so I'll try to take more care in future. Many thanks for the sound, friendly advice. All the best. --] ] 17:59, 12 July 2019 (UTC)

::::{{re|Cactus.man}} Yeah, after some reflection (and after MJL commented above), I do think I jumped the gun on adding the {{para|FPOCyear}} parameter to all the template transclusions. Particularly because a more granular <{{var|month}}> <{{var|year}}> date may be preferable.

::::As for why it doesn't display an error, superfluous parameter use in transclusions doesn't normally display errors. More specific templates can process parameters and report on unused parameters. For example, the infobox templates display a message mentioning when a parameter is unused.

::::I appreciate you striking part of your comment. ] (] &#124; ]) 18:11, 12 July 2019 (UTC)

== A barnstar for you! ==

{| style="background-color: #fdffe7; border: 1px solid #fceb92;"
|rowspan="2" style="vertical-align: middle; padding: 5px;" | ]
|style="font-size: x-large; padding: 3px 3px 0 3px; height: 1.5em;" | '''The Civility Barnstar'''
|-
|style="vertical-align: middle; padding: 3px;" | You have been so patient regarding ]. I just think you deserve a ] for it at this point. {{(:}} &#8211;<span style="font-family:CG Times">]&thinsp;]<sup>]</sup></span> 19:36, 16 July 2019 (UTC)
|}
:{{re|MJL}} Thanks! I try to ensure all my comments contribute to a productive discourse.
:I have replied quite a bit in that discussion (at this point it is probably the most comments I have ever made in a single discussion, by a long shot), but I think I've avoided ]. But perhaps the resulting lengthy discussion could have been avoided if I'd structured my nomination rationale better. {{Smiley|;-)}} ] (] &#124; ]) 20:18, 16 July 2019 (UTC)
::<small>]]</small><!--User:MJL/ty4p--> Nah, you definitely didn't bludgeon. I think you just underestimated how little people knew about {{tl|LL}}. Like, my mind was blown when someone said you could link multiple languages. A lot of folks had questions for you lol &#8211;<span style="font-family:CG Times">]&thinsp;]<sup>]</sup></span> 20:22, 16 July 2019 (UTC)

== Broken templates ==

Hey, I had this happen just now . I had given the student pretty detailed directions on how to copy things over so I know that it wasn't anything that they had done, as they copied their work over in the same way that an experienced editor would.

I did have a thought, though: I wonder if it's caused by someone adding a named source, along the lines of "<nowiki><ref name=":02"></nowiki>". I wonder if this is the case of the system messing up because there's already a source with that name and rather than resolving it by renaming it to something else like an unused number, they instead link to the sandbox. I don't know if this is limited to stuff in the sandbox or if this would happen with content copied from another article, as it's not as common for someone to copy over chunks of content from one article to another since in most cases it has to be rewritten or there may not be other sources with the same reference name.

I wanted to let you know about this since I can vouch that it's not student error. Not that you thought it was, but this is a situation where I can guarantee that the student didn't do anything out of the ordinary since the directions were not only detailed, but had pictures of what they should do. ] (]) 23:27, 17 July 2019 (UTC)

:{{re|Shalor (Wiki Ed)}} I've been meaning to get back to you on this. Sorry for the lag in response.

:You said you gave detailed instructions; can you share those instructions? I have a theory about what's causing this: people are copying text from articles without clicking the "edit" button. In ], I've found that copying text without being in "edit" mode produces identical results to the erroneous additions. I will note it hasn't produced identical results in a few cases, but I've attributed that to citation copying working differently on old revisions in certain circumstances.

:But students are just the tip of the iceberg. There are currently <17 citation error of this type created by students (I've been actively working at chipping away at these, so hopefully it will get to 0 soon so I can just keep up with new ones that arise), but there are around ''800'' total errors.

:And also, I earlier said I had a few tricks for fixing these. I will now summarize my general strategy. I use ] to see what revision the malformed citations were inserted, then go to the version immediately prior to insertion in the revision history of the page the malformed citation links to (i.e. usually <code>User:&lt;username>/sandbox</code> in the case of student editors). The trickiest bit is adding the correct citations to the article: if the references are named, adding them might cause a reference name collision, so I usually rename the sources I'm inserting to an &lt;{{var|AuthorLastName}}> &lt;{{var|Year}}>name format (the risk is especially high if there have been edits since the malformed citation was added). In the process of avoiding name collision I often end up merging identical citations (care must be taken to preserve unique information like page numbers if available; one shouldn't blindly merge two citations just because they have the same author and title, but thoroughly verify). I also use a text editor with find-and-replace to ease the process of replacing source names and merging redundant sources. I also check the result using the "Show changes" button as a safety measure.

:But overall, a by-hand approach is truly time-consuming, even with better methodology, so I'm currently working on developing a script to clean up the massive number of malformed citations that are currently present. I will likely file a ] to carry out part of this process, but certain pages will require more discretion, so I will definitely not be able to fully automate for every page, unfortunately. But the tool will probably still be helpful assistance in those cases. ] (] &#124; ]) 00:03, 18 July 2019 (UTC)
::Thanks for the tricks! I'll send you the link via email - I don't want to post it here since it has the student's name in it. ] (]) 13:17, 18 July 2019 (UTC)
:::{{re|Shalor (Wiki Ed)}} This response came out a bit more long-winded than I intended; hopefully you're up for reading it! {{smiley|wink}}
:::I've had a look at those instructions and I have to agree, if the student followed those instructions, it seems unlikely to have been user error. I'll do a bit more testing related to that specific situation and see if I come up with anything.
:::Oh, and there's one more thing I forgot to mention: sometimes there's cross-contamination going on with the malformed references. In these cases, you'll see a broken citation that links to the sandbox, go back to the sandbox to discover that the sandbox also has a broken citation. Then you will have to run WikiBlame on the sandbox itself; sometimes the citation will go back to the original article, and sometimes, it will be a malformed copy from within the sandbox. And a general cautionary note: WikiBlame is not a cure-all: sometimes the malformed citations have been created in multiple separate edits, making it difficult to easily restore the correct content.
:::Regarding merging citations: if we're talking about merging citations that are the same source with different page numbers, it's a bit tricky, and I get the sense that even experienced Wikipedians can struggle with this. More specifically, the default citation model does not play nicely with this, and encourages one to just copy citations; I can imagine this is even more difficult with the VisualEditor. It is my understanding that there are two main models for this: {{tl|sfn}} (Harvard-style citations) and {{tl|rp}}. Harvard-style is preferred by me and many other editors, but it requires more section headers at the bottom and more complicated organization generally. {{tl|rp}} is easy to use, but it separates the page number from the reference, and instead places it near the referenced text; it is fairly clear, but not my preferred style because it separate the citation components, so one has to go back and forth to verify the citation. But anyway: when I mentioned merging above, I was more talking about truly identical citations, rather than citations that differ by page number; the VisualEditor actually offers some assistance with name-referencing in this regard, though it is not sophisticated enough to detect citations with the same body. ] (] &#124; ]) 14:03, 18 July 2019 (UTC)
::::{{re|Shalor (Wiki Ed)}} My testing seems to suggest that the student did make the type of copying error I suspected. I got correctly formatted citations when ]. But when I copied without the sandbox being in "edit" mode, I got identical results to what the student produced; compare ] vs. ].
::::This is not intended to insult the student; I think the VisualEditor is deceptive because it's not easy to tell whether you're in edit mode or not.
::::It's important to emphasize that I don't think the main solution to this problem is behavioral shifts; there are quite straightforward ways for the VisualEditor to detect when a malformed citation is pasted and warn the user with instructions on how to properly copy the citation. ] (] &#124; ]) 14:43, 18 July 2019 (UTC)
::::: By "warning", are you talking about the Edit Filter (which VisualEditor does appear to handle reasonably)? ] ] 22:09, 20 July 2019 (UTC)
::::::{{re|Pppery}} I wasn't really thinking of the edit filter in particular, but that will probably be the most effective method of putting a stop to it here, since MediaWiki developers are sometimes slow to work on things like this.
::::::But then again, I'm not sure how efficient the edit filter is; are you familiar? Specifically, detection of miscopied references can be done by finding added wikitext containing <code>cite%20note</code> and added using the VisualEditor (this wouldn't catch ''every'' conceivable scenario, i.e. if someone absent-mindedly restored an old version in the source editor, but it would probably be fairly effective). ] (] &#124; ]) 22:52, 20 July 2019 (UTC)
::::::: I'm not entirely sure about performance, but just checking "does the wikitext contain string x" should be performant enough. I suggest you make a post at ]. ] ] 23:07, 20 July 2019 (UTC)
::::::::Okay, I'll do that in a bit. ] (] &#124; ]) 23:10, 20 July 2019 (UTC)
::::::::{{re|Pppery}} Actually, I would like to eliminate all current cases before putting a lock on new cases, because there is a possibility people working in the sandbox have improperly copied their citations from an article, and thus would be warned or stopped even if they do copy their work from the sandbox properly. I have a work-in-progress script that I'll hopefully finish in a week, and then I'll file a BRFA.
::::::::Eliminating all current cases could also potentially simplify the edit filter. ] (] &#124; ]) 12:54, 21 July 2019 (UTC)
::::::::: Eliminating all current cases will be difficult when they continue to be created as you work. Creating an edit filter makes eliminating all cases easier. The argument you are making goes both ways. ] ] 20:46, 21 July 2019 (UTC)
::::::::::{{re|Pppery}} You're welcome to make a request if it seems preferable. I don't feel comfortable doing so at this time, because I'd rather fully understand the problem and make sure we don't leave any contributors stuck. I can see your point though; I don't consider the daily accumulation a significant factor, but I may be mistaken. ] (] &#124; ]) 22:05, 21 July 2019 (UTC)
:*I was afraid of that. I can honestly see how it can happen as well for the same reasons you stated. The warning does sound like a good idea - I know it'd make my life a lot easier with students. XD ] (]) 17:51, 18 July 2019 (UTC)

== ''Palestine-Israel articles 4'' arbitration case commencing ==

In August 2019, the Arbitration Committee resolved to open the ] arbitration case as a suspended case due to workload considerations. The Committee is now un-suspending and commencing the case.
*The primary scope of the case is: Evaluating the clarity and effectiveness of current remedies in the ARBPIA area. More information can be found ].
*Evidence that you wish the arbitrators to consider should be added to the evidence subpage at ]. The evidence phase will be open until 18 October 2019 (subject to change).
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== ] ==

Hi,

plesase find my remark to your edit from April 2019 on the disussion page of Mastermind.

Kind regards,

--] (]) 21:36, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
:]. Thanks for getting in touch. ] (] &#124; ]) 15:15, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
::Thanks for your answer. I have replied. Kind regards, --] (]) 06:29, 6 June 2020 (UTC)

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== About my recent edit revert ==

Hi, Retro,

I saw you reverted my edit about British English, and i just wanted to reply to that.

I didn't realize that it was British English till halfway through my edit, and then i couldn't find the words when i looked over, so i agree, thats my mistake. i also agree with the removal of the hyphens.

However, i dont get the removal of the invisible comment saying to use British English. Can you please say why you did that?

Thanks, Diamond. ] (]) 23:38, 18 November 2024 (UTC)

:Hey {{re|D1am0nd995320}}, I'm not necessarily completely opposed to the comment, but I think it's probably pretty easy to miss. A lot of times, language variants are indicated by having {{tlx|British english}} on the talk page, so that's a good place to check when you're not sure what language variant an article uses, since it can vary among articles. (As for adding an ] to similar effect, I'm looking into that right now.)

:Also, you can see changes you've made with the "show changes" button, although I'm not sure how convenient the Visual Editor makes that. It might be good to look into the source editor, since it makes a lot of things easier, but I could also understand if it's intimidating. ] (] &#124; ]) 23:47, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
::Hey Retro,
::I am new to Misplaced Pages, so sometimes i forget to use the ¨show changes¨ so ill be better on that.
::And, can you have the British English warning on the main article, or can it only be put on talk pages? Im still learning, so if you could answer this, i would be extremely grateful! ] (]) 23:54, 18 November 2024 (UTC)

:::{{re|D1am0nd995320}} I mean, I wouldn't recommend adding the British English comment in this case. It's sort of a grey area: sometimes comments are used like this to indicate certain elements keep getting changed back-and-forth. But in general, part of editing an article is looking at the current article's conventions including the language variant from context (there are also overall style guidelines in ] and other places). And I will say that edits that don't change anything about how a page looks to the reader ] (that link is part of the bot policy, but the sentiment is also common when people look at other people's edits).
:::Personally speaking, I don't really have strong feelings about the HTML comment either way, but it just happened to get removed as part of the revert for reasons I described. ] (] &#124; ]) 00:12, 19 November 2024 (UTC)

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== Thanks ==

Just wanted to leave a thank you for doing a run through ]. Normally, I or my bot would get to most cases, but I've been personally inactive recently and the bot doesn't handle every case right now. ] <sub>(])</sub> 13:19, 25 November 2024 (UTC)
:{{re|Aidan9382}} Happy to help out. I made a few oversights in some of my changes though (e.g., leaving behind preexisting unmoved archives, wrong counter initialization), so I just now triple-checked my edits and fixed all the mistakes I could find. I see you fixed one or two as well.
:I do wonder: will the bot still be able to move ] even though {{diff|title=Talk:Southern front of the Russian invasion of Ukraine|diff=1259605556|oldid=1259033229|4=I changed}} the {{tlx|User:MiszaBot/config}}?
:If I'd realized the bot was going to fix unmoved subpages and archiving after 7 days, I wouldn't have fixed archiving for some of the ones where I couldn't confirm whether the page move would be stable (e.g., ]). ] (] &#124; ]) 05:03, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
::Also, just looking at the mess of archives that's sitting at ] and ] (where there are now three archives labeled "archive 1", and they aren't properly accessible through the talk page header). I'm inclined to do the following:
::#Move {{-r|Talk:Eastern front of the Russian invasion of Ukraine/Archives/1}} to {{-r|Talk:Eastern front of the Russian invasion of Ukraine/Archive 3}} and change auto-archiving to use the MiszaBot config template with counter set to 3.
::#Move {{-r|Talk:Eastern Ukraine campaign/Archive 1}} to {{-r|Talk:Eastern front of the Russian invasion of Ukraine/Archive 1}}
::#Move {{-r|Talk:Eastern Ukraine campaign/Archive1}} to {{-r|Talk:Eastern front of the Russian invasion of Ukraine/Archive 2}}
::Since your bot will soon(?) attempt its own page moves, I thought it was worth asking you for a second pair of eyes and sanity check on this, so I'm not interfering with the bot. To me, I think this should be recategorized as "needs human attention" and the bot should be prevented from automatically moving it. ] (] &#124; ]) 05:37, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
:::There's always a lot that's easy to miss when fixing the archive templates, it happens.
:::With regards to the first question, the actual primary function is to just make sure subpages get moved along with their parent page in cases where it wouldn't make sense to leave them parented to a redirect. This just happens to be archive pages 95% of the time (the other 5% normally being GA and todo subpages). This means that the bot will still move the subpages regardless of if an autoarchiver is correct or not or if the archive names make sense, since all it cares about it seeing the pages correctly parented.
:::As for ], the bot will still attempt to make the subpage moves, but it shouldn't be an issue. This at least helps guarantee no 2 identically named archives will end up getting made and that pages are at least still findable via the subpage list (once they're lost on a previous redirect it's very hard to find them unless you know what you're after). I already have manual quarry queries for catching pages with non-standard or broken naming, since they already exist quite a bit. Personally, I would probably move the subpages first and then either merge all of them into "Archive 1" or rename "Archive1" to "Archive 2" (Archive 1 is already decently large) and merge "Archives/1" into that, since it has just a single section in it. Don't worry about interfering with the bot - if anything you do would be problematic to the bot, it'll flag it for human attention since it does a bunch checks every time before thinking of performing the moves. ] <sub>(])</sub> 07:30, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
::::I've merged all the archives into Archive 1. It's not currently above the default configured size (and current ClueBot config) of 150k. Originally I wanted them separate so archival edit summaries still lead to the correct page, but redirects should be able to handle that. ] (] &#124; ]) 08:50, 26 November 2024 (UTC)

== Vandalism warning ==

Hi bro, I want to let you know I've reverted one or more of your because they do not seem constructive. If you think I made a mistake or have questions, you can leave a message on ]. Please note that continued vandalism may lead to restrictions. ] (]) 16:09, 26 November 2024 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 16:09, 26 November 2024

This user is busy in real life and may not respond swiftly to queries.

Archives

toggle ref check

Hello, just a note to say that User:Lingzhi2/reviewsourcecheck has been update to add the option to toggle it on or off.

The installed script will add a tab to the drop-down tab at the top, located between the 'watchlist star' and the search box (using the vector.js skin). The tab toggles between "Hide ref check" and "Show ref check" with displaying the errors as the default option. Please do drop me a line if you have any problems or suggestions. Tks. ♦ Lingzhi2 (talk) 15:18, 2 February 2019 (UTC)

  • Sorry to bother you again. After the addition of a toggle option in the tab atop the page, one editor requested a revised version in which the toggle link appears in the "Tools" section of the page's left sidebar. So now there are two versions of this tool. If you prefer the links in the Toolbar section on the side, the slightly altered script is named User:Lingzhi2/reviewsourcecheck-sb.js (just add "-sb" before the ".js"). Finally, both versions should now also store the page state (whether reference errors/warnings are "hidden" or "shown"). The state persists between page loads and between the browser closing and reopening (unless cleared by the user, for example by deleting data in your browser's cache etc.). Huge thanks to User:Evad37 for much coding help. If you have any questions or problems, please drop me a line. Thanks again. ♦ Lingzhi2 (talk) 08:26, 5 February 2019 (UTC)

Sabana Grande, Caracas

Dear Sir or Madam,

I opened a peer review request. The user did not edit the article, but deleted 110,000 characters. What is the name of that? I contacted the people that previously edited the Sabana Grande (Caracas) article. I rarely edit Misplaced Pages these days because I am very busy with my PhD application and work. I had no time to send personalized messages.

He could have ping me before deleting a whole article, but he deleted it instead. Nevermind.

QuinteroP (talk) 19:09, 13 March 2019 (UTC)

@QuinteroP: Sending messages to 14 different users is generally not appropriate regardless. The article's talk page is the appropriate place to discuss such matters, not many other user's talk pages.
People delete and add content all the time, and it's not their responsibility to personally tell you about it (see also: WP:OWN). If you disagree, you can always revert. But immediately assuming bad faith and calling an edit 'vandalism' is overly aggressive, especially when it's sent to 14 different user's talk pages. Instead, if you have a problem, you can always seek dispute resolution, but allow the natural bold, revert, discuss cycle to run its course first. E to the Pi times i (talk | contribs) 19:19, 13 March 2019 (UTC)
I would also discourage you from deleting warnings from your talk page. E to the Pi times i (talk | contribs) 19:22, 13 March 2019 (UTC)
@E to the Pi times i: Okay. Good to know. I am not a frequent user of Misplaced Pages/Wikimedia. Thanks for the info. QuinteroP (talk) 19:29, 13 March 2019 (UTC)

Much later note for the archives: WP:MULTI is more directly relevant here than WP:FORUMSHOP. e (talk | contribs) 06:02, 5 May 2019 (UTC)

Prostitution in India

Hi. I notice you added an anchor to the section heading "Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act". When wikitext is parsed to html a span with an id of the same name as the heading is added as an anchor to the heading. It's not necessary to add a second span. Regards --John B123 (talk) 17:32, 17 April 2019 (UTC)

@John B123: I think you missed the difference in section headers in my edits. The original section header read "Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act", while the anchor I added was "Immoral Traffic Persons (Prevention) Act" (which I added to account for some section-targeted redirects). e (talk | contribs) 17:38, 17 April 2019 (UTC)
In which case the redirect on the page Immoral Traffic Persons (Prevention) Act should be changed rather than adding unnecessary anchors. Nothing links to the redirect page so it's not as if there's lots of pages to change. --John B123 (talk) 17:58, 17 April 2019 (UTC)
@John B123: Your point is fair. There are only three redirects to that section (1 created by me today), and their targets could be replaced painlessly. Additionally, the anchor does slightly increase the complexity of the Prostitution in India's article source.
However, this makes no material difference to the encyclopedia's readers, and I request that you allow it to remain at present. I ask this because this specific situation shows a bug in the Rdcheck tool, and I would like to file a Phabricator ticket for this bug (or a bug report in general, if I mistakenly assumed this tool's bugs are managed on Phabricator). The bug is that the tool reports the redirect links as broken, while if you actually try the links for yourself (Immoral Traffic in Persons Act, Immoral Traffic Persons (Prevention) Act, Prevention of Immoral Trafficking Act), you'll notice that they work as intended. The bug appears to be related to how the tool url-encodes parenthesis.
I do plan to try to replicate the bug on my own user pages, and not use actual articles directly for the Phabricator report, but if I can't manage to replicate the bug, it would be ideal for the page to be online for reference. e (talk | contribs) 18:31, 17 April 2019 (UTC)
No problem. I did notice that in the anchor you added there are spaces between the words, whereas the page generated anchors have underscores instead of spaces. Thinking the spaces may be causing a problem with urlencode, I changed the spaces to underscores, but this made no difference. --John B123 (talk) 19:00, 17 April 2019 (UTC)
@John B123: Alright, I've finally gotten around to playing around with this a bit, and figured out the issue.
Since you expressed some interest in determining the problem, I though I might offer an explanation; hopefully it's understandable. If there's anything you don't understand from my explanation below, I'd be interested in knowing where my explanation failed (don't feel obligated, though).
For the most part, the bug isn't actually a fault in Rdcheck (though there's a bit that could be improved), but more a phenomenon of how section headers are encoded in HTML. Take for example the following two headers:

Header 1

2 (parenthesis required)

Looking at the HTML for the headers (if you're using Firefox or Chrome, you can inspect the source by using Ctrl-Shift-i or right clicking and selecting "Inspect Element" (Firefox) or "Inspect" (Chrome)), you will notice the first header looks like this:
  • <span class="mw-headline" id="Header_1">Header 1</span>
And the second one looks like this:
  • <span class="mw-headline" id="2_(parenthesis_required)">2 (parenthesis required)</span>
Both headers look similar: they're both surrounded by a <span> element with class="mw-headline" and an id equal to the text in the header. The id is important, because it's the part that the site actually needs to be able to link to the sections; it's the part that is searched for when one creates a section link like #Header 1.
But I actually told a bit of a fib there; a lie of omission. Because while these two headers look the same on the surface, there's an important difference. The second header actually looks like this in full:
  • <span id="2_.28parenthesis_required.29"></span><span class="mw-headline" id="2_(parenthesis_required)">2 (parenthesis required)</span>
What I recently learned is that when section headers generate with non-standard characters like parentheses, the site adds an extra <span> with a separate id that contains a modified version of the section's name. In this case the modified name is 2_.28parenthesis_required.29; in this version of the section's name, .28 replaced the ( and .29 replaced the ). This means that there's two ways to wikilink to this section:
These .## replacements may seem a bit strange, but there's a reason they exist. Take for example the following section:

Vertical bar | in the middle

How would you wiki link to that section?
If you try to copy the wikitext ], it produces in the middle; you can't include | in the link because it gets interpreted as a pipe. The only way to wikilink to that section is by using .7C instead of |, like #Vertical bar .7C in the middle.
So to sum all this up, the reason why Rdcheck fails is because while section headers do produce an extra <span> with an alternate id, {{Anchor}} does not produce an extra <span>, and thus when Rdcheck tried to use .##, it didn't work because the section link in question didn't exist. e (talk | contribs) 00:32, 9 May 2019 (UTC)

Lemmings

Hi there. I refer to your edit here: . I overhauled the Lemmings article and successfully nominated it for GA back in 2015. In the process I spent a considerable amount of time searching for a reliable source that Canon in D appears in the game. I unfortunately could not find one, so accordingly did not include this information. After seeing your addition, I have just spent another hour searching for such a source. These three sources were the closest things I found, but I'm fairly confident none of them meets the criteria for WP:RS:

Being somewhat of an immediatist and perfectionist, and also being aware the source you're requesting does not exist, I'd rather not have the stain of a 'citation needed' tag on the article. Incidentally I can't say I've ever seen someone add information to a Misplaced Pages article and then request a citation for it themselves before. If you cant find a citation either I'd much prefer to remove this information entirely, even though we both know it is true. Let me know if you have any problems with removing it, or if you think we could just remove the citation needed tag as the information is self-evident by playing the game. Thanks and have a nice day. Damien Linnane (talk) 00:47, 18 April 2019 (UTC)

@Damien Linnane: I appreciate your diligence, and I certainly do not object to you keeping an article you care about high quality. It's the price we pay for our WP:OR policy (though I think the benefits of the policy outweigh the negatives). Perhaps someday someone will write a reputable article mentioning the song legitimately. I've seen a similar case in my own personal curation DKC that I will probably end up removing (the OST for it has a hidden track, but I haven't yet seen any reliable sources mentioning it).
As for including it as self evident, I think the guidelines discourage that, because anyone can dispute uncited claims. I don't think edit warring over a relatively minute piece of information is worthwhile. My personal philosophy in this area has been if it wasn't important enough for the sources to mention, then it's probably not important enough for it to require mentioning in the article.
But take my thoughts with a grain of salt. I am not the best person to tell you about policies or guidelines; I've been topic banned from discussing changes to them and have taken an 11 month break, so I'm basically relying on my old memory. e (talk | contribs) 01:03, 18 April 2019 (UTC)

Some notes re: WP:Templates_for_discussion/Log/2019_June_9#Link_language_wrappers

Please peek at User:Shenme/ll1 for transclusion counts for the individual templates.

I've got other notes (in text, not on WP) but not formatted or made pretty. I'm probably the most paranoid person you'll never meet because I stay in my lair under the volcano, but I look wildly around at all sorts of things in my paranoia.

Looking for redirects of {{Zh_icon}} found

So I'm wondering how you'll find the all the various places that could/should be fixed up? Would you like me to do the equivalent of the above search for all your listed templates, in order to find the indirect templates?

Interesting:

Later (must leave for awhile) Shenme (talk) 07:31, 10 June 2019 (UTC)

@Shenme: Actually, I systematically queried a list of all the redirects before I nominated the templates (beware! My SQL code is probably suboptimal.)
As for handling the redirects, I assume the methodology there could be chainwise substitution, where the main wrapper is substituted to the redirect and then the redirects are substituted (but it would probably be good to check each redirect before marking it as okay through a bot task).
I don't necessarily think all the implementation details need to be worked out here and now though; I plan to make a post on Misplaced Pages:Bot requests so experienced bot operators can offer further technical feedback before before filing a BRFA (or before someone else offers to do it using functionality in an existing bot). Retro (talk | contribs) 12:40, 10 June 2019 (UTC)

Ahhh. It took me a minute to understand why I was pinged here. I haven't been directly involved with the wiki page Misplaced Pages:TemplateData/Template usage count, but I did create phabricator:P632, which the wiki page is based off of. --MZMcBride (talk) 00:40, 11 June 2019 (UTC)

TfD notices broke language icon templates

Hi, Retro. Just letting you know that adding Template:Template for discussion/dated at the top of language icon templates broke them, because notice was not wrapped in <noinclude></noinclude> properly. It seems that invocation of Module:Noinclude in these edits was intended to wrap the notice, but it did not do so. At the moment of writing, DannyS712 has helpfully fixed three templates after template-protected edit requests. —⁠andrybak (talk) 17:08, 10 June 2019 (UTC)

In the article namespace, it seems that most uses are inside references, so issue is not seen in the prose sections. For example, Symphony No. 9 (Beethoven)#cite_note-74. —⁠andrybak (talk) 17:12, 10 June 2019 (UTC)
@Andrybak: Can you show an example? They seemed to work fine when I checked how the rendered in article-space; if they're working properly, they should simply add <see TfD> with a link to the TfD (I intentionally did not put them in <noinclude>...</noinclude> for this reason). If there is a problem, I will do what I can to help fix it. Retro (talk | contribs) 17:19, 10 June 2019 (UTC)
@Andrybak: You linked to Symphony No. 9 (Beethoven)#cite_note-74, but I don't see the problem; it seems to be working as expected. Retro (talk | contribs) 17:21, 10 June 2019 (UTC)

@Andrybak: Ah, I see; in the edit requests, you linked to {{User SUL Box}}, where {{Link language}} is used in a piped link; that appears to be causing problems. It's arguably misuse on the part of {{User SUL Box}}, rather than the fault of {{Link language}}, but I'll look into it further.

I think it's a bit premature to <noinclude>...</noinclude> them all, since that's one specific issue which may be easily resolved; I would prefer editors be able to see they're being discussed at TfD in articles. But you are welcome to make more edit requests if you see fit. Retro (talk | contribs) 17:30, 10 June 2019 (UTC)

I haven't had a chance to dig in to this, but making the TFD notices "tiny inline" shouldn't break anything. Broken templates/userboxes/pages should be looked into and dealt with, but we don't need to be putting <noinclude> on everything. Primefac (talk) 17:39, 10 June 2019 (UTC)
@Andrybak and Primefac: Alright, I've moved the lang icon templates outside of the piped link; {{Link language}} is supposed to be used outside of the piped link, so that usage is a bit invalid. If you see any problems with this edit, you are welcome to revert. If not, I think it's appropriate to revert the <noinclude>...</noinclude>. If there's any other problems, they can be investigated, but for the vast majority of usage (which is in articles), it shouldn't cause any problems. Retro (talk | contribs) 17:40, 10 June 2019 (UTC)
Thank you! —⁠andrybak (talk) 17:44, 10 June 2019 (UTC)
@Primefac: Does reverting the edit requests seem reasonable? I think the TfD notice small link should be shown so interested parties have any easy link to participate in the discussion. Retro (talk | contribs) 17:48, 10 June 2019 (UTC)
If it's already been enacted, then it's not worth it for just a couple of templates. Primefac (talk) 18:05, 10 June 2019 (UTC)
@Primefac: Well, it was only for a couple of templates, but those were among the most widely transcluded templates in the nomination, totalling to about 1/3 of the transclusions. Retro (talk | contribs) 18:14, 10 June 2019 (UTC)

@Primefac: *sigh* I'm been too inconsistent in this situation. Following this discussion, I thought most of the transclusions were <noinclude>...</noinclude>ed, so I ended <noinclude>ed most of the language templates on another editor's request (I withdrew my edit requests on the highly transcluded ones, though). Pppery kindly informed me that there was no consensus for <noinclude>ing templates that aren't subst-only.

Ideally, I just shouldn't have acquiesced to that other editor, so they could all the template just consistently be visible. But at this point, I don't see any purpose in sweeping through a third time for a relatively small percentage of the transclusions (all of the highly transcluded templates have the notice, so most of the transclusions have the notice).

Obviously, this is my action, so I take full responsibility for it. I guess this is a sort of lesson learned about the dangers of flip-flopping in template-editing. For me, this situation shows the benefits of passivity where consensus seems uncertain or nonexistent. Retro (talk | contribs) 13:31, 13 June 2019 (UTC)

Ray McDonald (actor)

Archive note: this is in reference to this edit

Iused the AfCH . It should have left a redirect to the talk page but didn't. Such errors are rather common with AFCH. DGG ( talk ) 16:32, 2 July 2019 (UTC)

@DGG: From that it sounds like the tool is not sophisticated enough to remove the scaffolding (e.g. {{AFC submission|...}})? Or does the tool normally remove those templates, and this article just happened to be an edge case? Retro (talk | contribs) 16:36, 2 July 2019 (UTC)
If the page is refreshed before AFCH finishes its job it can often result in the templates not being removed. Sometimes there's a hitch in the system. There are many reasons why it doesn't remove the templates, but 99% of the time it does. Primefac (talk) 16:52, 2 July 2019 (UTC)
@Primefac: It'd be nice if one could do a page move and a page edit as an atomic action; it seems like problems like this will always happen unless that is possible. Retro (talk | contribs) 16:57, 2 July 2019 (UTC)
I'm not sure what you mean. AFCH moves the page, removes the AFC templates, adds relevant categories/WikiProject templates. What other functions should it be performing? Primefac (talk) 17:01, 2 July 2019 (UTC) (please do not ping on reply)
I'm actually talking about the MediaWiki API itself, not AFCH. It would require a change to the current revision model to allow pages to be edited when moving, but a null edit is already added to the revision history when a page is moved. If the MediaWiki API allowed this, then it seems AFCH would be much less likely to miss making the necessary edit. Retro (talk | contribs) 17:06, 2 July 2019 (UTC)
Feel free to file a phab task. Primefac (talk) 17:07, 2 July 2019 (UTC)
Filed: T227119. This is not to say that there might not be a bug in AFCH, but what you describe sounds more like a timing issue. Of course, this might not be the best solution for solving it, and I can imagine many problems.
And actually, AFCH could probably implement some kind of check internally so such things are quickly detected and presented to the actioning admin. I'm not hugely familiar with JS scripting unfortunately, but maybe I will become more familiar in the near future and be able to help with that.
And sorry for the initial ping; I realized it was silly right after I sent it, and it's a reflex I need to work on. Retro (talk | contribs) 17:30, 2 July 2019 (UTC)
No worries about the ping, I often forget to add {{ppor}} and there are a fair number of editors who never watch user talks. Primefac (talk) 18:28, 2 July 2019 (UTC)

Another case where manual fixing was necessary: Who is the Savage? Retro (talk | contribs) 17:40, 4 July 2019 (UTC)

Is this happening (regularly) only with DGG or is it happening with other editors? If it's just DGG, then it might be something on their end as opposed to something "wrong" with AFCH. Primefac (talk) 13:59, 14 July 2019 (UTC)
I don't know. I just happened to notice it because I've recently been systematically tracking userspace links in articles, and drafts moved improperly generate such links.
I do think two diffs can still be put down to coincidence, especially if DGG is one of the more active AfC reviewers. For now, I will continue to note any future occurrences, but I caveat this by noting this is not a particularly sophisticated method of analysis. In the future, I will likely go back and systematically analyze previous AfC moves in detail to better understand the scope of the problem. Retro (talk | contribs) 14:12, 14 July 2019 (UTC)

AfC template retention list

Cases where manual removal was necessary (last updated 12:00, 20 July 2019 (UTC)):

Retro (talk | contribs) 12:00, 20 July 2019 (UTC)

Texas Veterans Hall of Fame

I could really use some help with what I'm doing wrong with Texas Veterans Hall of Fame article. I'm on the board of the TVHOF... does that mean I can't edit the article? And I really don't get the COI templates. Gary J Hardy (talk) 01:10, 9 July 2019 (UTC)

Hi, Gary J Hardy! I've taken a closer look at the article you created, and unfortunately, I do not think the article's topic currently meets our notability criteria, so I have nominated it for deletion. You can find more details and comment there.
In regards to the conflict of interest, you are strongly encouraged to avoid editing the article directly, instead requesting edits through {{request edit}}. However, in this case, since you created the article, it would have been preferred that you created a draft of your article first, so then it could be reviewed and improved by experienced editors. Retro (talk | contribs) 03:32, 10 July 2019 (UTC)

Carla Fletcher moved to draftspace

An article you recently created, Carla Fletcher, does not have enough sources and citations as written to remain published. It needs more citations from reliable, independent sources. (?) Information that can't be referenced should be removed (verifiability is of central importance on Misplaced Pages). I've moved your draft to draftspace (with a prefix of "Draft:" before the article title) where you can incubate the article with minimal disruption. When you feel the article meets Misplaced Pages's general notability guideline and thus is ready for mainspace, please click on the "Submit your draft for review!" button at the top of the page. Jack Frost (talk) 04:34, 9 July 2019 (UTC)

@Jack Frost: As my original edit summary noted, this is not a draft I actually authored. I just moved to draftspace from a talk page after the author kept moving their talk page into mainspace. Retro (talk | contribs) 11:07, 9 July 2019 (UTC)
Retro, Apologies! I did realise that; I forgot to untick the box to automagically notify you of the move. My fault entirely! Jack Frost (talk) 22:36, 9 July 2019 (UTC)

Recent Portal changes

I see your AWB alter-ego made changes like this and this, but I am not aware of what exact effect it had besides being cosmetic. I see you posted here that you were working on a script, but the discussion didn't even close yet. So mind sharing why you've started implementing this change?
I really kind of found it disruptive; no offense. MJLTalk 16:04, 12 July 2019 (UTC)

@MJL: I'm sorry if you found it disruptive.
Currently, yes, the change doesn't affect the appearance of the template on the portals. However, once the parameter is added, the year parameter will be required to render properly, or there would have to be messy conditionals to make the template display properly in all cases. Multiple participants in the discussion have expressed support for date-marking the template in some way, and even if that doesn't happen, the parameter could still be used in other ways, like populating a maintenance category,
Of course, I can see your point: I probably should have drafted the appearance and then added the parameter to all related templates after an appearance was agreed upon. I implemented the template transclusions before adding support to the template because I wanted to have the parameterized template transclusions ready to ease the transition into them, but since you have raised concerns, I will probably reconsider doing so if I run into a similar situation in the future. Retro (talk | contribs) 16:19, 12 July 2019 (UTC)
@Retro: Well, I appreciate you acknowledging that things went wrong in that one regard. All is forgiven! MJLTalk 16:32, 12 July 2019 (UTC)
Hi Retro, I saw you added the {{Featured portal}} template back into Portal:Scotland last night and your AWB alternative account added the FPOCyear parameter to it today. Thanks for that, but it's probably jumping the gun a bit, don't you think? The TfD is technically still open, even though it's almost certainly a snow close to keep, but we've probably got too many rules and procedures to follow as it is, so No Big Deal IMHO. My other question is about the technicalities: I see that the template doesn't contain the FPOCyear parameter yet, so why doesn't it throw a wobbly and generate an error message about "unknown parameter" or some such? It's displaying fine on the Portal page. Apologies if this is a dumb question, I've just always avoided the technical side of templates, they're much too scary for me.
As a side note, in case you never noticed, I slept on your advice overnight, and struck my final paragraph of my opening comment on the TfD. On reflection it was a bit too personal and over the top. The problem is that BHG has been the main driver behind this portal deletion campaign for many months now, and has become effectively the cheerleader or official spokesperson for them. So when I'm making a point, or having a complaint about something dubious her Username somehow emerges from my keyboard. No excuse, I know, so I'll try to take more care in future. Many thanks for the sound, friendly advice. All the best. --Cactus.man 17:59, 12 July 2019 (UTC)
@Cactus.man: Yeah, after some reflection (and after MJL commented above), I do think I jumped the gun on adding the |FPOCyear= parameter to all the template transclusions. Particularly because a more granular <month> <year> date may be preferable.
As for why it doesn't display an error, superfluous parameter use in transclusions doesn't normally display errors. More specific templates can process parameters and report on unused parameters. For example, the infobox templates display a message mentioning when a parameter is unused.
I appreciate you striking part of your comment. Retro (talk | contribs) 18:11, 12 July 2019 (UTC)

A barnstar for you!

The Civility Barnstar
You have been so patient regarding Misplaced Pages:Templates for discussion/Log/2019 July 5#Link language wrappers. I just think you deserve a barnstar for it at this point. MJLTalk 19:36, 16 July 2019 (UTC)
@MJL: Thanks! I try to ensure all my comments contribute to a productive discourse.
I have replied quite a bit in that discussion (at this point it is probably the most comments I have ever made in a single discussion, by a long shot), but I think I've avoided bludgeoning. But perhaps the resulting lengthy discussion could have been avoided if I'd structured my nomination rationale better. Retro (talk | contribs) 20:18, 16 July 2019 (UTC)
Nah, you definitely didn't bludgeon. I think you just underestimated how little people knew about {{LL}}. Like, my mind was blown when someone said you could link multiple languages. A lot of folks had questions for you lol –MJLTalk 20:22, 16 July 2019 (UTC)

Broken templates

Hey, I had this happen just now here. I had given the student pretty detailed directions on how to copy things over so I know that it wasn't anything that they had done, as they copied their work over in the same way that an experienced editor would.

I did have a thought, though: I wonder if it's caused by someone adding a named source, along the lines of "<ref name=":02">". I wonder if this is the case of the system messing up because there's already a source with that name and rather than resolving it by renaming it to something else like an unused number, they instead link to the sandbox. I don't know if this is limited to stuff in the sandbox or if this would happen with content copied from another article, as it's not as common for someone to copy over chunks of content from one article to another since in most cases it has to be rewritten or there may not be other sources with the same reference name.

I wanted to let you know about this since I can vouch that it's not student error. Not that you thought it was, but this is a situation where I can guarantee that the student didn't do anything out of the ordinary since the directions were not only detailed, but had pictures of what they should do. Shalor (Wiki Ed) (talk) 23:27, 17 July 2019 (UTC)

@Shalor (Wiki Ed): I've been meaning to get back to you on this. Sorry for the lag in response.
You said you gave detailed instructions; can you share those instructions? I have a theory about what's causing this: people are copying text from articles without clicking the "edit" button. In my own experimentation, I've found that copying text without being in "edit" mode produces identical results to the erroneous additions. I will note it hasn't produced identical results in a few cases, but I've attributed that to citation copying working differently on old revisions in certain circumstances.
But students are just the tip of the iceberg. There are currently <17 citation error of this type created by students (I've been actively working at chipping away at these, so hopefully it will get to 0 soon so I can just keep up with new ones that arise), but there are around 800 total errors.
And also, I earlier said I had a few tricks for fixing these. I will now summarize my general strategy. I use WikiBlame to see what revision the malformed citations were inserted, then go to the version immediately prior to insertion in the revision history of the page the malformed citation links to (i.e. usually User:<username>/sandbox in the case of student editors). The trickiest bit is adding the correct citations to the article: if the references are named, adding them might cause a reference name collision, so I usually rename the sources I'm inserting to an <AuthorLastName> <Year>name format (the risk is especially high if there have been edits since the malformed citation was added). In the process of avoiding name collision I often end up merging identical citations (care must be taken to preserve unique information like page numbers if available; one shouldn't blindly merge two citations just because they have the same author and title, but thoroughly verify). I also use a text editor with find-and-replace to ease the process of replacing source names and merging redundant sources. I also check the result using the "Show changes" button as a safety measure.
But overall, a by-hand approach is truly time-consuming, even with better methodology, so I'm currently working on developing a script to clean up the massive number of malformed citations that are currently present. I will likely file a BRFA to carry out part of this process, but certain pages will require more discretion, so I will definitely not be able to fully automate for every page, unfortunately. But the tool will probably still be helpful assistance in those cases. Retro (talk | contribs) 00:03, 18 July 2019 (UTC)
Thanks for the tricks! I'll send you the link via email - I don't want to post it here since it has the student's name in it. Shalor (Wiki Ed) (talk) 13:17, 18 July 2019 (UTC)
@Shalor (Wiki Ed): This response came out a bit more long-winded than I intended; hopefully you're up for reading it!
I've had a look at those instructions and I have to agree, if the student followed those instructions, it seems unlikely to have been user error. I'll do a bit more testing related to that specific situation and see if I come up with anything.
Oh, and there's one more thing I forgot to mention: sometimes there's cross-contamination going on with the malformed references. In these cases, you'll see a broken citation that links to the sandbox, go back to the sandbox to discover that the sandbox also has a broken citation. Then you will have to run WikiBlame on the sandbox itself; sometimes the citation will go back to the original article, and sometimes, it will be a malformed copy from within the sandbox. And a general cautionary note: WikiBlame is not a cure-all: sometimes the malformed citations have been created in multiple separate edits, making it difficult to easily restore the correct content.
Regarding merging citations: if we're talking about merging citations that are the same source with different page numbers, it's a bit tricky, and I get the sense that even experienced Wikipedians can struggle with this. More specifically, the default citation model does not play nicely with this, and encourages one to just copy citations; I can imagine this is even more difficult with the VisualEditor. It is my understanding that there are two main models for this: {{sfn}} (Harvard-style citations) and {{rp}}. Harvard-style is preferred by me and many other editors, but it requires more section headers at the bottom and more complicated organization generally. {{rp}} is easy to use, but it separates the page number from the reference, and instead places it near the referenced text; it is fairly clear, but not my preferred style because it separate the citation components, so one has to go back and forth to verify the citation. But anyway: when I mentioned merging above, I was more talking about truly identical citations, rather than citations that differ by page number; the VisualEditor actually offers some assistance with name-referencing in this regard, though it is not sophisticated enough to detect citations with the same body. Retro (talk | contribs) 14:03, 18 July 2019 (UTC)
@Shalor (Wiki Ed): My testing seems to suggest that the student did make the type of copying error I suspected. I got correctly formatted citations when I copied in "edit" mode. But when I copied without the sandbox being in "edit" mode, I got identical results to what the student produced; compare the student's result vs. my result.
This is not intended to insult the student; I think the VisualEditor is deceptive because it's not easy to tell whether you're in edit mode or not.
It's important to emphasize that I don't think the main solution to this problem is behavioral shifts; there are quite straightforward ways for the VisualEditor to detect when a malformed citation is pasted and warn the user with instructions on how to properly copy the citation. Retro (talk | contribs) 14:43, 18 July 2019 (UTC)
By "warning", are you talking about the Edit Filter (which VisualEditor does appear to handle reasonably)? * Pppery * it has begun... 22:09, 20 July 2019 (UTC)
@Pppery: I wasn't really thinking of the edit filter in particular, but that will probably be the most effective method of putting a stop to it here, since MediaWiki developers are sometimes slow to work on things like this.
But then again, I'm not sure how efficient the edit filter is; are you familiar? Specifically, detection of miscopied references can be done by finding added wikitext containing cite%20note and added using the VisualEditor (this wouldn't catch every conceivable scenario, i.e. if someone absent-mindedly restored an old version in the source editor, but it would probably be fairly effective). Retro (talk | contribs) 22:52, 20 July 2019 (UTC)
I'm not entirely sure about performance, but just checking "does the wikitext contain string x" should be performant enough. I suggest you make a post at WP:EFR. * Pppery * it has begun... 23:07, 20 July 2019 (UTC)
Okay, I'll do that in a bit. Retro (talk | contribs) 23:10, 20 July 2019 (UTC)
@Pppery: Actually, I would like to eliminate all current cases before putting a lock on new cases, because there is a possibility people working in the sandbox have improperly copied their citations from an article, and thus would be warned or stopped even if they do copy their work from the sandbox properly. I have a work-in-progress script that I'll hopefully finish in a week, and then I'll file a BRFA.
Eliminating all current cases could also potentially simplify the edit filter. Retro (talk | contribs) 12:54, 21 July 2019 (UTC)
Eliminating all current cases will be difficult when they continue to be created as you work. Creating an edit filter makes eliminating all cases easier. The argument you are making goes both ways. * Pppery * it has begun... 20:46, 21 July 2019 (UTC)
@Pppery: You're welcome to make a request if it seems preferable. I don't feel comfortable doing so at this time, because I'd rather fully understand the problem and make sure we don't leave any contributors stuck. I can see your point though; I don't consider the daily accumulation a significant factor, but I may be mistaken. Retro (talk | contribs) 22:05, 21 July 2019 (UTC)
  • I was afraid of that. I can honestly see how it can happen as well for the same reasons you stated. The warning does sound like a good idea - I know it'd make my life a lot easier with students. XD Shalor (Wiki Ed) (talk) 17:51, 18 July 2019 (UTC)

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Mastermind (board game)

Hi,

plesase find my remark to your edit from April 2019 on the disussion page of Mastermind.

Kind regards,

--Lefschetz (talk) 21:36, 4 June 2020 (UTC)

Replied. Thanks for getting in touch. Retro (talk | contribs) 15:15, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
Thanks for your answer. I have replied. Kind regards, --Lefschetz (talk) 06:29, 6 June 2020 (UTC)

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About my recent edit revert

Hi, Retro,

I saw you reverted my edit about British English, and i just wanted to reply to that.

I didn't realize that it was British English till halfway through my edit, and then i couldn't find the words when i looked over, so i agree, thats my mistake. i also agree with the removal of the hyphens.

However, i dont get the removal of the invisible comment saying to use British English. Can you please say why you did that?

Thanks, Diamond. D1am0nd (talk) 23:38, 18 November 2024 (UTC)

Hey @D1am0nd995320:, I'm not necessarily completely opposed to the comment, but I think it's probably pretty easy to miss. A lot of times, language variants are indicated by having {{British english}} on the talk page, so that's a good place to check when you're not sure what language variant an article uses, since it can vary among articles. (As for adding an editnotice to similar effect, I'm looking into that right now.)
Also, you can see changes you've made with the "show changes" button, although I'm not sure how convenient the Visual Editor makes that. It might be good to look into the source editor, since it makes a lot of things easier, but I could also understand if it's intimidating. Retro (talk | contribs) 23:47, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
Hey Retro,
I am new to Misplaced Pages, so sometimes i forget to use the ¨show changes¨ so ill be better on that.
And, can you have the British English warning on the main article, or can it only be put on talk pages? Im still learning, so if you could answer this, i would be extremely grateful! D1am0nd (talk) 23:54, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
@D1am0nd995320: I mean, I wouldn't recommend adding the British English comment in this case. It's sort of a grey area: sometimes comments are used like this to indicate certain elements keep getting changed back-and-forth. But in general, part of editing an article is looking at the current article's conventions including the language variant from context (there are also overall style guidelines in WP:MOS and other places). And I will say that edits that don't change anything about how a page looks to the reader are discouraged (that link is part of the bot policy, but the sentiment is also common when people look at other people's edits).
Personally speaking, I don't really have strong feelings about the HTML comment either way, but it just happened to get removed as part of the revert for reasons I described. Retro (talk | contribs) 00:12, 19 November 2024 (UTC)

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Thanks

Just wanted to leave a thank you for doing a run through Category:Pages where archive parameter is not a subpage. Normally, I or my bot would get to most cases, but I've been personally inactive recently and the bot doesn't handle every case right now. Aidan9382 (talk) 13:19, 25 November 2024 (UTC)

@Aidan9382: Happy to help out. I made a few oversights in some of my changes though (e.g., leaving behind preexisting unmoved archives, wrong counter initialization), so I just now triple-checked my edits and fixed all the mistakes I could find. I see you fixed one or two as well.
I do wonder: will the bot still be able to move subpages of Talk:Southern Ukraine campaign even though I changed the {{User:MiszaBot/config}}?
If I'd realized the bot was going to fix unmoved subpages and archiving after 7 days, I wouldn't have fixed archiving for some of the ones where I couldn't confirm whether the page move would be stable (e.g., Talk:Yerba-maté). Retro (talk | contribs) 05:03, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
Also, just looking at the mess of archives that's sitting at Special:PrefixIndex/Talk:Eastern Ukraine campaign/ and Special:PageHistory/Talk:Eastern front of the Russian invasion of Ukraine (where there are now three archives labeled "archive 1", and they aren't properly accessible through the talk page header). I'm inclined to do the following:
  1. Move Talk:Eastern front of the Russian invasion of Ukraine/Archives/1 to Talk:Eastern front of the Russian invasion of Ukraine/Archive 3 and change auto-archiving to use the MiszaBot config template with counter set to 3.
  2. Move Talk:Eastern Ukraine campaign/Archive 1 to Talk:Eastern front of the Russian invasion of Ukraine/Archive 1
  3. Move Talk:Eastern Ukraine campaign/Archive1 to Talk:Eastern front of the Russian invasion of Ukraine/Archive 2
Since your bot will soon(?) attempt its own page moves, I thought it was worth asking you for a second pair of eyes and sanity check on this, so I'm not interfering with the bot. To me, I think this should be recategorized as "needs human attention" and the bot should be prevented from automatically moving it. Retro (talk | contribs) 05:37, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
There's always a lot that's easy to miss when fixing the archive templates, it happens.
With regards to the first question, the actual primary function is to just make sure subpages get moved along with their parent page in cases where it wouldn't make sense to leave them parented to a redirect. This just happens to be archive pages 95% of the time (the other 5% normally being GA and todo subpages). This means that the bot will still move the subpages regardless of if an autoarchiver is correct or not or if the archive names make sense, since all it cares about it seeing the pages correctly parented.
As for Talk:Eastern Ukraine campaign, the bot will still attempt to make the subpage moves, but it shouldn't be an issue. This at least helps guarantee no 2 identically named archives will end up getting made and that pages are at least still findable via the subpage list (once they're lost on a previous redirect it's very hard to find them unless you know what you're after). I already have manual quarry queries for catching pages with non-standard or broken naming, since they already exist quite a bit. Personally, I would probably move the subpages first and then either merge all of them into "Archive 1" or rename "Archive1" to "Archive 2" (Archive 1 is already decently large) and merge "Archives/1" into that, since it has just a single section in it. Don't worry about interfering with the bot - if anything you do would be problematic to the bot, it'll flag it for human attention since it does a bunch checks every time before thinking of performing the moves. Aidan9382 (talk) 07:30, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
I've merged all the archives into Archive 1. It's not currently above the default configured size (and current ClueBot config) of 150k. Originally I wanted them separate so archival edit summaries still lead to the correct page, but redirects should be able to handle that. Retro (talk | contribs) 08:50, 26 November 2024 (UTC)

Vandalism warning

Hi bro, I want to let you know I've reverted one or more of your contributions because they do not seem constructive. If you think I made a mistake or have questions, you can leave a message on my talk page. Please note that continued vandalism may lead to restrictions. Daedanham (talk) 16:09, 26 November 2024 (UTC)