User:Egm4313.s12/sandbox

= Arrows, Advanced text formatting = Arrow_(symbol)

Up-arrow: ↑

Help:Advanced_text_formatting,e.g., font size

= Anchor, jump target =

Reference-link template
24.5.27, useful code: highlight text background.

Text blah blah blah

Note-link template
In the main text, use the code below to set up the jump-to link "N.xxxx" and jump-back anchor "NOTE TITLE jump": Text blah blah blah

Then in Section NOTES, use the code below for each Note to set up the jump-to anchor "NOTE TITLE" and jump-back link "N.xxxx": Then write the Note here...

Help:Link,

Specifics
When a link contains a section title (as in the examples above), the title actually points to an HTML anchor on the target page. In addition to anchors created automatically by section titles, there are times when it's advantageous to create an anchor on a smaller unit of text, such as a specific paragraph (see below). This can be done using anchor name, or alternatively, the HTML code (see Anchor syntax). Anchors are also used when renaming a section, yet still allowing links to the old name to function, or similarly, allowing linking to a section using an abbreviation; see MOS:HEADINGS for more info. Links to anchors can also be added to external URLs and to interwiki links, again using the  syntax.

Section What_is_an_"anchor"?

Help:HTML_in_wikitext

Template:Anchor: The basic format is. To link to an anchor from within the same page, use display text. To link to an anchor from another page, use display text. See Help:Link § Section linking (anchors) for more details.

Basic format

You can define one or more anchor names, separated by |. This can be useful for alternative spellings, such as "humor" and "humour."

In general, if the intended target of an anchor is a section title, then it should be placed at the end of the section header by substitution: == Section headerAnchor name ==

which will be saved in the article as: == Section header ==

NOTE: It is not necessary to use class="anchor"; only need to use id="anchor name" is sufficient to define an anchor.

Anchor names are case sensitive, so and  are not equivalent. When making an anchor, in general capitalize the first letter of the anchor name, and follow the same capitalization guidelines as headers (see Manual of Style: Headers for more information).

= Nguyen Ngoc Bich articles =

Liens internes
Bonjour PING Pharma

Le contenu de Draft:Nguyen_Ngoc_Bich est très pertinent, et d'ailleurs n'est pas vraiment un "brouillon," qui par contre se trouve dans le sous-page User:Egm4313.s12/Draft:Nguyen_Ngoc_Bich.

La version Draft:Nguyen_Ngoc_Bich est identique à l'article Nguyen Ngoc Bich sur Citizendium. Prenez donc un coup d'oeuil pour comparer.

Vous pouvez alors vérifier que le contenu de Draft:Nguyen_Ngoc_Bich est beaucoup plus meilleur (riche d'information et images) que celui dans le Wikipedia français, c'est à dire Nguyen_Ngoc_Bich, qui est encore dans un état embryonnaire très préliminaire (pauvre d'information et images).

Sur le Wikipédia anglais et le Wikipédia vietnamien, il n'y a pas de règle qui empêche de lier un article à un "draft." Il y beaucoup d'exemples; voir les details de l'image où les liens se trouvent dans la section "File usage on other wikis," en particulier  Draft:Nguyen_Ngoc_Bich. Il y a aussi beaucoup d'autre images dans la catégorie Category:Nguyen_Ngoc_Bich_(1911-1966), qui elles sont toutes liées à Draft:Nguyen_Ngoc_Bich.

Si il y a une telle règle, sur le Wikipédia français, qui empêche de lier un article a des "drafts", surtout à ceux qui sont beaucoup meilleurs, veuillez bien donner le lien et une citation claire et complète sur se sujet pour mes informations.

Merci bien. Bonne journée.

Egm4313.s12 (talk) 22:00, 27 June 2024 (UTC)

-

Je comprend votre point de vue technique en effaçant tous les liens qui ont le mot "draft". Mais prenez un coup d'oeuil sur mon "draft" qui est definitivement supérieur au present article sur le Wikipedia francais (qui est encore dans un etat tres embrionique), et qui est identique a l'article sur citizendium. Le vrai draft est ceci: ARTICLE. Si vous tenez au contenu de l'article au lieu de baser sur le nom du lien, vos lecteurs auront beaucoup plus de details. Pour l'instant, je concentre sur le Wikipedia anglais, le Citizendium et le Wikipedia Vietnamien. Je verrai peut etre dans un an ou plus si il y a un environmement plus productif sur le Wikipedia francais.

-

Draft:Nguyen_Ngoc_Bich on English Wikipedia

Day first parameter "df" in death date and age template; default is "no".

Karl Pister from 27 June 1925 to May 14, 2022

Test from May 15, 2021 to May 14, 2022

Test from May 14, 2021 to May 14, 2022

Nguyen Ngoc Bich on Citizendium.

= Karl Pister =

Reply to reviewer
Current Draft:Karl_S._Pister ◉ fixed version at 15:53, 3 May 2024

Biography
''

Karl Stark Pister was born June 27, 1925, in Stockton, California. He graduated from Stockton High School as class valedictorian in 1942, and from UC Berkeley with a BS in Civil Engineering in 1945. After a short stint in the Naval Reserve and an assignment to Okinawa, Japan, during World War II, he commenced studies at Berkeley during the fall of 1946, and graduated with an MS in Civil Engineering in 1948. This was followed by a PhD in Theoretical and Applied Mechanics from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1952.

When Pister was hired at UC Berkeley in 1952, he initially conducted research on material properties of Portland Cement Concrete and the behavior of torpedo nets. For this early research work, he received the Wason Medal for Research, awarded by the American Concrete Institute. During the late 1950s he also began a multi-decade association with Lawrence Livermore National Labs.

Over the next two decades, he served as Vice-chair of the Civil Engineering Department (1964–65), Chairman of the Division of Structural Engineering and Structural Mechanics (1970–71), Chairman of Committee on Educational Policy at Berkeley (1972–73), Senate Policy chair and Academic Senate, Berkeley Division, vice chair (1976–78), and Vice chairman and chairman of the nine-campus Academic Council and Assembly of the Academic Senate (1978–1980).

Pister was appointed Dean of the College of Engineering in 1980, a position he held for ten years. From 1985 to 1990, he was the first holder of the Roy W. Carlson Chair in Engineering. From 1991–1996 he served as Chancellor, UC Santa Cruz. He then returned to Berkeley to work as Vice President for Educational Outreach in the UC Office of the President (1999–2000) and to chair the task force on upgrading California Memorial Stadium (2004–2012). Throughout these many roles, he is well known and respected for leading by example, and his passionate commitment to promoting social justice.

The American Society for Engineering Education presented him with the Vincent Bendix Award for Minorities in Engineering, and the Lamme Medal, the highest honor bestowed by the society, for his contributions to engineering education. He is also a Fellow of the American Academy of Mechanics, the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, the American Association for the Advancement of Science and an Honorary Fellow of the California Academy of Sciences.

Pister is a member of the National Academy of Engineering (1980) and a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He is the recipient of the Berkeley Medal (1996) and the Presidential Medal of the University of California (2000). In 2006, The California Alumni Association named him Cal Alumnus of the Year.

Karl Pister married Rita Olsen in 1950. They have four daughters and two sons.

Dr. Mark Austin Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Maryland at College Park austin@umd.edu Website: http://www.isr.umd.edu/∼austin (Internet archived on 2021.07.20)''

CMES Special Issue
''CMES 2021.12 - cover Karl Pister-1.pdf the occasion of Professor Karl S. Pister’s 95th birthday and his long academic career–-in research, teaching, and university leadership and administration–-we gathered together former students, friends and colleagues to contribute to this CMES Special Issue, Vol.129, No.3, 2021 Nov 25, which is composed of three parts.

Part 1 consists of eighteen items, a biography of Professor Pister followed by seventeen individual tributes to Professor Pister. Part 2 consists of fourteen technical papers dedicated to Professor Pister, followed by Part 3, a memory-lane with photos of the participants from way back when, particularly around the time of their closest interaction with Professor Pister, either through research or through administration.

Dr. Sheila Humphreys 1987.png Specifically, we intentionally arranged Part 1 to reflect a certain balance of diversity that Professor Pister sought for much of his later career as a university administrator, as described in detail in the long tribute by Dr. Sheila Humphreys titled “Karl S. Pister and the Foundation of Diversity in Engineering”. It is with regret that the same extent of the balance in Part 1 could not be replicated in Part 2.

We pay particular attention to the permanence of Web resources cited in this special issue. For example, the University of Maryland Office of the President (umd.edu), which would show different UMD presidents depending on when this webpage is accessed many years in the future, is accompanied by the archived, permanent webpage Internet archived on 2021.06.05, which will always display the photo and leadership of UMD President Darryll Pines, an alumnus from the University of California at Berkeley, and a contributor to this special issue. A website could have its address changed, or removed completely in the future, but its Internet archived version remains permanent.

Darryll J. Pines 2021.jpg 2021, President of University of Maryland, College Park]] Similarly, as Wikipedia articles constantly continue to evolve, with new information added and errors corrected by many editors (and are sometimes vandalized, but almost always quickly reverted to the previous good version), the version of any Wikipedia article at the time of access in this special issue, such as the article ‘Cesar Chavez’ in connection with the tribute by Ms. Lola Martin-Atilano, is immediately followed by the archived, fixed version closest to the time of writing for this special issue, such as.

We are well aware of the birthdate of Professor Pister. This special issue was started in 2020 when we underestimated the time it took to put it together with a quality level where it is now. Since many participants were informed of the special issue title, we keep it the same, as the (late) birthday present, and the effort expanded into creating it, would mean more than the actual age in the title. In addition, a mid-decade celebration seems to resonate well.

So Happy Birthday Karl. We wish you continued good health and good spirit.

With our appreciation, gratitude, respect, and very best regards,

Karl Pister Special Issue editors

Loc Vu-Quoc1 and Shaofan Li2 (2021 Nov 25)

1Aerospace Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, IL 61801, USA ∙ vql@illinois.edu 2Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of California at Berkeley, CA 94720, USA ∙ Shaofan@berkeley.edu''

LIFE/Time does NOT own copyright: Solid evidence 1
Transferred to LIFE/Time does NOT own copyright: Solid evidence 1 in User talk:Egm4313.s12 on Commons.

LIFE/Time does NOT own copyright: Solid evidence 2
I borrowed Devillers (1952), Histoire du Viet Nam, from the library again, and noted that there was this mention regarding the photo of Ho Chi Minh, Leclerc, Sainteny (1946) on Flickr: "Ci-contre: Leclerc, Ho Chi Minh, Sainteny. Hanoi, 18 mars 1946.  Photo S. C. A." This fact supports the finding of Racconish in Section Image search method, French archives/publications NAME-LINK that there was no credit given to a photographer.

NOTE: S. C. A. = Service Cinématographique des Armées (Motion-Picture Service of the Armed Forces), a branch of the "Service Presse Information," mentioned by Racconish, who recommended to KEEP the image close to a month ago on 15:19, 7 April 2024 (UTC).

Egm4313.s12 (talk) 13:14, 4 May 2024 (UTC)

LIFE/Time does NOT own copyright: Solid evidence 3
In the issue of LIFE, 1968 Mar 22, Vol. 64, No. 12, which is also included below the photo of Ho Chi Minh, Leclerc, Sainteny (1946) on Flickr, the image was published without credit.

Based on the careful search in the LIFE image archive in Section "LIFE/Time does NOT own copyright: Solid evidence 1", LIFE does not hold the copyright for the image.

In the award-winning history book by Logevall (2012) below, the image was published with the credit given to a "Private collection" ! The photographer is clearly unknown.


 * , 864 pp. Winner of the 2013 Pulitzer Prize in History: "For a distinguished and appropriately documented book on the history of the United States, Ten thousand dollars ($10,000). A balanced, deeply researched history of how, as French colonial rule faltered, a succession of American leaders moved step by step down a road toward full-blown war"  • Winner of the 2013 Francis Parkman Prize from the Society of American Historians • Winner of the 2013 American Library in Paris Book Award • Winner of the Council on Foreign Relations 2013 Gold Medal Arthur Ross Book Award • Finalist for the 2013 Cundill Prize in Historical Literature.

In the book based on The_Vietnam_War_(TV_series), by Geoffrey C. Ward & Ken Burns (2017), The Vietnam War: An Intimate History, Alfred A. Knopf, New York, the same image LINK was published with the credit given to "Alex K. Thomas papers, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan." Major Allison (Alex) K. Thomas, commander of the OSS Deer Team, sat on the left of Ho Chi Minh in the image.

See a detailed documentation on this photo in Section "Update on misprint in EW p.86, 2024.05.04" in Notes on Vietnam History, version 2024.05.04, or for future versions, go to Notes on Vietnam History, Internet Archive.

The unknown photographer cannot be a French colonial-army personnel, who was not allowed in this Viet Minh stronghold at Tan Trao in 1945. Thus this photographer can only be either a Viet Minh photographer, in which case the PD-Vietnam license applies, or a member of the OSS Deer Team, in which case the PD-USGov-Military-Army license applies.

So I used both templates PD-Vietnam and PD-USGov-Military-Army in the image to cover both cases.

Updated Egm4313.s12 (talk) 21:40, 4 May 2024 (UTC) ◉ Started Egm4313.s12 10:14, 7 April 2024 (UTC)

Image search method, French archives
Transferred to Image search method, French archives/publications in User talk:Egm4313.s12 on Commons.

Getty Images is selling public-domain images
Transferred to Getty Images is selling public-domain images in User talk:Egm4313.s12 on Commons.

Help:Link
Help:Link, Section What is an "anchor"?

= Quotation with double quotes =

No frame using Template:Cquote
Template:Cquote I beg you to understand that the only means of safeguarding French interests and the spiritual inﬂuence of France in Indochina is to recognize the independence of Vietnam unreservedly and to renounce any idea of reestablishing French sovereignty or rule here in any form. . . . Even if you were to reestablish the French administration here, it would not be obeyed, and each village would be a nest of resistance. . . . We would be able to understand each other so easily and become friends if you would stop hoping to become our masters again.

''I beg you to understand that the only means of safeguarding French interests and the spiritual inﬂuence of France in Indochina is to recognize the independence of Vietnam unreservedly and to renounce any idea of reestablishing French sovereignty or rule here in any form. . . . Even if you were to reestablish the French administration here, it would not be obeyed, and each village would be a nest of resistance. . . . We would be able to understand each other so easily and become friends if you would stop hoping to become our masters again.

I beg you to understand that the only means of safeguarding French interests and the spiritual inﬂuence of France in Indochina is to recognize the independence of Vietnam unreservedly and to renounce any idea of reestablishing French sovereignty or rule here in any form. . . . Even if you were to reestablish the French administration here, it would not be obeyed, and each village would be a nest of resistance. . . . We would be able to understand each other so easily and become friends if you would stop hoping to become our masters again.''

With frame using Template:Quote frame
Template:Quote frame

Template:Quote box
Template:Quote box

Hello, must write something otherwise the title "Borders" of the next section is suppressed.

Note that the font size of Template Quote box is smaller than the above quotation methods, and there is a small indentation.

Template:Borders
Template:Border

Template:Box
Template:Box

See also Template:Divbox.

Html div
More on box with frame with HTML, see

Creating space between an element and its border: On div and padding

HTML  Tag, W3Schools

Div_and_span

See HTML - How to Create a Box with HTML and CSS for "border-radius" used in the example below.

Example:  The Note link-labels, such as N.bda in superscript, are unique identifiers for the corresponding Notes, with "N" standing for "Note", followed by a period and three or four characters summarizing the Note contents, e.g., "bda" for "Bao Dai abdication," which is the title (in italics) of the Note N.bda. In front of each Note, the uparrow ↑ preceeding a Note link such as (↑ N.bda) indicates the link to jump back UP to the main text where the link N.bda appears.

The target of the link (↑ N.bda) is the HTML anchor with the code  having the anchor name being "Bao Dai abdication jump", without an Anchor_text (or link text, or link label) inside. The code  creates the link (see Help:Link) with label "N.bda" to jump back UP to the main text where the anchor with anchor name "Bao Dai abdication jump" was embedded.

= Draft =

Copyright violation

''Content that violates any copyrights will be deleted. Encyclopedic content must be verifiable through citations to reliable sources.''

= Minimum in-line citations =

Comment: mixed referencing format. stick to one, either footnotes or inline citations. for biographies, it is highly encouraged to use inline citations. – robertsky (talk) 13:41, 3 March 2023 (UTC)

When you must use inline citations

Our sourcing policies do not require an inline citation for any other type of material, although it is typical for editors to voluntarily exceed these minimum standards. However any material lacking an inline citation to a reliable source that directly supports the material may be removed and should not be restored without an inline citation to a reliable source. Substantially exceeding them is a necessity for any article to be granted good or featured article (or list) status. The featured article criteria, for example, require that articles seeking to exemplify Wikipedia's very best work must be "well-researched," defined as a "thorough and representative survey of the relevant literature", presented by "consistently formatted inline citations using footnotes". If you can't find the source of a statement without an inline citation after a good-faith look, ask on the talk page, or request a citation. As of 2022, there was no specified amount of inline citation that an article must have before being eligible for nomination as a Featured Article, Good Article, or (when applicable) A-Class article, and no particular style is favored over any other.

= Joseph Buttinger =

Joseph Buttinger: no image as of 24.1.20

Search South Vietnam Foreign Minister Tran Van Lam

Trần_Văn_Lắm

South Vietnam Foreign Minister Tran Van Lam with Joseph Buttinger CC-BY-2.0 Douglas Pike Photograph Collection - Vietnam Center and Archive

[https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-e&sca_esv=600067661&sxsrf=ACQVn09umMm6kh5VqehGGnnyI4ztVENVhg:1705758308100&q=joseph+buttinger&si=AKbGX_qXAHl0ixv0TRHk_JNfH1ZpPcoCjxIk4rWer4ucR4BKUZxmeUpAKZ72ngOlSAywZclMWxkyrwXYeC4QneUh9gTa2N9tIDLrUQcz529pcjdWlQ3pWKxMBaRKQgPilYgC_8BD9Ebc0J7_mwzrWDUM44TrZ7d83-4zLjqrSQoNJ3ngwWqrDW0EdxMGvV2xgti69EtrdZmOM32JTkFXgV6q62BPx8LkDZ3C6eQzrrlpYr4O9dFe7CPdSmuigeZ-ZuzbCReGUXPFGM6VhkBrtOM21RyarFnUxjUYm_Rto9ougjXe975Ak7wA7HZjwugmhbfrq7MeAex2o26VlaC9bKKfR6cYlOylAspF6PKkOMvZYgDQI9AWLtry3dx4rtP5ppcMNxR6-PifIA1mfxp8J6Y_rPNIJhfdr7uXQnwSvLfTRaPp62T-7vVhUDlQ5nPvl7pRBoojSb_Py636Vm07lg1BqTQ-OBKSyJU1bf7PB5UFeupWPkYlrFyDgmnEorcTsfoKObZgvz880Z129KSoNPy-NNGY12F15VnG8MbspyGdjrs507iDHJg9U3URGDKt0EWIBqQ8OM8Sl6AESMaQK646BccTGnjjKORI-kERarHZe-vGRxpQLH7WpSw-ufjO0IbXkpo_sbqvdzYRjvPWUUKNg5BjDAVKhDdRYoqcjMGzqDIeNsilpwPBJXnNb_HL_HK_ThvzlRSKs6M3iayzfkxAhgEVTI6Afn1eP8HXSpvl1imkU0bmSSul3YwLb_4iTx_p7RM6pbUTGrNdzZfp9U3f4BiQf_EpT_e9hKTo2YxKCbMW9FCUUKNQ0giufvRo2FT58PcPO4-Ebe0sxaWWV_8MXq8gncUI_KHr5lQ20rpalADMF-iMbN7JDrC8uy5X5C6f-KEmEMo7b196G-1tzWxQpIQn2RwCE4lc_P3A5mYqMwRE_5HOkJYmPc7c5BMuW4mA53hdu8pYB4dM8Vx59fZlnCkL6oDlWyslLDhzqnITbzR1UfOn2dcmsdgj0SR7zTKOMxWREj9Bu4DUhRmWhKx4DqiDKmckxOcc2DP3kMHKCN8jpBplPhyEPQyhlA-WZ1_V5q_UCodGuI7tjELNXrBQslKiPcxvL5PlRW0SQfmdrcsKXjsZK5y6biTDdKinzqasKzfSiG1UHjxvTIIN-JlVgvShQjWztpsO4HpxnWgB8nn3jAup5z3hxjOTwJGc78MqwY0WDuTF-rh8TVG78TwZYFziply7MOVycjUqz0LQRXzBn4L1oiaNxwLIfypthDCwwym0MSGuSfUvjG3xJHutACYunCaiSSXuQpoZrLOWD7TG2hYc8VwVB3lKriB57a1Phf6eGU9c0ohwutnIdtwFKauBTetu8RkMf2CC-sgCN4ZnPW5n7OPOMudaWFDeLovfcPjbGGEwnPrbobL2GdxMqyvmD7nLeAKrKsyKM3SSNJ1C8rgXCFgsZsethp6yNlIzJc31iIMhKuaE-x0DLjB39g_-tp2fkvAXoIaEFu7E0LbCrzYga9eWFpaPu7GFV7o6Bjz6k29_NvnfinNAQKgMG1Rx0zyG-zwlhTDnn9qNJAi8GXX_o5LumO7Qq3h07qEfIwlAB5Xd5w6RgdGmcl6LoNQ2L-QRC7T_a9U8S8fxaPAeDDBTlBEDonxvj7dgBJFCN-gve7dDNEdTzNwZWi3yFsQINDcXd0NJb6Ph1j3BopBfhufFoSsPEgST4i8_smHzWnd0e4GFMn2LcxjF3ST068tvCpgxkiqvGU3AaGpArIY8vBHwhDYCdeQA-s-shaVPgD8ZanYRyEKNqgz_5bVFbDBDv4dpCMQ7-0Tj2PD4sVyj06QSSl9lvDY2o_ucesQFMFNHx7MGpEHwuj0T3sVHjDjoBXgLU1btuPsCQFhJbrwCowAxiCvPGtaiIdsu3LrbdPzQQ6cSZd2dwXRXxjXSkCRwJNEjtalboJAMpTZzOVfo-bLy-PCVkiBL3ohMddIreRs-zWYs699xjtA5q0I1StPdtQMXNno8mL9euOJd2tkCPX8HDxnuoVYBrFbLMp0wLT35QHDiKkET3B5BWoBx6Pa4d7zxAP1yAjjxdo-4a0BDZsFZVu_yQcyv7PYmAI4-mTdeyWQ3kzjRIaKY9ebwu_ICjD6woDe6E1xVSX-QQKmVXse1Dug9KZMzIlp7KfjXKn2skc5KAIl432AH27imz6vO9q2BiuX1I0hprUOZXXduFNC_TeqN0HhdrL1p2otSt99iEbjfPsLluhdtHOZKz7hzeUytQeHjM86hkyJvTz326r-L1ihUsgwjD-sOdDVMoAX9ImKQvFhY1DUuK2M-5tTGPIUO4qCmAAzq_CBcDuANbsigzBJ00-IPE_ysTQjsayhGqTaEcOKx7ylvV6anoGmhDfs9frwNwe3ue2RUOuAKYX5H1n1pImsydNmOVLWQN2ntcu4-JzIRSIZDjdfFfLP06upOZ9pufwfKqMYw5hjioc21CZTAViGmCsnFsc7PBwz_4keGUV9yDEUz5GsD0hUA2S8OzZGqLcAaMx_ZFlyUxOl_SJiOIXA2p9aVr6NGmo5ESxumJ8nrGaTS4fWhALXXMkrPpHk0Z3_8uGcpt1-reGspmO8u1SNMgE56QwxVMYpTV_nFMEpIgKpC6fb79BvnCHzbDIjzL9RESH53eTIUDC1f1d_zSdqy1w6bbSpymocGymbW8P08j2_IMwIVl-xQ2nAFJ6S0ARqovFBQulXah52UQHKnETYz7OoL3A15YOSHpf-ydTi_Jr3VQjnZQ_QdHo0G-YDcPYdOBMtl63jMosB2IWYuTlJsi8IPYbq1_3yWsCL2VemWSF7GHd8UdV2qel-mexZATcP7i17ksY5J78py0C1mX2haX3WBjsEeA9rrpht6jglaz3_t_nI4JS2WkpfV8Q-SkS7X0cYPIS3YYS6eyAeXUZKS_ee3t-fpZKoQ2vHrrsT2AUrg--g-pWqMY70Ez7rpYwJcCJyQ_Ze3afRzcLfTVYHcUVJsp7i6klOZkGN6QIHzJT_GUupheCfQlIUskvn_eTPgZucIcSUxlwC2iYdkENSFTPc7hKigzU9Y_2I67-RAUAYo6llVUq3IOUdKDaGOpOF-87Cnelgq_zn6UZ35GWZH_apvBdtiYY54kjooGYKzR8TlW1wbXAI4cXNTgqCM8JJiNdqFZcGv2spFgD2EeNGR-6BtxXpfvMdERCHM5s-oRu0zt0dTM8B1Fj6vEHkOxvKh7S7fARQrv3YnImDFxEF7UV6vFr2xlmpPH6Hp4zh0jdJ2mLAtOptihEUn3OaA2Yyv6ZQJtsryFfI6H6_uDAfGEvGesC95Ne4sdp-VnuNatdyy4J3stec0_DsYPNi8LL4a4J4HRx2FeULWgccFX2fxhPwJH5pJKUUXnkLZ2Ajjh11MIChYFLKtprled4DkAiYKtmIM4n1bemoymEqpPSbV0wY3RbUZBr68thYzn2aBj0YqgwpF95gbfA1TVaPuyaeiNDLkQayRbbsHAF5yfzVgLXQMbdGOwFM67oxzLcoQbVO3TGUXHpSOGAJG-l0H4-jlcWdJ2FjXTJ5CopgiZA0O7pMkLEMvAq_tPuqcjdD1F_Lt7SpY7yFPpSXXnLbDU4iDlWzz7ucXs4Ikvq_kZ7THVhVVVZydzXRrvfG6mpSS6uLrXy8o0O0wdtTxdJ9rsG1vOcKt4mxx3mmMTT6pIc1dUpK9oWXbx29JEZbGsG-yxmFONCLJGCQwnlfn1EHE45BeITDF49xZLdVGLSxByT7fQiOw5MzIQAtnJjRHji3SEAAiVT9FrPKfvgDf2aj--PAZ5y0TAhS-Vb8Yuv7u088h4qEaklat7_F2Xd93lDBwhUqR48n49JTv0l_wx_87oaKRIVYJwkFB7Vlsxdyyn1QbPBCJjV917C8X1LsIdbkuxK91gselR6IFMVHjtBkh9zTJLH2Si2ocYQjd_llW_Fa-Wu6RTQHP4c1rQN9MXFxGPdc5zcihUy6vYb3C_YfkfuozDHo2d0yS6rKVA06ki37OOrVdQ6LaVGu6U0eJBBd8P5KnVwBO2F6zUJsAj93GP1Jicp4xagSTKjZ6EO3Bb6n99wu_Pa2TstIwMkoGvWOgWtqj-FznYJvadSPFmxP4CggE-uGm7zSxVK01p3VOhojQpICRaj1ventFCR2wtqtutU8yoPev3udhC7kp0IqMKUW6ORBBW4fuS05RNZL8qAusQC_A1KGUfpMY4sfCtuNTNW-yo3tGaQyTxE8gWg5o9iRGbFNYstJfbqYC26TRZyRrebTPnsECK2c3_NpFERdwekP8bfpK3irqXDsrHgCeiVVMz1ZCjW2ZhjaJTKqSskI_dXA8GU9Hn8USDXcHgW2_uE2sMa_9kfbMcMlNxyAnyX-G1TdVvv3RIPGgAMnhqRER5TkytKVuPOOOIOyLitYBEgbVqNu78OobQ5iZ1mMR9wjl-S5obqKa5y9aQ1xfIZG0sFuXPXpdxMtVBR_Zz0Hpwo4qSPp7a0-rZ1FLcwr0w8WFgUhljEkoXPcvOp_CWLuuwmWLszTiPCkGEHVIhnaUiCOpON2WYuzjaAWFb8kqC5NWl_OzGz99PRMo7R9kwOeeXduqbVsFUhrUJXRvSkMGtZxPJamNeE85JAulUA%3D%3D&tbm=isch&source=lnms&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjfkJvwjOyDAxWbk2oFHZnoANQQ0pQJegQIChAB&biw=1366&bih=653&dpr=1 Image search]

= Vietnam National Museum of History =

Musee Louis Finot
From, I found:

c:User:%E6%BA%90%E7%BE%A9%E4%BF%A1, c:User:源義信/Waiting_for_imports, Musée Louis Finot, nay là Bảo tàng Lịch sử Việt Nam, Zoom-out image of the museum with a stele on the left

L'Ecole Française d'Extrême-Orient (EFEO), Un siècle de recherche sur le terrain en Asie. L'Ecole française d'Extrême-Orient (EFEO), fondée en 1900 à Saigon, a pour mission la recherche interdisciplinaire sur les civilisations asiatiques, de l'Inde au Japon. L'EFEO est présente, grâce à ses 18 centres de recherche, dans 12 pays d'Asie. Cette spécificité permet à ses 42 chercheurs permanents (anthropologues, archéologues, linguistes, historiens, philologues, sociologues des religions, etc.) d'être sur les terrains de leurs études, et d'animer un réseau de coopérations locales et d'échanges internationaux entre scientifiques orientalistes.

Conditions d'utilisations des images Dans le cadre de la photothèque, l’EFEO met à disposition des photographies, le cas échéant protégées par le droit de la propriété intellectuelle. Leur réutilisation est soumise à une demande préalable.

L’usage des photographies est libre pour des fins d’étude et de recherche, à l’exclusion de tout usage commercial. Pour toute autre utilisation, veuillez contacter la photothèque de l'EFEO : phototheque@efeo.net

Google search for "Đông Dương Bác Cổ, nay là Bảo tàng lịch sử Việt Nam, Hà Nội", Image search

From the above image search, I found these nice architecture articles: Nét Đẹp Kiến Trúc Đông Dương Ở Hà Nội Qua Các Công Trình, [https://noithaticon.vn/kien-truc-dong-duong/ #1 Phong Cách Kiến Trúc Đông Dương Là Gì? – ICON INTERIOR]

Older stuff
Google map showing the museum is near the river front as noted in Archimedes Patti's book, Why Viet Nam? pdf p.181.

Street image

Category:PD US license tags Template:PD-US

, ,

Template:PD-1996 This work is in the public domain in the United States because it meets three requirements:


 * it was first published outside the United States (and not published in the U.S. within 30 days),
 * it was first published before 1 March 1989 without copyright notice or before 1964 without copyright renewal or before the source country established copyright relations with the United States,
 * it was in the public domain in its home country on the URAA date (January 1, 1996 for most countries).

= "Spamming own work," official rule or personal preference? = DONE, I moved the draft (which I deleted here) to the end of Section [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Egm4313.s12#%22Spamming_own_work,%22_official_rule_or_personal_preference? "Spamming own work," official rule or personal preference?] in Commons. Egm4313.s12 (talk) 13:23, 17 December 2023 (UTC)

Wikipedia:Spam § External link spamming

Wikipedia:Vandalism

Map removers
Document here the two map removers in Wikipedia and the map remover in Vietnamese Wikipedia.

Courtesy to other users
Content that violates any copyrights will be deleted. Encyclopedic content must be verifiable through citations to reliable sources.

Vietnamese Wikipedia message when trying to edit an article.

User_talk:Mrfly911

Civility

Etiquette

Wikipedia:Etiquette § A few things to bear in mind
 * Wikipedia invites you to be bold, though it is wise to remember that it is possible to be too bold. Before initiating discussion, ask yourself: is this necessary to discuss? Could I provide a summary with my edit and wait for others to express opinions if they like? Might my actions have consequences that I have not considered?

Wikipedia:Editing policy

Template index/Cleanup

New material not yet included
2023.12.23: In I even cited my name as author since : "for more details, see Vu Quoc Loc (2023), Notes on Vietnam history, Inernet Archive."

Egregiously meaningless image description
See Section Egregiously meaningless image description

Citation spamming
Moved to Wikimedia Commons User_talk:Egm4313.s12 § Citation spam, official rule.

Egm4313.s12 (talk) 01:40, 13 January 2024 (UTC)

Note: The well-known expression "L'État, c'est moi!" mentioned above is a charitable way to describe the dictatorship of the personal preferences of the underworld anonymous admins and users, who are by far not comparable to the Sun King Louis XIV.

Incorrect description in Vietnamese pronouns
DHN: I have always been bothered by the Introduction of Vietnamese pronouns, which turns out to be incorrect, both logically and mathematically, as follows. I work on math/mechanics every day; see my list of Publications and their impact (through number of citations) in.

Logically and mathematically, consider a larger set A that contains a smaller set B. One says that "A is more general then B," or "B is a particular case of A." Concretely, set A is the collection of pronouns in the article Vietnamese pronouns, whereas set B is a much smaller collection of pronouns in the article Đại từ nhân xưng, which can be translated into English and French. There are Vietnamese pronouns that contain nuances in relationships that do not have equivalences in Engish or French, or in Western languages in general.

A Venn diagram can be drawn to pictorially explain set A containing set B.

Hence, logically and mathematically, the article Đại từ nhân xưng, with its equivalent Personal pronoun, is a particular caseNOT a more general caseof the article Vietnamese pronouns.

Let me know if you see something else.

Prof. Loc Vu-Quoc, vuquocloc@yahoo.com, Publications,.