User:Lawaspirant5580/sandbox

Batmania header
Batmania is a term coined by Billy Joe (Biljo) White in the early 1960s and the title of his influential fanzine dedicated to the DC comic book character Batman. The name is "almost certainly" based on the then-prominent term "Beatlemania" used to describe the impact of the Beatles in popular culture. When White first published Batmania, interest in the Batman character was at a low point; however, due to changes credited largely to DC editor Julie Schwartz, comic sales improved and the character built a wave of popularity that led to the 1966 Batman television show. White and his fanzine were credited with helping to focus the energy of the dedicated fans during this time.

The term "Batmania" was used extensively - and without apparent awareness of White's publication - in the popular press to describe the high level of interest surrounding the premiere of the 1960's TV Show and was revived in media references to levels of interest displayed around the premiere of the 1989 Batman Movie. The term has become a colloquialism used to describe fan interest in Batman and merchandise associated with the character.

In addition to White's fanzine, the Batmania title has been used as the name of several books written by James Van Hise on the history of the Batman character and associated merchandise, a series of documentaries about the 1960s Batman TV series, an album of music "Inspired By The Batman TV Series" released in 1997, and assorted other Batman-related media projects.

Bilily Joe (biljo) White: Columbia Daily Tribune Obituary

Commentary on early fanzines by Bill Schelly

Chapter 4, Footnote 17 signals "approptiation" of Beatlemania by White for Batmania

p.32 directly attributes coining of term to Biljo White and his fanzine. (https://books.google.com/books?id=e7t-mZrkF08C&pg=PA32&lpg=PA32&dq=batmania+beatlemania+white+biljo&source=bl&ots=-o8Ks1lKwc&sig=ACfU3U0Tvq-hSZQpGmiGdEljhFkv9Tyh8w&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiOrM6xuaPrAhVTaM0KHc_SAts4ChDoATAJegQIAhAB#v=onepage&q=batmania%20beatlemania%20white%20biljo&f=false)

Batmania footer

 * something else Lawaspirant5580 (talk) 16:05, 17 August 2020 (UTC)

Interesting things about animanga infoboxes

 * inserting a value other than a date in "last" generally flags a "redundant" error (the default value is "present" if the field is left blank
 * having a volume=1 combined with a first=1, but no magazine or last values flags an "obsolete/incorrect" parameter trigger
 * having a title or a name in a /Print, /Video, etc. box that is identical to the page name flags redundant information

Newberry library embedded map - wikiopenstreet map, coordinates?

test 1 test 2

test 3

test 4

Sample Citation

Links that are Anchors
test anchor link

to put an external anchor link, use the anchor template in the page first, then link to the page, then insert the "#" anchor text after the link. See "Wigmore Chart" and the link back to Wigmore on Evidence for a concrete example

See anchor discussion on Redirect (subst:anchor) for anchors and section heading info.

Standards for notability - Journals
Notability (academic journals)

Internal Infoboxes (secondary ones)
see St. Mary's University School of Law

Editing redirect pages
The easiest way to get back to a redirect page (to edit the destination of a redirect or its categories or whatever) is to use the "What links here" link in the toolbox at the top left column of a page. This enables categories and additional information to be placed on the interstitial redirect, so that a link to a "not real" page (one that has its information embedded as a section in a larger page). See Baylor Law Review and its associated categorization for a specific example.

Section redirects and infoboxes
Any section can be a #redirect (check Baylor Law School #Law Review), but if you include an infobox with bluebook or ISO4 citations, the redirects to redirects become unwieldy. I had everything working on this with the abbreviation redirects, but the hidden housekeeping category notifiers were still getting shown on the page. I had to manually add a "purge" template that added a manual link to the page to force the caches to refresh in order to clear the notifications. What a pain.

Useful references for edit tags:
WP:V - verifiability lies with the author who added the information

MOS:LOW - Manual of style, list of works (author, works, journal articles)

WP:RELTIME - MoS ref for "currently", "recently", non-specific time. Relative time.

WP:WHATPLACE - specificity for places and examples as opposed to "sometimes" or "often"

Useful Template containers
All these with appropriate template double brackets (replace quotes)

Multiple R templates: "Rcat shell|" (note there is only the one pipe, then list all the R templates afterwards with no pipes or commas. Close with extra double-brackets at the end.

Request deletion: two templates: first "delete | [your reason]", then "db-author"

template container category (label parent cat intended for subs only, not pages): "Container category"

template avoid double redirect (ISO4 redir style): "R avoided double redirect|(specified page)"

Alphabetizing in categories
To force something into an alphabetical slot, use a SORT KEY (pipe) on the page that links back to the category (e.g., University of California alumni|Alumni). To get something to pop to the top of an alphabetical list, place a space in front of the word but after the pipe (e.g., University of California alumni| Alumni). Another way to get to the top is to use a "*" (star) reference in the pipe. The * is indexed ahead of the alphabet (although it shows up as a separate section which looks a bit odd).

Test link
this is a test link to the anchor I embedded above

Infobox Embedding
Some common embed samples (office, military) are reproduced for easy cut 'n paste use. Still have yet to find convenient way to list all academic postings for faculty who move around a lot;  list of employers (with dates?) seems to be the common way...maybe someday make an embed (like officeholder) for an academic posting? Just need position (prof, adjunct prof, etc.), dates, university/organization. Could also do this for jobs in general (employer, term). Really just want a nice separator like "military career" or the blue background differentiator. Something to think about for another day.

Succession boxes
Between the titles and the open-style formatting, this is an exciting mechanism that can be applied to a number of situations. See Template:S-start for great overview. Particularly like the headers for different kinds of appointments - wonder if this could be adapted in infoboxes for academic postings (see infobox embedding rumination above).

Here is a particularly pretty variation that uses a double-row predecessor box for two different offices (see the real thing at William M. Conley).