User talk:Kku

Article Licensing
Hi, I've started a drive to get users to multi-license all of their contributions that they've made to either (1) all U.S. state, county, and city articles or (2) all articles, using the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike (CC-by-sa) v1.0 and v2.0 Licenses or into the public domain if they prefer. The CC-by-sa license is a true free documentation license that is similar to Wikipedia's license, the GFDL, but it allows other projects, such as WikiTravel, to use our articles. Since you are among the top 2000 Wikipedians by edits, I was wondering if you would be willing to multi-license all of your contributions or at minimum those on the geographic articles. Over 90% of people asked have agreed. For More Information:
 * Multi-Licensing FAQ - Lots of questions answered
 * Multi-Licensing Guide
 * Free the Rambot Articles Project

To allow us to track those users who muli-license their contributions, many users copy and paste the " " template into their user page, but there are other options at Template messages/User namespace. The following examples could also copied and pasted into your user page:


 * Option 1
 * I agree to multi-license all my contributions, with the exception of my user pages, as described below:

OR
 * Option 2
 * I agree to multi-license all my contributions to any U.S. state, county, or city article as described below:

Or if you wanted to place your work into the public domain, you could replace " " with "  ". If you only prefer using the GFDL, I would like to know that too. Please let me know what you think at my talk page. It's important to know either way so no one keeps asking. -- Ram-Man (comment| talk)

Disambiguation link notification for November 28
Hi. Thank you for your recent edits. Wikipedia appreciates your help. We noticed though that when you edited Spring Web Flow, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page MVC (check to confirm | fix with Dab solver). Such links are almost always unintended, since a disambiguation page is merely a list of "Did you mean..." article titles. Read the FAQ* Join us at the DPL WikiProject.

Proposal to merge some small forestry articles
Maybe you edit on forestry was small but as it was fairly recent and I am struggling to get comments from that wikiproject perhaps you would like to comment on https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Ecoforestry#Merge_proposal

annlink errors
I fixed two problems with your edit at Dark Enlightenment: New semi-automated editing tool? Please be careful out there :) Jruderman (talk) 08:00, 17 July 2024 (UTC)
 * Reverted breakage of Korean characters
 * Fixed italics leaking into annotations
 * ouch. only quarter-automatic. vim doesn't like korean. that was too quick, then. thanks for noticing. just as an aside: what's the use of korean references in w:wikipedia? -- Kku (talk) 08:29, 17 July 2024 (UTC)
 * A non-English source, cited inside a "see also" section, is an unusual way to encounter non-ASCII characters. But I still recommend using a tool that supports Unicode, because many article titles do contain en dashes (e.g. Canada–Mexico relations) or diacritics (e.g. Lech Wałęsa).
 * By the way, I peeked at the docs for . It doesn't have a nice shortcut for italicizing the article title, which is why my edit repeats the book titles. But the template does have an option to put quotes around the title, useful for song titles and such. Jruderman (talk) 09:19, 17 July 2024 (UTC)