User talk:Mattao5

May 2014
Welcome to Wikipedia, and thank you for your contributions. Although everyone is welcome to contribute constructively to the encyclopedia, please note that there is a Manual of Style that should be followed to maintain a consistent, encyclopedic appearance. Deviating from this style, as you did in Abou Diaby, disturbs uniformity among articles and may cause readability or accessibility problems. Please take a look at the welcome page to learn more about contributing to this encyclopedia. No need for bold. Mattythewhite (talk) 09:58, 29 May 2014 (UTC)

Changes for Dance Academy the Australian Televsion Show
Learn to say please. Also, That is where you are wrong. *Series* is technically Not the term used in Australia for describing a new *Season* for an Australian television show containing 20 episodes or more per season for example. As I been in Australia for 15 years and I have a lot of Australian friends and family friends that were born and also lived in Australia for over 50 years, including my neighbours, they know before I even existed that every Australian television show they have told me refers as it as *Season* for when a new season is premiered, Never by *Series*, unless it is the first *Season* itself, then that can be an exception, but that itself is pretty rare. Dance Academy for some strange reason has messed everything up, with it so far being the only Australian television show to call each *Season* as *Series*, which is completely wrong and simply unacceptable. If it was just called *Series* instead of *Season* for Every Australian television show ever existed for the last 50 years or more, then Australia would be completely copying Great Britain, making their whole point of being completely different from Great Britain and being completely independant for over 110 years as well, meaningless. I am aware Britain says *Series* for every single British television show, especially that I was born in Great Britain and lived there and I still got a lot of my family back in Great Britain, before I moved to Australia myself. I know as well that America and Australia are the only two big countries that say *Season* for all their television shows, but *Series* as a big collection of the whole television show itself for how many episodes it had done or currently shown for current continuing television shows, including for when one person wants to buy DVDs for a currnet television show or in some cases, the previous television show(s). Listen I am not trying to start an argument here. I am simply trying to make a point. I only made those changes, because I am British and I perfectly know very well that Australia Never calls their shows by *Series*, only for the television show as a whole for how many episodes it has done, not by per season of completed episodes before moving onto the next season. Dance Academy so far being the only exception and maybe one or two others that I don't know. If I won't change it, then somebody else from Great Britain will and that won't be me this time. Thank you for reading this. I apologise for any misunderstanding or confusion for this. Take care of yourself. --User:Huntster

Abou Diaby error with making changes
Hello. thank you for the advice. I am new to wikipedia when it comes to doing the codes when trying to fix a mistake. Unfortunately Wikipedia is known to get a lot of things wrong. I only did it in bold, because i wasn't sure how to do a code where the player won the FA Cup with his football team Arsenal, but never actually received a winner's medal as unfortunately he did not make a single appearance for the Arsenal winning team of the 2014 FA Cup Final. Thank you anyway for the advice. Take care. --Mattythewhite

Updating stats
Hello Cloudz679. I am new to wikipedia. Still learning. Mistakes are made. It happens. Thank you letting me know and for the advice. I actually thought I did all the updating correctly. I guess there was a technical error or I made a mistke. Thank you for your advice. At least you could see I was doing the right thing to make changes, whether you agree or disagree. --User:Cloudz679   17:23, 10 September 2014 (BST)