User talk:Rich Farmbrough/Archive/2005 October

Khalistan
Could you please wikify the dates again in Khalistan? Your changes were lost when I reverted the changes of a persistent vandal. You have made the changes to a POV/vandalized version. Thanks! --Vivin Paliath ( &#3381;&#3391;&#3381;&#3391;&#3368;&#3405; &#3370;&#3390;&#3378;&#3391;&#3375;&#3364;&#3405; )
 * No problem, Thanks a bunch! --Vivin Paliath ( &#3381;&#3391;&#3381;&#3391;&#3368;&#3405; &#3370;&#3390;&#3378;&#3391;&#3375;&#3364;&#3405; ) 17:34, 1 October 2005‎ (UTC)

Careful with bot
Please note that I had to revert your edit here because what you wikified was not a date.

Also note that a date written in the month-day-year order properly needs a comma after the day and before the year, which you are removing on a mass scale, such as in this article. --Jiang 05:49, 2 October 2005 (UTC)


 * I will try to avoid pinyin in future! By the way it's not a bot, it's search and replace. Rich Farmbrough 09:14, 2 October 2005 (UTC)

Thanks for the prompt response. Usually the pinyin has tones instead of numbers, and with time, numbered pinyin will be converted to tones pinyin.

I would prefer that dates written in North American Month-day style by default not be purposely changed to European day-Month unless the subject is European as it would unnecessarily favor one style over the other. I don't think the edit here is appropriate because the subject is Chinese, and in China, dates are written Month-day and not day-month (but then again, the format is something like 2005.10.02 for today and not October 2, 2005, so I think no change in the default is the best solution for this case). --Jiang 09:37, 2 October 2005 (UTC)


 * 2005.10.02 can be quickly wikified as 2005-10-02 which renders depending on your date preferences as 2005-10-02. Rich Farmbrough 22:07, 2 October 2005 (UTC)

Spot the difference
OK. I give up. Unless you are a bot (in which case, here is my copy of the News Chronicle and I claim my £5) I've looked and I've looked, but I still can't see the difference you made with your "Wikify dates" edit to Jabbeke. -- Picapica 16:55, 2 October 2005 (UTC)
 * I was puzzled to start with as well, you had already done the date so my search and replace would have no effect, normally if an edit makes no difference, then it is not saved. But I must have been super observant, and removed the space before the closing square brackets around the website reference. Rich Farmbrough 22:14, 2 October 2005 (UTC)

dates in Russian personalia
Hi there Rich! just thought I'd share with you some odd peculiarity of the calendar in Russia (which you might not be aware of; sorry if I'm beating yet another dead horse... :) OK, so in Russian personalia, the dates of birth and death are often cited in both New Style and Old Style because in Russia, the calendar shift from the Julian to Gregorian has occured less than a century ago (!) and much of the published biographical data still show dates under both calendars or even under the Old Style only (causes confusion often, must I admit :)

For example, Ivan Goncharov article has the dates listed by the New Style, and these will be the ones that get recorded into the births/deaths Calendar and born/died Categories. And, the article also shows the dates under the Old Style for reference -- those were left unwikified intentionally. I'd be okay with leaving them wikified as long as they won't automatically go into the said Categories or events Calendars. Would they? not quite sure how exactly that works in the English wikipedia... I also feel that leaving them unwikified helps clarity as the "proper" dates stand out -- but this is certainly a one person opinion. What'd be your take on this? Regards - Introvert   talk  23:16, 1 October 2005 (UTC)


 * Suppose Ivan Ivanovitch was born 6 January 1813 NS 25 December 1812 OS.


 * As I see it there are four issues here:
 * Will the "born in 1812" category include Ivan wrongly?
 * Will the 1812 article include Ivan Iavanovitch on the OS birthday?
 * Will the 25 December page include Ivan?
 * Will it look OK?


 * I don't think so, the process is smarter than that, and wiifying the date certainly won't affect it.
 * No, that's a manual process (or the page wuld be overloaded).
 * Ditto.
 * Yes, I think because otherwise the date will look something like 6 January 1813 NS December 25 1812 OS to some users.


 * Rgds,
 * Rich Farmbrough 09:05, 2 October 2005 (UTC)


 * All right! Ivan Ivanovich will be properly tagged and logged :) Yes, I wasn't sure how the inclusion into the calendar categories works (I know that it is automated in the Russian wikipedia).  If it is to remain manual, then... I shouldn't have taken your time.  Regarding #4, like I said I do prefer the "otherwise" because this way, it helps the contemporary calendar dates properly stand out, but it is of course a matter of personal taste.   Thank you again for taking time to explain  -  Introvert   talk  03:19, 3 October 2005 (UTC)

Aircraft specs policy
Several weeks ago, you voted in the WikiProject Aircraft Specifications Survey. One of the results of the survey was that the specifications for the various aircraft articles will now be displayed using a template. Ericg and I have just finished developing that template; a lengthier bulletin can be found on the WT:Air talkpage. Naturally, we will need to begin a drive to update the aircraft articles. However, several topics in the survey did reach establish consensus, and they need to be resolved before we implement the template. It is crticial that we make some conclusion, so that updating of the specs can resume as soon as possible. You can take part in the discussions here. Thanks, Ingoolemo   talk  06:03, 4 October 2005 (UTC)

Wikimedia UK meeting
Hi Rich, there will probably be a meeting for the purpose of discussing Wikimedia UK this Sunday, which you might like to attend. You could add your name there if so. Cormaggio @ 23:55, 5 October 2005 (UTC)

Hi Rich,
Princess Margaret of Prussia was also hit by some of the endless mess left by user:Arrigo if I remember well. I never had any dealings with that article apart from a piped link repair and a minor lay-out tweak.

As a suggestion, maybe ask user:deb, I believe she has more experience here than I have (about that type of Princesses) - Not so long ago I left her this note: diff --Francis Schonken 12:15, 7 October 2005 (UTC)
 * Put up the merge templates for the two identical margaret(e)s (suggesting a direction for merging) nonetheless - PS, If you happen to see Cormaggio this WE, send him my regards! --Francis Schonken 12:32, 7 October 2005 (UTC)

Barnstar
Fir e  Fo  x  19:30, 7 October 2005 (UTC)

Me, Justintmartin, and Buddy Love

 * Me, Justintmartin, Buddy Love, and Brittany h 2 o share the same IP then. And, I edited Buddy's page for him. He asked me to. C2 aaron 13:22, 11 October 2005 (UTC)

IP Address?

 * I don't know if I have a shared IP address. How would that happen? C2 aaron 12:57, 11 October 2005 (UTC)


 * It's sort of a high school. It's a school in a residential treatment facility. It has kids from different grades in it. Me, Justin, and Buddy (Aaron) are all in high school though. C2 aaron 13:44, 11 October 2005 (UTC)

9814072356
Just called by to say nice job on expanding 9814072356. FWIW, I have voted strong keep on its Afd page. Gandalf61 11:13, 14 October 2005 (UTC)

Page Deletion

 * Are you an admin? Can you get LP aaron C2, P.I.D, Samantha Day, Sarah Love, and Brittany h2 o

deleted? 2 or 3 of them were created by Buddy Love, and 2 were created by me (sorry, it won't happen again). Thanks. C2 aaron 13:23, 14 October 2005 (UTC)

Vandalism

 * I typed to Jessica Liao, to give advice on kids. 10 or 15 minutes later, I went back to her talk page. I found out, Buddy Love had edited my advice, so his signature would be on it. I reverted it back already. C2 aaron 13:31, 14 October 2005 (UTC)

Obliged
Sorry, but I have reverted several of your edits. Please don't change English from one form to another to suit personal preferences. - SimonP 14:58, 15 October 2005 (UTC)

autoblocks
The user#N blocks represent autoblocks of the underlying IP address when a particular username is blocked. This is implemented by the Mediawiki software. -- Curps 00:37, 16 October 2005 (UTC)

Physical Effects of Abortion
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physical_Effects_of_Abortion can be changed to be more neutral. I have wikified and marked as not NPOV. It was marked as from the Catholic Encyclopedia...if we have a template for it, I assume that it's ok. raylu 16:16, 16 October 2005 (UTC)

Page Deletion

 * This is LP aaron C2( C2 aaron ). Could you please delete my User and User talk pages or have them deleted? Thanks. LP aaron C2 17:57, 17 October 2005 (UTC)

Overlinking
What is the point of that? -- Jmabel | Talk 05:32, 18 October 2005 (UTC)


 * See Manual of Style (dates and numbers). This is to allow date preferences to work. If you have them set them you will see 11 September and September 11 ( 11 September and September 11 ) the same way.
 * In particular if your preference is set for ISO dates (1995-10-22), it requires the year as well as the month to be wikified. Rich Farmbrough 09:29, 18 October 2005 (UTC)

Page Deletion

 * This is User:P I D ( C2 aaron ). Can you please delete my user and user talk pages? Preacher In Development 15:23, 18 October 2005 (UTC)

thank you but never mind

Pimp Juice 14:07, 20 October 2005 (UTC)

Incorrect date wikifying
Hi Rich,

Properly-wikified dates are good, and I'm glad you're working on it. However, your bot has been making erroneous edits which I've had to revert. Consider this edit and my reversion. One is a direct quotation which shouldn't be modified. Also the dates in the infobox are already wikified by the template so that people don't have to remember to do it themselves. I'm not sure whether that's the right or wrong thing to do, but it's the way it's done, and if you wikify them again they end up as [[21 June]] which renders as [[21 June]]. I found another example where you'd done that too. I'm worried we're going to end up wasting a lot of time reverting your edits if you don't make a special case for that. Thanks. Stephen Turner 13:27, 21 October 2005 (UTC)
 * Yes, most of the cricket articles are so good I usually cancel the edit. I also made a change to search and replace some time ago, to ignore dates immediately preceded by an "=" sign, I can then override by inserting a space between the = and the date. However I've had a better idea...
 * In the round, I'm making a few uncorrected mistakes, but out of many thousand edits, and improving all the time. Quotes are hard, and can only be checked by inspection, (and sometimes the "quote" is  a translated, in which case the wikifying is the right thing to do), but I can certainly exclude lines starting with ":".
 * Incidentally, because of wikilag, I do a bunch of pages, check them, then the next bunch, arguably the checking is the weakest point of the process, and the better the rest, the weaker the checking gets. Also worth noting, the main part of wikifying dates is almost done.
 * Regards, Rich  Farmbrough 14:08, 21 October 2005 (UTC)

Hi! I reverted part of your edit here because dates in URLs do definitively not need wikification. You might want to exclude this kind of behaviour from any automated processes. --zerofoks 20:01, 21 October 2005 (UTC)

Request for Adminship
Rich, I would appreciate any input you have for my Request for Administrator. Thanks so much --Reflex Reaction 21:24, 21 October 2005 (UTC)

"Wikify dates"
You made an edit to List of Native American tribes with the edit summary, "Wikify dates" While the edit itself was a useful one, the difference between the edit summary and the change that you actually made makes it harder for someone like me who is verifying that any given edit wasn't vandalism. Please use descriptive edit summaries that match the changes you are making. Thanks. -Harmil 14:32, 4 October 2005 (UTC)


 * I had not realized what a compulsion this seems to be for you until I reviewed your recent edits. The following changes:
 * Excelsior (Longfellow)
 * Hu
 * List of sheep breeds
 * Oo
 * 1930 British Empire Games
 * are just a sampling of your "Wikify dates" edits over the last couple of days. None of them have anything to do with dates, though they are not actually vandalism either. You seem to have a desire to contribute, so why are you so insistent on making the edit histories of these articles inaccurate? -Harmil 13:01, 6 October 2005 (UTC)


 * Simply a default edit summary, that didn't get turned off. Rich Farmbrough 17:54, 6 October 2005 (UTC)

You might want to be a bit more careful when you convert dates - see Silver Dollar City, specifically the various statments that "childern under 8 may ..." - that is NOT a date. N0YKG 21:57, 21 October 2005 (UTC)

See note at top of page.
It's in big letters. Night night. Rich  Farmbrough 00:40, 22 October 2005 (UTC)

1st Cav dates
You should check out Manual_of_Style_%28dates_and_numbers%29 before editing more dates and deleting commas. The style is supposed to be either
 * July 1, 1863 (which is what I use for Civil War articles) or
 * 11 September 2001 (more European and modern US Army)

and the styles should agree throughout the article.

(I will someday try to clean up that page, but it's such a mess, I've put it low on my list.) Hal Jespersen 00:34, 22 October 2005 (UTC)


 * Just for you I've made them consistant. Rich  Farmbrough 00:45, 22 October 2005 (UTC)

History of the administrative division of Russia
Hi, Rich! I should have probably mentioned this before, because you apparently are wikifying dates in bulk (in a semi-bot mode, perhaps?). Just wanted to let you know that the dates in the History of the administrative division of Russia series of articles (such as this one do not need to be wikified. The reason for that is that there are two sets of dates given&mdash;Gregorian and Julian.  The Gregorian date is the main one, so it's linked.  Linking the Julian date would be redundant (and not quite correct).  The other dates/years are duplicates&mdash;the first instance is already linked, so there is no need to wikify the rest (otherwise it looks over-linked).  Please let me know if you have questions.  Thanks!&mdash;Ëzhiki (erinaceus amurensis) 00:40, 21 October 2005 (UTC)

Thanks for contating me. This is more about formatting than linkage. For example this is how Administrative divisions of Russia in 1713-1714 looks to someone with their date preferences set to number-month-year.


 * 19 May (May 8 in the Julian calendar), 1713 - the capital of Russia was moved from Moscow to St. Petersburg.
 * 28 July(17), 19 May 1713 - Riga Governorate was formed on the recently acquired lands in the north-west of Russia.
 * July 28(17), 1713 - Smolensk Governorate was abolished; its territory was divided between Moscow and Riga Governorates.

I would probably go for somthing like this.


 * May 19 1713 (May 8, Julian calendar), the capital of Russia moved from Moscow to St. Petersburg.
 * July 28 1713 (July 17, Julian):
 * Riga Governorate formed on the recently acquired lands in the north-west of Russia.
 * Smolensk Governorate abolished; its territory divided between Moscow and Riga Governorates.

I brought the years next to the dates for people who have their prefernces set to ISO date format, and also to avoid interrupting the flow of the date. I've moved the Russia link to the first occurance, and removed some bolding. I've also removed the word "was" but that's stylistic choice.

Meanwhile in the real article I've linked the second "July 28", for the moment, the rest I leave to you. I will try to avoid these articles for now, but I suspect I've done most of them.

In the longer term I may look at getting a slightly different markup for dates.

Regards,

Rich  Farmbrough 09:32, 21 October 2005 (UTC)
 * Wow, you must get really tired explaining the same thing over and over again, to each and every person having a question, considering the magnitude of the changes. Anyway, thank you for explaining the bigger picture.  Even though I have little to no compassion to people who want to see the dates in the "28 July" format, I understand poor suckers cannot live the other way around, so having a choice is a must :)


 * I am still, however, a little confused about duplicate dates. The admin division articles only have a few, but I can imagine some articles would get tons of identical date references.  Linking them all to achieve the desired formatting effect overloads the page with redundant links, while not linking them leads to inconsistency of date display.  Do you have a solution for this problem?  No need to go into fine details; if this question had already been asked, I'd appreciate if you could just point me to the right discussion thread.
 * Same would probably apply to Julian/Gregorian dates&mdash;linking both of them is not really the right thing to do (because they both map to only one real-life day), but, as you mentioned, not linking them may break the formatting.


 * Again, thank you for taking time to write a detailed explanation. I am a date-linking freak myself :), but the issues above leave me somewhat concerned.  Take care!&mdash;Ëzhiki (erinaceus amurensis) 12:34, 21 October 2005 (UTC)
 * Yes, I agree that in an ideal world dates should only really be blue and underlined if they are strictly important. That's what I meant about a diffenet markup.  I've been thinkng something like <>  or <<13 September>> etc.  The possibilty also exists to put functionality to deal with OS dates, japanese dates, Jewish/Muslim dates etc. Ideally it would be extended to things like <> and <<11:15 pm UTC>>.  The date linking project is about 80%+ complete I reckon (altough new ones will occur), and I've had probably only 20 enquiries, in every shade of politeness!  One of the intersting things is it takes me to bakwaters of the 'pedia where I've found almost every solecism possible, which is useful for planning other cleanup projects.  They  will not be manual though! (If they happen at all.)  Rich   Farmbrough 12:46, 21 October 2005 (UTC)
 * Are the developers considering the new markup for that purpose yet, or is it more of a wish-list item?&mdash;Ëzhiki (erinaceus amurensis) 15:06, 22 October 2005 (UTC)

Kent State shootings
You made a real mess of many dates in Kent State shootings. I've managed to remove all of the errors I found. Your little search and replace operation wikified several dates that shouldn't have been. One was inside a url (.../may4/...), and several were inside external links. One was already a link!
 * Thanks for fixing errors, you could have reverted the changes, or just notified me.

Since you actually call it "search and replace", I'm thinking you did this with just a text editor or word processor. As someone who was once employed to do some serious processing of legal documents in Perl, I can tell you you're going to have to do a lot better than that. Learn about Regular expressions for a start. And it's best you use a programming language, so you can construct logic when RE's are insufficient. Like making sure you're not making a link inside an existing link.
 * I'm using RegExps, there is a limit to what they can do.

But at least check your changes more carefully! And why are they all marked as minor? Imroy 13:00, 22 October 2005 (UTC)
 * I make about 0.1% mistakes, which I think is quite good. I generally find about 1% of speedy delete pages, about 1% of incorrectly titled pages, vandalism, user signed pages and all sorts of other rubbish. They  are marked minor so as not to clog up the "recent changes" page. Rich   Farmbrough 17:26, 23 October 2005 (UTC)
 * Please do something to prevent the script wikifying dates in signatures and so forth. Thanks. Rob Church Talk 18:51, 28 October 2005 (UTC)

Thank you for your vote on my RFA
Now that the voting has officially closed, I would like to thank you very much for supporting my candidacy for adminstrator and as of 18:36, 28 October 2005 (UTC) I am an administrator. I will make sure to use the additional power judiciously and I welcome any comments you may have. --Reflex Reaction 19:07, 28 October 2005 (UTC)



Date edits - problem
Hey looks like your script tripped up when it ran across Charles Cardwell McCabe

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Charles_Cardwell_McCabe&diff=23922523&oldid=23850744

I came across it while on "random article patrol". You might want to review the edits it made to make sure it didn't break anything else. Keep up the good work. Megapixie 14:26, 27 October 2005 (UTC)
 * Thanks for spotting this. It was a one-off reg-ex search and replace that went wrong, so it's not likely to affect other articles - but if you find any more errors, please let me know.  Rich   Farmbrough 18:45, 27 October 2005 (UTC)

Just thought I'd let you know that I've noticed your bot wikifying dates in people's sigs when they sign after placing a {copyvio} tag on an article. I've never been sure why we (used to?) ask people to sign the article in these cases, but quite a few people do. This isn't important, particularly, I just thought I'd let you know. The one annoyance it does cause is that it's nice to be able to get the last diff from the CP listing and, when your bot is the last diff, it means accessin the history instead. Only a minor thing. -Splash talk 22:28, 29 October 2005 (UTC)


 * Thanks, taken care of. Rich  Farmbrough 10:47, 30 October 2005 (UTC)

Metrication in the UK
Metrication in the UK. Hi, I noticed your mention of aircraft parking as an exception to metrication law. I searched UK and EU sites for references to aircraft parking but found none. This exception does not exist in any legal reference I have seen. Can you provide any more background on the assertion?

Incidentally, the mention of aircraft height in the dti reference puzzled me at first. At first glance, I thought it was suggesting an exemption for the vertical dimension of the aircraft itself. That would be a weird exception and unlikely to be particularly of concern for aviation. However, it is merely an amiguous reference to use of the foot for altitude which is mentioned in legal documents e.g. Air Navigation Order. Many thanks. Bobblewik 11:01, 31 October 2005 (UTC)

Reduce overlinking.
'''Some people add brackets to full dates for preferences to work. Solitary months and solitary years don't have preferences.'''

Our discussion made me notice that you do a lot with dates. I have started unlinking solitary year links and solitary month links with the summary: ''Reduce overlinking. Some people add brackets to full dates for preferences to work. Solitary months and solitary years don't have preferences.''

People do all sorts of bizarre things with dates and it is fairly random and unsatisfactory. There was a discussion about modification of the Wikipedia software so that dates are automatically recognised. This would do away with the need for editors to apply 'Bobblewik 15:08, 31 October 2005 (UTC)

Edward St George
Many thanks for your comments regarding Steve Sant Fournier and also on Edward St George. Edward St George was born to the Count von Zimmermann Barbaro and had everything one can imagine with a silver-lining. Though Edward after a life in the legal profession and other associations, went into an unknown and turned around a community into one of the best in the world. His website biography done by his grandson doesn't really explain all of his generosity and legacies which a GREAT man had left behind. Edward married into the English gentry and nobility but never used his background as a basis of life but through hard work and determination. If Edward had lived another several years would have received a Knight Bachelor from HM, Queen of UK and Bahamas for his efforts. Tancarville 10:47, 3 October 2005 (UTC)

2005 South Asia earthquake
Thank you for your contribution at 2005 South Asia earthquake. Please keep it up!!!  Pradeepsomani  ( talk )

03:58, 9 October 2005 (UTC)

Happy Diwali


User:Pradeepsomani 10:20, 31 October 2005‎ (UTC)