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Quick gathering of opinions: is there a point in
basketball (disambiguation)?
The film entry is a redlink, and to be honest, I don't think it'll ever earn itself an article, at least not in the foreseeable future. "The Basketball Diaries", in my opinion, has no risk of confusion — someone that wants to find out about "The Basketball Diaries" will probably search for "The Basketball Diaries" or perhaps "Basketball Diaries"; most people if not all would be able to figure out a mere "basketball" won't get them anywhere in a search. The final entry, "BASEketball", has a different spelling and I find this unlikely to be confused with the sport.
Just wanted to see what others think.
Neonumbers
12:38, 27 March 2006 (UTC)
- I think it's important to keep. Although the redlinked movie is questionable (it is not even listed under the
director's credits at IMDB, the other entries are valid.
The Basketball Diaries maybe not, but certainly
BASEketball. The spelling difference take a minute to notice, could certainly be confused when searching, and is therefore
important to include in the page.
- Because of the questionable existance of the redlinked movie, and the difference in title of
The Basketball Diaries, I guess I could see putting a disambiguation link on
Basketball linking to
BASEketball, but it seems to be better as a disambiguation page. --
Nataly
a
17:06, 27 March 2006 (UTC)
- Cool, thanks. I can see why BASEketball is a reasonable entry (kind of), but I maintain that the others are not — I can't be bothered changing that hatnote link, so we'll just see how things go.
Neonumbers
09:02, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
I would be grateful for advice on issues concerning
Ptolemy (disambiguation). I have summarised the editing history and centralised links for discussions at
Talk:Ptolemy (disambiguation). If you have any advice or comments, please leave them there. Thanks.
Carcharoth
00:39, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
[Refactored and edited discussions copied here from the Help Desk and
Category talk:Lists of ambiguous human names - please note I have copied these comments - apologies if this breaches any etiquette, though I think refactoring like this is OK.]
The
Leonardo (disambiguation) page has a bit allowing people to see all articles starting "Leonardo", or rather to see a list of AllPages starting from Leonardo, as seen
here. This is the first time I've seen this, though the Leonardo disambiguation talk page led me to
Robert, which does look a bit overdone, but also has the "AllPages" link. My question is whether this is a common practice, or whether it falls foul of the "no self-reference" rule about not linking to non-article space in Wikipedia (creates problems with mirror/redistribution sites)?
Carcharoth
18:57, 28 March 2006 (UTC)
- The Special:Allpages link from
Leonardo (disambiguation) strikes me as a self reference (which
WP:ASR says to avoid) and I don't think this is common. [...] I think a good place to discuss this would be
Wikipedia talk:Manual of Style (disambiguation pages). --
Rick Block (
talk)
02:27, 29 March 2006 (UTC)
- No, the allpages list isn't usual. Bad idea. All those pages should be listed on the disambiguation page.
William Allen Simpson
07:52, 29 March 2006 (UTC)
[end quote]
So is using Special:AllPages a bad idea? It is a useful tool to find articles to put on disambig pages, but it seems lazy not to list them on the page itself. If the complaint is "there are too many", then that suggests something is wrong anyway.
Carcharoth
01:59, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
- I think using Allpages is bad, but using
Special:Prefixindex/Leonardo etc. for first names could be useful. The Dutch
nl:Sjabloon:Dp actually has this link on their version of the {{
disambig}} template (which only works if the dab page is Foo, not for Foo (disambiguation)).
Kusma
(討論)
02:15, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
- Unfortunately
Special:Prefixindex/Michael doesn't really work, since the "next page" link doesn't do what it should. In that case,
Special:Allpages/Michael is more useful.
Kusma
(討論)
02:20, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
No, Kusma, you are missing the point. No links to any form of Special Pages are acceptable. One of the reason for
WP:ASR is because Wikipedia content is widely distributed under the GDFL to other websites. A good example is Answers.com. This link will hopefully show you their version of the Wikipedia disambiguation of the name Leonardo (you may need to scroll down the page):
answers.com disambiguation page for Leonardo. As you can see, the "See also: List of all pages beginning with "Leonardo"" link does not work there. I doubt it works on other mirror/redistribution websites either.
Which brings me to another point. The pervasiveness of Wikipedia results on web searches should be emphasised as widely as possible to all editors of Wikipedia - maybe even in the editing boilerplate text. I fear that people who are not aware of how widely the content is redistributed will "check facts" using web pages that are just regurgitating the thing they are trying to check! A horrendous exercise in circularity.
Carcharoth
02:55, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
- I do understand your point and your concern, but still want to argue a bit why this idea should at least be thought about for a little while before it is dropped again: That "Special" pages don't work on mirrors is something the people who run mirrors should worry about, or that could be amended by putting these links into special CSS that makes the mirrors not use it. While a hand-made list of all people whose first name is Michael could be prettier, that list will never be up-to date. The alphabetic indices on
Special:Allpages and
Special:Prefixindex can be useful in some circumstances like this one, but are rather hidden from the casual user, who will probably only see them when searching for a nonexistent page. Perhaps at the very least a Special pages link should be on the talk page of disambiguation and some other pages (like first name pages), to be checked every now and then to see if more content needs to be added to the page.
Kusma
(討論)
03:27, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
- (reply to Carcharoth after edit conflict with Kusma)Then perhaps we should emphasize that any such special pages links should use
Template:Selfref, then at least reusers who at least make an effort at making the content usable can simply strip out such self-references. Now whether and when links to Allpages are appropriate probably merits some discussion -- it has come up before on one of the disambiguation-related talk pages. Personally, for things like first names (like Leonardo or Robert), I think the dab page should only list persons who are commonly referred to solely by that name. However, for people who might want to browse all the articles beginning with "Robert", a link to Allpages allows that (we really can't expect novice users to know about Allpages--and it is not so unreasonable to think that a disambiguation page for "Robert" might direct one to such a tool).
- Similarly, there are some terms that can be used as adjectives which are not commonly known solely by the term (only in a combined form). A link to Allpages is a way to forestall those who want to list all those numerous terms that don't really belong on the dab page and which are dynamic (but again it is not so unreasonable to think that a disambiguation page for the term might direct you to such a tool).
- If we envelop such links within the Selfref template, for example, {{Selfref|[[Special:Allpages/Leonardo|List of all pages beginning with "Leonardo"]]}} which renders as , I don't think there should be too much concern about self-references. Responsible re-users will be able to easily remove such references.
older ≠
wiser
03:37, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
- I agree with what both Bkonrad and Kusma say here. Didn't know about the Selfref template. Does that also apply to linking to category pages from an article, or is that allowed now? (ie. Are categories supported by all reusers?)
Carcharoth
03:42, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
The template and the category title read like they should be used for "ambiguous numbers". I think that means only
666 (disambiguation) or
2600 and similar pages. However, the category currently mostly consists of disambiguation pages whose title starts with a number. I fail to see how any of
qualify as "number-oriented articles". These articles do fit the category description, though: "This category consists of titles that begin with numbers." So should we amend the template, or recategorize some of the articles?
Kusma
(討論)
22:35, 1 April 2006 (UTC)
- Thanks for inviting me over here, Kusma. I'm not sure this is the best place to discuss, as it seem a style issue, but I agree the template language needs to be updated. (Reminder, I can point to several places where I asked what are we going to do about numberdis.) How about matching {{
geodis}}:
This page of titles that begin with numbers is a
disambiguation page....
- --
William Allen Simpson
23:32, 1 April 2006 (UTC)
- That indeed describes the current use of the template, and would be a better description. I just don't quite understand why this template makes sense. I mean, how is this really different from {{
diacriticdis}}:
- This article containing a
diacritic in its title is a
disambiguation page...
- or maybe {{
LetterAdis}}:
- This article whose title starts with the letter A is a
disambiguation page...
- I think I would prefer to see the scope of this category narrowed. If
2001: A Space Odyssey belongs in any category, it should be something like
Category:Titles used for more than one work or something like that. As I am trying to point out with my silly examples above, the connection to "numbers" is quite arbitrary.
Kusma
(討論)
23:42, 1 April 2006 (UTC)
- The long-existing category was recently renamed (to conform to policy) after a CfD that chose to keep these numerical lists in a separate category. In fact, there was only a single delete vote (unsurprisingly, Tedernst). Arguing about the wording of the template, sure I'll help with that. But the template should match the contents of the category as clearly as possible.
- Meanwhile, let's ponder the wording for a few days, and see whether there are better suggestions.
- --
William Allen Simpson
00:30, 2 April 2006 (UTC)
- I see. I hadn't followed the categorization of disambiguation pages, and hadn't read
Wikipedia:Categories for deletion/Log/2006 March 16. Maybe rescoping this shouldn't be done right now, then, so let's just keep this category and template for now and only edit the explanation. How about this?
- This article about topics that share the same name and start with a number is a
disambiguation page...
- --
Kusma
(討論)
00:47, 2 April 2006 (UTC)
I'm pretty sure i recall at least a discussion (possibly a guideline) regarding putting a year (or vital stats or range of reign) in paren as the Dab'g suffix on an ambig name. IIRC the practice was at least denounced and not defended. But i haven't found again anything about it. Help!
--
Jerzy•
t
16:41, 6 April 2006 (UTC)
BTW, my use of a variation on that (see
The boxers Davey Moore and
Davey Moore) when i broke up a joint bio, seems to have gone unchallenged for going on a year; it continues to strike me as a rare (and perhaps enlightening) exception to the rule that there is virtually always something better than dates to distinguish people. IMO, this case justifies it bcz the time periods are more likely to be both recalled and clear (for any but serious fans) than anything else (like weight class or form of trauma ("(beaten)" vs "(crushed)"?). Comments welcome.
--
Jerzy•
t
16:41, 6 April 2006 (UTC)
I'm posting my three (initial) 'graphs for this section at both
Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Biography#Dab'g suffixes for Bios and
Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Disambiguation#Dab'g suffixes for Bios. If someone comments, it would probably be good if the first one would also put a note at the top of the section at the other location, urging that the responses be centralized. (Also good:
- *put a note after this 'graph, on the same page that has your response, saying "done as to Moores" or "done as to years in general"
- *indicate on the non-centralizing page which of the two topics has/have drawn responses.)
--
Jerzy•
t
16:41, 6 April 2006 (UTC)
Does
rationing count as a disambiguation page? If not, is there a suitable category to put it in as an article that gives an overview of the use of a term in many different subject areas?
Carcharoth
13:18, 7 April 2006 (UTC)
- It looks suspiciously like a
multi-stub page to me... --
Nataly
a
16:12, 7 April 2006 (UTC)
I'm not sure if this is the appropriate forum for a help request, so I apologize if I'm out of place. Regardless, I have discovered there is a need for a disambiguation page for
Marcus Claudius Marcellus. If you follow the link, the details are in the discussion page. Thank you for your time.--
ScottieB
00:59, 7 May 2006 (UTC)
- It turns out only disambiguation links were needed, and it has been taken care of. :) --
Nataly
a
02:03, 7 May 2006 (UTC)
I came across
WTF and it didn't seem to still need cleanup, but I have little expierence in this area, so I thought I'd ask here.
JesseW, the juggling janitor 22:07, 12 June 2006 (UTC)
- If you take a look at the
Manual of Style for Disambiguation Pages, you'll probably notice that
WTF is substantially different that what disambiguation pages are supposed to look like. It's not *all* that bad, but mainly the problems are the long descriptions for each article. It makes it a big harder because
What the fuck redirects to
WTF, though there is no appropriate article. I'd suggest moving the "What the fuck" information to a separate article, but what do other people think? --
Nataly
a
01:19, 13 June 2006 (UTC)
- I think there's enough here for at least one split, but I'm too prudish to do it myself. Also, several of the entries are unencyclopedic and need to be eliminated altogether. --
Smack (
talk)
01:37, 13 June 2006 (UTC)
Disambiguating links to
Bosnia (disambiguation) is pretty difficult, because it's hard to tell which ones should point to
Bosnia and Hercegovina, and which to plain old
Bosnia. What should we do about this tough case? --
Smack (
talk)
03:06, 14 June 2006 (UTC)
As a newbie, I thought I should ask for help on this:
Sths currently
redirects to
Santa Teresa High School. However, the abbreviation
is also used by
Sydney technical high school. Can the
redirect be removed, or changed into a disambiguation page
with links to both pages? TIA
Winterelf
03:57, 15 June 2006 (UTC)
- I had a go at this myself. Actually, I redirected
Sths to
STHS, and put the disambig page there. You're welcome to check. Many thanks.
Winterelf
10:43, 19 June 2006 (UTC)
On
Wikipedia talk:Disambiguation#Primary topic links, I'm proposing to remove some confusing (and apparently often ignored) sentences from the guideline. Any comments are welcome. If there are no objections, I will remove the sentences after a week or so.
older ≠
wiser
14:10, 15 June 2006 (UTC)
I'm starting to tidy up the
Democracy (disambiguation), and would appreciate some input. I've removed some links such as
First Party System, but they are being defended as articles people interested in democracy need "disambiguated". This seems (to me) to clearly be what a disambiguation page is not, but some other views would be appreciated. The discussion thread is at
Talk:Democracy (disambiguation)#Weeding_the_links-
David Oberst
16:38, 19 June 2006 (UTC)
I was going to create a new article about the writer Lisa Tucker (well-known novelist of young adult literature), but the Lisa Tucker currently on Wikipedia is the American Idol contestant/singer. First thought was- make Lisa Tucker (disambiguation) and use the singer as the main Lisa Tucker. On second thought, they both seem to share equal, average, notability on Google search result pages. In fact, the writer Lisa Tucker has more news that override the singer Lisa Tucker (whom, the only news the singer has is when American Idol or Star Search is referenced.) What should be done? Should the current Lisa Tucker be moved to Lisa Tucker (singer)? Or should a new page, Lisa Tucker (disambiguation) be created? User:Arual 20:40, 24 June 2006 (UTC)
- Since it doesn't seem like there is any obvious
primary topic, it seems most appropriate to have the disambiguation page be at
Lisa Tucker, move the current article there to
Lisa Tucker (singer), and create the article you want to create at
Lisa Tucker (author). --
Nataly
a
22:00, 24 June 2006 (UTC)
This is an embarrassing example of "We forgot!"...
It's something called "McQueen". In light of recent movies, what does that mean...
Lightning McQueen.
And somebody forgot to put it at
McQueen (a disambiguation page).
I did it because:
Imagine. Somebody is looking for the Lightning McQueen article, and they just type "McQueen". The disambig that comes from there did not have Lightning McQueen, thus being a
dead-end to the search. The article
Lightning McQueen existed, but it now is also linked from the aforementioned disambiguation page. -
Tracker <small>([[User talk:TrackerTV|>talk)</small>]]
02:41, 28 June 2006 (UTC)
In case you don't have
Category:Disambiguation on your watchlist, there's some discussion at
Category talk:Disambiguation#Secondary disambiguations of some new subcategories which may be of interest (or concern).
older ≠
wiser
22:07, 4 July 2006 (UTC)
I looked through the talk archives and couldn't find the answer. Do we use {{
disambig-cleanup}} for pages with style problems only, or do we also use it for pages that (pretty much) follow
MoS:DP but are missing content. For example, see
Orlando. --
Usgnus
07:18, 7 July 2006 (UTC)
Anyone else want to comment at
Talk:Grass? --
Usgnus
15:14, 18 July 2006 (UTC)
I seem to be getting into an edit war over whether universities should be listed above capital cities at
Georgetown. Any advice from those more experienced? Also look at the
talk:Georgetown talk page for a related issue. Thanks. --
Scott Davis
Talk
23:31, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
- Not worth fighting over. As long as it stays a dab page, and people can find the place names easily, leave it be. Besides, universities are often referred to without the "university": Harvard, Oxford, McGill, Johns Hopkins, etc. --
Usgnus
00:07, 21 July 2006 (UTC)
- I have no doubt that in context, "Georgetown" means
Georgetown University. I'm not sure whether that's true when the context is "Encyclopaedia", but I'll accept the advice "not worth fighting over" for now. Checking the examples:
-
Harvard redirects to
Harvard University, but none of the "cities" named Harvard have a population as big as the student body at the university or any sort of capital status. A number of the places named Georgetown are larger than the university — two have 250,000 people.
-
Oxford is a city, and mentions
Oxford University in the lead paragraph.
Oxford (disambiguation) lists places before education.
-
McGill redirects to
McGill (disambiguation) which lists the university first, but it's bigger than the town.
-
Johns Hopkins is a person. His article has dab links to a university and a hospital which are also both in the opening paragraph. Incidentally, I'd never heard of the university, but had heard of the hospital.
- --
Scott Davis
Talk
00:49, 21 July 2006 (UTC)
OK. I'm not sure who I should talk to about this, but I think there should be a disambiguation page for the phrase "Romana". It should definitely include the two most obvious choices:
Pax Romana and
Romana, the companion of The Doctor. But where do I stop? Should I include
La Romana province?
Romana d'Annunzio?
Pedro Caro y Sureda, Marquis of La Romana? Any advice?
74.226.201.126
19:25, 5 August 2006 (UTC)
- Go ahead.
Be bold. I think it should obviously include
Romana,
Pax Romana,
La Romana and
Romana d'Annunzio. --
Zoz
(t)
22:12, 5 August 2006 (UTC)
- Yep. You probably don't need the redlink to the Marquid os La Romana, since
La Romana would be included anyway. Let us know if you need any help. --
Nataly
a
23:11, 5 August 2006 (UTC)
- As an anon they can't start a new page, so I created
the page for them. --
Zoz
(t)
01:02, 8 August 2006 (UTC)
It's a bit above me to do, but the disambiguation page for
amelia is meshed in with amelia the disease. Could someone extricate it & add a link to Amelia (novel)?--
Ibis3
13:53, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
- Done. --
Interiot
14:35, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
- Thanks so much. It looks much less confusing now. --
Ibis3
17:13, 24 August 2006 (UTC)
I've looked through the disambigutation policy and didn't find anything that really addressed this question: should the relative important of the pages to potentially be disambiguated matter? The two pages in question are
scope creep and
scope creep (relationships)
Antonrojo
16:52, 22 August 2006 (UTC)
- Just realized the article had been deleted making this an academic question.
Antonrojo
17:09, 22 August 2006 (UTC)
- Yep, it does matter, because you will have to decide if there is a primary topic or not. For information primary topics, you can take a look at
Wikipedia:Disambiguation#Primary_topic and
Wikipedia:Manual_of_Style_(disambiguation_pages)#Linking_to_a_primary_topic. --
Nataly
a
17:19, 22 August 2006 (UTC)
Hi, I just made available a new mediawiki engine feature: From now on, the
MediaWiki:Disambiguationspage page is a regular wiki page with the list of all disambibuation templates. It should have a short description, plus links pointing to all templates used for disambiguation. The page may be in any format, and contain any number of links, but only links to the Template: namespace will be treated as disambiguation templates.
Once you change it, the
Special:Disambiguations will start showing all the pages linking to disambiguation pages, thus allowing users to correct links - and point them to the specific topics. That list gets regenerated every week (might be more often - need to check with admins).
If you have any questions, feel free to contact me. --
Yurik
19:08, 25 August 2006 (UTC)
P.S. The page
Wikipedia:Disambiguation Templates is no longer needed, as it contains the same information. --
Yurik
19:11, 25 August 2006 (UTC)
Hello, I am TrackerTV from
WP:PCP. We need to collaborate with you on the new disambiguation
Power Point. Please talk with us at
WT:PCP.
Tracker/TTV (
myTalk|
myWork|
myInbox)
20:21, 3 September 2006 (UTC)
- This discussion has actually now been moved
here because it was getting off-topic at the original talk page. The problem is essentially the varied pages you get sent to via
Powerpoint/
Powerpoints,
Power point/
Power points,
PowerPoint/
PowerPoints, and
Power Point/
Power Points. The talk page has more detailed info. -
Zappernapper
18:36, 4 September 2006 (UTC)
- This issue has now been resolved, thnx anyways. -
Zappernapper
18:34, 5 September 2006 (UTC)
Don't really know if this is the right place to ask, but does anyone know what the policy is for this? For example, at
R, there is a link at the top to the page
R (disambiguation), but all the items here are already in the main article anyway! This appears very inconsistent, e.g. there is no disambiguation page for
B, and there are some extra articles at
C (disambiguation) that are not at
C. -
postglock
03:17, 24 September 2006 (UTC)
- The difference between a list and a disambiguation is that you fix backlinks for disambigs, but lists intend to keep all their backlinks intact. (should this be mentioned on WP:MOSDAB?)
- In this case, the section in
R seems like they're of the "fix the backlink" type, and should probably be moved to
R (disambiguation). And many of the
C (disambiguation) entries seem like proper disambig entries as well. --
Interiot
03:41, 24 September 2006 (UTC)
The following is copied and pasted from
Wikipedia talk:Disambiguation:
“
|
Okay. Hey. Forgive me if this comment is misplaced. Name's Ace. I've read and followed an apparent policy that plurals need to either link to the singular article title, or a disambiguation page. Now, on the other hand, this may not be policy and just an "unwritten rule". If the latter case is in effect, as it seems to be, I'd like to recommend this policy be made official, citeable and applied throughout the encyclopedia. The mean issue comes back to disambiguation, not naming conventions or redirects. "Pixies" was once the title of the article now known as "Pixies (band)". The users, to put it mildly, are/were uneducated and/or unrealistic in matters of disambiguation. Similar case at what is now "Eels (band)" and several other " (band)" articles, actually. Users had/have the misguided belief that listing an article at a title for the plural of a common word or phrase is okay. Anyway, that's actually kind of moot. The big issue is plurals. "Eels", the word, can refer to the species,—and other varieties thereof—the band and many other uses. Thus, the redirect goes to the disambiguation page, not any of the articles. I first saw this method being implimented to with the redirect "heroes". It was redirected from hero, to Hero (disambiguation) so that readers could find Heroes (TV series) with more ease. No objections, to my knowledge, with the heroes edit and many objections due to...well...ignorance, with the eels disambiguation. Now, however, I have come across a problem. The redirect Pixies is being fought over. Fans of Pixies (band) believe that article to be the most notible use. They've even neglected to remove a move petition after an anministrator—also a fan and a bit of a jerk—moved the article to the current title. (It was at The Pixies for a time.) Anyway, the redirect of [[[Pixies]] could obviously refer to both Pixie and Pixies (band). And, let's face it, only the band, and, by fanatical devotion to them, some of the users, say simply "Pixies". They're arguably better known as the Pixies, like Joker (comics) as "The Joker. Also moot, however. The issue is, basically, this: I need a ruling. I cannot act per an unofficial practice. So...ahem...Help! :( ACS (Wikipedian); Talk to the Ace. See what I've edited. 16:27, 9 October 2006 (UTC)
|
”
|
I could really use some mediation on this.
ACS (Wikipedian);
Talk to the Ace.
See what I've edited.
22:37, 9 October 2006 (UTC)
- I don't think there is an official policy on this. It's determined on a case-by-case basis. There is an official policy to ignore all rules as you see fit, and, although there is a good argument that the redirect should (strictly speaking) point at the dab page (as it does), I suspect that most people looking for
Pixies will want the article about the band (at least for the next couple of decades), and probably don't need to be inconvenienced for getting the name right just because fans of pointy eared tricksters don't have the good sense to look for
Pixie.
- Slap a disambiguation tag (pointing at
Pixie (disambiguation)) on the top of
Pixies (band), and the problem goes away, doesn't it? If the Pixies people want the redirect enough to fight for it, I say let them have it.
TheMadBaron
00:04, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- I strongly feel that the vast majority of people looking for "Pixies" are actually looking for
Pixie. I would take issue with any move that hadn't garnered concensus first. --
Storkk
11:59, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- Go to
Pixie (disambiguation), hit "What links here", read 'em and weep.
TheMadBaron
03:33, 15 October 2006 (UTC)
- I believe the user is referring to searches, not links.
Ace Class Shadow;
My talk.
- Firstly, thanks. Second, what did that second sentence mean? Feh. Thanks to you all for the responses. Sometimes I do wish Wikipedia was a democracy. Voting would have more meaning and we could officialize new policies semi-easily.
ACS (Wikipedian);
Talk to the Ace.
See what I've edited.
17:06, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
As far as I can tell, this should still be at
The Pixies. We have
The Beatles,
The Kinks,
The Jimi Hendrix Experience... and no one ever says, "Hey, you know that song by Pixies?"
Dekimasu
08:58, 13 October 2006 (UTC)
- This is not comparing like with like. A quick look at the album covers on the pages concerned will confirm that the correct name for The Beatles is The Beatles, the correct name for The Kinks is The Kinks, the correct name for The Jimi Hendrix Experience is The Jimi Hendrix Experience, and the correct name for 'The' Pixies is Pixies. Some silly people refer to 'The' Pink Floyd, too, but that doesn't mean we should move the page there....
TheMadBaron
03:33, 15 October 2006 (UTC)
- I also noticed that all definite articles were removed from the
Frank Black article by an IP user last month. Something strange has been going on here, that's for sure.
Dekimasu
09:08, 13 October 2006 (UTC)
- Yeah...speaking to the first thing, that's really not up for debate, and hasn't been for weeks before I brought this up.
- To the second, I wouldn't know, but there are certainly hidden uses of "Pixies" that haven't been found and changed there.
Still, what I could really use is the policy I mentioned: Plurals redirect to disambiguation pages.
Ace Class Shadow;
User talk:Ace Class Shadow.
09:13, 13 October 2006 (UTC)
Would adding a banner to disambiguation pages declaring that it is adopted by a user be feasible and effective for directing interest in disambiguation repair? For example the banner on the talk page could say:
- "This disambiguation page Football has been adopted by User:Example and User:Example2. Click
here to adopt this page or
here to help assist in disambiguation repair, where help is always needed."
Or something to that effect. Then people could take ownership for each page by including their name on the talk page on the banner.
To get more participants another banner could say:
- "This disambiguation page Football needs to be adopted. Please click
here to adopt this page in assisting in disambiguation repair."
Then they could go to that page or this one and adopt a page and include their name on the talk page banner. Would this be effective or possible? I know there are a lot of disambiguation pages, but all projects start small, and this could help to increase adoption rates and link repair. If this works, then a message can be sent to all of the WikiProject: Disambiguation participants asking them if they want to adopt a page. If you support/oppose this, please respond. If somebody knows how to program the banners to work, could somebody show an example? Just thought I would try and see if this would work or not. --
Nehrams2020
21:27, 8 October 2006 (UTC)
- I just stumbled across
Template:Maintained which looks very similar to what I'm talking about. Is this possible for disambiguation talk pages but in a different format?
Nehrams2020
05:36, 9 October 2006 (UTC)
Don't think this is a good idea for the dab page itself, but perhaps its talk page. --
Storkk 22:34, 9 October 2006 (UTC) .... hitting head against wall. Yes, it would be ok for the talk page, but I don't know how much interest you'll get. In my experience, people don't care too much about dab pages. I only participate because I get frustrated when following a link to any dab page. I probably wouldn't maintain one after clearing its links. But I don't know. It's possible I'd adopt one or two. --
Storkk
22:37, 9 October 2006 (UTC)
- Seems like a dumb idea. Maintain or not, it's a personal decision and it doesn't need to be stated outright like that. I maintain several dab pages like I do several articles, but I don't go saying: "This page is under the watchful eye of ACS" or some such. That kinda thing seems like it'd be bordering on a violation of
WP:OWN. And orphaned? That term is misused. Linkless or poorly/un- maintained, articles aren't
Annie, ya know? Anyway, no. No to the idea, however well intentioned it may be.
ACS (Wikipedian);
Talk to the Ace.
See what I've edited.
22:43, 9 October 2006 (UTC)
- I'm not sure
WP:OWN applies that well to gnome-like activities. It's practically an administrative task, and one that many editors avoid. And in my experience on the project, it's not like anyone minds if someone jumps in to help with some of their disambig page. The idea seems to encourage people to keep at it, as well as encourage new users to take that on as a contribution to the project.
Dina
23:01, 9 October 2006 (UTC)
- I'm undecided. While there could be some benefit from such a plan, I see are the potential to scare people off from helping maintain pages and editors becoming inactive after adopting pages (after a month or a year, etc). It might be more effective for dab talk pages to have a more general template pointing people at the the DAB project page to encourage helping out. I started working on dab pages mainly because one of the articles I was watching was updated to resolve a link and it seemed like something I could help out with fairly easily.
Upholder
22:46, 9 October 2006 (UTC)
- I think this is a pretty great idea. My very first edit to Wikipedia was an edit to the talk page of an article, pointing out that a link in the article needed to be disambiguated. I had no idea how to change it at the time and so posted my observation to the talk page of the article (sort of okay in retrospect, but now, obviously, I would just fix it.) Can we possibly consider putting a message at the top of the article page of the disambig and not the talk? I realize that's not pretty, but many people, even new users, following the bad link, might just fix it if they knew how. I'm thinking a combo of the adopted pages idea (which I like) with something like the message one gets when one clicks on a red link (ie. if you think you are here for a wrong reason, here are some steps you can take). An adopted page could also have a link to the "parent's" talk page, so a user could point out a specific problem (helpful especially if the disambig was tricky, as they can be.) I mean, really, maybe we ought to be thinking of disambig pages as error messages -- they're not, if you come upon them in a search, but they are if you get there through a link. And I suspect that's how most folks arrive there. So why not a template at the top?
Dina
22:54, 9 October 2006 (UTC)
- Edit Conflict. I think that it might be useful. As for posting it on the actual dab page, I don't think that is such a good idea. Remember, Wikipedia must always be useful to the reader, not to the editor. The average reader has no need or care to know who works on the page, hence the reason why the maintained template is put on talk pages. The average reader isn't gonna be looking at talk pages. If an editor needs to know who works on it, they can go to the talk page. Put simply, I think that the template could be useful but not on the dab page.
Dooms
Day34
9
22:56, 9 October 2006 (UTC)
- This strikes me as a good idea. Considering the amount of work that needs to be done, ISTM that this would help recruit people to the task; I also think it would be a good idea to provide a readily identifiable point of contact who has gained familiarity with the dab page in question. As for this being a violation of
WP:OWN, it's certainly no closer to that than
Template:Maintained. I do agree that the template belongs on the talk page and not on the main page. --
Tkynerd
23:00, 9 October 2006 (UTC)
- Just adding my POV here: I don't think I, as an editor, would want to use a feature like that. Simply because I feel it puts too much "pressure" on me. I fix these pages occasionally, when I have time, and when I feel like it. I don't want to take any kind of "responsibility" for them, checking the pages I edited regularily. If I feel the need to periodically check a certain page, then I'll add it to my watchlist. So, I'm totally OK with this feature if it helps others, I'm not against it or something. It's just something that I wouldn't use...
Darkstar
23:32, 9 October 2006 (UTC)
- It's a bad idea, IMO. Pages will be marked as having been adopted by well meaning editors, and then abandoned. People won't bother to disambiguate those pages, thinking that the task is in hand.
- A better idea would be a link repair message/banner for article talk pages (because an awful lot of ambiguous terms don't even have dab pages) and dab main pages simply stating that links have been disambiguated, when, and, perhaps, to what extent. There's no point in putting anything on dab talk pages. No-one looks at dab talk pages. The average reader shouldn't ever have to see a dab main page. Most dab pages don't even have talk pages yet, and that's a good thing.
TheMadBaron
23:40, 9 October 2006 (UTC)
- I agree that no one looks at dab talk pages. I rather like the idea of a link repair banner, but it still seems to me that the dab pages themselves are where they ought to go.
Dina
00:27, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- Nah. If you decide to "adopt" a page, then add it to your watch list and fix things as they come up. I don't see the point of posting your name to the talk page saying that you're doing this. --
MrBoo (
talk,
contribs)
00:39, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- I really like your idea, Nehrams. I think it would help a lot. —
EdGl
00:42, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- Good plan, Nehrams. It will help keep us on track too (I often start repairing links to a page, and then get distracted, so I think it's good incentive!) —
riana_dzasta
wreak havoc-
damage report
00:45, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- The main reason that I started all of this was to also drive interest in just getting a regular banner added to the talk page for the WikiProject. I already thought of several of the problems here and was hoping somebody knew a way around them. I figured an adoptive banner would be somewhat successful in decreasing the database dump of links as users would be able to keep multiple disambiguation pages link to other pages low. I am still in favor of a banner that at least points editors in the direction of the link repair page or adopting a page. Even if a banner does not list "adoptive editors" on it, at least it would drive traffic to the two pages. Based on the reception here, how does this sound:
- "This disambiguation page for Football is part of
WikiProject Disambiguation. Click
here to help assist in disambiguation repair or
here to adopt this page."
--
Nehrams2020
00:52, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- Dislike. What's really needed is a bot or script to go around reminding people that a particular disambiguation page they are interested in has exceeded a set number, per previous suggestions. Templates are cute but ultimately meaningless for this purpose. --
Gwern
(contribs)
01:07, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- I agree with Gwern - this conflicts with
WP:OWN and what happens when someone adopts and then gets disinterested or busy, as all of us do occasionally? Another idea for a bot is to notify the person who introduced the link to a dab page. —
Quarl (
talk) 2006-10-10 01:49Z
- What's wrong with {{WikiProjectNotice|Disambiguation}}? •
Q
^
#
o •
01:08, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- I dislike the adoption version of the idea, as pages will become abandoned over time as some editors become inactive. It also puts too much pressure on the editor, as Darkstar said. I do like the idea of putting a general template, similar to the above, on dab pages suggesting that people fix the link they arrived from, and that they should join the project if they feel so inclined. --
Mbell
02:24, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- On further reflection (and perusal of this page), I've decided I prefer the version shown at "Template for Disambiguation link repair" above. Apparently nothing ever came of that proposal, but I think it is well worth reviving and using. --
Tkynerd
03:06, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- Its a good idea. A small banner will help--
Neo139
03:34, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- While I do watch a couple of dab pages, I do so in an unofficial, non-permanent capacity. As such, I probably would not use the above template. I'd rather have a template that I can stick on a user's talk page that says, "warning: you didn't disambiguate your links to dab in your edit to article" --
Robocoder (
t|
c)
03:58, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- Now that's something I'd like to see. I had the idea for something like that a while back, with hopes of having it implemented into MediaWiki, but this works too. Someone could probably write a plugin for
AWB to check through for links to dab pages and that could be used to put messages on the talk page of the article "there are X links to dab pages on this page. They are:", or something along those lines. --
Daniel Olsen
05:01, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- I am a fan of this idea as well. It seems that a large number of links to dab pages are created by editors that are simply not paying attention, or by editors that move pages without either gaining consensus or following protocol. It seems that this proposal would: 1. Distribute the task to a much larger user base; 2. Provide education to editors, reducing the likelyhood of occurance in the future.
Srice13
17:01, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- I don't like the "adoption" idea too much, for the reasons already listed. However, as CQ pointed out, {{
WikiProjectNotice}} might be useful to put on disambiguation talk pages (which I do read before doing things like manual-of-style edits in case they were determined not to be helpful). —
dto (
talk
contribs)
04:04, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- Against -- I cannot support this idea because it crosses a line that I do not want to see Wikipedia cross--implying that users own or can claim pages as their projects. Users should not lay claim to any page except their own user page and user talk page. To be able to adopt a page (even if the banner is on the talk page) is hardly different than adding a "Credits" heading at the foot of every article and thanking the big contributors. Doing either could ward off new editors too. --
Voidxor
07:15, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- Personally, I don't think it's necessary. I don't think an adoption of a dab page needs to be formally declared — I always keep track of dab pages I've cleaned up in my watchlist — each can go around taking care of his own unoffical adoptions. Edit conflicts shouldn't be a problem; in the rare event that two editors disagree what is best for a page, well, that's what this page is for (which is probably beside the point anyway). I don't think it would help with promotion. The only advantage that I can think of is that it prevents an editor wasting his time on a page that another's got covered, but that should be fairly obvious (becuase teh page will alreayd be clean, and if it's been changed since last cleanup, then there's no reason why someone else can't do it) anyway. That's what I think, anyway.
Neonumbers
07:23, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- Well said,
Neonumbers, I agree with you. I watch about 100 dab pages I have worked on, and return regularly to fix incoming links. I keep them listed on my user page for my own convenience. I am aware that disambiguating incoming links leaves no record of me at the dab page, and that I have built up knowledge that might be useful to someone. Perhaps we should leave messages on the dab talk page, such as "Incoming links fixed by (User) on (date). If you find an incoming link and would like help, please leave a message on my talk page." Anyone who responds to this could then be encouraged to join Wikiproject:Disambiguation.
CarolGray
10:01, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- Against I have adopted several pages, and so I monitor their "what links here" pages every day. But that doesn't mean that other people can't do the same thing, and if I suddenly lose my internet connection for a month, I don't want those pages to go unattended.
Cfrydj
16:15, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- I'm not really a fan of this idea, just because it seems unnecessary, and would probably cause more problems than it is worth. There's nothing wrong with someone watching a disambiguation page that they've fixed up; many of us do that. You stick the disambiguation page on your watchlist, clean up any edits that are non-
MOS:DPed, and fix all the incorrect links once in a while. Those that like to "watch out" for disambiguation pages they've worked on will do so anyway, regardless of officially "owning" it, while having such a tag will seem overbearing and turn away those who wouldn't normally do it. --
Nataly
a
21:11, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- The original idea seems excessive to me. If nothing comes out of this discussion, at the very least, people with knowledge on specific disambig pages could just post in that talk page detailing what links should go to which destination, giving inquiring users the needed info and bypassing the need to contact the adopting user. Disambig pages already link
Wikipedia:Disambiguation so methinks a link in the talk page wouldn't do much good. This is unrelated, but while we're on the subject of "adopting pages," see
Wikipedia:WikiProject Disambiguation/Adopting disambiguation pages for what we do with the fastest link accumulating disambig pages. -
Oatmeal batman
06:17, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
- 'Against adopting pages - due to irregular editing in that area, and probable mistakes that I made at early stages - and then the sometimes ad hoc manner of adding items by later editors
SatuSuro
08:17, 13 October 2006 (UTC)
- Against - on balance, while I like the notion that folk should take pages 'under their wing' and 'look after' them, I feel that all the previously-mentioned against points outweigh the advantages - plus I'd be concerned about 'retiring' or even, heaven fobid, 'deceased' editors not being spotted and a page therefore languishing on the vine, for want of attention, when everyone else thinks it's covered. -
Ballista
04:30, 15 October 2006 (UTC)
- Late to the party! Hey I've been away for a while. This discussion is of interest to me. I particularly want to respond to folks above who seem to be saying, "I can adopt a dab page, but I don't need to announce it to the world." [There are also related/similar arguments above, which I'll discuss in a moment]. This idea of being behind-the-scenes etc. is a perfectly valid and quite common wikignome philosophy. However, I would really like to put in a plug for listing your name and your pages on
Wikipedia:WikiProject Disambiguation/Adopting disambiguation pages. This is not a show-off page (well it could be I guess, but that's not its purpose). It's a public service announcement kinda thing. It's like giving blood, then wearing one of those stickers that says "I gave blood." [Not saying adopting dab pages is of equal importance to giving blood -- don't strain the simile :-) ]. The point is that one main function of the
Wikipedia:WikiProject Disambiguation/Adopting disambiguation pages is to encourage newcomers to do the same. It's in everyone's best interests, etc. Public service kinda thing.
- Now that I've said that, and as much as I support the
Wikipedia:WikiProject Disambiguation/Adopting disambiguation pages subproject, I guess I kinda see a thicket of potential problems with putting a template on the dab page itself. I think putting a "claim of adoting pages"
here is harmless and even productive; but putting the same on the dab page itselff is kinda problematic. Color me Weak Against. I really appreciate
Nehrams2020 for taking the lead on this suggestion, but I guess putting tags on the dab pages themselves may have too many problems. My biggest problem is that it would look crufty if people put a tag on a page, but then abandoned the task. Which of course no one here would do. --
Ling.Nut
13:19, 17 October 2006 (UTC)
Please help me to talk to the senses of a fan of the "
Igor" name disambig page. `'
mikkanarxi
03:01, 26 October 2006 (UTC)
- Seems to me like this is more of a content dispute. Perhaps another sllight would be in order. "
Igor (disambiguation)"? "
Igor as a word,
Other uses of "Igor"? Also, I notice no attempt to discuss this one that article's talk page was made by either party. This is disappointing.
Ace Class Shadow;
My talk.
03:37, 26 October 2006 (UTC)
- This is a message I just made to
Wikipedia talk:Manual of Style (disambiguation pages)#Igor (where mikkalai also made the complaint): There's a
Talk:Igor page for such discussions; that would be a better place to start. But I think removing the lists of people with a name is the minority opinion.
Wikipedia talk:Manual of Style (disambiguation pages)#Hndis needs its own Manual,
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Allen (surname),
Talk:Jennifer. --
JHunterJ
11:54, 26 October 2006 (UTC)
Hello. The
WikiProject Council has recently updated the
Wikipedia:WikiProject Council/Directory. This new directory includes a variety of categories and subcategories which will, with luck, potentially draw new members to the projects who are interested in those specific subjects. Please review the directory and make any changes to the entries for your project that you see fit. There is also a directory of portals, at
User:B2T2/Portal, listing all the existing portals. Feel free to add any of them to the portals or comments section of your entries in the directory. The three columns regarding
assessment,
peer review, and
collaboration are included in the directory for both the use of the projects themselves and for that of others. Having such departments will allow a project to more quickly and easily identify its most important articles and its articles in greatest need of improvement. If you have not already done so, please consider whether your project would benefit from having departments which deal in these matters. It is my hope that all the changes to the directory can be finished by the first of next month. Please feel free to make any changes you see fit to the entries for your project before then. If you should have any questions regarding this matter, please do not hesitate to contact me. Thank you.
B2T2
13:36, 26 October 2006 (UTC)
I stumbled across this page after finding a disambig page with random article. As there's no set banner for disambiguation pages (and, judging from the above, there seems to be opposing viewpoints as to what should be in one), I've created a bare-bones version for the project at {{
DisambigProject}}, which I've added to
Talk:Azariah (seeing as that was the article that lead me to make the banner).
Anyway, hope it works for you. If it turns out that nobody likes it, I'll only cry a little bit, I promise. ;-)
EVula
15:18, 28 October 2006 (UTC)
- I found that you'd added the banner to
Talk:8tv. Is the intention to tag all dab talk page in Wikipedia with this banner? Looking at the
8tv, it doesn't look like it has been edited to bring it in line with recommended dab page format guidelines ... or is your interpretation of those guidelines that the
8tv article is just fine as it is? --User:Ceyockey (
talk to me)
17:06, 23 November 2006 (UTC)
- I see no reason why dab talk pages wouldn't get the banner; its fairly common place for WikiProjects to brand relevant articles.
- As for
8tv, I fail to see how my putting the banner on the talk page can be seen as any sort of endorsement of an article's current state. I did do some light reformatting of the pages as I pulled them up (most of the time correcting faulty bold tags, or moving {{
disambig}} from the top of the article to the bottom), but those have been few and far between; my primary target is the talk page.
- If the article doesn't match the format guidelines, change it so that it does; problem solved. :-)
EVula //
talk //
☯ //
19:22, 23 November 2006 (UTC)
- So you're saying that you are planning to indiscriminately put the banner on every dab page in Wikipedia just because it is a dab page and therefore, by definition, in scope for this WikiProject? --User:Ceyockey (
talk to me)
23:27, 23 November 2006 (UTC)
- That seems... less than useful somehow. {{
disambig-cleanup}} already points here. If it were really important, might it not be better to just add a link to the wikiproject from {{
disambig}} as well? --
Interiot
00:18, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
- Well, I am doing a fairly brief check to see if the page should be included, not just blindly adding the tag (I've found several such articles, like
Adamantium). But as far as performing an exhaustive examination of each and every page to see if it conforms with the dab guidelines to the letter, no, I'm not (and I really don't see why I would be expected to).
- I still don't see the problem here; someone goes to a disambiguation page, goes to the talk page for some reason (has a question, whatever), see the project banner, clicks it and gets further information on disambiguation pages in general, perhaps gets involved with the project and/or improves said article to make it conform with the guidelines. What's the problem, and how is this any different from the way any other WikiProject functions (except for the sheer scope)?
- I would have hoped that any objections to the banner would have been mentioned in the almost month since its creation, rather than after I've already done a thousand or so edits...
EVula //
talk //
☯ //
05:58, 24 November 2006 (UTC)
- Unfortunately, this is an asychronous communications environment, and such things inevitably happen in such environments. The point is to mitigate the 'damage' (including the fomenting of personal ire), keeping cool heads and keeping in mind that we're not plotting to undermine efforts later by keeping our mouths shut today (or yesterday, as it were). --User:Ceyockey (
talk to me)
23:17, 3 December 2006 (UTC)
- As suggested by Interiot, I would support addition of a link to this WikiProject to
Template:disambig and most or all other dab-indicative templates (such as
Template:3CC and
Template:Geodis). What's different is in part the scope, but also the fact that there are already two things that highlight dab pages .. a set of templates that define the page type and a style guideline that borders on (but is not) policy resulting from thousands of person-hours spent debating and refining it. For articles that fall under the scope of other WikiProjects, this is usually not the case. --User:Ceyockey (
talk to me)
23:17, 3 December 2006 (UTC)
- Fair enough. Should I remove the banner from the pages I've already tagged? (yes that will take a little while, but since I'm the one that added them, I wouldn't feel comfortable asking someone else to clean up after me). I personally like the banner, but the rationale against its use is sound (and, just as important, there seems to be somewhat of a consensus against it).
EVula //
talk //
☯ //
22:25, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
I've proposed changing
template:Disambig and its variations from a table-based layout to CSS, at
MediaWiki talk:Common.css#Divs instead of layout tables. —
Michael
Z. 2006-11-06 23:59 Z
- From a limited technical background, this will overall make a shorter read time for the tags? That's always nice, if it provides some usefulness. Does it have any direct effect on the actual template appearance? Thanks for explaining it, --
Nataly
a
02:07, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
- On the average page, the savings will probably not make it load perceptibly faster. For example, on the short disambiguation page
Transcarpathia, the savings of 404 bytes represents only 3% of the actual data, and on the longer page
ABC it is only 1.8% of the data. The less-complex layout of a div rather than a table will also save a tiny amount of rendering time in your web browser. In general, minor improvements like this represent good practice, and will cumulatively amount to significant savings, especially in terms of saving resources for the Wikimedia Foundation, on tens of thousands of pages and billions of page views.
- The appearance shouldn't change much, if at all, depending on the web browser. —
Michael
Z. 2006-11-07 04:52 Z
- I will always support any attempt as eschewing old and improper code for valid XHTML and CSS.
EVula
05:24, 7 November 2006 (UTC)