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== Not good enough == == Broken Coord ==


Hi. I'm working on clearing out ].
Gene, I respect your contributions to this project, but your response to being blocked for being rude and aggressive was... rude and aggressive, basically. You don't seem to understand the problem, preferring to attack those who identify it. I'm sorry, but this is not good enough. Right now you have a block of 7 days, I will be happy for any admin to lift that if you can persuade them that you've actually learned something from the experience. <b>]</b> <small>(])</small> 17:18, 2 November 2007 (UTC)
There's an instance of {{tlx|Coord}} in ]:
:<code><nowiki>{{</nowiki>coord|12|02|36|S|37|'''77'''|01|W|42}} too many elements</code>
which has 77 minutes. Would you mind if I changed it to 7 minutes, or something?
<br/>] (]) 13:51, 13 August 2009 (UTC)


: Since you haven't been around since July, I did that. ] (]) 15:47, 4 September 2009 (UTC)
:Well, Guy, I was going to ask you why, if I have been blocked, what your interest was in it, and why there was no notice to that effect by the blocking administrator here on my talk page.


== Sound level meter ==
:But then when I come to post that, I happen to glance at the jumble of a signature there and see that the "Guy" who was posting on my talk page was the same as the "JzG" who appears in my block log.


In acoustics, the formal and correct plural of 'decibel' is decibel NOT decibels; please remove this change, putting an 's' on the end is American not British usage and IEC has decided that British English should be used.] (]) 12:36, 21 December 2009 (UTC)
:So then the question becomes, why the third-person passive-voice nonsense? What's this "Right now you have a block of 7 days" stuff, as if you are informing me of someone else's actions? You blocked me. Just say so--especially if you are going to twiddle with your user name so that what I see in the notice is something different from what I see in my block log. I almost mistook you for some well-intentioned soul who thought that he was going to offer to help out in some unspecified way in my ]. Some helpful, innocent bystander with a "Help!" button in his signature for some reason or anther.


What utter nonsense!
:To say that one cannot raise an issue and claim, on a forum for making such complaints about the actions of editors such as WP:ANI, that an editor's actions have been rude and inconsiderate (or even aggressive, your word, if I had said that), is ludicrous. It is totally contrary to all sense of fairness and due process, on Misplaced Pages or anywhere else. Raising such an issue is clearly not a violation of ], whether or not in your subjective opinion you can find some excuse for that action--but you haven't even bothered to try to do that.


You would have several things to show in order to make your point.
:But you also seem to have entirely missed the point of the issue I raised at WP:ANI. Rlevse's actions in disrupting the process are not wrong becasue he was incidentally rude and inconsiderate to me in doing so; they are wrong because they are bad for Misplaced Pages. They are wrong because they corrupt the process of the various dispute resolution network we have. They would have been wrong if he had been pleasant and nice to me and had tried to discuss things with me and actually accomplish something, rather than blocking me out of the blue. The fact that he was rude and inconsiderate is irrelevant to that issue. I even pointed that out there, and don't understand how you could have missed that.


*You need to show that this in fact is standard British English usage.
:You are instead assuming bad faith on my part, in addition to not paying any attention to the actual issues raised there. You have turned a blind eye to the issue that was raised, just because, for whatever reason--and I don't have a clue what it is--you have taken a dislike to me. Not a good foundation for any discussion.
*In light of the fact that Misplaced Pages explicitly allows British English as well as the English spoken by most native speakers of English, you need to show that this would be in accordance with the house rules here on Misplaced Pages. Show me that what you are asking for would be in accordance with ] rules.
*I don't care much about anybody else's house rules, but you also have not in fact established ''that anybody else really has such a house rule.'' You have not even made any claim that the IEC doesn't use "decibels"--you merely seem to be claiming that the IEC uses British English in its own publications, which has no relevance here where other varieties of English are used. But you are also trying to bootstrap this onto the unfounded claim that the -s plural is not a part of British English.
*You are going to have a damn hard time making your point in light of the fact that the national standards laboratory of the UK, the ] uses '''decibels'''. For example, here is
:http://www.npl.co.uk/acoustics/sound-in-air/technical-guide-sound-measurements/51549
:Technical Guide - Sound Measurements
:Quantities and Units for Sound Measurement
:...the physical measurement (e.g. sound pressure level (SPL) is the sound pressure expressed in decibels....


So it looks like you are just wasting my time. I'll listen if you have more to say to try to make your case, but it looks like you have a tough row to hoe.
:But then, you aren't really interested in discussion, are you? No more so than Rlevse. No, in fact, much less so--he didn't block me to keep me from responding to anything he had said. He merely didn't say anything, anywhere. You, OTOH, have blocked me specifically to stop me from addressing your response or anyone else's on the WP:ANI discussion, and the subsequent one on WP:AN.


*Now some homework for you: try a search of the iec.ch site for "decibels" and don't come back here unless you are willing to provide the results of that search and discuss it. ] (]) 13:27, 21 December 2009 (UTC)
:The disruption of WQA was done to give an advantage in content disputes to ], who had already had a ] on his own actions at ], filed by ] in back on 1 September, before I ever got involved in that discussion there. The issues raised then have continued almost unabated or even in a worsening manner, with a changing cast of characters other than the constant Greg L involvement, and remain largely unresolved.


== Temperature unit ==
:] 13:11, 5 November 2007 (UTC)
::Hi Gene, you're being blinded to the forest by the trees. Guy didn't block you for taking your complaint to ANI, he blocked you for an overall rude and aggressive tone. Likewise, Rlevse didn't block you for not participating at Wikiquette, even though that is part of what he said. He blocked you for an overall rude and disruptive behavior - go back and read what he .
::Your manor has never bothered me in the least - I know that is just how some people talk. But a lot of people don't see it this way. A good example is post. It reads just fine to me - but some people find it rude and aggressive. Since this is a collaborative effort, subjective things like civility are defined by community standards - your and my idea of civility doesn't really matter. That being said, is definitely not ok.
::You need to try to be very polite and to apologize when you hurt peoples feelings, even if that wasn't your intention. A lot of people want to see you banned permanently, so try to be nicer from now on. --] 16:39, 5 November 2007 (UTC)


The correct unit for an absolute temperature is kelvin, not kelvins. See for the SI definition. I'm sorry if the Wiki article on units has it wrongly stated a kelvins. If you look at the definition it makes no sense to use a plural form for a temperature. A temperature is a single quantity. ] (]) 09:43, 30 December 2009 (UTC)
:::I don't think I'm the one most in need of a lecture about not seeing the forest for the trees.


:Quote me exactly what that source says, please.
:::Look, Duk, if you want to take on the job of my ], I can probably talk to you about it.


:Wrong. It is kelvins. See ] SI brochure. See NIST Special Publication 811. See numerous other sources, such as documents from the BIPM like http://www.bipm.org/utils/common/pdf/its-90/TECChapter17.pdf
:::But if you want to do so, first we need a ''solid foundation on which to build the discussions.'' Let's stick to what is known about why I was blocked, okay?
:::#JzG blocked me because I complained, in a point incidental to a separate complaint, on a complaints noticeboard, that Rlevse was rude and inconsiderate in his actions towards me. We know that because JzG came right here and said that was why he was blocking me.
:::#Rlevse blocked me because I had not responded on ]. We know that because he came right here and said that was why he was blocking me.
:::##We also know it because Rlevse went to WQA and said that was why he was blocking me.
:::##Rlevse did not go and make any such explanation at ].
:::##Rlevse did not go and make any such explanation at ]


:A temperature is not a single quantity.
:::Now, maybe I just missed it, but I don't think there is anything at ] saying that the decision to block is something entirely at the administrator's whim, or that the administrator should
:::*'''Block now. You can always invent a reason for it later.'''
:::or anything along those lines. So let's just stick with what is actually known and knowable about he reason for which I was blocked, the things that had been documented and recorded in our various histories here at Misplaced Pages before I was blocked. Anything else is irrelevant.


:Just look at the other units of temperature we use. It is degree'''s''' Celsius, it is degree'''s''' Fahrenheit, it is degree'''s''' Rankine.
:::Don't invent new reasons for a block. At the same time, don't say that the stated reasons for a block were not the reasons for it.


:And of course, when the degree Kelvin was the proper name for the unit, it was degree'''s''' Kelvin. We change the noun in the plural in English; we don't change adjectives whether singular or plural. The word "Kelvin" was an adjective then. But it is no longer an adjective; it is now the noun. It takes the plural just like other units of measure. We now stick that '''s''' at the end of "kelvin'''s'''" rather than at the end of "degree'''s'''" as we used to in the old days. Pretty much puts the kibosh on your strange notion that using the plural doesn't makes sense, doesn't it?
:::For that matter, if Rlevse had wanted to take on that job, and had felt that there was something he wanted to teach me, he likewise could have tried to talk to me. He did not do so. If JzG had wanted to take on that job, he likewise could have tried to talk to me. But he took it one step further than Rlevse did; JzG did make a comment addressed to something I said, but then he blocked me to prevent me from responding to his own comment. ] 22:13, 5 November 2007 (UTC)


:Some people are just a little slow when it comes to understanding the English grammar rules involved here. ] (]) 10:56, 30 December 2009 (UTC)
::::The immediate cause of JzG's weeklong block of you was, yes, the post you made on the admin noticeboard. I didn't see any justification for that in our blocking policy so I objected to it (a weeklong block for a grumpy post on ANI? huh?). I thought the indefinite block was stranger still. Nevertheless, while I agree with you that the blocking admins have been lax in justifying their actions with respect to our policies there is an underlying reason for this sudden pile-on of blocks. You are consistently perceived as rude and confrontational. Like Duk above I have learned that this is just the way you normally interact with people. I usually just chuckle when you throw a sarcastic barb at me or deliver some useful information wrapped up in porcupine leather. But your style honestly bothers and offends some people so if you're going to survive in this ecosystem you're going to have to tone it down (without, I hope, losing too much of your character in the process). ] 22:44, 5 November 2007 (UTC)
:::::''your response to being blocked for being rude and aggressive was... rude and aggressive''. I think Guy explained his reasoning perfectly well there.
:::::Looking at Rlevse's block note - he listed about six or seven things. Three were broad generalizations of past complaints that add context and perspective. Then he listed three specific uncivil links. You've focused on a meaningless part (Wikiquette) while neglecting the important parts (the specific examples and history of incivility). You're being blinded to the forest by the trees.
:::::'']'' - Ha! that's funny. Administrator's job is to serve, I'll run errands for you, accept your criticism and return it if I think it might help. I'll try to keep people from ganging up on each other. When someone makes an ] at WP:AN for a diacritic-related community sanction, without presenting a shred of evidence why it is needed, and when your behavior in that area has been fine for the last 5,000 edits, I'll call him on it. But I'm just one little guy, meanwhile there are about twelve people who owe their adminship nomination to Hunsond. Did you notice, by the way, that as soon as I called for a reporting of all off-wiki discussions regarding ], the request was retracted instead. Mayby it's my imagination - but still a funny coincidence (descisions like this, when there's no reason for secrecy (like privacy issues), must never be make off-wiki, and it's one of the reasons Husond lost ]).
:::::''the decision to block is something entirely at the administrator's whim'' - Disruption, not a whim, but still completely subjective.


:I asked you to quote the source you cited, not only so that you would read it yourself, and also so that anyone else reading my talk page would know exactly what it says. But rather than relying on you to do that, I'll do it myself. This is exactly what the IUPAC source cited by Petergans says:
:::::OK, I'm fairly sure we're not going to agree on all this so I'll stop repeating myself and leave you with a quote from my favorite admin:
:::::*''Working productively with people you think are idiots is probably *the* most important skill you can have on Misplaced Pages.''
:::::--] 05:04, 6 November 2007 (UTC)


<big></big>
::::::Ah, yes--]. You two know that it probably isn't prudent for me to say much about him now.
;kelvin
:SI base unit of thermodynamic temperature (symbol: K). The kelvin is the fraction 1/273.16 of the thermodynamic temperature of the triple point of water.
:G.B. 70; 1996, 68, 977
</big>


:Note the salient points here:
::::::Instead, let's take a different tack, okay?
:*The cited source doesn't use the plural form; it is singular, and therefore it is naturally "kelvin" and not "kelvins".
::::::'''A challenge to those at WP:AN'''
:*The cited source doesn't state any rules about the use of the plural.
::::::A number of people have been discussing various moves by me. In an attempt to help clarify the issues, I respectfully issue the following challenge:
:*This isn't an IUPAC rule, either. Rather, it is a direct quote of the English version of the official definition of the kelvin by resolution the 13th ] of 1967-68 (from memory, might not have the number of the conference right; and that particular conference merely restated the older definition, under the new name "kelvin" assigned to this unit then); the CGPM is one of the three organizations established under the ] of 1875 to keep our international standards (of the three, the CGPM is the highest ranking, making the broadest, most general rules). <small>(added later 12:39, 30 December 2009 (UTC))</small>
<div id="challenge"></div>
::::::#Go to ] and make a request for ] to be moved to ], providing the proper discussion space on the talk page in accordance with the instructions at WP:RM, etc.
::::::#Then give everyone who has commented about my moving articles should be given a chance to weigh in on that requested move. Put together all that collective brainpower, and more importantly, all that spirit of cooperative editing, to work to try to resolve the question of which of those two names should occupy the unique spot available for the article's name, in accordance with our ].
::::::##Consider what you could support based on the article , with nothing specifically identified as a reference, but with two entries under "External links" to statistics pages. Based on what I could see, in other words.
::::::##Look for and discuss additional sources of information, to support either the "Eduardo Pérez" spelling or the "Eduardo Perez" spelling.
::::::##Add appropriate references to the article, if they are "reliable sources".
::::::#If anyone who has commented about me in this regard hasn't jumped in of his or her own accord within a couple of days, seek them out and specifically invite their input to achieve the best cooperative result.
::::::#This will provide a wonderful opportunity to "teach by example".
::::::#Then, no matter where it ends up, we will probably accomplish one thing. Those who want to talk about naming conventions issues will at least have some little bit of experience with and understanding for the potential issues involved.


:So stop trying to pull the wool over people's eyes, Petergans. ] (]) 11:10, 30 December 2009 (UTC)
::::::History: This article was started with the name ] more than two years ago, and remained that way until moved to ] without discussion and no edit summary 10 Oct 2007 by ]. Later, I moved back the undiscussed, unreferenced move of the longstanding name. There have been no edits since, and ] is a blank slate, unused but for the ubiquitous WikiProjects and BLP boxes filling up a couple of screens.


::"Temperature in degrees Kelvin" does not translate into "temperature in kelvins". This is the fundamental error that you have made. Rather, it translates literally as "temperature measured on the Kelvin scale". I prefer to use ] which correctly indicates the temperature scale being used.] (]) 07:53, 31 December 2009 (UTC)
::::::Or, perhaps it would be even more instructive to add one additional step first. Let Husond first show you how an old pro, one well versed in the workings of Misplaced Pages, would handle this. Let him first move it back to ], then request page protection on the page. Then, once that page protection is in place, you can request the move in the opposite direction, from ] to ].


:::Degrees Kelvin and kelvins are indeed the same thing, except for the fact that for the last 40 years it hasn't been proper to call them "degrees Kelvin".
::::::Same encouragement of participation by anyone involved in that WP:AN discussion, of course, no matter which direction the move is requested. All that changes is the burden of proof (something Husond is well aware of, but might not have been considered by everyone else). It might have some effect on the ensuing discussion or not, I can't predict what will happen in this case. Leave the discussion open for the normal five days or more, with of course anyone who is following the article just because they are baseball fanatics or whatever free to jump into the discussion as well.
:::Calling it "absolute temperature" and linking to the kelvin article isn't right. "Absolute temperature" doesn't "correctly indicate the temperature scale being used"--it is a vague and ambiguous term, applying equally well to temperature measured in ]. Of course, the old terminology "degrees Absolute" and °A was thrown out as well as "degrees Kelvin" and °K in that name change to "kelvins".
:::] (]) 11:24, 31 December 2009 (UTC)
::::It is common usage in thermodynamics to refer to T as an absolute temperature. The point here is that it is a generic term not relating to any particular temperature measurement. It implies that in numerical calculations the Kelvin scale is to be used for temperature values. It is essential in thermodynamics that "absolute zero" should have a temperature value of zero. This discussion is now closed as far as I'm concerned. ] (]) 16:05, 31 December 2009 (UTC)
:::::That little ] "an" speaks volumes.
:::::When it matters which one you use (in many cases it doesn't, because various units will form consistent systems compatible with the formulas), specific identification helps. ] (]) 16:13, 31 December 2009 (UTC)


I belive the ultimate statement can be found at NIST: http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/sec06.html#6.1.3 ''Unit symbols are unaltered in the plural.''--] (]) 10:00, 8 March 2010 (UTC)
::::::That discussion, of course, ought to be able to proceed quite smoothly and amicable, since you won't have to worry about a disruptive character like me jumping in there. ;-)


:Unit '''symbols.''' Not that difficult to understand, is it? Especially not when you already looked at the example given right after those words in that cited section:
::::::Does that sound do-able? Either direction, I don't care. You choose. ] 19:13, 6 November 2007 (UTC)
:*<span style="font-family:Times New Roman;">''Example'': ''l'' = 75 cm ''but not'': ''l'' = 75 cms</span>
:::::::Actually, as I support the current location (without diacritic), I'll wait for someone else to take up that challenge. What I might do instead is go through the last 20 or so diacritics-related moves, and see what I find. I anyone could point me to the most relevant discussions and guidelines, that would be good as well. ] 21:14, 6 November 2007 (UTC)
:Now look at §9.2 in the very same document for the section relevant to the discussion here on this talk page:
:*<span style="font-family:Times New Roman;">Plural unit names are used when they are required by the rules of English grammar. They are normally formed regularly, for example, ‘‘henries’’ is the plural of henry. According to Ref. , the following plurals are irregular: Singular —lux, hertz, siemens; Plural —lux, hertz, siemens.</span>
:Guess which units come under the "formed regularly" category. All the rest (there aren't very many named units in the SI, none were overlooked), including kelvins. ] (]) 10:44, 8 March 2010 (UTC)


==Unreferenced BLPs==
::::::::You could do it without it being changed, just say that it has been subject of some dispute and you want to clear it up.
] Hello Gene Nygaard! Thank you for your contributions. I am a ] alerting you that '''3''' of the articles that you created are ]. Please note that all biographies of living persons '''must be sourced'''. If you were to add ], ] ] to these articles, it would greatly help us with the current '']'' article backlog. Once the articles are adequately referenced, please remove the {{tl|unreferencedBLP}} tag. Here is the list:
::::::::But, as I pointed out, that can be changed before you make the request anyway. I doubt that Husond has changed his spots, but it might be that he is trying to exhibit exemplary behavior for a couple of days. But somebody else could probably be talked into moving it first.
::::::::This would be of most benefit to those who, unlike you, haven't been involved in such discussions before. ] 14:01, 7 November 2007 (UTC)


# ] - <small>{{findsources|Jiří Kylián}}</small>
== Sort keys ==
# ] - <small>{{findsources|Ruhul Amin (film director)}}</small>
# ] - <small>{{findsources|Misono}}</small>
Thanks!--] (]) 18:45, 2 January 2010 (UTC)


== Talkback ==
From some of your comments about category sort keys, I thought you might be interested in ]. Do you think this is the sort of thing a bot can do, or is it not always clear what character to replace the non-standard character with? ] 07:53, 3 November 2007 (UTC)


{{talkback|Tim1357|Not mine|ts=19:54, 2 January 2010 (UTC)}}
== Indefinite block ==
] (]) 19:54, 2 January 2010 (UTC)
I'm sorry to say that I feel that the Community's patience has been exhausted. I am blocking you indefinitely from editing Misplaced Pages. ] ] 14:44, 3 November 2007 (UTC)
:With all due respect to Physchim, I feel an indefinite block at this point is counterproductive to building encyclopedic content, and have restored the seven-day block. It is very clear that Gene has been uncivil and has made personal attacks, per . However, comments on the administrator's noticeboard indicate that several users feel that the method of prevention of disturbance to the encyclopedia in this case (an indefinite block) is excessive. As Phychim has indicated he does not object to undoing the indefinite block, I have done so. It is my hope that Gene can reform his habits and return to building the encyclopedia when his block expires. <font color="#0000FF">]</font> 15:32, 3 November 2007 (UTC)


== Proposal == == Talkback ==


{{talkback|Talk:Brazilian battleship Minas Geraes|Featured article review?|ts=00:33, 5 January 2010 (UTC)}}
Gene, I'm not sure how you will react to this, but could you read what I wrote ? I'm proposing to work with you on the issue of diacritics, with the hope of calming down any future disputes. I hope I can see both sides of the arguments, and communicate that to you and others, and that we can work together productively. Would you be happy to do that? ] 00:19, 7 November 2007 (UTC)
You've been here for quite some time. Perhaps you could actually discuss this with me? I'd be much more inclined to listen to you if the sarcasm and cynicism in your posts, related to (I think?) FAs, is removed. Kind regards, —<span style="font-family:Baskerville Old Face;">]&nbsp;] • ]</span> 00:33, 5 January 2010 (UTC)


== ] FAC ==
:That actually sounds quite reasonable.
You're welcome to submit a more which I've removed. Regards, ] (]) 00:51, 6 January 2010 (UTC)


== defenceman ==
:Keep in mind that I've been blocked largely to prevent me from participating in discussions that were already underway off-Misplaced Pages before I was blocked.


Feel free to actually debate on you know...the talk page. But the can/us spelling of these cats has been debated many times and consensus came down to the spelling the description should match the category name so as not to have POV wars such as you are having to change it back and forth. -] (]) 15:13, 7 January 2010 (UTC)
:It's refreshing to see some true civility for a change. Especially after having had four different admins block me (actually, it's probably more than the last four), without one word of discussion with me from any of them before doing so. Then there's the whole thing about much of the discussion not being aboveboard, but rather taking place in the modern version of the proverbial smoke-filled back room.


:From what I can see, the naming issue been debated once, poorly, with '''no conclusion—no consensus whatsoever'''. ] It's overdue for reopening.
:Duk and Haukur were decent, and know more about what they're talking about because we've been involved in the same discussions at various times in the past; even I've locked horns with both of them at various times, we've managed to come out of it without permanent hard feelings (can't say that for everyone else involved).


: And the text issue is separate from the naming issue, and ] is ''totally empty'' in that regard. ] (]) 15:34, 7 January 2010 (UTC)
:Mostly, however, what I've much of anything not even ''remotely'' resembling civility, in this entire process. At least not anything close to ''civility'' in anything other than a highly ritualized, magic-incantation, Misplaced Pages-jargon meaning of that term. It's no wonder that so many of them never use that word without linking it; it has nothing whatsoever to do with real-world concepts of civility as they use it.


== Displacement ==
:Your proposal was so much in a different vein that it catches me by surprise. The fact that I am surprised might be a cause for concern. ] 13:55, 7 November 2007 (UTC)
::You say above that a requested move discussion might enable me to learn more about this. How about I initiate that requested move discussion for ], you watch, and then decide if you think I'm the sort of person you can work productively with, and whether I will be a calming influence on both sides, or not? Your block expires before that requested move discussion will end, so whether or not you want to participate in the requested move discussion is up to you. For now, I will point to the initial post you made above, stating that I agree that a naming convention discussion needs to take place. ] 14:22, 7 November 2007 (UTC)


Hello Gene.
:::OK. Done. See ]. ] 14:52, 7 November 2007 (UTC)


I came across some of the discussion on measures of displacement. I thought you may be interested in this prior discussion:
== I don't believe it! ==


]. (Also see ], about halfway down, discussing displacement templates, and ] followup on my talk page.)
You know I pointed out ] at that talk page discussion? Well I just recently came across ]. Looks like ] needs to be redirected there as well. I see that ] also exists, which is how I found the Rafael article. Do you think that both Eduardo Perez articles need to go at the "middle name" versions? As that is the best way to disambiguate them. ] 23:37, 10 November 2007 (UTC)


Last summer an editor, operating under the assumption that displacement figures on US cruisers and battleships were stated in short tons, introduced dozens of erroneous conversions. I doubt the damage has yet been undone completely.
:I think they're normally called Eduardo and Eddie. That's where they should be. You never see either of them listed with a middle name version on any baseball rosters and the like, so the "baseball" disambiguation is fine for Eddie, and Eduardo should have the disambiguation line (hatline, some call it) to the disambiguation page. But yes, the E. Rafael P. redirect should exist. ] 02:58, 11 November 2007 (UTC)


is an interesting link. As mentioned ], this USN website is stating carrier displacement in short tons, as well as metric. It may well be in error; a table on page 8 of gives carrier displacements in long tons.
::See ] for more ideas. ] 03:00, 11 November 2007 (UTC)


Regards, ] (]) 03:45, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
== Em dashes on ] ==


:Thanks. Looks to me like the most important thing is that we never have ''unidentified'' tons in any of our articles. I think the USN website may well be in error; I would imagine that the clerical people who do websites would be prone to the same errors many other people make, assuming that the "tons" used without identification in the United States are always "short tons". Just like they might do if they see something about a 50,000-ton sale of wheat to Algeria in a U.S. newspaper, where those tons are almost certainly metric tons and not short tons.
Thank you for your attention to detail on the ] page. However, as ] indicates, spaced en dashes are acceptable as an alternative to em dashes. We standardized the article using the spaced en dashes throughout during the FA process, so we'd prefer to leave them that way. (I've changed them back.) Thanks! –&nbsp;]&nbsp;·&nbsp;] 14:51, 11 November 2007 (UTC)


:Have you also considered the fact that in at least some of the cases where our articles state a displacement figure in tonnes-first (metric tons) or tonnes-only, those "tonnes" might well be long tons rather than metric tons? That's in addition, of course, to the likelihood that some that actually are metric tons are misinterpreted as long tons, in any strange system which uses long tons for some classes of ships and metric tons for other classes of ships.
:Dumb idea, IMHO. However, in any case spaced en dashes are totally unacceptable, in a dynamic paging environment, if you allow the line to break before the dash. Fix that, and I won't argue with you now on this article. ] 14:58, 11 November 2007 (UTC)


:We have far too many "tons" in shipping already, with the confusing volume measurements such as gross register tons. I don't think we should ever use short tons with regard to displacement of ships. If some riverboats or whatever give there displacement in short tons, we could express it in pounds with little distortion of the precision of the measurement.
== "put the source value first" ==


:Then, of course, there is "dived displacement" of submarines, another strange measurement that is also really a measurement of volume. (] is used to measure mass for a floating object; for a submerged object what you measure is its volume, not its mass.) ] (]) 05:32, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
Thanks for your comment at the convert template talk page. I would be grateful if you could also comment at the original discussion at ].<br>
] 22:08, 11 November 2007 (UTC)


:Of course, it isn't just in "historic" ships nor just in infoboxes where the conversion-as-if-short-tons problems occur. It also occurs in 20th century ships such as . ] (]) 05:40, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
==''Imperial'' Nautical Mile==
Hi Gene, I assume good faith edit to the ] article, but I have reverted it. The US Federal government source, cited extensively in the article, says for Louisiana: "Louisiana is extended 3 imperial nautical miles (imperial nautical mile = 6080.2 feet) seaward of the baseline from which the breadth of the territorial sea is measured." Thus, for now at least, until another ] source is found for some different assertion, it is correct to leave the word "imperial" in the article. I have thus reverted your edit. Please feel free to further research "imperial nautical miles" and improve the wikilinks and information in this article. I am guessing, but do not know, that perhaps the "imperial" nautical mile is related to an older French unit of measure, since a great deal of Louisiana state law is based on the Napoleonic code. But because of this fact, which is anomolous from the other 49 states, I tend to believe that the imperial nautical mile cited in the original Federal source is very likely correct. ] 22:49, 11 November 2007 (UTC)


:So, whose empire? No, it isn't correct to leave it in the article. Especially when we specify in ] how that term is used in Misplaced Pages. ] 22:54, 11 November 2007 (UTC)


::I'm also curious about one thing. Certainly that one USN site with "short tons" isn't the only source of information about the carriers involved there. And certainly with all the expertise among the people who participate in WikiProject Ships, a few of them could be followed out and compared with other sources, to see how likely it is that that particular website is simply in error. Has that been done? I didn't notice anything about anybody doing that in the discussions I saw.
::Gene, I am not defending which country the imperial nautical mile came from. Frankly, I don't know. Someone before me added that text to the article, and did so correctly from a correctly cited US Federal Government source at the US Dept. of the Interior. If you want to change it, you should do so within the article, and only with a valid citation from a ] source, not with mere assertion that I, or any other editor, needs to do some particular research to satisfy you. Thus, you have now made the article incorrect, and I will revert it back unless you first do it yourself.
::Note in particular with regards to that website that many of the conversions there are carried to improper precision, with ludicrous statements such as "Approximately 97,000 tons (87,996.9 metric tons) full load". Note also that the original "tons" there are never specifically identified as "short tons". To me, the combination of those two things is a pretty clear indication that the conversions were not in the original article, and that they were later inserted by some clerical functionary, rather than by somebody with any real expertise in the subject. It looks like a series of related pages where the "metric tons" figures (and an only-implicit identification of the tons as short tons) can be totally discounted as unreliable. By the way, that's the way we need to treat many of the conversions on Misplaced Pages as well; just because somebody has made a conversion of some ambiguous unit based on one particular meaning, that doesn't mean the identification has been correctly made. ] (]) 05:56, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
::I am continuing to assume good faith on your part, but you should not make such a change unless based on citable sources, from Louisiana law or elsewhere. It is insufficient to revert because you don't like what the Federal government says about Lousiana's seaward jurisdiction being measured in imperial miles.
::I would also suggest you and I both take, say, a day or so off to allow a cool down period in the event any emotional elements have crept into our debate on this topic.
::I will do further discussion only on the article talk page, not here on your Talk page. ] 13:12, 12 November 2007 (UTC)


:::I agree with your thoughts.
== Bot ratings ==
:::*The navy.mil website is wrong; an unfortunate example of an otherwise-reliable source being mistaken. I will contact them for clarification.
:::*Personally, on Misplaced Pages I would give only long tons or metric tons, whichever is appropriate, and link the appropriate term. (They are very close anyway; the difference is well-within what is consumed in an active day at sea.) If conversions must be given, it seems we should only give them once, and not repeat them in the text every time a unit of caliber, distance, or mass is used. That makes the text hard to read.
:::*I too have come across many other examples of merchant vessel tonnage (gt or grt) being conflated with displacement, both here and in exterior sources. In an effort to accommodate differences in measure, editors make assumptions as to what the sources mean. A recent example is a source which mentioned enemy tonnage sank, which was misinterpreted to be short tons, rather than what likely was the ] which is the measure of size of merchant vessels.
:::*It seems hard for naval aficiandos to understand, but displacement is irrelevant for merchant ships. (Who would purchase a house, or a warehouse, by weight?) Naval architects seek to minimize diplacement, and design the lightest vessel which can safely handle the desired capacity. (''See'' and especially edits by a naval architect who has edited Misplaced Pages.) Although I am a past offender, it would be less confusing to simply eliminate the displacement field for merchant vessels which are not measured by that metric. Howver, I doubt that would be acceptable to many.
:::Regards, ] (]) 15:49, 10 January 2010 (UTC)


== Battle of Nirim ==
I see you asked about BetacommandBot's article ratings. We had a ] on ANI about that. ] 18:58, 12 November 2007 (UTC)


Hi Gene Nygaard! You commented on the DYK ] for the article Battle of Nirim. The nomination has neither been approved nor rejected for some reason. Can you please look at it again? Thanks, ] <sup>(])</sup> 23:34, 12 January 2010 (UTC)
== French ship Marat (1794) ==


== Long hundredweight ==
I have expended ] somewhat and taken the liberty to remove the speedy deletion tag. I hope you don't mind.


Hi. I noticed that you established the ] page as a redirect to ]. I don't know much about Imperial measures, but surely it would make more sense to have it as a redirect to ]? ] (]) 00:21, 18 January 2010 (UTC)
I have noticed that ] has created a number of stubs of French ships of the line which obviously need expansion. I think that it is not a bad thing, because even very short stubs containing the name and date of a ship are a good basis to find further information.


:That was a long time ago. I don't know if there was any particular reason for it or not.
Cheers ! ] 11:59, 16 November 2007 (UTC)
:It really doesn't make much difference in this case; either one will give you the basic information you'd look for, though one might be better written than the other.
:It might have depended then, and it should now, on the relative quality of the articles. There probably isn't a whole lot of good reason to have separate articles in any case, especially when now (unlike the situation when I created that redirect), a redirect can go to a specific section of an article (e.g., use <nowiki>{{Redirect|Ton#Units of mass}}</nowiki> to go to ]. (When that redirect you found was created, even if you had put that into the redirect text, the redirect would only have taken you to the top of the article, not to the specific section.) So look over the possibilities, and see what you think is best.
:It probably won't make one whit of difference in any case. If you find hundredweight used in a Misplaced Pages article, it's most likely going to be used by someone who thinks that hundred is written in digits as "112" and who doesn't have enough sense to realize that if they use hundredweight they need to identify which one they are using, so instead of saying "long" hundredweight, they're just going to add a link to ] and the users will be left guessing which one was intended. ] (you can get that at the side of the page too; if you go to a page, there is a "What links here?" link on the left of the page, or somewhere on it depending on how you have your preferences set up) has a couple of hundred incoming links to that page, and most of them should be disambiguated in the articles they come from by following the link back to them and fixing them. Unfortunately, there aren't enough editors who bother to check out things like that.
:OTOH, ] shows '''only two articles''' the article namespace using that redirect, and one page that looks like some kind of maintenance lists. Don't worry about what Talk: pages say, nor any in Misplaced Pages: namespace rather than articles. ] (]) 01:41, 18 January 2010 (UTC)
::Thanks for the detailed response. I realise that this may not be all that important (I hadn't checked to see how many pages linked to the redirect, but thanks for pointing that out). The reason I came across this was that I wanted to know what a long hundredweight was for a ] I was considering using. When I saw that ] redirected to ], I initially assumed that they must be equal. I didn't read the article in full and it was only when I came across ] that I realised what a long hundredweight actually is. For that reason, I think it would be prudent to change the redirect to hundredweight. Please let me know if you object. I'll also do some disambiguating though, as suggested. ] (]) 08:42, 18 January 2010 (UTC)
{{talk back|Cordless Larry|Conversion templates}}


== Query ==
:That's good. I'm not much of an exclusionist. But I do draw a line when all the info in an article adds nothing to what is said in its name. -- ] (]) 21:08, 16 November 2007 (UTC)


I do not understand your point at ].--] <small>(]/]/]/]/]) </small> 18:46, 18 January 2010 (UTC)
== ] ==


== Edit summaries ==
Hi Gene, since you are always interested in proper coverage of the SI, I thought you might be interested in the discussion at ], where an editor erroneously claims that the correct abbreviation is Ms! --20:44, 19 November 2007 (UTC)


Your edit summary in bears no resemblance to the actual changes you made. Could you be more careful about this in the future? --] (]) 23:57, 20 January 2010 (UTC)
== The cheddar article ==
D'oh. Thanks for catching that. --] (]) 01:51, 20 November 2007 (UTC)


:Sounds like an issue to take up with whoever put "add metric units" in the toolbox on the edit page, and such an inappropriate edit summary when you use that pretty much worthless "tool". I'd never used it before today, and am trying to figure out what it will and will not do. Obviously, it didn't provide much of the "assistance" it claims on that particular edit, so I did some of the ones it should have done. The edit summary itself isn't my doing; sure, I could have changed it, but for now I'm going to choose not to, until I can figure out why all that date nonsense and the like has been put into a toolbox like this. Is there even any place where we can discuss what is in that toolbox, and the way it works including the edit summaries it gives? ] (]) 00:12, 21 January 2010 (UTC)


::What toolbox are you talking about? Are you using a user script or something to get this? --] (]) 02:12, 21 January 2010 (UTC)
:::Not knowingly. I remember somebody trying to talk me into doing something like that a long time ago. Maybe it is something I added; I do have a script page somewhere for other things, don't remember what. Guess I'll have to try to figure that out; I have only notices those things, which only appear in the toolbox after I go to the edit screen, recently.


:::Here's the list of what appears in my toolbox on the edit screen now; the first seven have always been there, as far as I remember:
==Japanese photographer substubs==
:Toolbox
* What links here
* Related changes
* User contributions
* Logs
* E-mail this user
* Upload file
* Special pages
* Delink common terms
* Add metric units
* Delink dates to dmy
* Delink dates to mdy
* All dates to dmy
* All dates to mdy
* Delink year-in-X dates
* Delink dates to dmy+common terms
* Delink dates to mdy+common terms
* Make dates bold


:::Now that you mention it, maybe it is something I've added; I don't remember having used any of them before. And it certainly doesn't ever give an edit summary appropriate for "Add metric units". If so, I think I'll try to figure out how to remove it, and figure out how to get other people to stop using it as well. ] (]) 02:39, 21 January 2010 (UTC)
Gene, I'm surprised that you encountered the wretched "article" ]. But you did, and if you did you might very well encounter more like it. After all, there are hundreds. Thus a short explanation. If you take a quick look at the , you'll see that I essentially reversed your edit, intelligent, well intentioned and excellently described though it was.
::::It was that &^&^%%%$ ]; I must have added his script to see how it worked. I've removed it now. ] (]) 02:52, 21 January 2010 (UTC)


==]==
You'll find the background ] and ].
Thanks for the idea! First I will start by compiling a list of all hills in England less than 100ft high. ] (]) 16:05, 21 January 2010 (UTC)


As for the current state, I'll explain in terms of ] (very worthwhile if only for its "related changes" tab). A full explanation of what's happened since and where we are now would exhaust both of us, but the following should cover well over 90%:


==Hidden Articles==
# I turned all the names into links.
Sorry, I am not quite clear on the context of your question:
# I respelled them where necessary, turning them into Hepburn complete with diacritics
:Why is Elizabeth Hight a redlink? Have you done other articles like that?
# (Irrelevantly to the substubs) I added people from other lists
but the article is actually ]. Where did you see the redlink ]?
# I stuck "OK" next to any link that I knew was more than a mere stub, and "'''NC'''" (not checked) next to any other blue or redlink.
] (]) 14:09, 23 January 2010 (UTC)
# I started at "A" and worked my way down to somewhere around "O", looking primarily at articles about people whose names need diacritics:
## Respelling the articles to Hepburn where appropriate (but not reversing the names)
## Adding DEFAULTSORT (but not consistently adding a comma where appropriate)
## Fixing links where necessary
## Marking each linked article as "OK" or "'''BGSS'''" (bot-generated substub)
## Moving the articles where appropriate (but not reversing the names)
# I then realized there'd be various problems if I didn't comply with the (bloody stupid) requirement of MoS-ja that names of Japanese people born after 1867 should be back to front, and so started again at "A" and:
## Adjusted the articles to have names of people born after 1867 in "western" (non-Japanese) order
## Stuck commas within DEFAULTSORTs
## Re-moved these articles


Thanks, Gene, but I am not confused about redlinks. Go ahead and create a redirect to get to ] -[REDACTED] can be edited by anyone and your contributions are appreciated. ] (]) 14:22, 24 January 2010 (UTC)
So:


Gene, the "creator" of the page did not "refuse" to create a redirect. You seemed to want to change the way some pages are named, and, since[REDACTED] is open for editing, you can do that. Being irritated because I did not do it your way to begin with is not very helpful. Here is a clearer way to express yourself in the future:
*Substubs on people without diacritics in their name are mostly untouched by human hand. They'll be misunderstood for sorting.
:I noticed that you named a page ], but, since there are no other notable people named ] and someone who types this simpler name will get a redlink, it is more appropriate to name the page ] and use a redirect from ]. If another ] should surface, a disambiguation page could then be created. I have made these changes - you might want to use this technique in the future.
*Substubs on people with diacritics in their name are OK down to "K" or thereabouts (and a little later every day).
Gene, I think you will get a better response by using this technique, and I hope you find it helpful. Best regards ] (]) 18:20, 24 January 2010 (UTC)
*From "K" or thereabouts to "O" or thereabouts, substubs on people with diacritics in their name have a more or less correct DEFAULTSORT (though it may lack the comma).
*From "S" or so thereon, substubs on people with diacritics in their name are like those for people without diacritics.


== Iowa class battleship ==
All pretty straightforward really. . . .


Sorry, didn't know you'd be active at this time of the night, otherwise I'd have stuck a man at work tag on the article. How's the rebuilding look? I tried to address the issues, but I would like your opinion on the matter. ] (]) 09:04, 26 January 2010 (UTC)
A few months or so from now, I should have sorted out this mess. We'll then have hundreds of correctly sortable, MoS-compliant, utterly useless substubs. A few years or so from now, I should have converted a significant percentage of these into articles that are worth a look. A few decades from now, they'll all be good (lowercase "G") articles. Er no, I'll die of old age before that happens.


:Haven't seen much yet; first one I looked at had removed a link and left the ]] behind at the end, and had a "gun guns" redundancy, typo or whatever, and repeated "anti-aircraft guns" three times in one sentence. Guess you must have figured out where I am, to know that I'm working "at this time of the night"; given the way that one section looked, maybe we both should get some rest. I'll look at it more tomorrow. ] (]) 09:27, 26 January 2010 (UTC)
Of course, if you happened to be interested in photography in Japan, you'd be most welcome to join the effort. I've occasionally made feeble attempts to interest some other people, but nobody has yet been tempted. Which hasn't surprised me. ] (]) 10:29, 21 November 2007 (UTC)
:And, of course, you don't know that it is "this time of night" for everybody who might be interested in this article. See ] or something like that. ] (]) 09:41, 26 January 2010 (UTC)


== thanks for your help and advice ==
==Bad moves?==
Hi! Based on your comment for edit, I'm a bit curious what was bad about the move itself. Taking the actual edit into consideration, it seems the only real problem you had with the move was that I didn't add a defaultsort (which I probably didn't know existed at that point, and I certainly hadn't realized diacritics caused problems with alphabetical sorting), rather than with the new title, or any leftover redirects, or mis-linkings, or whatever other usual problems "badly done" moves cause. So... am I missing something, or was the "badly done" misplaced? -]<span style="font-size:85%;"><sup>]</sup></span> 16:04, 23 November 2007 (UTC)


thanks for your help with ], which was promoted to FA yesterday. ] (]) 19:57, 26 January 2010 (UTC)
:That was what I was concerned with, and it happens far too often, with different editors. Otherwise, you did much better than most of them, having discussed your proposed move and showing concern about double redirects. Your mislinkings might evidence a misunderstanding; as WP:NC says, "In particular, the current title of a page does not imply either a preference for that title name, nor that any alternative name is discouraged in the text of articles."


== Sea levels and dam volumes ==
:You are in a better position than anyone else to know if there are likely others you have done which need a similar adjustment. ] (]) 10:14, 24 November 2007 (UTC)
::Well, I'm slightly confused again. Mislinkings? As for other pages with sorting issues, there are probably at least a couple, silly diacritics, and most likely plenty more that could use a defaultsort just in case; I'll run through and check for that in a bit. -]<span style="font-size:85%;"><sup>]</sup></span> 20:03, 25 November 2007 (UTC)
:::Ok, I think I caught all the sort issues that might've been caused by moves I've done. Only two or three where it was actually an issue, in the end. -]<span style="font-size:85%;"><sup>]</sup></span> 21:37, 25 November 2007 (UTC)


On ] and other articles you have changed links from ], the specific datum at Amsterdam from which the heights in those articles are measured from to ], a general article on the subject which doesn't even mention it. This may be because someone has incorrectly changed the redirect of 'Normalnull' to 'sea level', stating they are synonymous - they are clearly not. I have reverted the redirect so it points at ] which is the Dutch name for this datum. However, I have also added 'sea level' to the See Also section of 'Normaal Amsterdams Peil'. In most cases I write it as <nowiki>]</nowiki> so the layman sees a generic term he recognises, but those who click on the link go to the specific datum from which heights in western Europe are measured.
== November 2007 ==
{{{icon|] }}}Hello. Please don't forget to provide an ]{{#if:USS Midway (CV-41)|, which wasn't included with your recent edit to ]}}. {{{{{subst|}}}#if:{{{2|}}}|{{{2}}}|Thank you.}} <!-- Template:uw-editsummary --> ] (]) 04:32, 24 November 2007 (UTC)


Turning to the dam etc. volumes, using the ] as the example, the original German article gives the volume as "1 Mio m³" which means "1 million cubic metres" i.e. 1 x 10<sup>6</sup> cubic metres. My sense is that although a hm³ (hectometre cubed i.e. 100m x 100m x 100m) is the same as a million cubic metres, the unit is not widely or readily understood by the average English reader, whereas "1 million m³" (with the equivalent in imperial if necessary) is much clearer. --] (]) 08:30, 30 January 2010 (UTC)
== Space before unit symbol in bullet names ==


:after an edit conflict as I was doing this, I see you figured the first part out on your own. That's the only really legitimate, justifiable use of the prefix hecto- anywhere; all in all we'd be better off if the CGPM had gotten rid of all the prefixes which are not powers of 1000, and consigned them all to the same fate as the now-obsolete ].
You may wish to read a ] that a project has decided that there would be no space before a unit symbol in bullet names. I would have thought that the default should be to use a space but I am open to debate. I am sure you have an opinion on this and I will be interested to see what you think. ] (]) 20:44, 25 November 2007 (UTC)


:No, you've gotten mixed up somewhere. A ] is 100 m, not 10 m. And 100×100×100 = 1,000,000. Using {{tl|convert}}, {{convert|1|hm|m|sp=us}}. More with that conversion template:
== Bold for vectors ==
::{{convert|1|km3|hm3|sp=us}}
::{{convert|1|hm3|dam3|sp=us}}
::{{convert|1|dam3|m3|sp=us}}
::{{convert|1|hm3|m3|sp=us|abbr=on}}
::{{convert|1|m3|dm3|sp=us}}
::{{convert|1|dm3|cm3|sp=us}}
::{{convert|1|cm3|mm3|sp=us}}
::{{convert|1|m3|mm3|sp=us}}
::{{convert|1|Mm3|hm3|sp=us}}
:and outside the template, since there isn't enough call for Mm<sup>3</sup> conversions for it to handle them,
::1 cubic megameter (1,000,000,000,000,000,000 m<sup>3</sup>)
::1 cubic megameter (1,000,000,000,000 hm<sup>3</sup>)


I reversed . Vectors are conventionally typeset in roman boldface, while scalar variables are typeset in italic.--] (]) 07:03, 28 November 2007 (UTC)


:A "hectare" got its name because it is a hectometer squared, (100 m)(100 m) = 10000 m², and then "are" was backformed from hectare.
:I don't think they are vectors; and furthermore, the things that are vectors in this article aren't boldface. That ''x'' and ''y'' are axes in a coordinate system. They aren't vectors; they are just directions. ] (]) 15:15, 28 November 2007 (UTC)


:''Normalnull'' is just the German term for ], which really should be the article name rather than a redirect on English Misplaced Pages as you can see from the introduction. That, "mean sea level", is what is almost always meant when someone says "sea level" in English. It's just the details about getting to a "mean" level that vary somewhat. The stub article under the ] name certainly didn't have any reliable, useful information at the time it was redirected to sea level; we can look at the history and see that. It would be better to put any specific datum into the ] article, and to include as well the information at ] and at your Dutch datum article and any others in one comprehensive and comprehensible article. Note that redirects can now go to a specific section of an article, too (for a long time after I started editing here, using <nowiki>#REDIRECT]</nowiki> would only take you to the top of the article, even if a Normalnull section existed in the article. Now redirect works like links in an article: using <nowiki>]</nowiki> gives you this link to ], click to see where it takes you.
::I don't see any other vector variables in the article. Note that ''E''<sub>x</sub>(''t'') is a scalar component of a vector.


:Using "million" with a unit symbol rather than the spelled out name of the unit, especially for SI units, isn't "correct". It might squeak by in Misplaced Pages's house rules, but it is not in accordance with the rules of measurement standards organizations. ] (]) 11:22, 30 January 2010 (UTC)
::Mathematically, '''x''' and '''y''' are nothing if not vectors. Scalar quantities don't ''have'' direction. I'm used to representing the axes by small unit vectors in each direction. An alternative approach is to typeset the x and y in plain roman font (not italic)—merely a label for which axis is meant, rather than a mathematical quantity. I altered the article accordingly. See what you think.--] (]) 01:06, 29 November 2007 (UTC)


::Besides, most Americans won't even admit they know what a "meter" is, as a unit of measure—and a good share of them really do not know what a "metre" is. So let's just get rid of those units, too! Some probably do know that the Canadians use those dinky little "litres" where it takes over 4.5 of them to make a gallon, rather than American "liters" where it only takes 3.8 to make a gallon. ] (]) 11:32, 30 January 2010 (UTC) Just kidding about the gallons, of course. I do know the liters are the same and gallons different. ] (]) 17:58, 30 January 2010 (UTC)
:::But vectors ''do'' have length as well as direction; these parameters do not. They aren't vectors, and they (axes in a coordinate system) are normally italicized. ] (]) 01:09, 29 November 2007 (UTC)


:::Furthermore, ''E''<sub>x</sub>(''t'') isn't a scalar. It does have direction--in this case along the direction of the ''x'' axis. It is a vector, just as ]s are vectors. ] (]) 01:16, 29 November 2007 (UTC) :::By the way, there's a whole lot more to it than to have a benchmark, too. You still need to compare that datum to a geoid, and there are numerous ways that can be done, to use it for the elevation of a lake in Germany, for example. That isn't explained at all in the ] article. ] (]) 11:47, 30 January 2010 (UTC)


==]==
I think we are not far apart, but are mostly talking past one another. In the article, ''E''<sub>x</sub>(''t'') is a scalar, not a vector. It is the component of the vector '''E'''(''t''), which is obtained by taking the ] of that vector with a unit vector parallel to the x-axis. --] (]) 06:18, 29 November 2007 (UTC)
Thank you for rectifying my mistake.--] (]) 17:02, 30 January 2010 (UTC)


== Brabham BT19 == == USS Congress ==


I was wondering if you could look over ] when you have a few minutes free? I will soon be taking the article to FAC and have been impressed with your attention to detail during the FAR on Iowa class battleships. Please discuss any issues on the article talk page. Thanks. --] (]) 01:12, 1 February 2010 (UTC)
Thanks for the unit catches at ] - I must have absent mindedly used a US converter. Cheers. ] (]) 16:52, 29 November 2007 (UTC)


== Loktak Lake ==
==Long and short scales versus Parts-per notation==
Gene. I was tempted to fix this and then thought it best to refer the issue to you since you are more expert on the subject. In ], it says…


In ], I must admit I didn't consider the {{para|abbr|on}} parameter as the culprit. I tried several combinations - but all were with {{para|abbr|on}} - and the only ones that didn't error were the simple conversions, not the ranges. Since seeing your subsequent edits, I have tried getting a copy of the version that I edited from, and simply removing the {{para|abbr|on}} - ie <code><nowiki>{{convert|0|to|35|C|F}}</nowiki></code> which yields {{convert|0|to|35|C|F}}. Do you want me to paste that in as a replacement for the non-converted form currently there? --] (]) 15:03, 2 February 2010 (UTC)
{{quotation|The ] suggests not to use the part-per notation to avoid misunderstanding. In most countries, a billion is 10<sup>12</sup> (a million²) and a trillion 10<sup>18</sup> (a million³); in the U.S. a billion is 10<sup>9</sup> and a trillion 10<sup>12</sup> (being a billion in Europe). Nevertheless the notation is still widely used.}}


:If you like; it won't make any significant change (it will throw in those mostly useless nonbreaking spaces which aren't worth adding, and which clutter up edit pages needlessly and make them difficult to read for no good reason when added individually). Conversions don't have to be done with any particular template (and there are others that work better than this one for some purposes, e.g. {{tl|height}} for human heights with its half-inch conversions from heights in meters)—and I run into as many problems or more of them with editors using the various conversion templates properly than I do with problems in conversions not using the templates. In addition to {{tl|convert}} being incredibly complex (it takes well over 1000 pages of templates to work), with a steeper learning curve than most editors are willing to endure, there are a whole lot of bugs and glitches in addition to the problem of "abbr=" giving a problem with ranges when it doesn't give any error message (though it also doesn't work) for a single temperature:
I find the above to be misleading given that 1) parts-per-notation is used primarily in technical fields, and 2) this is the English language version of Misplaced Pages. Accordingly, the English expression in science of “ppm” doesn’t have the confusion implied in ]; the term is well understood to refer to one part in 1,000,000 in English technical circles. Further, IEC is just another safety standards agency, similar to the U.S.’s U.L. or Canada’s CSA.
:* <code><nowiki>{{convert|27|C|F|abbr=off}}</nowiki></code> giving you the form with symbols nonetheless: {{convert|27|C|F|abbr=off}} (compare that to <code><nowiki>{{convert|2700|N|lbf|abbr=off}}</nowiki></code> &rarr; {{convert|2700|N|lbf|abbr=off}} where the first term is spelled out)
:* <code><nowiki>{{convert|2.9|t|lb|sp=us}}</nowiki></code>, even with the spelling parameter set, gives us a spelling more foreign to American English than "litres" are: {{convert|2.9|t|lb|sp=us}}
:*and not even any rudimentary ], letting stupid things like this slip through: <code><nowiki>{{convert|2.57|km|lb|sp=us}}</nowiki></code> &rarr; {{convert|2.57|km|lb|sp=us}}
::*There are, of course, a number of cases where someone using the ] like this, and not seeing the output on the on the edit screen, will do reasonable-looking (on the edit screen) conversions such as <code><nowiki>a {{convert|12|oz|ml}} soft-drink can</nowiki></code> or <code><nowiki>the battleship has a range of {{convert|11700|nm|mi km|sp=us}}</nowiki></code> and end up with garbage in the article if they don't carefully review the results. I leave it an an exercise for you or other readers to remove the nowiki and preview these to see what happens.
:So, though I do use {{tl|convert}} quite often, there are cases when it should not be used. One of the biggest problems, of course, it that it has improperly introduced British spellings into thousands of articles written in American English, because of its improper default rather than making every editor specify the spellings. ] (]) 15:48, 2 February 2010 (UTC)


== Convert alt spellings ==
The below is from ]:


Gene, instead of constantly complaining about alternate input/output spellings that don't exist, as you most recently did , why don't you simply create them yourself? It is only a redirect to the main one! You don't have to understand the code at all. It would save us all a lot of time, rather than demanding someone ''else'' do it. <span style="white-space:nowrap; text-shadow:gray 5px 3px 1px;">— ] <small>(] ] ])</small></span> 02:28, 15 February 2010 (UTC)
{{quotation|For most of the ] and ], the ] uniformly used the long scale, while the ] used the short scale, so that the two systems were often referred to as "British" and "American" usage respectively. Today, the UK uses the short scale exclusively in official and ] usage and, although some long-scale usage still continues, the terms "British" and "American" no longer reflect usage.}}


:In that particular case, even the "F-change" is undocumented. It isn't clear that that is the most appropriate way to accomplish it. It isn't clear that it should become documented, even. It was never discussed; it is just something some editor decided to throw in there. So it isn't clear that making redirects is the best way to fix it.
Also, ] says this (which I believe reinforces my point about English-language use):


:But as far as why I don't do that most of the time, it is
{{quotation|The following table lists those names of numbers which are found in many English dictionaries and thus have a special claim to being "real words". The "Traditional British" values shown are unused in American English and are becoming obsolete in British English, but are dominant in many non-English-speaking areas, including ] and ]-speaking countries in ]; see ].}}
:#Largely because we need to get some understandings by the people who edit this template that we need a consistent look and feel—and we aren't going to get that unless the people who add new conversions start to understand what that look and feel should be, and do what they can to achieve it.
:#As a consequence of a lack of a consistent look and feel, adding a redirect won't always be consistent what we already have. For example, ] '''does not''' redirect to ], nor vice versa. They are two different template pages, despite the fact that they are used to convert the same unit. That is due to the stupid practice of using the input unit parameters to affect spelling and capitalization issues.
:#I understand it well enough so that I could actually add those which are more than redirects, if I took a little time to make sure I was following the conventions myself.
:#But I generally cannot fix the ones that already exist, even when the solution is obvious. Output spellings I cannot fix, for example. Making "sp=ca" and "sp=sv" and "sp=tur" work right are probably beyond what I can do as well.
:#In some cases it is because the real solution is not to add the "missing" ones, but rather to delete the useless, befuddling, unnessary ones already there, the ones which accomplish nothing other than steeping the learning curve for using this template.


:But I'm not going to do any of that, unless and until I see some evidence of a real attempt to clean things up. Business as usual won't get me to help out. If it starts working better than it has in the past, I could well jump in and help fix some of those things and to clean up the documentation mess.
I’ll leave this to your judgment and choice of sources. ] (''])'' 03:10, 2 December 2007 (UTC)


:As it stands now, {{tl|convert}} remains a dangerous weapon in the hands of most editors who add it to articles. I still need convincing that the best solution is not to delete Template:Convert and all its subpages in their entirety. ] (]) 03:20, 15 February 2010 (UTC)
::British use of billion meaning 10<sup>9</sup> is almost always limited to monetary figures. Billions are generally avoided in other contexts.


::My best suggestion would simply to be don't use it. It's been around a very long time, and it isn't going away. If it can be improved upon, that's fantastic, but I am deeply disturbed by the handful of editors who seem hellbent on attacking those who created it (I'm not one) because it doesn't do everything they want it to do. It's a bloody static template...it isn't intelligent, and I don't understand why folks think it should somehow clairvoyantly know what the editor is wanting it to do, or, as you say above, thinks it is somehow ''dangerous'' to the community. That really boggles my mind.
::But that isn't the biggest problem with "parts per" notation. The biggest problem deals with the identity of the quantities being compared—and the clumsiness necessary to make that clear. That ambiguity is an unnecessary problem, something easily avoided, by simply using normal units such as mg/kg and nmol/mol and µL/L and, especially important, the weird yet common use of "parts per" when the units are along the lines of µg/m³. See NIST SP811. ] 03:35, 2 December 2007 (UTC)
::As to my original question, your response leaves me even more puzzled. In your first paragraph, you say that a redirect isn't the clear way to proceed. What? It's a redirect between "°F-change" and "F-change". Between "A·h" and "A.h". Between "hp.h" and "hph". Etc etc. There is no "fix" other than a simple redirect or rename (which itself will involve a redirect), which is *specifically* what you complained about. Your bullet point 1 above, I believe, points to the critical problem here: this is a collaborative effort, and it is simply *wrong* to demand action from others when you refuse to take simple actions yourself.
::I want to be clear that I'm not attacking you or anything, just pointing out the inconsistencies of actions here. I think you have some fantastic ideas, some that would be great to implement and others that may be beyond what we're capable of doing (such as accounting for every spelling variation on the face of the earth, like your sp=sv and sp=tur (tr) examples above), but the way you go about suggesting those changes turns all but the already converted (like Wikid) against you. I'm serious about my earlier comment regarding honey and vinegar...it may not ''always'' work, but the batting average will still be better than if you try to bludgeon other volunteers into doing what you want. <span style="white-space:nowrap; text-shadow:gray 5px 3px 1px;">— ] <small>(] ] ])</small></span> 03:41, 15 February 2010 (UTC)


Further to this, there's no need to convert American English spellings to International English spelling as you did ] and change a link to a page that results in a redirect no different than the one that was in place just so you can have an International English spelling. It's completely unnecessary. I would revert them, but that too is unnecessary, but please stop. --] (]) 17:50, 16 February 2010 (UTC)
:::So I interpret your position as follows: If a resistor changes 10 ppb, you prefer to write 10 parts in 10<sup>9</sup>. Right? Do you change ppm and ppb when you encounter them? The notation ppm is so incredibly common in science. ] (''])'' 04:02, 2 December 2007 (UTC)


:It's usually "advertise" in American English, and advertise in any other variety of English, as far as I know. Advertize might be an acceptable spelling, at least in American English, but it is far less common than advertise in the U.S. or anywhere else. In any case the spelling there does not appear in the article; it appears only in a comment to editors. My American English spell-checker here underlines the "advertize" spelling; it is an "also" variant in Webster's Third New International Dictionary, meaning that it sees some use but is not common.
::::No. I write 10 nΩ/Ω. What's so difficult about that? ] 04:05, 2 December 2007 (UTC) Or, if it is clearer, 10 Ω/GΩ might work better. ] 04:07, 2 December 2007 (UTC)
:Removing an unencyclopedic colloquialism abbreviation isn't a national varieties of English issue either. The redirects are also more specific to a section in the article, rather than just ot the top of the article. The units are amperes in American English, in Australian English, in Canadian English, in any English; for what its worth, they are "ampères" in Canadian French, but I haven't run into any problems with that being used on English Misplaced Pages.


:If you want to deal with those varieties of English issues, go complain at ] about the impropriety of that template defaulting to British English, and making us jump through hoops to get American English. That has resulted in thousands of articles improperly using "metre" and "litre" spellings; I've fixed a few hundred of them and haven't made much of a dent in the problem. But unless more people complain about it at the template talk page, as I have done in the past, we aren't likely to get that changed. Compare
:::::Of course, I'd be more likely to challenge your claim the resistance was measured to that precision. ] 04:10, 2 December 2007 (UTC)
:*{{<code>convert|7|m|ft</code>}} with no spelling parameter &rarr; {{convert|7|m|ft}} can be
:*{{<code>convert|7|m|ft|sp=us</code>}} &rarr; {{convert|7|m|ft|sp=us}} if and only if the editor adding the conversion knows that you need to jump through hoops to get American English, and knows what you need to do to achieve that. You don't see the results on the edit page; many editors adding that template probably are unwitting accessories to this crime, not even realizing that they are throwing British spellings into an articl using American English. Don't you think that instead the convert template should require everybody to specify the spelling to be used? Do your part by making that point at ]. ] (]) 01:43, 17 February 2010 (UTC)


== Sorting diacritics in the Slovene municipal template ==
::::::NIST calibration against a ]. They can calibrate to ''better'' than 10 ppb; it's an issue of how long a resistance standard will ''hold'' the calibration (not long). ] (''])'' 04:43, 2 December 2007 (UTC)


Please provide a relevant argument supporting your recent "fix" of the ] (after reading ]) so that this doesn't become an edit war. Thank you, — ] <sup>]</sup> 08:32, 17 February 2010 (UTC)
:::::::But in cases like that, you rarely see 10 ppb. Rather, you will see 1 part in 10<sup>8</sup> (or simply a statement about a 10<sup>−8</sup> level of precision, especially if it is only a decimal order of magnitude) or 1.0 part in 10<sup>8</sup>, whichever is appropriate. You do know the difference, don't you? And why the 10 in 10 ppb is ambiguous? ] 13:31, 2 December 2007 (UTC)


==Windmill articles==
==Please==
Re your recent copyedit, as the creator of lots of windmill-related articles on Misplaced Pages, the preferred conversion is from ft.in to m.cm - I've tweaked the conversion back to where it was so that the article conforms with the hundreds of others. Articles on mills in Europe give the measurements in m.cm, which are then converted to ft.in. ] (]) 07:00, 19 February 2010 (UTC)
Don't use my name in edit summaries . Thank you, --<sub><span style="border:1px solid #228B22;padding:1px;">]|]</span></sub> 21:56, 4 December 2007 (UTC)


:I have no idea what you are talking about. In my recent edit, I merely fixed the conversion template that was there so that it would use properly use the adjective form. It is a "10-foot wheel" not a "10 feet wheel". You didn't tweak anything "back"—it never included inches, '''and it still doesn't after your edit'''. That's the really baffling part about your complaint. So I could help you out, if that's what you want. In the particular example given here, it might be undue precision to add inches, however. Do you know how precisely that measurement, which was originally just in feet in this case, was expressed? Is it to the nearest inch? If it isn't, you shouldn't be converting it as if it were. And if it isn't, you don't have centimeter precision either. It isn't a matter of what "windmill" articles use. Is is a matter of the precision of a particular measurement. ] (]) 13:20, 19 February 2010 (UTC)
:Don't give me reason to do so, then. Can you go fix all the problems you have created in that regard, the hundreds of articles which appear in the wrong place in their category listings, making it likely that some people looking for them won't find them? Why would you want to hide things away like that in any case? ] (]) 22:01, 4 December 2007 (UTC)


::Well, 10 foot and 10 foot 0 inches are the same, aren't they? I generally prefer not to add the "0 inches" bit if the measurement is an exact number of feet, but I'll not revert the addition in the conversion as it's really not worth warring over. I'm just trying to keep the conversions consistent across all windmill articles. . I think that conversion to 0.000m is a little too precise, whereas a conversion to 0.0m gives an approximate 4" step (not precise enough). 0.00m is a good compromise between the two. ] (]) 13:32, 19 February 2010 (UTC)
::They appear wrong only temporarily, until is fixed. As soon as it is, all of your 'fixes' will have to be reverted.--<sub><span style="border:1px solid #228B22;padding:1px;">]|]</span></sub> 22:07, 4 December 2007 (UTC)
:::No, they aren't the same. The 10 feet might be accurate to the nearest foot, in which case if it were expressed to the nearest inch it would be somewhere between 9 ft 6 in and 10 ft 6 in. OTOH, "10 feet 0 inches" should mean that it is somewhere between "10 ft ½ in" and "10 ft 1½ in". For this measurement, we can presume that the final zero in 10 feet is significant; however, in other measurements, you might have "10 feet" meaning "10±5 feet". Though if it is designed to be 10 feet 0.0 inches with one-tenth inch tolerance, it might still be referred to as ten feet. We don't always need to use the most precision we could use.
:::The precision of the output depends on the precision of the input. For something like a wheel that is designed to be a nice round number in some units, like this, it is okay to assume that it has enough precision to convert it to the centimeter level, and knowing it to the millimeter level isn't helpful. But when you have something in the same article that is a measured quantity rather than a design quantity, then only assume the precision expressed.
:::Note that in most conversions, you generally have at least two defensible options for the precision of the result, one a little bit more precise than the input, and one a little bit less precise. The less you know about the precision of the input, the more choices you need to pick from. In this case, as long as we don't use vulgar fractions or rounding decimally but to the nearest 5 cm or 5 mm or whatever, our choices for the results of the conversion are 3.0 m and 3.05 m. I wouldn't have changed the precision if I weren't already editing the "adj=on" parameter. I don't mind your changing it back to the other defensible option, 3.05 m. And I won't even insist that it include the "0-inch" on the other side if that is used. ] (]) 13:55, 19 February 2010 (UTC)
:::Actually, a "10-foot (3 m) wheel" is also a third acceptable option here; like the 3.05 m, I might change that if I'm already editing something for another reason, but not in an edit by itself. ] (]) 14:08, 19 February 2010 (UTC)


== ] FAC ==
:::Several points:
:::#It's not likely to happen in my lifetime. That bug report is already nearly four years old.
:::#Even if it does ever happen, that would only mean that English sort order can be achieved more simply here.
:::#We will still need to do much of it manually, to get the words used in sorting and their order as we want them (last name first in many categories, but given name first in some; omitting the initial "Battle of" in article names, for the various "Battle" categories, etc.)
:::#Those with existing, proper sort keys will still sort every bit as well as they do now. '''None of "my fixes" nor those of thousands of other Misplaced Pages editors who do it correctly will have to be reverted, even if the software ever becomes more than a primitive, rudimentary Unicode number sort.'''
:::#If you continue to '''deliberately''' missort items, corrective action will have to be pursued. ] (]) 22:25, 4 December 2007 (UTC)


I have responded to your concerns at ]. Could you <s>strike</s> resolved issues and consider whether you are ready to support this nominee.--] <small>(]/]/]/]/]) </small> 23:52, 24 February 2010 (UTC)
==Japanese photographer non-articles again==
:I don't know if you are watching the article, but it was copyedited today. I thought you might want to reconsider supporting it.--] <small>(]/]/]/]/]) </small> 05:55, 27 February 2010 (UTC)


== ] clarification tag ==
On of yours: no, her name is KON Michiko in Japanese-language contexts, and either KON Michiko or Michiko KON in English-language contexts. (To my personal disgust, MoS-ja of en:WP plumps for the latter.) So it was the titling rather than the sorting that was wrong.


Please see my response at ]. ] (]) 16:02, 25 February 2010 (UTC)
As I wrote above at tedious length, I am not at all happy about the robotic generation of hundreds of these bloody non-articles. The exceedingly thin silver lining is that perhaps one in fifty has prompted somebody unexpected to flesh it out. In addition to turning a handful into real (if short) articles, I've already put hours into the dreary chore of renaming those that have macrons in their name (not because I am partial to non-articles whose titles have exotic lettering but because the bot screwed them up more than it did non-articles without macrons). I suppose I'd be a bit irritated if you rushed to prod those. But as for ], you'd have been welcome to prod it. (She does deserve a proper article, but prodding the silly non-article of course doesn't prejudice her chances of getting a proper article later.)


== "micron" vs "micrometer" for 10^-6 meter ==
Simple rule of thumb: If an article on a Japanese photographer looks like a robotically generated substub, it is. Please don't guess how it should be sorted, but (if its edit history shows no sign of human intervention) feel free to prod it. -- ] (]) 04:25, 5 December 2007 (UTC)


Regarding the Gene Nygaard edit of ] on 3 March 2010. This edit removed "microns" and replaced them with "micrometers", with an edit note "microns were thrown out in the '60s". I assume this refers to "Resolution 7 of the 13th meeting of the CGPM (1967/68)" http://www.bipm.org/en/CGPM/db/13/7/
== Article you might want to read ==


So "microns" have been officially thrown out, but I note they are still in popular use, and the original WISE document that is referenced from the Wiki article at the end of the edited sentence, http://wise.ssl.berkeley.edu/documents/WISESPIE_SanDiego05.pdf by Mainzer et.al. (2005), does use microns. To quote from the abstract of that document, " will survey the entire sky in four bands from 3.3 to 23 microns". So the term is in current use. In the body of the paper, the unit is written µm using the lowercase Greek letter mu.
I saw the quote you had on ] from President ] and I want you click on ] for something to pique your curiosity. ] (]) 03:05, 8 December 2007 (UTC)


See also: http://en.wikipedia.org/Micrometre which mentions: "NOTE: The American spelling of "micrometer" is rarely used (micron is typically used instead), due to the existence of a measuring device of the same name."
==Boiling point of water==
The boiling point of water is actually >=212, not about 212. For searing approximately is close enough. --] (]) 06:35, 8 December 2007 (UTC)


So should a Misplaced Pages article aimed at the general public use the common, typical usage, or the scientifically approved, but rare usage? ] (]) 20:44, 4 March 2010 (UTC)
==Boiling point of water==
The boiling point of water is actually >=212, not about 212. For searing approximately is close enough. --] (]) 06:34, 8 December 2007 (UTC)


:Just because it still sees some use doesn't mean ''we'' should be using it. I can show you a lot of dinosaurs still using ] as well, but so what?
:Where I live, the boiling point of water averages about 208 °F (98 °C). There are many inhabited places on Earth where the normal boiling point of water is less than 200 °F, and at any place it can vary by a couple of degrees with high and low pressures. That's why cooking instructions on many food packages and recipes include "high altitude" directions with longer cooking times. ] (]) 09:11, 8 December 2007 (UTC)
:Even before my edit, that article already used the symbol for micrometers (µm), right up there in the second sentence and in the infobox, rather than the symbol for microns (µ). And that symbol for micrometers is just thrown out there, in the first usage, without either spelling out the unit, nor including a link to the ] article. So let's not have any nonsense about "general public use" in any case. We were already assuming that our readers are numerate enough to understand that first use of micrometers even though they are only in symbol form, not spelled out and not linked. Since we assume they already understand that form, why would they have any problem understanding it when it ''is'' spelled out later in the article.
:The prefix micro- is well understood, no matter what unit of measure it is applied to. More people are going to understand "micrometer" than are going to understand "micron". When you see the numbers in front of it, some readers will do a double take but it shouldn't take long to figure out that if we are talking about 3.3 micrometers, we aren't talking about three working instruments and pieces of another broken one. At most "micron" might serve better as a "comfort word" (something they are familiar with, even if they don't understand it) for the readers who grew up in the days when "microns" were acceptable units.
:The use of "micrometers" as a unit of measure is not rare. (And Misplaced Pages isn't a ] in any case, in either the Wikijargon sense or in a more real-world sense of the accuracy of claims such as that one.) It is quite common, as any search engine will show you quite easily. In the U.S., some people who don't like the ambiguity choose instead to use the "micrometres" spelling for this unit, even if they don't use the -re spelling for any other lengths. But most of the people who avoid using "micrometers" simply do so by sticking to its symbol instead, and not spelling it out.
:The article also uses "microjanskies", for Pete's sake—though of course it was in a weird hyphenated, camel-case, non-plural "micro-Jansky" monstrosity. That usage might also found in the real world; being found there is no reason for us to accept it, any more than we should accept the microns which were thrown out in the 1960s. ] (]) 22:06, 4 March 2010 (UTC)


::To see the nonsense of that Misplaced Pages claim that "The American spelling of "micrometer" is rarely used", just look at examples you can see in :
::Note that this depends on the absolute atmospheric pressure at any location, not the pressures we get in weather reports which are "corrected to sea level". ] (]) 09:16, 8 December 2007 (UTC)
::{|
|-
!Google||hits
|-
|"20 micrometers" -wikipedia ||52,900
|}
:: ] (]) 22:14, 4 March 2010 (UTC)


== Case sensitive section links ==
: High altitudes and other exceptions (salty water) are just that, exceptions to the general case. In any case, searing is not so exact a process as you imply. --] (]) 14:47, 8 December 2007 (UTC)


Well, this link to the section ] does not work for example with Firefox 3.5.8, Google Chrome 4.0.249, Firefox 3.0.6, Firefox 0.9 and Safari 4.0 for Windows. What kind of Firefox are you using? -- ] (]) 22:49, 9 March 2010 (UTC)
== Pelham bit ==


It does not work also with Firefox 1.5 on Windows, Firefox 2.0.0.4 on Windows, Konqueror 4.3 on Ubuntu 9.10 and Firefox 3.6 on Ubuntu 9.10. -- ] (]) 23:39, 9 March 2010 (UTC)
Gene, can you do that same pressure/force/newtons thing for ]? Thanks! ]<sup>]</sup> 00:32, 11 December 2007 (UTC)


== FAC ==
:Oh, never mind, you did, a week ago. I missed that one. Is the wikilinking the same? Seems clearer in Pelham. I can't recall if there is anything on this in ], but that would also be an appropriate place. ]<sup>]</sup> 00:34, 11 December 2007 (UTC)


Hi Gene, have we resolved your concerns? If not, could you list any other concerns you have at the FAC? Thanks! ''']'''] 20:39, 14 March 2010 (UTC)
== millihertz ==


:Thanks for reminding me--I did intend to get back there. ] (]) 21:36, 14 March 2010 (UTC)
My script converts 'mHz' into 'MHz'. Many editors write 'mHz' or 'mhz' for megahertz. I can either watch for false positives where 'millihertz' is really intended or take the function out of the script. I am interested in your thoughts. Please comment at the existing debate on my talk page. ] (]) 18:30, 11 December 2007 (UTC)


== R-R Merlin and Spitfire specs alterations ==
== SI multiples template ==


Would you please discuss your alterations to these articles on the talk pages before implementing your changes, and before you go through other articles to correct them? You are altering measurements which are given in the source material - if a respected engineer like Cyril Lovesy describes boost pressures as eg "+15 lb/in²" for a WW II aero engine he does so for a good reason; it is not up to you to alter such information without providing references; without references your conflicting changes can and will be removed. Secondly, please don't add kPa - again, this is your unilateral addition to accepted practice in these and similar articles (why not then add all possible conversions?). Other people have worked extremely hard to bring the Rolls-Royce Merlin up to Featured Article status, please respect their work by at least discussing your changes. ] (]) 23:35, 14 March 2010 (UTC)
I made some of your requested changes in ] as a new template ]. See the accompanying talk pages. Any comments are welcome. ] (]) 11:30, 17 December 2007 (UTC)


:You are missing the point - you are altering units which are used ''in the source material cited''; they may be "silly...colloquialisms" to you but why should we believe you rather than an engineer like Stanley Hooker, who helped design the Merlin's supercharger, or Cyril Lovesy who was involved in many aspects of the Merlin's development (read the article cited)? Are you intending to go through every such article "correcting" them without providing source material and without at least some discussion as to why these changes are so suddenly and urgently needed? Statements such as "''silly notion that ambiguous, technically improper and unencyclopedic colloquialisms have any place on Misplaced Pages....Those are just a scratching of the surface of the problems so badly in need of attention in articles like this''" have no place in Misplaced Pages - it simply says that us poor, unscientific, silly, plebs, who have gone to a great deal of time and trouble to create or edit these articles, should stand back and let scientific experts such as your good self (who, up to the last few days, didn't bother to advise or assist in the process) take them apart again. If you want to help by all means do but for goodness sake don't take such a top-lofty attitude with other editors. ] (]) 20:51, 15 March 2010 (UTC)
== ] ==


== ] revision ==
Hi there


Hello Gene, I undid your edit to add conversions to this article as per mining conventions.
I've returned bond length to angstroms, properly disambiguating ("A"). In my experience, angstroms are used more than picometers in crystallography, even though it is non-SI. With the proper wikilink, I do believe there is no more ambiguity. --] (]) 14:41, 19 December 2007 (UTC)
For the first, total ore, converting 1.4 million metric tons to pounds, this is unnecessary. Total ore grades do not need to be converted to pounds, ounces, etc as this number has no real value. For the second, contained metal, the source states 4.1 million pounds of uranium oxide. I guess we could do a conversion on this number to get a metric ton equivalent, but as the values quoted from the source are rounded (millions for pounds, thousands for tonnes), we need to use those as the starting point.
Cheers, ] <sup>]</sup> 02:18, 22 March 2010 (UTC)


:Stop and think for a bit, Turgan. Does it make any sense whatsoever to measure proven reserves of ore in kilograms, and resulting product in pounds? No, it doesn't, whether or not one or both of them is expressed in any of the various tons instead. They aren't even in the same highest-level system of measurements. One is metric, the other English.
:There's still the fact that nobody should have to learn Fred Flintstone units to read a Misplaced Pages article. The iinterdisciplinary nature of the SI is as important as its international nature. I'll put in conversions instead of replacing it. ] (]) 14:44, 19 December 2007 (UTC)
:Of course they are rounded. That's part of the basic rules of arithmetic. When you multiply two numbers together, you cannot gain any precision. In that multiplication, it is the least precise number that is controlling. A rough rule is that you should round the result to the same number of ]s as the least precise multiplicand. For our numbers here, the proven yield of 1,461,800 metric tons has been multiplied by a guessed-at concentration of 0.13% kg/kg, or 0.0013.
::So lets assume for the sake of argument that the numbers given are accurate to the precision stated, so we have 1,461,800±50 and 0.0013±5
::Result before rounding: 1461800×0.0013 = 1900.34 metric tons
::Highest possible: 1461850×0.00135 = 1973.4975
::Lowest possible: 1461750×0.00125 = 1827.1875
:Thus, the best we can do is to say that it is 1900 metric tons. In fact, even if the original assumptions are accurate, it might really round to two significant digits as either 1.8×10<sup>3</sup> or 2.0×10<sup>3</sup> metric tons, but the highest probability is that it would be 1.9×10<sup>3</sup> tons.
:Rounding to thousands or millions or whatever doesn't matter; what matters is the significant digits. It doesn't matter if you call it 123 '''million''' metric tons, or 123 '''billion''' kilograms, or just plain 123 teragrams or 123 '''thousandths''' of a petagram. These are not ]s in any case; they are physical measurements, or here estimates of what the physical measurements could be in the future.


:You also don't seem to have a very good grasp of the reason why we include conversions. We are doing so to increase the chances that our intended audience will understand what we are saying. Most of the world doesn't really understand pounds; they will use kilograms and their multiples (including metric tons, 1000 kg) for not only for uranium ore but for uranium oxide or uranium as well.
::Furthermore, while angstroms may remain far too common in this context, picometers and nanometers are common in the technical literature as well. ] (]) 14:49, 19 December 2007 (UTC)
:Another factor you don't seem to be considering is that when dual measurements are included, most readers are going to totally ignore one of them. It doesn't slow their reading down much to have the conversions; their brains simply don't bother even processing one of them.
:However, when you have something like ore in metric tons multiplied by concentration gives product in pounds, that's jarring to everybody. Nobody is satisified. Nobody gets all of the information in familiar units. Having one of the units in metric units and the other in English units slows down their reading, it destroys their ability to understand what is being talked about. None of the readers get the information they need to connect the two measurements together, to figure out how they relate to each other. The will also wonder what the hell that "0.13%" has to do with anything; nobody is going to see that ''x'' pounds is 0.13% of ''y'' kilograms.
:Note also that the "proven reserves" number here is way over-precise, too. You wouldn't even be able to measure the amount you actually took out of the ground in a given year at one particular mine to five-significant digit precision. Making a guess as to how much could possibly be taken out in the entire future cannot be done with nearly as much precision. In most cases like this, the overprecise numbers result from adding together several subcomponents. In addition, the rounding rules are different. They don't depend on the number of significant digits, but rather on the location of the decimal point. For example, if you add together 37,000 tons and 5 tons, you should still get 37,000 tons, not 37,005 tons (of course, if you have a whole bunch of small numbers, you don't do the rounding until after all of them are added up). But a lot of bean-counters who come up with numbers like this do not properly round their results. ] (]) 11:57, 22 March 2010 (UTC)


==] of ]==
:But should people need to learn Jetsons units that no one uses yet? Not that this is the case here, but I couldn't resist. :) --] (]) 14:55, 19 December 2007 (UTC)
]
::LOL. And maybe my comment wasn't really called for in the first place. But even Rifleman 82 says "used more than picometers"; that "more than" may or may not still be accurate (and is difficult to gauge in any case), but there surely are a significant number of people and publications which do use picometers. Having both in the article is fine with me; that way, people can use the one they are more comfortable with and ignore the other. ] (]) 15:00, 19 December 2007 (UTC)


The article ] has been ]&#32; because of the following concern:
I'm lost ... Fred Flintstone and Jetsons? I'm well aware that picometers are used often... but I've never seen it used to describe bond lengths. Reports from single crystla X-ray diffraction studies are routinely denoted in angstroms and degrees (why not pm and radian?). --] (]) 15:50, 19 December 2007 (UTC)
:<b>no link to this redirectpage at present. Furthermore, Lewis Herreshoff should not be confused with Lewis Francis Herreshoff, his nephew.</b>


While all contributions to Misplaced Pages are appreciated, content or articles may be ].
:Google
:picometers OR picometres "bond length" -Misplaced Pages 666 hits
:and you can see several examples, with at least some of any Misplaced Pages taint removed from the list. Don't know about radians, but would guess that the way they are used gives none of the advantages radians have in some calculations. In any case, degrees, unlike angstroms, are acceptable for use with SI. ] (]) 16:08, 19 December 2007 (UTC)


You may prevent the proposed deletion by removing the <code>{{tl|dated prod}}</code> notice, but please explain why in your ] or on ].
::Hmm... searching "angstrom 'bond length' -wikipedia" 81900 hits... But I stand corrected. Bond lengths are reported in pm indeed. --] (]) 16:14, 19 December 2007 (UTC)
:::That is a bigger difference than I would have expected. I suspect it is more time-sensitive than those results can show, with older tables still being copied and in use, even after a trend away from angstroms. ] (]) 16:21, 19 December 2007 (UTC)
:::NB: the ] prefix was not used to any significant extent before the CGPM included it as part of the ] in 1960, and even since then has likely been adopted more slowly here than many other places. ] (]) 16:24, 19 December 2007 (UTC)


Please consider improving the article to address the issues raised. Removing <code>{{tl|dated prod}}</code> will stop the ], but other ]es exist. The ] can result in deletion without discussion, and ] allows discussion to reach ] for deletion.<!-- Template:PRODWarning --> ] (]) 21:34, 24 March 2010 (UTC)
:::This search, compared to the more general one, might be indicative of the trend:
:::angstroms "bond length" -Misplaced Pages site:.edu 698 hits
::: picometers OR picometres "bond length" -Misplaced Pages site:.edu 61 hits
:::dropping the ratio down to 11:1 on education sites rather than 123:1 for the general search.
:::Many uses will also be missed because those pages involved use only the symbols Å or pm for the units, without ever spelling them out for the search engine to find. ] (]) 16:30, 19 December 2007 (UTC)


== Efficiency and redirects ==
::::Well the issue for stibine is settled, so I'm not pushing any agenda. To your last, I doubt that there are only 61 and 698 hits across the entire www for bond lengths. Either that, or journal articles are not listed (or that bond lengths are not mentioned in abstracts which are indexed). That said, I do doubt that there *is* a move away from angstroms, but I doubt you & I can prove either way. --] (]) 16:37, 19 December 2007 (UTC)


Gene, wouldn't it be more efficient -- when you find a page whose title has diacriticals and the equivalent non-diacritical redirect doesn't exist -- to simply ''create the redirect'' rather than bitching about it on the talkpage? ] (]) 14:36, 27 March 2010 (UTC)
:::::I searched using 'pm' and found plenty of examples of picometre being used with bond length. Even if there were no examples, it would still be acceptable to use it. Misplaced Pages is not an in-house publication for any specialism, it is an encyclopedia intended to be inclusive to non-specialists. So the customs of specialists is merely one factor to consider. We can be certain that anyone (including those in crystallography) that understands metric units will know that a picometre is a unit of length. Some will get further useful clues from the prefix 'pico'. We can be much less certain about knowledge of the older units. Thus the picometre is more inclusive than the angstrom. I suspect (but could not prove) that the angstrom may be a bit more prevalent in the US where metrication is less common. ] (]) 18:12, 19 December 2007 (UTC)
I think I don't know what the d-b move is exactly. I saw Speedy-delete and thought Parana should redirect to Paraná becauae that "á" isn't on the keyboard.--] (]) 15:11, 20 December 2007 (UTC)


:No. Whenever I run across some of these, the people involved with them are often involved in several similar articles which also do not have redirects. Every once in a great while, somebody takes the hint and a whole lot more get fixed than if I did it myself.
== Franz Josef Strauß ==


:Note further what when I do create the redirects, nobody involved with the article ever knows either that it needed to be done, nor that it has been done. Creating redirects doesn't show up on the history of a page. Sure, I could tell them that I had done so on the talk page--but then all that supposed efficiency you mentioned vanishes, since I need to do both the talk page and the redirect itself--and nobody else is ever going to pick up the ball and fix any of them.
Might I ask you to take a look at the new discussion going on at ]? Yes, it ''is'' an ancient topic (the use of '''ß''' on en-wiki), but this is one of the most prominent articles in which this issue is of significance. Given your experience, your input would be very much appreciated. ] (]) 01:39, 21 December 2007 (UTC)


:As far as "efficiency" goes, the simplest way to do that is with a page move. That does a much better job of getting peoples attention, but then they start bitching at me. I'll start doing that, if you get people to stand behind me if I do so. ] (]) 15:16, 27 March 2010 (UTC)


::How about making the redirect, then saying on the talk page "I just made this redirect - if anyone knows of similar articles which could use redirects from unaccented spellings, please help" or something. That way it gets fixed even if no-one reads your message, and if they do the explicit request might make them more likely to do something about it. ] (]) 15:39, 27 March 2010 (UTC)
== Incorrect sort keys ==
:::Or post a request on ]. ] (]) 16:25, 27 March 2010 (UTC)
I have replied to your ill tempered comment on my talk page. --<span style="border: 1px solid #CC3333">]]</span> 14:32, 21 December 2007 (UTC)


==Pondemaat==
:Must be the electronic equivalent of ]? ] (]) 14:35, 21 December 2007 (UTC)
I've replied at ]. I'm not in the habit of requesting conversions unless I have a need for them. ] (]) 07:13, 8 April 2010 (UTC)


== ] ==
== Birgisson ==


I added a fourth possibility for a name's not appearing in the category. It is the reason the names in question do not appear in the category. In addition to addressing the specific issue, I have tried to avoid a condescending tone. ] (]) 16:53, 3 June 2010 (UTC)
Hi, Gene Nygaard! I'm curious as to why ] should be sorted by last name for, say, the ], and by first name for ], per your ? Thanks! -- <span style="background: #EECCFF;">] <small>(] | ])</small></span> 15:28, 21 December 2007 (UTC)
== thrust to weight ==
in the thrust to weight article you suggest that the ratio needs units. if its the ratio of two of two forces it has no units. if its the ratio of a force/mass then it would be an acceleration and would have units of ft/s<sup>2</sup> or m/s<sup>2</sup> which is it --] (]) 06:05, 3 July 2010 (UTC)


:The measurement you have for weight is mass, not force. That's what "weight" usually means in any case, despite what your science teacher may have told you. The ratio has units; many people like to pretend that they aren't making an error when they divide pounds force by pounds mass (or kilograms force by kilograms) and end up with a unitless number. But as you point out, it really does have units of acceleration. ] (]) 08:11, 7 July 2010 (UTC)
:We've had first-name sorting in the Icelandic people categories for some time (it is common in Iceland, for example in telephone books, to sort people by first name). See the note on ], for example. There are probably some talk pages discussing it somewhere; it's been a while since I've been involved in such discussions. Still English sorting order, of course. The categories dealing with a specific family name (e.g. ]) are also generally sorted in first-name order.


== Magnus von Wright alphabetised incorrectly ==
:I don't have any big problem with that, could accept them sorted either way in these categories. There'd be considerable opposition if you tried to change it, and a whole lot of editing to do to change the sort order in all the categories now generally sorted by first name, but on the other hand a general acceptance of the fact that this applies only to the Icelandic people categories and not to other categories generally sorted by last name, and that it is English-alphabet sorting order. ] (]) 15:39, 21 December 2007 (UTC)


Your to the article ] in December 2006 alphabetised him incorrectly. If that alphabetisation would be used, his name would be "Magnus von Von Wright". ] &#124; ] 14:58, 16 October 2010 (UTC)
::Many thanks for the reply! I'm going to switch his sorting for the LGBT category, if that's okay, but will leave the Icelandic Musicians one alone :) Thanks again! -- <span style="background: #EECCFF;">] <small>(] | ])</small></span> 16:37, 21 December 2007 (UTC)


== Thanks == == Happy, happy ==


] (]) 15:30, 1 January 2011 (UTC)]]
Thanks for . I've been a little concerned about that user's actions regarding ] trying to support Scotland's place articles. It's not the first time I've seen him remove templates and change our mainspace without asking the project itself... anyway, thanks again! <span style="color:#696969;font-size:larger;font-family: Trebuchet MS, sans-serif;">-- '''] ·''' (])</span> 12:47, 23 December 2007 (UTC)


== Request for comment ==
:I'm not part of that WikiProject and won't be following it closely, but if you'd like my participation in any discussion that arises about this, let me know. It just seemed pretty obvious to me, without even knowing anything about the project. ] (]) 13:52, 23 December 2007 (UTC)
This message is being sent to you because you have previously edited the ] page. There is currently a discussion that may result in a significant change to Misplaced Pages policy. Specifically, a consensus is being sought on if the policies of ] and ] continues to be working policies for naming biographical articles, or if such policies have been replaced by a new status quo. This discussion is on-going at ], and your comments would be appreciated. ] (]) 16:57, 19 May 2011 (UTC)


==Wheatgrass== == Attaboy! ==
Thanks for the edits. Why "1 kg (2.2 lb.)" instead of the other way around? ] (]) 14:58, 24 December 2007 (UTC)


{| style="background-color: #fdffe7; border: 1px solid #fceb92;"
:Just a guess that it was the original (otherwise, it would more likely be something like 2¼ lb, or 2 lb 3 oz, or 35 oz, I'd think). But it does result in a hodgepodge with the ounces in the first measurement being compared to it (1 ounce of wheatgrass juice is as nutritionally valuable as 1 kg of green vegetables). Were that the only issue, I wouldn't have any objection to going back to the original order.
|rowspan="2" style="vertical-align: middle; padding: 5px;" | ]
|style="font-size: x-large; padding: 3px 3px 0 3px; height: 1.5em;" | '''Continually Excellent Work'''
|-
|style="vertical-align: middle; padding: 3px;" | Thanks, Gene, for your clear and useful upgrade of my small introduction to "Cran (unit)"..-GreggEdwards ] (]) 20:03, 31 July 2011 (UTC)
|}


==Merge discussion for ]==
:But your calling this to my attention makes me notice what I'd overlooked the first time; those juice ounces most likely are not 1/16 lb, but rather 1/16 pt. Or perhaps the slightly different 1/20 imperial pint (the two fluid ounces aren't quite the same size). Let me take a new stab at it. ] (]) 15:08, 24 December 2007 (UTC)
] An article that you have been involved in editing, ], has been proposed for a ] with another article. If you are interested in the merge discussion, please participate by going {{ #if: Talk:Ducati SuperSport#Merging Ducati 400SS and Ducati 800SS into this article |]|to the article and clicking on the (Discuss) link at the top of the article}}, and adding your comments on the discussion page. Thank you. ] (]) 02:49, 14 November 2012 (UTC) <!-- Template:mergenote -->
==Season's tidings!==
] ''To you and yours, Have a Merry ______ (fill in the blank) and Happy New Year!'' ] (]) 15:59, 23 December 2012 (UTC)


== Nearly three years later... ==
::It is an ''understandable'' hodgepodge, of course. Whoever came up with the comparison may have had the juice nutritional data based on fluid ounces (or 6 or 8 fl oz ''servings'', as would be used in U.S. nutrition labeling, for example), and the green vegetables information on a "per 100 g" basis. ] (]) 15:16, 24 December 2007 (UTC)


{{TB|Template talk:Miles-chains}}
== Rugby player edits ==
Apologies for the tardiness of the reply!&nbsp;<small style="white-space:nowrap;border:1px solid #A00000;padding:1px;"> An ] on the ] </small> 11:44, 25 January 2013 (UTC)


==]==
Hi Gene,<br>
Hello and thanks for tagging this for notability back in 2008. It's still tagged 5 years later. You may want to take it to the Notability Notceboard or AfD to get it resolved. Best wishes, ] (]) 08:54, 30 January 2013 (UTC)
I noticed that some your edits to rugby players were reverted; some with good reason, others without. I reedited some of the changes that were reverted by ] using <nowiki>{{convert|13|st|7|lb|0|abbr=on|lk=on}}</nowiki> to produce {{convert|13|st|7|lb|0|abbr=on|lk=on}} and <nowiki>{{convert|5|ft|10|in|2|abbr=on|lk=on}}</nowiki> to produce {{convert|5|ft|10|in|2|abbr=on|lk=on}}. This way stones pounds are shown for the Brits, pounds for us here in the U.S. and Canada and kilos for elsewhere. You may want to check some of your other recent edits to see if they were reverted. Good luck, &mdash;] (]) 18:46, 26 December 2007 (UTC)


== Request to take part in a survey ==
:See ]. The biggest problems aren't the ones reverted, but the hundreds of rugby articles still using "Kg" and "lbs" and "ins" in the infobox, and malformatted dates. I'm not a big fan of {{tl|convert}}, which is difficult for the average editor to correct when it isn't used properly. Try, for example :
:*lbs kg -rugby -user -talk site:en.wikipedia.org
:] (]) 21:07, 26 December 2007 (UTC)


Hi there. I would very much appreciate it if you could spend ~2 minutes and take a short survey - a project trying to understand why the most active Misplaced Pages contributors (such as yourself) may reduce their activity, or retire. I sent you an email with details, if you did not get it please ], so that I can send you an email with the survey questions. I would very much appreciate your cooperation, as you are among the most active Misplaced Pages editors who show a pattern of reduced activity, and thus your response would be extremely valuable. Thanks! --<sub style="border:1px solid #228B22;padding:1px;">]&#124;]</sub> 11:35, 25 July 2013 (UTC)
::I was just givin' you a "heads up" because the first page I seen that was reverted, was reverted because Londo06 didn't want pounds only st-lb and kg. That lead me to other pages that were reverted. I can almost understand the "lbs" mistake, but "Kg" and "ins" is just terrible. I'll check out the link you gave and maybe try to give an explanation of how {{tl|convert}} can help if used correctly. But truth be told, I could care less about rugby. I was just trying to back you up on your edits. Regards, 03:15, 27 December 2007 (UTC)


{{you've got mail}}
::::If that's what you call terrible...] (]) 14:24, 27 December 2007 (UTC)


== A historical perspective on moment in physics and mathematics ==
==Fred Grossinger - Fred Holliday==
Thanks for fixing the categorization to Fred Holliday (actor). As you could see from the original categorization, it is more important to categorize him under Fred Holliday. --] (]) 17:27, 27 December 2007 (UTC)


I have posted a comment in your article/discussion on 'moment'. Please consider my request to elaborate the historical perspective on the issue. ] (]) 16:38, 23 May 2014 (UTC)
== Thank you ==


==]==
Thank you for the housekeeping on the ballet articles. ] (]) 20:01, 27 December 2007 (UTC)


As a significant contributor to that article, you are invited to participate ]. All input welcome. Thank you, <small>]</small> ]<sup><small> ]</small></sup> 14:39, 20 June 2014 (UTC)
== Ernest Shackleton (a shameless request for help....) ==


== Global account ==
Hi Gene:


Hi Gene! As a ] I'm involved in the upcoming ] of all accounts organized by the Wikimedia Foundation (see ]). By looking at your ], I realized that you don't have a global account yet. In order to secure your name, I recommend you to create such account on your own by submitting your password on ] and unifying your local accounts. If you have any problems with doing that or further questions, please don't hesitate to ping me with <nowiki>{{ping|DerHexer}}</nowiki>. Cheers, —]&nbsp;<small>]</small> 10:53, 30 December 2014 (UTC)
It looks like you have a lot on your plate from your talk page, however I noticed that you left a few remarks on the ] talk page regarding distances, nautical miles, degrees, and a bunch of other stuff that it seems like you understand much better than I do....anyway, I've been doing a lot of work on the article, trying to bring it up to GA status, and some of what I did was to change the distances to coincide with what I read in sources. Anyway, since it seems like you have a firm grasp on the different ways of measuring distance, I was hoping that if you had the time you could take a look at the distances I've quoted and, if they aren't correct, maybe make a clarification note (hopefully leaving the original in some manner, as it is sourced).


== ] ==
Any help would be appreciated! Thx! ] (]) 17:41, 28 December 2007 (UTC)

== Metric cartridge data ==

Please can you look in on ]. I noticed that the article had inconsistent values. Now I notice that the manufacturer is Swedish although the product seems to be for the US market. I wonder whether source data is metric. I looked at: . I also navigated via their 'Ballistik' menu to 'Ballistik metrisk' and 'Ballistik US' (using Internet Explorer).

Perhaps some values are hard metric (e.g. velocity) and others (e.g. weight) are not. This the website itself provides a good example of why we need source data to be clearly distinguished from converted data. You seem good at digging out source data and your thoughts are welcome. Regards ] (]) 11:52, 30 December 2007 (UTC)

==Travers Stakes==
Please refrain from making changes to article content for which you are not qualified such as what you did with the racetime format at ]. Should you disagree with any integral format in use on similar such articles, please have the good manners to post your views/suggestions to the ] and allow members who know what they are talking about to decide its merits. Your edit does nothing to help Misplaced Pages and only wastes valuable time of editors who make real, knowledgeable, and substantive contributions. Just for the record, twenty years ago they invented a timing clock that measures in 1/100ths of a second. The racetime format used by Wiki Project members is not only consistent with the digital racetimers in use, but is the only official racetime reporting format used in the United States by the ] and without exception, every other Thoroughbred racing authority in the world. Thank you for your cooperation. ] (]) 15:33, 1 January 2008 (UTC)

:It's not my burden of proof, but yours. If you want to make a case for improper misrepresentation of the precision of these historical numbers, have at it. I'll do what I can to oppose it if you do. If you do so, please cite some ] references as to the existence and the exact nature of an "official racetime reporting format", and some reason why if they do exist that should have any effect on Misplaced Pages standards, not just some bald-faced, subjective claims. ] (]) 15:53, 1 January 2008 (UTC)

::I also take special note of in which you corrected the previous ''']''' of the numbers in the ] article, which I had properly represented in accordance with the numbers which existed at the time. Clean your own house before you come whining to me; if any of those numbers in other articles also have improper trailing zeros after the decimal point which are incorrect, fix them before I get there, and you won't have so much of a problem. ] (]) 15:58, 1 January 2008 (UTC)

==The Great Imperial Robbery==
I read your views at ] with much interest. I have since proposed some further wording for the MOS on the point. I do not expect you will be overly impressed, given your apparent preference for greater freedom on the issue, but would be grateful for your continued thoughts all the same. Many thanks ] (]) 09:11, 4 January 2008 (UTC)

== Gene, this is unnecessary ==

, , , and aren't productive contributions. If you think that those shouldn't be hidden away, you know just how to fix them, and you're good at it. But complaining at the talk pages doesn't really seem like a good way to make a point. Regards, <strong><font style="color: #082567">]</font>]<font style="color: #082567">]</font></strong> 06:57, 5 January 2008 (UTC)

:As are you, but you haven't done so. But there is no reason for me to do so either.

:Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day. Teach him how to fish and he will eat for a lifetime. ] (]) 12:08, 5 January 2008 (UTC)

::Furthermore, a few particulars are worth noting:
::#If it is something that I care if people can find or not, I'll often add the redirect
::#Fixing it doesn't even let anybody know that it has been done, that it is something that should be done, or anything along those lines.
::##Adding a redirect doesn't show up on the watchlist of anybody watching the article or its talk page
::##Adding a redirect cannot be noticed by anyone visiting the talk page
::##Adding a redirect cannot be noticed by anyone looking at the page history
::#If someone with an interest in a particular article can see the need for adding redirects and disambiguation page links so that it can more readily be found, that person is quite likely to have an interest in a number of other articles that could be improved in the same way, and be able to find them quite quickly.
::##That gets a lot more done than I could ever do myself.
::##That will find articles that I would never find, even if I had infinite time to devote to it.
::#If it involves creating or cleaning up a disambiguation page, I'm not going to waste all the additional time that would be necessary if it is something in which I have little interest.
::#Someone who is interested in the article is also more likely to be aware of other specific redirects that would be helpful for the article, from other spellings or nicknames of people or common names of places and things, than I am. ] (]) 12:51, 5 January 2008 (UTC)
:::For what it is worth, I support Gene in this. A little bit of time (a few weeks or months) is enough for people to see the redlinks or talk page notices. Then I suggest Gene (or someone else) goes through his contributions list and turns the redlinks in the edit summaries into redirects (I'm sure there is a tool to list edit summaries). Education of others is an important part of the Misplaced Pages process. ] (]) 06:35, 23 January 2008 (UTC)

==Those intercoursing Japanese photographer substubs again==

On : well intentioned, but alas it led to more work.

Really, if any of these substubs bothers you (they certainly bother me, and there are hundreds of the bloody things), feel free to prod it. -- ] (]) 00:05, 6 January 2008 (UTC)

:Sorry about that--good thing you are cleaning up after me.
:They are a nuisance, aren't they.
:But there may be other things I'll want to tackle before I get around to any larger-scale action on them. Now that articles on individual Pokémon cards are gone, if you hit "random article" you'll likely get an episode of a TV show, some no-name athlete or band, or a one-liner sub-stub on a river in Romania. Do we really have 50,000 rivers in Romania? How long will it take before that ] is larger than the living people category (it already has the two-letter table of contents navigation links, like the living people category)? Maybe I should start a ] on that. Easier than nominating 49,000 articles for deletion. Maybe a few less than that, I haven't actually counted them, but somewhere in that neighborhood. Problem is, it's a lot harder to get places removed than people, so I might take on that challenge first. ] (]) 07:24, 6 January 2008 (UTC)

:: Mmm, but I do rather like the idea that en:WP would have tens of thousands of (excellently sourced, informative) articles on rivers in Romania. (Beats hundreds of thousands of articles on pop singles, or on individual ''Simpsons'' shows, or indeed on ].) But of course such articles are one thing and substubs another. -- ] (]) 08:25, 6 January 2008 (UTC)

== ] ==

hi. i recently tagged the above as possible hoax & now it's been prodded. just wondering, only because you were the last person to edit it, if you knew anything more about the article. as far as i know, someone ''is'' 'selling' bits of the pacific sea-floor, but there's no sources for the stuff about the 'unique' contribution to the law of the sea. any thoughts? thnx in advance, ben&nbsp;<span style="border: solid 1px black;font-size:90%;">''']]'''</span> 05:47, 6 January 2008 (UTC)

:No, I know nothing more. My edits were limited to copyediting, and have explained that on the talk page. ] (]) 07:16, 6 January 2008 (UTC)

== ]/] ==

Hi. Would you be in favour of moving the page to the double-s version? If so, I'd have no particular objection, although I'd suggest to wait until after it's off the Main Page. ] | ] 10:59, 7 January 2008 (UTC)

== ] ==

Just so you know, the page as not English had by the Spanish-language version, but was originally a real article.

No harm done, just figured you might be interested in knowing. - ] 18:58, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

:Thanks for the explanation. ] (]) 20:07, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

==Thanks for the fix==
But what's with this ? . ]] 21:01, 14 January 2008 (UTC)
:It was correct, with the sort keys on the individual entries. Then you deleted all the categories, and in a later edit put them back in with the wrong sort key. Seemed pretty strange to me, is all. Fixed now. ] (]) 21:04, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

==Van Vleck==
] move done, double redirects fixed I think, nothing else changed. ] ] 11:38, 16 January 2008 (UTC)
:Thanks. ] (]) 15:09, 16 January 2008 (UTC)

==Orthography==
I just figured I'd check on it since you reverted the edits I made: is there a policy against properly accenting for category sorting? I admittedly didn't look around for one, I just assumed the proper name would always be used. Good to know for future reference if there is a standard against it. Thanks for letting me know either way. ] (]) 05:01, 23 January 2008 (UTC)
:Yes there is. I'm sure Gene will provide a link. What I'm wondering is how to make more people aware of this. As someone who presumably looked for something, may I ask where you looked and failed to find anything? Those are the sort of places where the warnings need to be placed if people are going to learn before making such changes. ] (]) 06:31, 23 January 2008 (UTC)
::I only skimmed through and didn't see it. It might be there, but hidden. I really think it should have its own section in there to be more clear. I'm sort of interested to see what the rationale behind the rule is now that I know it exists, because it seems sort of ridiculous to me. ] (]) 16:04, 23 January 2008 (UTC)
:::The relevant section is ]. One key point is that "this text is used as the sort key on the category page itself... contrary to expectations, that sort text is not displayed". This means that the spelling of the sort key doesn't need to be correct as long as the sorting order is correct, because the spelling won't be visible to users. On the other hand, using the correct spelling will NOT sort correctly due to technical limitations of the Mediawiki software. For example, "á" will sort after "z", and not together with "a". Therefore, it is necessary to use the sort key without the accent. I don't know if this is written down somewhere else, but it should definitely be added to ]. --] (]) 17:00, 23 January 2008 (UTC)
::::I've added a new bullet point to ] explaining this. Perhaps Gene will find useful to link to it instead of having to explain the same thing every time someone complains on his talk page. :-) --] (]) 17:27, 23 January 2008 (UTC)
:::::OK, thanks for the help guys. I'm glad to know there's a reason for it. ] (]) 18:04, 23 January 2008 (UTC)
::::::I haven't checked yet, but it used to be explained where it belongs at ]. Then somebody moved it to ], even though it applies to everything else on Misplaced Pages as well. I haven't checked yet, but it should be explained at both places. ] (]) 17:08, 25 January 2008 (UTC)

== ] ==
moved to ]

:This is also related: ]. ] (]) 10:22, 29 January 2008 (UTC)

== Brunei ringgit to dollar move ==

Just wanted to say thanks for the support of the move. --] (]) 01:01, 30 January 2008 (UTC)

== Kilowatt hours ==

I defer to your expertise, but I was merely repeating what the source said, on the grounds that a web site produced to inform the public and scientists about a research facility would probably know whereof it spoke. Could you look at and see if maybe they made the sort of mistake that would allow someone knowledgeable to guess what they really meant, and if so, correct the article accordingly? ] (]) 19:12, 30 January 2008 (UTC)

:Never mind. I looked at the page again and it ''was'' a time period. I have appropriately corrected the article. ] (]) 19:15, 30 January 2008 (UTC)

==Hirohito==

Thank you for your post on the Hirohito discussion page. The word you use to describe the preference for using Showa instead of Hirohito there, ludicrous, is the one that perfectly describes the situation. I agree with you totally. ] (]) 04:52, 2 February 2008 (UTC)

=====
Certainly wiki "contributors" ego over exceed their knowledge. I hope for sake of your mental stability this is not your case. <small>—Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 23:23, 8 February 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

==Missorting==
Was this really nessesary? I can't see how highlighting mistakes its particulary constructive or for that matter civil. - ] 22:04, 10 February 2008 (UTC)

:Is it different from any other reversion? We routinely say who we are reverting, for several reasons. It shows that I'm not making a new change, but going back to an earlier version, and identifying either the one who changed it or the last editor before the change or both can make it easier for someone to find that change in the history. It can call it to the attention of a contributor still following the article, who is more likely to pay attention to the edit on seeing his or her user name. And it can help people notice users who are getting reverted frequently.

:In your case, had you already become aware that the way you had changed the preexisting sort key was wrong, in last May, before you saw my recent reverting of it? Had you done the same thing in other articles? Mostly, it is something helpful to me, to see if there is a pattern in a certain editor having missorted a whole series of articles. Was that the case with you, and if so have most of them been corrected or do problems remain? I don't remember noting your name before (if I had, I probalby would have gone to your talk page about it before you came here), so I'd guess it wasn't widespread in your case, but maybe I just haven't run across the articles you are interested in. ] (]) 22:18, 10 February 2008 (UTC)

::Outside of Carlos and Eddie I can't recall changing this on any other article, then again these are the only articles that end up with Colón, as for why it was done, its pretty obvious that there is a significant difference between somebody related to ] and the ]. - ] 22:52, 10 February 2008 (UTC)

:::There are lots of other people on Misplaced Pages with the ] or ] names, of course, including many not listed on those disambiguation pages, and most are likely not related to Christopher Columbus, at least not in lines using that name. And I don't know what you are getting at, but there is no error in Carlos Colon and his relatives being spelled that way in English (as they are in many sources such as ), and there are other people named Colon who never use the Colón spelling. Nor do the spelling variations necessarily imply different pronunciations in English. None of which, of course, has anything to do with the sort keys, which need to be "Colon" for all of them, no matter how it is spelled in the article's name or the article itself. ] (]) 23:10, 10 February 2008 (UTC)

::::The Columbus part was a analogy, my point is that the "Colon" mispelling should be avoided as often as possible, while in English the difference is not particulary notable in Spanish its quite noticeable, this combined with the fact that Carlos always uses the proper spelling when signing autographs should justify my desicion back there, although to be honest I don't really spend a significant ammount of time working with sorting articles, with the bulk of my edits being focused in building articles toward Good and Featured status, wich means that chances are that at the time, nearly one year ago, I wasn't paying attention to that particular format issue in the sorting template. - ] 01:09, 11 February 2008 (UTC)

:::::It's not a template; if you look, you will see it uses a "]", not a vertical bar as templates do. It is a ]. Furthermore, it isn't an issue with that magic word. You can sort each category individually using vertical bar piping; you still need to strip out the diacritics so that they will sort properly, because of the rudimentary every-character Unicode number sorting our categories use, which not only results in sorting not in accordance with English sorting rules but also not in accordance with anybody else's sorting rules either.

:::::This is an English encyclopedia, of course. Pronunciation in Spanish isn't particularly relevant to choosing the proper name to use for our articles, which is normally the name by which a person or thing is best known in English.

:::::And we don't use a different word for that colon in DEFAULTSORT, just because it is spelled and pronounced the same way as ]. Likewise, in addition to the fact that names of people who do at least sometimes spell their names "Colón" are quite often and quite legitimately written as "Colon" in English-language works, there are many people who do spell their names Colon all the time, whether they pronounce that name like the punctuation mark or like ]. ] (]) 01:41, 11 February 2008 (UTC)

Yes. This was what made my brain explode. The three different meanings of "colon" that managed to be brought into the discussion. :-) ] (]) 15:04, 14 February 2008 (UTC)

:For the record most of these articles are visited by Latin American users, and the reason we use the accent on Carly's page is because someone had already noticed the issue and complained about it, wich means that there are people actually noticing the difference. All I'm asking for is that you respect the cultural differences as I respect the one used by Anglo speakers, for example in this diff it would have been a lot easier to just replace one letter in the 'defaultsort' instead of just undoing the other user's entire work, see my point? - ] 05:19, 23 February 2008 (UTC)

== Torkel Franzén ==

Why did you change Torkel's name on the DEFAULTSORT? --] | ] 16:35, 11 February 2008 (UTC)

:So that it will sort properly in the categories. See, for example, ]. ] (]) 20:56, 11 February 2008 (UTC)

::I was afraid of that. --] | ] 21:05, 11 February 2008 (UTC)

:::You do realize that this works differently from piping in wikilinks, which changes what you see on the page, don't you? It is still the article name that appears in the category listing, no matter what you put in the sort key. The sort key only affects where it appears; it doesn't change what appears there. ] (]) 21:10, 11 February 2008 (UTC)

== Thanks for the credit ==

But I had nothing to do with the sorting you reverted in the Čapljina article. ] (]) 20:42, 11 February 2008 (UTC)

:This sure looks like to me. Isn't it? I didn't strictly revert it to the version you had changed; I used DEFAULTSORT instead of the individual keys on each category, but it sure looks to me like it was your missorting which I was fixing. Do you still claim otherwise? If so, why? ] (]) 20:52, 11 February 2008 (UTC)

::Certainly that was my edit. But there was no sorting or missorting in it. Take a little more care with your comments. ] (]) 21:48, 11 February 2008 (UTC)

:::That's the whole purpose of a "sort key", whether on an individual category or through the DEFAULTSORT ]; to ensure proper sorting in categories. The result of your change in the existing sort keys was "missorting" of this article in its categories. You changed a correct sort key, which resulted in proper sorting, to one which resulted in missorting. ] (]) 21:52, 11 February 2008 (UTC)

::::I just changed a few Cs to Čs. It caused no missorting that I could see and you don't seem to have removed the carons. Maybe I'm missing something. ] (]) 22:28, 11 February 2008 (UTC).
:::::You need to look in the categories to see the sorting. Let's not mess with that one, but look at a different one instead. Go to ] and look at its sort keys. It doesn't have any, right? So add them, like you did at Čapljina. Then go look and see if you can find the article listed in its two categories, linked in the bar at the bottom when you view the page after saving it.

:::::Then go back and change the sort keys to "Cajdras", then look at the categories once again.

:::::Note that the "DEFAULTSORT:Capljina" I added works the same as if I had added the sort key to all the categories which don't have a different sort key in their individual listing. It's just like using
::::::<nowiki>]</nowiki>
::::::<nowiki>]</nowiki>
::::::<nowiki>] </nowiki>

:::::(DEFAULTSORT does also sort the categories (usually maintenance categories such as stub categories and "Articles needing ..." which are added by templates and don't show up in the category listing.) Does that help? ] (]) 22:49, 11 February 2008 (UTC)

::::::No, that doesn't help and I'm not going to try tampering with another article. Right now Čajdraš does not show up in either of its listed categories, and I would have thought the reason was obvious. In the case of Čapljina, it did show up in the appropriate categories when entered as "Capljina" so I need not have changed "Capljina" to "Čapljina". However my replacing the "C" with "Č" (which is all I did) made no dfference: Čapljina still showed in the appropriate categories.] (]) 11:07, 12 February 2008 (UTC)

:::::::Wrong on both counts.
:::::::#Čajdraš does show up in its categories, it is just in the wrong place. For example, look at ]. It should be before "Čajniče" which is before "Cerska", but instead it shows up ''after'' "Zvornik".
:::::::#When you changed the sort key for "Čapljina" from "Capljina" to "Čapljina", it did still appear in the categories as you say. But it appeared in the wrong place in those categories, somewhere after "Z".

:::::::The fact that you couldn't find ] in its categories, even when you knew they should be there because the categories were linked to in the bar at the bottom, is pretty clear evidence of how serious this problem of hiding the category entries away in the wrong place really is. In this case, it was easer than what is often the case—it even appeared on the same page, because there are fewer than 200 articles in that category. In other cases, such missorting can result in an article being a page or a few pages or many pages out of place in the category listing; if this were a person rather than a place and it appeared in ], there would probably be over a thousand pages of 200 entries each between where the article appeared and where it should have been. ] (]) 14:07, 12 February 2008 (UTC)

:::::::: You seem to have missed the point that '''after''' my edit, the town still showed up "correctly" - or at rate under "C". <small>—Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 13:59, 18 February 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

:::::::::And on what basis are you making that claim? You can't view an unsaved old version, click on the category listing there, and conclude that is the case. Unless you save the old version, it will still appear according to the sort keys in the current version. Revert to your old version and I bet it will be wrong. But, as I pointed out above, it would be better for you just to try it by doing ] like you did Čajniče, just to see for yourself. ] (]) 19:12, 18 February 2008 (UTC)

==]==

I've nominated this article for deletion. It still has no sources besides the book itself, and having got hold of a copy of the book, I find that it actually makes no claims to be derived from an authoritative survey, so I see no notability. Since you've edited the article or participated in the old AfD you might like to comment. As there has been confusion about the book's actual content, I'd be happy to back up all the assertions I've made by Emailing you scans of the relevant pages. Best, ''']'''<sup>] and ]</sup> 21:12, 12 February 2008 (UTC)

== re: Spelling fix, and indexing ==

The kick off was your edit that got my attention. That was a flat move to anglicize the name not only in the sorting, but in parts of the article text as well. As a third party editor pointed out the reasoning behind the changes to the default sort, I'm not going to worry over the removal of the ''accents'' there. And as far as "listas" goes, yes, I have been taking the information from the article title, so there are going to be some that are accented.

The sorting explanation though doesn't explain the removal of apostrophes and spaces. You'd think that would wind up miss-sorting material.

- ] (]) 12:07, 14 February 2008 (UTC)

:The rudimentary sorting we have sorts every character, including punctuation, which we don't use in sorting. It does so by Unicode character number, not by anybody's sorting rules. And it sorts letters case-sensitively, which causes lots of problems and tradeoffs between "ideal" and "practical" results for Misplaced Pages sorting, especially with the article name being the first default as a sort key and with initial capitalization of them turned on in English Misplaced Pages (unlike, for example, Wiktionary where initial capitalization has been turned off so "newton" and "Newton" are different articles). That's especially noticeable in the Spanish titles of some works such as albums which start with an inverted exclamation point or inverted question mark. We do use this to some advantage to get articles to the top of certain categories, before the alphabetical listing starts, by using a space (they are characters which are sorted) or an asterisk as the initial character of a sort key. There are some areas where there probably aren't clear-cut rules, and there may be some where there are and I get it wrong. Some of these have been discussed at various times at ] and ] and elsewere (recently on ], for example). One helpful place to look for whatever rules may have developed in practice, even if they might not be explicitly spelled out anywhere, is the quarter-million member ], which gives lots of opportunities to try to deal with the problem areas.

:Note that there is no "error" in spelling George Perez's name that way, even if it is sometimes spelled with an é. In fact, the spelling in the text of that 3¼ year old article was changed from Perez to Pérez this month in the last edit before mine, with no discussion and no evidence whatsoever. Actions such as that to long-standing articles is usually a pretty good indication that it might be wrong.

:Furthermore, it is not at all clear that ] is the proper name for the article under ] and its various subpages. That is an issue which has never been addressed, not on the talk page nor on any requested moves or the like. Just because a name can be spelled with an accent doen't automatically mean that it should be. And it especially doesn't mean that that spelling is the proper one to occupy the one slot available as an articles name (there can be many redirects, of course, so the rules are different for them). ] (]) 14:16, 14 February 2008 (UTC)

== Brain exploded ==

When I feel like seeing how easy it is for people to misunderstand the sorting and indexing systems on Misplaced Pages, I come and read your talk page. Some nice explanations as well, though it must get tiring after the nth time. Do you think most people read the instructions and get this right, or do most just not bother to read the instructions? I wonder where else this could be highlighted? Where do people learn about category pipesorting and DEFAULTSORT first? On the documentation pages or through copying other people? If the former, no problem, but if the latter, I'm glad someone (ie. you) is helping to stem the tide. ] (]) 15:01, 14 February 2008 (UTC)

== Artur Rodziński ==

hmmm...not that it really matters much, but didn't you mean to say: “'''''corrected''' missorting by User:Emerson7'' ”? --] 18:57, 15 February 2008 (UTC)

==DEFAULTSORT==
You may find it useful to check out the use of {{ DEFAULTSORT }} tags with ]. ] <b><sup><small><span style="color:#90F">]</span></small></sup></b> 20:59, 15 February 2008 (UTC)

:Useful how? ] (]) 04:52, 16 February 2008 (UTC)
::You may find that it was unnecessary to make the changes you made to members of ], or have you some complex plan that I don't understand? ] <b><sup><small><span style="color:#90F">]</span></small></sup></b> 10:18, 16 February 2008 (UTC)

:::You can change them back if you like. But almost all the "family" categories are first-name indexed categories. Look at ] or ] and the like. If you do think this should not be a first-name indexed category and want to change them back, it would be helpful to put a notice on the category page that it is a last-name indexed category, and explain why on ].

:::Besides the Help: file you looked at, you should look in the Misplaced Pages namespace, too. Particularly ] and ] and various related pages. I think the general practice of sorting categories about family members by first name is mentioned somewhere, but it might only be on the talk pages (which might be archived as well). ] (]) 14:00, 16 February 2008 (UTC)

:I don't want ] (Husband of a daughter of ]) and other Husbands, Mothers-in-Law, married female Foxes listed under Forename. There is some interest in the Quaker network of cousins, who made huge business successes, without the benefit of University degrees. Female lines are significant in discovering these cousin relationships and will, if WP notable, be included in ]. ] <b><sup><small><span style="color:#90F">]</span></small></sup></b> 08:35, 23 February 2008 (UTC)

==Caïque==
My apologies for my revert. Not sure what happened - recent changes filter highlighted Image:Example, so I reverted. ] (]) 01:11, 17 February 2008 (UTC)

:Not sure what you are saying. If it was an unintentional revert, you can just revert yourself again, can't you? I don't see any purpose for having that image, and you also took out my template suggesting merger. ] (]) 01:14, 17 February 2008 (UTC)

==Requested moves: Hornitos Beach==

While it might be argued whether moving ''Bío-Bío Region'', ''Coyhaique'', ''Huerta de Maule'', ''Til-Til'', ''Aysen'' and ''Aysén Region'' is controversial (even though official documents do not use these names), it is unarguably uncontroversial to move ''Hornitos Beach'', as the article is not about the beach, but about the town, which is unarguably called ''Hornitos'' not ''Hornitos Beach''. ☆ ''']''' 20:46, 17 February 2008 (UTC)

:I think I just moved the Aysén ones, didn't I? That's the ones where the variations were actually discussed in the article--and according to that, it is an official document in particular which uses the Aysen (no diacritics) spelling, if I recall correctly. What is Hornitos Beach? A beach? A city? Some other administrative region? The answer might affect the results. ] (]) 20:52, 17 February 2008 (UTC)

::I just looked at ], and I think what you need is '''some''' references of some sort in the article. ] (]) 22:57, 17 February 2008 (UTC)

''I think I just moved the Aysén ones, didn't I?'' What? I haven't seen you moving those articles. The spelling note at ] actually contradicted the reference it was citing, and I've corrected it and added more information. I encourage you to read it and check the references cited if you suspect. Regarding ''Hornitos'', it is a town and it's called just that, ''Hornitos''. See this (Zip file) for proof. ☆ ''']''' 03:16, 18 February 2008 (UTC)

::Sorry, I didn't say that very well. I meant those were the only ones I moved from the "uncontested" section on WP:RM to the contested section, somebody else moved some or all of the rest of them down. I don't have any strong feelings on any of these, but I do think that including references in the articles first, before suggesting that the names are wrong, is a good idea. One source, of course, doesn't "prove" anything. If it is a reliable source, it is probably good enough to get mention of the variant spelling in the article. It doesn't necessarily mean that it is the proper choice for the articles name. And as the naming conventions say, an article's name is not determinative of the spelling used in the text of other articles (nor for that matter, not necessarily for all of the article which appears under that name; the appropriate spelling is in any cases time- or location-dependent. What we often have, however, is a number of choices for the one slot available for the article's name. Under our ] including various subpages thereof, you need to provide some better justification than your claim of "proper spelling" to warrant a move, and that is part of what I was saying on WP:RM and even more so the point of the editor who moved the others down to the other section. If you understand better how our naming conventions work, you'll be able to present clearer reasons why you think a move is appropriate, after you have given due consideration to the other possibilities. ] (]) 03:42, 18 February 2008 (UTC) ] (]) 03:42, 18 February 2008 (UTC)
:::The move is appropriate because I myself created the ''Aysen'' page there originally in error. I used ''Aysen'' based on an unofficial transcription of an old decree that lacked the diacritic (''Aysén'') by mistake and that is not current anymore, ignoring that the official name is currently ''Aisén''. If you're not convinced by looking at the official documents, then do a Google search in Chilean pages for vs. , and you'll have an idea which one is more popular. You'll find that ''Aisén'' is both the correct, official name and the most used variant. It's a no brainer and you're just being a little too demanding on this old chap. ☆ ''']''' 04:29, 18 February 2008 (UTC)

Just to make myself perfectly clear: The variant ''Aysen'' does not exist, it was an error which I've explained. ''Aisén'' and ''Aysén'' are the only exisiting variants. Having the article at ''Aysen'' is completely wrong. ☆ ''']''' 04:32, 18 February 2008 (UTC)

:No. You are forgetting one factor at least; it is not an error to use the English alphabet when writing in English. ] (]) 05:54, 18 February 2008 (UTC)

::Why do I think you're only giving me a hard time here? The English Misplaced Pages uses foreign characters extensively in titles (just one example: ], which is reproduced extensively in English without the accent). In discussing the Chilean settlements naming convention, the community has established at ] that accents will always be preserved. ☆ ''']''' 06:07, 18 February 2008 (UTC)

:::The broader community can always decide otherwise in any particular case. When there is an English name, that is what we use as in ] and ]. And it is, of course, ], so you chose a particularly bad example to illustrate your point. ] (]) 06:15, 18 February 2008 (UTC)
::::No, I chose the right example. ] refers to a U.S base, thus there is not accent. ] refers to a geographic area that is part of Cuba, thus it is written with an accent. I chose the perfect example. ''The broader community can always decide otherwise in any particular case.'' Yes, but the current concensus is to always use accents for Chilean places, and as an admin you have to respect (and enforce) concensus. And there is no name in English for ''Aisén''. If there is, prove it. Until then, please move the article or I'll get help somewhere else. ☆ ''']''' 07:11, 18 February 2008 (UTC)
::::I don't know where you got the idea that I'm an admin. But now that it has been moved out of the "uncontested requests" area, nobody should be moving the articles. Not until good reason for doing so is achieved on the talk pages of the respective articles, with or without a regular ] request and the appropriate talk page notices and the like. ] (]) 07:15, 18 February 2008 (UTC)

Well, thank God you're not an admin. There was something terribly wrong with your attitude. So you just have the habit of contesting people's move requests, right? ☆ ''']''' 07:23, 18 February 2008 (UTC)

:No, I support many of them, and do some of my own. Yours were mostly just incomplete and premature—and it wasn't just me who opposed them on that basis. Provide some reliable sources, present your case, and see if you can get others to agree with you. At least start the appropriate discusions. ] (]) 07:29, 18 February 2008 (UTC)

== Manners ==

Rude messages deleted. I ignore messages which are impolitely worded. ] (]) 20:09, 21 February 2008 (UTC)

== Sorting ==

Dear Sir,

I have noticed that you have modified the DEFAULTSORT in some of the articles I have submitted, though they were correctly written with the appropriate diacritics. I continue not to understand what the entire issue is about. Except for involuntary errors, why may occur, all river articles are written with the correct ortography, including all accents. This is valid for names in all languages which use special characters. The articles will be sorted according to the order which the sorting program accepts over which I have no control. Maybe I did not look in the right place, but I am not aware of any rules which say that articles should be spelled otherwise than correctly. You have repeatedly accused me of misspelling the titles, and even of doing this on purpose which is definitely not true. If there are any rules, I would appreciate if you would direct me to the rules which you claim I am ignoring.

Sincerely] (]) 22:07, 21 February 2008 (UTC)

:You might start by just looking at the categories, where you can '''see with your own eyes''' that they are not sorted properly, when you have put in those improper sort keys.

:Then try ], which incorporates by reference ]
::'''Punctuation, such as apostrophes and colons (but not hyphens) should be removed, and accented letters and ligatures should be replaced by their unaccented or separated counterparts.'''
:See also numerous discussions at ] and ] and their archives, and ], etc.

:Then, just for good measure, go read ] and ] to learn various other things you should be doing, to keep your efforts from being hidden away in oblivion where nobody will find them. ] (]) 00:23, 22 February 2008 (UTC)


All your quotations refer only to names of persons. There is nowhere a reference to geographic names. I am perfectly aware on how the system classifies the names. However you prefer to classify the letters with or without accents in the same category. For the time being this is only a personal preference and it is incorrect. For instance T and Ţ or S and Ş should not be in the same group. Ş should come after S and Ţ after T and so on. This can be achieved not by eliminating the accents but by replacing them for instance, by replacing Ş with SZZ. So there are ways to fool the system and make it sort the geographic names correctly, but it requires other procedures, which even if they have the desired effect seem extremely strange.

What is difficult to understand is, if the rule was as generally applicable as you claim, why the sort program is not set up so as to disregard any diacritics. Though it is perfectly programmable, this has not been done. Presumably, because the developer of the program has considered that the letters with several accents are NOT equivalent to the ones without accents.

The discussions you quoted are not a rule which indicates that any of us is right or wrong. Unfortunately I was not able to identify an article which describes this policy. The discussions simply show the oppinions of some of the participants - however if a policy article does not exist, it indicates that the matter is not settled. It is clear that we disagree on what should be done. I consider that we should agree to disagree.

I will eliminate the DEFAULTSORT statement from future articles in order to avoid further disputes, until a ruling on this matter is posted, at least regarding geographic names in foreign languages. ] (]) 00:58, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

::The WP:CAT page quite clearly says that the rules stated on the Categegorization of people page apply generally, and incorporates those rules generally. At various times in the past, the main Categorization page has stated it more explicitly there, and someone has tried to reduce the maintenance of two pages listing the rule by changing it to a reference to the page about people. The name order thing applies specifically to people, but similar rules are also of general application. For example, with rivers those such as the ] should generally be sorted under "C", not under "R".

::As you point out, our crude software not only doesn't sort by English sorting rules, but it does not sort by Romanian sorting rules (where Ţ comes before Z, not after it) or anybody else's sorting rules, but rather just a simplistic Unicode number sort. Somewhere in the depths of Misplaced Pages (and in off-Misplaced Pages bug reports to thw Misplaced Pages developers), there are numerous requests for changes and bug reports going back many years, by many different people.

::But in any case, this is English[REDACTED] and we do sort by English sorting rules, under the 26 letters of the English alphabet. T and Ţ are indeed equivalent under English sorting rules, the only ones relevant here, as are S and Ş and as are all the various forms of A or whatever.

::Note that eliminating your in fact useless DEFAULTSORT: keys (since the primary default in any case is the article name) will not solve the problem. It will still be '''deliberate missorting on your part''' if you do not in fact add the proper sort keys, so that they get sorted correctly in their categories. ] (]) 01:22, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

== Chinese Names ==
Chinese names are not translations of English names. In all the cases where you removed the Chinese names of those ethnic Chinese persons, they are widely known by those names. ] (]) 04:36, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

:There is absolutely nothing in the articles to indicate that this is the case. The ones I removed are American-born, have never lived in China, don't have Chinese-language publications mentioned. There is more reason for including their names in Chinese than for including ]'s Chinese name; he, of course, also gets his name used in Chinese in some communities in California, but so what? ] (]) 12:01, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

:Furthermore, you are quite free to create a Chinese Misplaced Pages article and include an interwiki link to it, if one doesn't already exist. ] (]) 12:10, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

::You don't seem to understand the basics. Chinese is not the language of China; it is a language of the Chinese. Ethnic Chinese born anywhere outside of sinosphere are far more likely to be given a Chinese name by their parents or grandparents than their chances of learning the Chinese language. And once they become well known, their names become public knowledge. Unlike the Japanese who won't write your Japanese surname in Japanese/kanji script if you possess foreign nationality, the Chinese language is non-alphabetic, is not tolerant of alphabets, is tonal and therefore not back-translatable, original Chinese names if exist must be used. This applies even to Vietnamese, Korean and Japanese names since they are also Chinese-character based. The Chinese names you removed can be the only name known to many Chinese speakers in California or wherever it's concerned. Governor Schwartzenegger has no official Chinese name, period. And there isn't even one unified translation of his name. He's from a country which uses the Latin alphabet, and no foreign name is necessary anywhere in English Misplaced Pages. ] (]) 13:20, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

:::Exactly: "He's from a country which uses the Latin alphabet, and no foreign name is necessary anywhere in English Misplaced Pages." ]. ] (]) 13:28, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

:::And just in case you are a little slow to understand,
:::*] is from a country which uses the Latin alphabet, and no foreign name is necessary anywhere in English Misplaced Pages.
:::*] is from a country which uses the Latin alphabet, and no foreign name is necessary anywhere in English Misplaced Pages.
:::*] is from a country which uses the Latin alphabet, and no foreign name is necessary anywhere in English Misplaced Pages.
:::*Etc., etc., etc. ] (]) 13:32, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

::::You still don't seem to understand. Is Schwartzenegger given any name in any other script? I should have been more clear to say that Schwartzenegger has no ancestry from but Latin alphabet countries. All of your examples are GIVEN Chinese names. Even in most restrictive societies, names are given by the parents. Whether the government can register the names in all given language is another matter. They are given Chinese names, they use those names, they are known (by many, only) by those names, and that's their names, and since those are not an equivalent of their English names, they ought to be included. And for those politicians, their Chinese names (not the phonetically translated version) had gone onto ballots. The Japanese and Korean versions were phonetically spelled, not the Chinese. ] (]) 13:46, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

:::::All of which is, even in the most favorable interpretation, at best irrelevant unreferenced and undiscussed ] that doesn't even appear in the article. Exactly which ballots are you claiming that ] appeared on? ] (]) 13:56, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

:::::Furthermore, if you want to talk about ballots, you had better come up with a reliable source to show that these people's names appeared on a ballot in which names such as Arnold Schwarzenegger which may have also appeared on it were not in Chinese. ] (]) 15:03, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

::::::The Chinese names are certainly important to retain, and the editor removing them without discussion or consensus (and with a highly contemptuous tone that shouts, "I am not even going to consider any other point of view than my own") is doing so in a highly improper manner. The information presented by User:HkCaGu is quite correct and reasonable, and we must be reasonable in everything we do at WP. The unilateral, non-discussed/non-consensus blanking was highly unreasonable and must not continue. ] (]) 17:55, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

:::::::In one case in particular, your readdition is clearly contrary to actual discussion and consensus, for ]. In almost all of these cases, it is totally irrelevant information, as irrelevant as a Chinese name for Arnold Schwartzenegger, and it is against the rules of our manual of style, and even if it were to meet those preliminary threshholds, it still remains undocumented and unreferenced information. But before we even get to those verifiability issues, you first need to address the relevance issues and the style issues. ] (]) 18:08, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

::::::We either aim to be encyclopedic, or we don't. The Chinese names are given by the individual's parents, and have significance and meaning. Blanking this information from the article, thus, is unreasonable and robs this highly significant information about these individuals from our users. We should not be in that business. ] (]) 18:14, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

:::::::We could include Chinese names for everybody, sure. But there is no reason to do so. Furthermore, you have the Chinese Wikipedias where you can put a chinese name for everybody, and you can link to those articles from the ones in English Misplaced Pages. ] (]) 18:16, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

::::::The Chinese given names are given by the individual's parents and have meaning beyond the Latin given names, and thus must not be blanked unilaterally, without consensus. We either aim to be encyclopedic, or we don't. We must be reasonable in everything we do. It would be unreasonable to include Chinese names beyond the interwikis for individuals who are not of Chinese descent or who are not Westerners intimately associated with Chinese culture who have Chinese names. However, if the individual is an ] known to possess a Chinese name given by his/her parents, if we aim to be encyclopedic, we must include it (and it must not be blanked unilaterally, without consensus). ] (]) 18:19, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

:::::::First, they need to be relevant to the article in English Misplaced Pages. Then, second, if that can be established, we need reliable sources that these were given by their parents in each case, if you want to make that claim. ] (]) 18:24, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

::::::If given by the individual's parents (and used in literature within the Chinese American ] community, which is indeed a part of the United States), it would be unencyclopedic to blank such a name. The name is carefully selected by the individual's parents and possesses a meaning different from the Western/Anglo/Latin given name. ] (]) 18:27, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

:::::::No, it needs to have some relevance to the reasons why the person is ] for purposes of an encyclopedic entry, then if that is the case, it needs to be referenced to a reliable source and not just some made-up stuff or original research. It's fine for people who were born in China, or who worked in China, or who published in the Chinese language. But for almost everybody else, it is '''irrelevant''' and '''unencyclopedic'''. ] (]) 18:35, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

::::::::When something is well known and/or easily verifiable (like "Guangdong is a province in southern China), you can't demand documentation or accuse original research. Sources not in English doesn't mean they're invalid, either. If you can't go a Google search to verify their Chinese names, it doesn't mean you should remove them. ] (]) 18:47, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

::::::We do have many bilingual editors who are able to verify such things. We must be reasonable in everything we do, and "discussion" should have been used to generate consensus before the blanking took place. ] (]) 18:50, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

::::::If possessed by the individual and given by the individual's parents it is part of their identity and background, and would be quite relevant, and it would not enhance our encyclopedia to blank such a name; in fact, it would rob our users of this important backround information about the individual. Such names are not translations and are used in literature within the Chinese American ] community. As such, to remove them would be highly improper. ] (]) 18:48, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

:::::::That is '''not''' what "part of their identity" means in the Wikijargon used in various discussions. You need some actual evidence of that, not your speculation which isn't even stated to be such. Lots of people of all sorts of ethnic background are discussed in various languages associated with that background; but unless it is used in English publications or in some way formas a relevant part of a person's identity, it doesn't belong here. ] (]) 18:54, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

::::::We must be reasonable in everything we do. If given by the individual's parents, the Chinese given name (which possesses meaning different from the Western/Latin/Anglo given name) is of signal importance to an understanding of the individual. The editor blanking such names without consensus and using dismissive terminology such as "irrelevant" is quite incorrect and unreasonable in doing so. ] (]) 18:56, 22 February 2008 (UTC)
:::::::Reasonableness is exactly what has been lacking in the actions of you and HkCaGu. ] (]) 12:18, 23 February 2008 (UTC)

] Please do not remove information from articles{{#if:|, as you did to ]}}. Misplaced Pages is ], and content is not removed even if some believe it to be contentious. Please discuss this issue on the article's talk page to reach ] rather than continuing to remove the disputed material. {{#if:|{{{2}}}|Thank you.}}<!-- Template:uw-notcensored2 --> ] (]) 02:25, 23 February 2008 (UTC)

::Irrelevant material can be removed at any time. There is nothing "contentious" about it; it simply has no bearing on our articles. Establish its relevance on the talk page if you think it should be there. This isn't censorship; it is quite simply following our rules for notability and for style and the like. ] (]) 02:29, 23 February 2008 (UTC)

I'm sorry, I cannot agree with your changes to Norm Chow or other Chinese-Americans. There is not perogative against using them, there is no fallacy in including the Chinese spelling of a child of Chinese parents. Your counter examples of Swedish names or Chinese names for the Governor of California are flawed and not relevant. If you dislike the Chinese language so much, perhaps you should avoid those articles? --] (]) 20:22, 24 February 2008 (UTC)

::So, now you are claiming that it would be improper to add a Swedish name for ], yet we must include a Chinese spelling of his name? Get over it. Neither have any relevance to this Misplaced Pages article.
::Furthermore, it isn't a matter of disliking the Chinese language; it is simply that this isn't the Chinese-language Misplaced Pages; you can create all the Chinese-language articles you want, and include the interwiki links for those who are interested in knowing how someone's name is spelled in Chinese. But unless it has some relevance to an English Misplaced Pages article, it doesn't belong here. And even in those cases where some relevance can be shown, it '''still doesn't belong here''' in almost all of these cases I have seen, some editors made-up name or other ] wholly unsupported by any citations to reliable sources. ] (]) 00:12, 25 February 2008 (UTC)

STOP MISQUOTING ME AND ABUSE IT IN EDIT SUMMARIES! I've corrected what I meant, and you presenting what I didn't mean as my view is considered ]. ] (]) 21:26, 24 February 2008 (UTC)

::It wasn't attributed to you. I have merely adopted what you originally said as a reasonable, sensible--a part of Badagnani's admonitions about reasonableness. What should be adopted as our black-letter rule:
::*'''He's from a country which uses the Latin alphabet, and no foreign name is necessary anywhere in English Misplaced Pages.'''
::] (]) 00:05, 25 February 2008 (UTC)

] Please stop. Misplaced Pages is ]. Any further changes which have the effect of censoring an article{{#if:|, such as you did to ],}} will be regarded as ]. If you continue in this manner, you '''will''' be ] from editing Misplaced Pages. {{#if:|{{{2}}}|}}<!-- Template:uw-notcensored3 --> ] (]) 18:14, 25 February 2008 (UTC)

:There is absolutely no ] involved here. So stop bullshitting.
:]
:'''"Doing any of the above for reasons other than censorship including relevance, verifiability, copyright."''' ] (]) 18:22, 25 February 2008 (UTC)

==]==
Hello Gene! I've added a second suggestion to your RM of ]. Since there is a tennis player called ], per WP:naming conventions they should be at ] and ] respectivly (with ] a redirect to the ] DAB-page). If you agree with this we could close the RM and go on with these rather uncontroversial moves. Respectfully, ] (]) 23:39, 24 February 2008 (UTC)


==]==
You appear to be involved in an edit war with ]. Looking through a number of edits there are multiple violations. Reverting or arguing over little digits, numbers or whatever they are, too many to look through, is pointless. Please come to a consensus over what appears to be an s, weights in countries, etc.<small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">]]</span></small> 20:55, 25 February 2008 (UTC)

::There is no 3RR violation.
::There is a consensus, well established and long-standing, at ]:
::*'''Do not append an s for the plurals of unit symbols (kg, km, in, lb, not kgs, kms, ins, lbs).'''
::This has been part of our style rules continuously for many years, since before I ever started editing on Misplaced Pages. It is ] who is deliberately flouting that rule. ] (]) 21:01, 25 February 2008 (UTC)


:Sure no great problem. Left messages on both user pages as most of my watchlist is filled up with reverted edits and what have you. 3RR mentioned as there were numerous revertions from both parties throughout a multitude of articles. Don't worry not reported either of you so no need to worry.<small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">]]</span></small> 21:16, 25 February 2008 (UTC)
::As stated not looking to report either of you, just making you aware that ] is strongly discouraged, whether you feel you are correct or incorrect. Nothing to worry from me, not going to escalate the situation.<small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">]]</span></small> 21:24, 25 February 2008 (UTC)
:::Not overly interested in the argument itself, just the fact that I am looking through a whole host of edits to see that very little is being done except my watchlist being filled up with whole hosts of articles. Not really bothered about the fight, just want the cessation of hostilities, ie no more edit warring. Just leave the articles at lb and leave it be, it doesn't really matter what is used where, etc. <small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">]]</span></small> 21:33, 25 February 2008 (UTC)

== Manners ==

I strongly object to your manners and your tone. I don't know where you are from and what you are doing. Please be however advised that in Virginia people are used to being polite. If you can't please be so kind and take your business elsewhere,
As you might have noticed I ignore any messages which are not civil, such as yours.

Following our previous exchange, I have notified you that I do not agree with your views, but in order to avoid any more contacts with you, which I find increasingly unpleasant I will eliminate any Defaultsort from my articles. You did not object to my message and that is what I did.

Please immediately stop all this harrasment.] (]) 01:21, 27 February 2008 (UTC)

I object to your uncivil tone, that's all. You have certain views on how the articles should be sorted which are different from mine. The sorting is not done by me, but by the sorting program applied by Misplaced Pages. For some reason you don't like their sorting rules and want to apply others, in which you ignore the diacritic accents. Other sorting rules (and the one applied by Misplaced Pages) consider that accented letters have a separate meaning and are placed according to the sorting rules.

If Misplaced Pages intended to ignore the accents, as you seem to want, the sorting could have and still can be programmed accordingly.

I comply with[REDACTED] rules. You invent new ones.

Don't take this up with me. Suggest the new sorting rules to the administrators, get them approved and if the rule is changed I will of course apply it. As I indicated before, what you have stated was just a discussion not a policy. ] (]) 01:43, 27 February 2008 (UTC)

:No, I don't invent new rules. They are clearly stated in the guidelines at ]. THey are evident in most categories. They are supported in hundreds of talk page discussions all across Misplaced Pages. ] (]) 01:45, 27 February 2008 (UTC)

==Accents==
Okay this needs to stop, you are edit warring over accents when you don't appear to have any knowledge of Spanish, blanking the discussion on the article's is disrupting the project to prove a point, if you don't like it comment about it on the relevant project's talk page don't edit war over it, I won't block you, but if the situation scalates further I will open a AN/I thread. - ] 02:49, 27 February 2008 (UTC)

== ] ==

Why did you place a <nowiki>{{translate}}</nowiki> tag on this page? ] (]) 04:41, 28 February 2008 (UTC)

Because it needs numbers translated to English style, because it needs translation of whatever those words in the infobox are, such as: let (which you took out, maybe that is enough), osebo. It's not much, but then there wasn't much i the article. ] (]) 07:41, 28 February 2008 (UTC)

:Looks like mostly taken care of other than "osebo". ] (]) 07:42, 28 February 2008 (UTC)

== ton ==

Hi,

You may be interested in this topic:
]

If you are, I would be interested to read what you have to say.
Regards
] (]) 18:09, 4 March 2008 (UTC)

==Speedy deletion of ]==
] Please do not move pages to nonsensical titles. It is considered ]. If you would like to learn more about moving pages, please see the ] on this subject. If you would like to experiment with page titles and moving, please use the Misplaced Pages. Thank you.

If you think that this notice was placed here in error, you may contest the deletion by adding <code>{{tl|hangon}}</code> to '''the top of ]''' (just below the existing speedy deletion or "db" tag), coupled with adding a note on ''']''' explaining your position, but be aware that once tagged for ''speedy'' deletion, if the article meets the criterion it may be deleted without delay. Please do not remove the speedy deletion tag yourself, but don't hesitate to add information to the article that would would render it more in conformance with Misplaced Pages's policies and guidelines. —] 16:21, 6 March 2008 (UTC)<!-- Template:Db-pagemove-notice --> <!-- Template:Db-csd-notice-custom -->

:You'd best do some explaining, pronto, if you are going to come here and accuse me of moving pages to nonsensical titles. ] (]) 16:26, 6 March 2008 (UTC)

::It was a mistake and I have reverted it. But I will explain. The article ] was moved, and I was trying to clean up the old redirect. Twinkle has a CSD that simply says "Page move", but the resulting template is pretty rude. Sorry. —] 16:30, 6 March 2008 (UTC)

:::Still don't understand what you were trying to do. Who's Twinkle? What's a CSD? Were you trying to delete the article, the redirect, or both? It sure looks to me like redirect should stay if the article does. This old-timer is likely an artist often known as simply "De Lellis" and hence the original article name, before I changed it to include the given name which is used in the article. ] (]) 16:35, 6 March 2008 (UTC)

::::See ]. One of things it does is automatically notify the initial contributor of an article when you nominate something for deletion. Because there was an option for "page move" that should have read "page move vandalism" I mistakenly called you a vandal. I realized my mistake and reverted it right away. By the time I came here to remove the notice from your talk page you had already replied to it. On further consideration I'm going to leave the redirect as someone may find it useful. —] 16:55, 6 March 2008 (UTC)

:::::Now, is there any mechanism so that this gets unflagged, so that some other editor doesn't come along and delete a useful redirect without ever having seen this discussion? Or should you post a "speedy" request there and let me delete it? ] (]) 17:03, 6 March 2008 (UTC)

::::::I don't quite understand. The redirect is no longer tagged for deletion, as I removed the notice. Or are you concerned about this aspect of Twinkle? I suppose I could report this as a bug. —] 17:15, 6 March 2008 (UTC)

:::::::I'm concerned about some other editor getting the same information that you got from Twinkle, then going there and deleting this redirect. Is that likely to happen? They won't see anything to tell them otherwise, just by going to the redirect, will they? ] (]) 17:17, 6 March 2008 (UTC)

::::::::Twinkle is just a script to make the nomination for speedy deletion easier and more automated. It doesn't report any problems itself. To avoid the mistake I made (which was really to send you the wrong template) I am requesting a change in the wording in the tool.

::::::::And, just to be clear, the fact that I nominated the redirect for deletion in the first place was my error in judgement, not Twinkle's. So no, it's not likely that someone else is going to do the same thing. —] 17:27, 6 March 2008 (UTC)
:::::::::Okay. ] (]) 17:28, 6 March 2008 (UTC)

== Thanks ==

Thanks for the help on ], I appreciate it!--] (]) 20:24, 11 March 2008 (UTC)

== March 2008 ==
] Hello. Please don't forget to provide an ]{{#if:|, which wasn't included with your recent edit to ]}}. {{#if:|{{{2}}}|Thank you.}} <!-- Template:uw-editsummary --> ''']''' (]) 15:50, 13 March 2008 (UTC)

] Hello. Please don't forget to provide an ]{{#if:|, which wasn't included with your recent edit to ]}}. {{#if:|{{{2}}}|Thank you.}} <!-- Template:uw-editsummary --> ''']''' (]) 15:51, 13 March 2008 (UTC)

] Hello. Please don't forget to provide an ]{{#if:Băbiu River|, which wasn't included with your recent edit to ]}}. {{#if:|{{{2}}}|Thank you.}} <!-- Template:uw-editsummary --> ''']''' (]) 15:52, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
:You are assuming facts not in evidence. ] (]) 15:53, 13 March 2008 (UTC)

] Hello. Please don't forget to provide an ]{{#if:Băbuşa River|, which wasn't included with your recent edit to ]}}. {{#if:|{{{2}}}|Thank you.}} <!-- Template:uw-editsummary --> ''']''' (]) 15:53, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
:Please stop cluttering up my talk page. Thank you. ] (]) 15:54, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
==AfD nomination of Ermin Alić==
]An editor has nominated ], an article on which you have worked or that you created, for ]. We appreciate your contributions, but the nominator doesn't believe that the article satisfies Misplaced Pages's criteria for inclusion and has explained why in his/her nomination (see also "]").

Your opinions on whether the article meets inclusion criteria and what should be done with the article are welcome; please participate in the discussion by adding your comments at {{#if:Ermin Alić | ] | ] }} and please be sure to ] with four tildes (<nowiki>~~~~</nowiki>).

You may also edit the article during the discussion to improve it but should not remove the ] template from the top of the article; such removal will not end the deletion debate. Thank you.<!-- Template:AFDNote --> ] (]) 19:00, 13 March 2008 (UTC)

== Happy First Day of Spring! ==

{{Template:First Day Of Spring}}

==Mexico==
Hi Gene. Hope you are well. I've noticed you indexing some Mexican geo articles. This is good but could you try to think about adding an infobox. I created a ] to improve thw quality of articles , eventually each place in Mexico will have an infobox but this will take time. I would be a grwat help if you could an infbox every now and again. Regards ]</span> <sup>]</sup> 13:14, 29 March 2008 (UTC)

:You should put some documentation on the template page (either noincluded on the page itself, on its talk page, or the modern way of transcluding a separate /doc subpage so changes to the documentation don't have a chance of accidentally changing the template itself). It isn't clear how to use it. ] (]) 13:19, 29 March 2008 (UTC)

For instance see ]. It has be done very quickly. All that has to be done is the enter the correct coordinates and altitude or state on each one with a cut and paste. I'll get around to working on Mexican articles sometime but as I see anything you can do in advance would be a great help ]</span> <sup>]</sup> 13:19, 29 March 2008 (UTC)

:I just followed the link on the page to the documented main location template, too. That may be enough. ] (]) 13:21, 29 March 2008 (UTC)


Basically the location maps allow any settlement on that country to be pinned on a map that can be displayed in all articles. I have been working on most of the countries in the world to begin to do this e,g ] where most places now have a map and infobox. Countries like Mexico will take considerably longer to complete but guaranteed it will be done eventually. It can be done by copying and pasting the infobox e.g in yecora now, onto another settlement page, and then entering the correct geo coordinates and altitude in the box. If you are working on one state at a time it can be done fairly quickly (within ten seconds) as you don't have to alter the state name in the box. As for population figures -well if they are referenced to falling rain I would plainly ignore this as population figures on that site have proved to be grossly inaccurate. Keep up the good work]</span> <sup>]</sup> 13:24, 29 March 2008 (UTC)

::Of course, I haven't actually been doing a lot with Mexican places anyway. I was cleaning up some of the category sorting of pages whose article names started with punctuation marks, and of course many of them are the Spanish inverted exclamation points and question marks. I just came across Yécora by following a link or two from one of those articles. ] (]) 13:28, 29 March 2008 (UTC)

Yes some of the categories can look pretty yucky when we have all these diaretics and weird foreign letters. It does help to have a sound filing system certainly as it isn't a good look to have article out of place. But as I say if you could help with a few infoboxes this would be a nice help. Saludos! ]</span> <sup>]</sup> 13:47, 29 March 2008 (UTC)

== Accusation of history falsification is uncivil ==

See this . ''']<sup>]</sup>''' 10:51, 4 April 2008 (UTC)

:Don't be taking things out of context; the editor there clarified that with the parenthetical "(anachronism)" statement, and in any case edit summaries are often somewhat cryptic. There is no inherent incivility in what was stated there. You might disagree with his reasoning, in which case you need to discuss it on the talk page. ] (]) 11:04, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
::If you say someone is falsifying history then you are at least uncivil. That's the fact. ''']<sup>]</sup>''' 13:06, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
:::I didn't say anything of the sort. But no, it is not a '''fact''' that the other editor was being incivil in claiming in an edit summary that anachronistic names are being changed. ] (]) 13:23, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
::I reffered to this ''Undid revision 202552119 by Tankred (talk) history falsification (anachronism) undone''. It is a clear accusation that Tankred was falsifying history, don't you think? ''']<sup>]</sup>''' 13:37, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
:::No, it's not. ] (]) 13:43, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
:Really? Maybe we should have it judged by the administrator if you wish. ''']<sup>]</sup>''' 13:59, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
::::This difficult discussion is being further complicated by wandering between four different talk pages (four that I have seen, maybe more.) I'm putting some comments at ]. ] (]) 17:21, 5 April 2008 (UTC)


==Pomerania==

Per the searches ], what are your views on a move to Western Pomerania instead? ] (]) 15:58, 10 April 2008 (UTC)

:I might as well answer there. ] (]) 16:18, 10 April 2008 (UTC)

== Name sorting ==

I have been starting to do what you suggested at ], and I came across ], which totally stumped me. Any ideas? (That is in the biography category because all the music groups ended up in there - something I must try and sort out one day). ] (]) 22:39, 10 April 2008 (UTC)
:And some more... ]?? ] (]) 22:43, 10 April 2008 (UTC)

::I think that it should be moved. That doesn't seem to be an appropriate name. Maybe there is something specific related to it at ], I'd have to look at it. Something about foreign alphabets (in particular, the uppercase pi here). In the meantime, sort it as they say it should be pronounced in the article, or maybe better as as "Y pi y". Similarly for someone who uses a $ as a S in their name, sort it as if it were an S. Or sort ] as "Quest". Maybe there is a music WikiProject where you might ask if this problem has been addressed; maybe they do have some rules along those lines. You can at least ask, just don't be disappointed if you don't get a clear answer.

::The thorn is sorted as "Th" in most cases; that's something that has been discussed and most Icelandic editors accept, as well as non-Icelandic editors. That's what is usually used, not a simple "T". Note that some Icelandic people categories such as ] are sorted by first name, so it would be "Thorsteinn fra Hamri" in them. (Look under T in that category listing, lots of Þ there already.) But in other categories, including ] (needs to be added), etc. there are two possibilities, "Fra Hamri, Thorsteinn" or "Hamri, Thorsteinn fra". I'd probably go with the latter in that case, but if he lived in an English-speaking country and still used the "from" in his name, I'd sort it under F. ] (]) 22:59, 10 April 2008 (UTC)

:::I thought every separate sort key needed to be capitalised, so it is Hamri, Thorsteinn Fra or Thorsteinn Fra Hamri? But that probably doesn't matter a huge amount. It is rare that sorting goes that far down a name. I went with Hamri, Thorsteinn Fra. By the way, I've discovered why no-one does this. It is incredibly boring (though mildly interesting in terms of names). ] (]) 23:07, 10 April 2008 (UTC)

Even with the guidance at ], I'm still steering clear of the von, van, de, di, du names. I don't think anyone can do this sort of work for long without going insane! <gibber> :-) ] (]) 23:14, 10 April 2008 (UTC)

:Re your first point: I knew I was thinking of some article along the lines of "?uest" but didn't notice that it was a redlink. Here's what I was thinking of. See the discussion at ]; somebody recently moved that article to "?uestlove" (and naturally didn't adjust the sort keys, which is how I noticed it). I reverted that move, because it had previously been moved to "Questlove" as a result of a prior ] discussion. Look through the arguments used there, and the people supporting them; I wasn't part of that discussion, but it gives some ideas if we request any moves along those lines in the future. ] (]) 23:27, 10 April 2008 (UTC)
::And read through ]. ] (]) 23:29, 10 April 2008 (UTC)
:::Oh. I've been bold and moved it. I must be getting impatient in my old age... ] (]) 23:36, 10 April 2008 (UTC)

==Notability of Japanese photographers==

Would have done the trick?

There are perhaps two hundred more virtually identical wretched robot-generated non-articles on which you could just as well slap the same template. (See what's flagged as "BGSS" ].) My gut feeling is that ten or so among them really ''aren't'' notable -- other than by the risible en-Misplaced Pages standards that for example let in hundreds of ''Star Wars'' vehicles and thousands (it seems) of people who provide the voices for Japanese cartoons -- and that the rest are. All but a tiny number (who all died a very long time ago) have produced photographs that are in the permanent collection of Japan's preeminent gallery of photography. So all in all most ''do'' deserve actual articles. Unfortunately only a small number of people seem inclined to produce those articles. I'd like to do more myself, but during a period of a month or so starting very soon indeed I shan't have time to do any. Could you perhaps announce at ] any addition or proposed addition of this template to photographer article(s)? There's always a chance that somebody would see it there and act upon it. Thanks. -- ] (]) 23:49, 14 April 2008 (UTC)

:Yamane does seem to me to have demonstrable (if not so great) notability, so I'm removing the notability tag you stuck to the article. If you disagree, please speak up on its talk page (or of course send it to AfD). -- ] (]) 02:08, 17 April 2008 (UTC)

== Improper page moves by Husond ==

Gene, your moving of ] to ] was not only justified with a poor excuse, as you are also not allowed to perform such a move. Your diacritics move probation has not been lifted. Please use ] if you intend to move an article due to a diacritic presence with which you disagree. Thanks. <strong><font style="color: #082567">]</font>]<font style="color: #082567">]</font></strong> 13:05, 18 April 2008 (UTC)

:There is no such probation. Nothing that can be "lifted".

:My move was quite proper and legitimate. It was the unreferenced, undiscussed move by you which was improper. And to a much lesser extent, he original creation of the article itself with an article name contrary to all the sources cited in the article.

:Furthermore, your move is now the '''second improper, unreferenced move of this article''' to a name not supported by the cited sources.
:That your move was undiscussed is '''especially improper and inappropriate''' given that there is a ]. ] (]) 14:17, 18 April 2008 (UTC)

::Gene, your probation is very much alive: ]. The page is marked as inactive, but as you can read your probation is still in effect. I have reverted your move of ] again. Please do not attempt to move the article again, as I will be forced to block you per your probation. Use ], as you are required to. Thanks. <strong><font style="color: #082567">]</font>]<font style="color: #082567">]</font></strong> 18:38, 18 April 2008 (UTC)

:::You know better, Husond. You've already explicitly tried to make that very same claim at WP/ANI several months ago. And, '''despite the fact that you deliberately did so knowing that I was unable to respond,''' you were nonetheless resoundingly '''rejected''' in that claim, with the discussion already closed '''and already archived''' before I got back. (Maybe there's a lesson in there for me; sometimes it works out better if I don't say anything.)

:::Furthermore, that big, honking box at the ] page means EXACTLY what it says:
:::{| class="messagebox"
|-
| style="font-size:36px" | ]
| '''This Misplaced Pages page is currently inactive and is retained for ''historical'' archive.''' ] is either no longer relevant or consensus has become unclear. If you want to revive discussion regarding the subject, you should seek broader input via a forum such as the ] of the ].
|}


{{Misplaced Pages:Arbitration Committee Elections December 2015/MassMessage}} ] (]) 12:54, 23 November 2015 (UTC)
:::Not only that, but it was totally out of process at the time it ws done; there was no such procedure, and there is no provision whatsoever for "lifting" anything in this nonprocess.
<!-- Message sent by User:Mdann52@enwiki using the list at https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=User:Mdann52/list&oldid=691988767 -->


== Old business: ] ==
:::Furthermore, it '''never did have anything to do with moving becasue the name was not in accordance with the sources.''' It dealt with moving articles because they did not have redirects. That is the only thing ever discussed at that time. In this case of "Mihai Susa]] the redirect already existed; I moved it "over redirect". I didn't move it to make a point about the redirect not existing; I moved it because the article name was wrong, because all the sources spelled it the way that redirect spelled it.


Hello, Gene! I happened to come across a very old discussion you started at ], which apparently resulted in a consensus to move back to the generic title. I don’t know much about the topic, aside from having spent most of my life in a part of Canada that’s surveyed according to a very similar scheme, but I think there should be at least some mention beyond the USA, noting the differences. I was wondering if there was some reason the move didn’t proceed. I suppose another option would be to start an article on the Canadian equivalent, but because there’d be a lot of redundant overlap I’d rather see a combined article, even with a large American section and a small Canadian one. I realize you haven’t been very active here recently but, as they say, there’s no deadline …—]]] 05:34, 6 May 2016 (UTC)
:::Your move was contrary to ] and knowingly made to a spelling not supported in any of the sources. ] (]) 11:55, 19 April 2008 (UTC)


== Requested move: Pączki → Paczki ==
::::Please don't patronize me Gene. And you should really refrain from distorting facts to have your way, it won't work. And refrain from being repetitive too, as it won't work either. Your probation is on, that you can be rest assured. Regards, <strong><font style="color: #082567">]</font>]<font style="color: #082567">]</font></strong> 23:32, 22 April 2008 (UTC)


Greetings! I have started a ] at ], regarding a page relating to this WikiProject. Discussion and opinions are invited. Thanks — ]<sup>]</sup> 16:25, 8 January 2018 (UTC)
:::::You appear to be the only one holding that view; your claims along that line were rejected last November, and you tried to raise it again now without success. You had probably better start acting in accordance with the WP:ANI discussion yourself, and in stop trying to stifle discussion by threatening to block me, rather than dealing with the issues involved. ] (]) 13:17, 23 April 2008 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 06:17, 21 January 2024

This user may have left Misplaced Pages. Gene Nygaard has not edited Misplaced Pages since 31 July 2021. As a result, any requests made here may not receive a response. If you are seeking assistance, you may need to approach someone else.

For older talk, see

  • User talk:Gene Nygaard/2004Dec-2005Apr (Litre,Special Fraction Characters, Deletion, merge, do nothing?, Edit summary, Mass is not weight, Middot, Ansari X Prize, Unicode code pages, Welcome to the Misplaced Pages, Aquarium volume, Balsam poplar, Significand, Death Valley National Park FAC, Magnetar distance units, Bot to undo damage by bot putting in U.S. census places, Thank you!, Degrees symbol, cm for height of people, Continental United States, BC / BCE dating convention, Europa (moon) edit, Units and nbsp, mid dot, Cheddar, Villages in Hong Kong. The bot thing, Devil's Lake, helium nonbreaking spaces, template:Infobox_U.S._state, California State Route 57, SuperCroc revert, Second/seconds, what is the least ugly in-line math in Planck units?, mass flow meter, Sequoia, Specific impulse)
  • User talk:Gene Nygaard/2005May-2005Jun (Sugar substitute, Trinity anniversary, Slrubenstein debate, USS Mississinewa (AO-59), Gustav II Adolf-vote, merge Tonne?, PA 103, lots of edits, not an admin, Pounds force, Aircraft loaded weights, Camel, Aluminium)
  • 2005Jul-2006Jan | 2006Feb | 2006Mar-2006Apr | 2006May-2006Jul | 2006Aug-2006Oct | 2006Nov-2006Dec | 2007Jan pt 1 | 2007Jan-Oct| 2007Nov-2008Nov 2008Dec-2009Jul
[REDACTED] This user is one of the 400 most active English Wikipedians of all time.

Broken Coord

Hi. I'm working on clearing out Category:Coord template needing repair. There's an instance of {{Coord}} in User:Gene_Nygaard/sandbox#Other_stuff:

{{coord|12|02|36|S|37|77|01|W|42}} too many elements

which has 77 minutes. Would you mind if I changed it to 7 minutes, or something?
—WWoods (talk) 13:51, 13 August 2009 (UTC)

Since you haven't been around since July, I did that. —WWoods (talk) 15:47, 4 September 2009 (UTC)

Sound level meter

In acoustics, the formal and correct plural of 'decibel' is decibel NOT decibels; please remove this change, putting an 's' on the end is American not British usage and IEC has decided that British English should be used.24malbec09 (talk) 12:36, 21 December 2009 (UTC)

What utter nonsense!

You would have several things to show in order to make your point.

  • You need to show that this in fact is standard British English usage.
  • In light of the fact that Misplaced Pages explicitly allows British English as well as the English spoken by most native speakers of English, you need to show that this would be in accordance with the house rules here on Misplaced Pages. Show me that what you are asking for would be in accordance with Misplaced Pages:Manual of Style rules.
  • I don't care much about anybody else's house rules, but you also have not in fact established that anybody else really has such a house rule. You have not even made any claim that the IEC doesn't use "decibels"--you merely seem to be claiming that the IEC uses British English in its own publications, which has no relevance here where other varieties of English are used. But you are also trying to bootstrap this onto the unfounded claim that the -s plural is not a part of British English.
  • You are going to have a damn hard time making your point in light of the fact that the national standards laboratory of the UK, the National Physical Laboratory, UK uses decibels. For example, here is
http://www.npl.co.uk/acoustics/sound-in-air/technical-guide-sound-measurements/51549
Technical Guide - Sound Measurements
Quantities and Units for Sound Measurement
...the physical measurement (e.g. sound pressure level (SPL) is the sound pressure expressed in decibels....

So it looks like you are just wasting my time. I'll listen if you have more to say to try to make your case, but it looks like you have a tough row to hoe.

  • Now some homework for you: try a search of the iec.ch site for "decibels" and don't come back here unless you are willing to provide the results of that search and discuss it. Gene Nygaard (talk) 13:27, 21 December 2009 (UTC)

Temperature unit

The correct unit for an absolute temperature is kelvin, not kelvins. See IUPAC Gold book for the SI definition. I'm sorry if the Wiki article on units has it wrongly stated a kelvins. If you look at the definition it makes no sense to use a plural form for a temperature. A temperature is a single quantity. Petergans (talk) 09:43, 30 December 2009 (UTC)

Quote me exactly what that source says, please.
Wrong. It is kelvins. See BIPM SI brochure. See NIST Special Publication 811. See numerous other sources, such as documents from the BIPM like http://www.bipm.org/utils/common/pdf/its-90/TECChapter17.pdf
A temperature is not a single quantity.
Just look at the other units of temperature we use. It is degrees Celsius, it is degrees Fahrenheit, it is degrees Rankine.
And of course, when the degree Kelvin was the proper name for the unit, it was degrees Kelvin. We change the noun in the plural in English; we don't change adjectives whether singular or plural. The word "Kelvin" was an adjective then. But it is no longer an adjective; it is now the noun. It takes the plural just like other units of measure. We now stick that s at the end of "kelvins" rather than at the end of "degrees" as we used to in the old days. Pretty much puts the kibosh on your strange notion that using the plural doesn't makes sense, doesn't it?
Some people are just a little slow when it comes to understanding the English grammar rules involved here. Gene Nygaard (talk) 10:56, 30 December 2009 (UTC)
I asked you to quote the source you cited, not only so that you would read it yourself, and also so that anyone else reading my talk page would know exactly what it says. But rather than relying on you to do that, I'll do it myself. This is exactly what the IUPAC source cited by Petergans says:

kelvin
SI base unit of thermodynamic temperature (symbol: K). The kelvin is the fraction 1/273.16 of the thermodynamic temperature of the triple point of water.
G.B. 70; 1996, 68, 977

Note the salient points here:
  • The cited source doesn't use the plural form; it is singular, and therefore it is naturally "kelvin" and not "kelvins".
  • The cited source doesn't state any rules about the use of the plural.
  • This isn't an IUPAC rule, either. Rather, it is a direct quote of the English version of the official definition of the kelvin by resolution the 13th CGPM of 1967-68 (from memory, might not have the number of the conference right; and that particular conference merely restated the older definition, under the new name "kelvin" assigned to this unit then); the CGPM is one of the three organizations established under the Treaty of the Meter of 1875 to keep our international standards (of the three, the CGPM is the highest ranking, making the broadest, most general rules). (added later 12:39, 30 December 2009 (UTC))
So stop trying to pull the wool over people's eyes, Petergans. Gene Nygaard (talk) 11:10, 30 December 2009 (UTC)
"Temperature in degrees Kelvin" does not translate into "temperature in kelvins". This is the fundamental error that you have made. Rather, it translates literally as "temperature measured on the Kelvin scale". I prefer to use absolute temperature which correctly indicates the temperature scale being used.Petergans (talk) 07:53, 31 December 2009 (UTC)
Degrees Kelvin and kelvins are indeed the same thing, except for the fact that for the last 40 years it hasn't been proper to call them "degrees Kelvin".
Calling it "absolute temperature" and linking to the kelvin article isn't right. "Absolute temperature" doesn't "correctly indicate the temperature scale being used"--it is a vague and ambiguous term, applying equally well to temperature measured in degrees Rankine. Of course, the old terminology "degrees Absolute" and °A was thrown out as well as "degrees Kelvin" and °K in that name change to "kelvins".
Gene Nygaard (talk) 11:24, 31 December 2009 (UTC)
It is common usage in thermodynamics to refer to T as an absolute temperature. The point here is that it is a generic term not relating to any particular temperature measurement. It implies that in numerical calculations the Kelvin scale is to be used for temperature values. It is essential in thermodynamics that "absolute zero" should have a temperature value of zero. This discussion is now closed as far as I'm concerned. Petergans (talk) 16:05, 31 December 2009 (UTC)
That little article "an" speaks volumes.
When it matters which one you use (in many cases it doesn't, because various units will form consistent systems compatible with the formulas), specific identification helps. Gene Nygaard (talk) 16:13, 31 December 2009 (UTC)

I belive the ultimate statement can be found at NIST: http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/sec06.html#6.1.3 Unit symbols are unaltered in the plural.--ZJ (talk) 10:00, 8 March 2010 (UTC)

Unit symbols. Not that difficult to understand, is it? Especially not when you already looked at the example given right after those words in that cited section:
  • Example: l = 75 cm but not: l = 75 cms
Now look at §9.2 in the very same document for the section relevant to the discussion here on this talk page:
  • Plural unit names are used when they are required by the rules of English grammar. They are normally formed regularly, for example, ‘‘henries’’ is the plural of henry. According to Ref. , the following plurals are irregular: Singular —lux, hertz, siemens; Plural —lux, hertz, siemens.
Guess which units come under the "formed regularly" category. All the rest (there aren't very many named units in the SI, none were overlooked), including kelvins. Gene Nygaard (talk) 10:44, 8 March 2010 (UTC)

Unreferenced BLPs

Hello Gene Nygaard! Thank you for your contributions. I am a bot alerting you that 3 of the articles that you created are Unreferenced Biographies of Living Persons. Please note that all biographies of living persons must be sourced. If you were to add reliable, secondary sources to these articles, it would greatly help us with the current 21 article backlog. Once the articles are adequately referenced, please remove the {{unreferencedBLP}} tag. Here is the list:

  1. Jiří Kylián - Find sources: Google (books · news · scholar · free images · WP refs· FENS · JSTOR · TWL
  2. Ruhul Amin (film director) - Find sources: Google (books · news · scholar · free images · WP refs· FENS · JSTOR · TWL
  3. Misono - Find sources: Google (books · news · scholar · free images · WP refs· FENS · JSTOR · TWL

Thanks!--DASHBot (talk) 18:45, 2 January 2010 (UTC)

Talkback

Hello, Gene Nygaard. You have new messages at Tim1357's talk page.
Message added 19:54, 2 January 2010 (UTC). You can remove this notice at any time by removing the {{Talkback}} or {{Tb}} template.

Tim1357 (talk) 19:54, 2 January 2010 (UTC)

Talkback

Hello, Gene Nygaard. You have new messages at Talk:Brazilian battleship Minas Geraes.
Message added 00:33, 5 January 2010 (UTC). You can remove this notice at any time by removing the {{Talkback}} or {{Tb}} template.

You've been here for quite some time. Perhaps you could actually discuss this with me? I'd be much more inclined to listen to you if the sarcasm and cynicism in your posts, related to (I think?) FAs, is removed. Kind regards, —Ed (talkmajestic titan) 00:33, 5 January 2010 (UTC)

Carabane FAC

You're welcome to submit a more constructive comment in place of this one, which I've removed. Regards, SandyGeorgia (Talk) 00:51, 6 January 2010 (UTC)

defenceman

Feel free to actually debate on you know...the talk page. But the can/us spelling of these cats has been debated many times and consensus came down to the spelling the description should match the category name so as not to have POV wars such as you are having to change it back and forth. -DJSasso (talk) 15:13, 7 January 2010 (UTC)

From what I can see, the naming issue been debated once, poorly, with no conclusion—no consensus whatsoever. Misplaced Pages:Categories for discussion/Log/2008 March 1#Category:American ice hockey defencemen It's overdue for reopening.
And the text issue is separate from the naming issue, and Category talk:American ice hockey defencemen is totally empty in that regard. Gene Nygaard (talk) 15:34, 7 January 2010 (UTC)

Displacement

Hello Gene.

I came across some of the discussion on measures of displacement. I thought you may be interested in this prior discussion:

Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Ships/Archive_14#Displacement_figures_for_US_warships. (Also see this discussion, about halfway down, discussing displacement templates, and this followup on my talk page.)

Last summer an editor, operating under the assumption that displacement figures on US cruisers and battleships were stated in short tons, introduced dozens of erroneous conversions. I doubt the damage has yet been undone completely.

This is an interesting link. As mentioned here, this USN website is stating carrier displacement in short tons, as well as metric. It may well be in error; a table on page 8 of this source gives carrier displacements in long tons.

Regards, Kablammo (talk) 03:45, 10 January 2010 (UTC)

Thanks. Looks to me like the most important thing is that we never have unidentified tons in any of our articles. I think the USN website may well be in error; I would imagine that the clerical people who do websites would be prone to the same errors many other people make, assuming that the "tons" used without identification in the United States are always "short tons". Just like they might do if they see something about a 50,000-ton sale of wheat to Algeria in a U.S. newspaper, where those tons are almost certainly metric tons and not short tons.
Have you also considered the fact that in at least some of the cases where our articles state a displacement figure in tonnes-first (metric tons) or tonnes-only, those "tonnes" might well be long tons rather than metric tons? That's in addition, of course, to the likelihood that some that actually are metric tons are misinterpreted as long tons, in any strange system which uses long tons for some classes of ships and metric tons for other classes of ships.
We have far too many "tons" in shipping already, with the confusing volume measurements such as gross register tons. I don't think we should ever use short tons with regard to displacement of ships. If some riverboats or whatever give there displacement in short tons, we could express it in pounds with little distortion of the precision of the measurement.
Then, of course, there is "dived displacement" of submarines, another strange measurement that is also really a measurement of volume. (Archimedes' principle is used to measure mass for a floating object; for a submerged object what you measure is its volume, not its mass.) Gene Nygaard (talk) 05:32, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
Of course, it isn't just in "historic" ships nor just in infoboxes where the conversion-as-if-short-tons problems occur. It also occurs in 20th century ships such as USS North Carolina in this edit. Gene Nygaard (talk) 05:40, 10 January 2010 (UTC)


I'm also curious about one thing. Certainly that one USN site with "short tons" isn't the only source of information about the carriers involved there. And certainly with all the expertise among the people who participate in WikiProject Ships, a few of them could be followed out and compared with other sources, to see how likely it is that that particular website is simply in error. Has that been done? I didn't notice anything about anybody doing that in the discussions I saw.
Note in particular with regards to that website that many of the conversions there are carried to improper precision, with ludicrous statements such as "Approximately 97,000 tons (87,996.9 metric tons) full load". Note also that the original "tons" there are never specifically identified as "short tons". To me, the combination of those two things is a pretty clear indication that the conversions were not in the original article, and that they were later inserted by some clerical functionary, rather than by somebody with any real expertise in the subject. It looks like a series of related pages where the "metric tons" figures (and an only-implicit identification of the tons as short tons) can be totally discounted as unreliable. By the way, that's the way we need to treat many of the conversions on Misplaced Pages as well; just because somebody has made a conversion of some ambiguous unit based on one particular meaning, that doesn't mean the identification has been correctly made. Gene Nygaard (talk) 05:56, 10 January 2010 (UTC)
I agree with your thoughts.
  • The navy.mil website is wrong; an unfortunate example of an otherwise-reliable source being mistaken. I will contact them for clarification.
  • Personally, on Misplaced Pages I would give only long tons or metric tons, whichever is appropriate, and link the appropriate term. (They are very close anyway; the difference is well-within what is consumed in an active day at sea.) If conversions must be given, it seems we should only give them once, and not repeat them in the text every time a unit of caliber, distance, or mass is used. That makes the text hard to read.
  • I too have come across many other examples of merchant vessel tonnage (gt or grt) being conflated with displacement, both here and in exterior sources. In an effort to accommodate differences in measure, editors make assumptions as to what the sources mean. A recent example is a source which mentioned enemy tonnage sank, which was misinterpreted to be short tons, rather than what likely was the tonnage which is the measure of size of merchant vessels.
  • It seems hard for naval aficiandos to understand, but displacement is irrelevant for merchant ships. (Who would purchase a house, or a warehouse, by weight?) Naval architects seek to minimize diplacement, and design the lightest vessel which can safely handle the desired capacity. (See this and especially this edits by a naval architect who has edited Misplaced Pages.) Although I am a past offender, it would be less confusing to simply eliminate the displacement field for merchant vessels which are not measured by that metric. Howver, I doubt that would be acceptable to many.
Regards, Kablammo (talk) 15:49, 10 January 2010 (UTC)

Battle of Nirim

Hi Gene Nygaard! You commented on the DYK nomination for the article Battle of Nirim. The nomination has neither been approved nor rejected for some reason. Can you please look at it again? Thanks, Ynhockey 23:34, 12 January 2010 (UTC)

Long hundredweight

Hi. I noticed that you established the long hundredweight page as a redirect to long ton. I don't know much about Imperial measures, but surely it would make more sense to have it as a redirect to hundredweight? Cordless Larry (talk) 00:21, 18 January 2010 (UTC)

That was a long time ago. I don't know if there was any particular reason for it or not.
It really doesn't make much difference in this case; either one will give you the basic information you'd look for, though one might be better written than the other.
It might have depended then, and it should now, on the relative quality of the articles. There probably isn't a whole lot of good reason to have separate articles in any case, especially when now (unlike the situation when I created that redirect), a redirect can go to a specific section of an article (e.g., use {{Redirect|Ton#Units of mass}} to go to Ton#Units of mass. (When that redirect you found was created, even if you had put that into the redirect text, the redirect would only have taken you to the top of the article, not to the specific section.) So look over the possibilities, and see what you think is best.
It probably won't make one whit of difference in any case. If you find hundredweight used in a Misplaced Pages article, it's most likely going to be used by someone who thinks that hundred is written in digits as "112" and who doesn't have enough sense to realize that if they use hundredweight they need to identify which one they are using, so instead of saying "long" hundredweight, they're just going to add a link to hundredweight and the users will be left guessing which one was intended. Special:WhatLinksHere/hundredweight (you can get that at the side of the page too; if you go to a page, there is a "What links here?" link on the left of the page, or somewhere on it depending on how you have your preferences set up) has a couple of hundred incoming links to that page, and most of them should be disambiguated in the articles they come from by following the link back to them and fixing them. Unfortunately, there aren't enough editors who bother to check out things like that.
OTOH, Special:WhatLinksHere/Long hundredweight shows only two articles the article namespace using that redirect, and one page that looks like some kind of maintenance lists. Don't worry about what Talk: pages say, nor any in Misplaced Pages: namespace rather than articles. Gene Nygaard (talk) 01:41, 18 January 2010 (UTC)
Thanks for the detailed response. I realise that this may not be all that important (I hadn't checked to see how many pages linked to the redirect, but thanks for pointing that out). The reason I came across this was that I wanted to know what a long hundredweight was for a conversion template I was considering using. When I saw that long hundredweight redirected to long ton, I initially assumed that they must be equal. I didn't read the article in full and it was only when I came across hundredweight that I realised what a long hundredweight actually is. For that reason, I think it would be prudent to change the redirect to hundredweight. Please let me know if you object. I'll also do some disambiguating though, as suggested. Cordless Larry (talk) 08:42, 18 January 2010 (UTC)
Hello, Gene Nygaard. You have new messages at Cordless Larry's talk page.
You can remove this notice at any time by removing the {{Talkback}} or {{Tb}} template.

Query

I do not understand your point at Misplaced Pages:Featured article candidates/2008–09 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team/archive1.--TonyTheTiger (t/c/bio/WP:CHICAGO/WP:FOUR) 18:46, 18 January 2010 (UTC)

Edit summaries

Your edit summary in this edit bears no resemblance to the actual changes you made. Could you be more careful about this in the future? --Carnildo (talk) 23:57, 20 January 2010 (UTC)

Sounds like an issue to take up with whoever put "add metric units" in the toolbox on the edit page, and such an inappropriate edit summary when you use that pretty much worthless "tool". I'd never used it before today, and am trying to figure out what it will and will not do. Obviously, it didn't provide much of the "assistance" it claims on that particular edit, so I did some of the ones it should have done. The edit summary itself isn't my doing; sure, I could have changed it, but for now I'm going to choose not to, until I can figure out why all that date nonsense and the like has been put into a toolbox like this. Is there even any place where we can discuss what is in that toolbox, and the way it works including the edit summaries it gives? Gene Nygaard (talk) 00:12, 21 January 2010 (UTC)
What toolbox are you talking about? Are you using a user script or something to get this? --Carnildo (talk) 02:12, 21 January 2010 (UTC)
Not knowingly. I remember somebody trying to talk me into doing something like that a long time ago. Maybe it is something I added; I do have a script page somewhere for other things, don't remember what. Guess I'll have to try to figure that out; I have only notices those things, which only appear in the toolbox after I go to the edit screen, recently.
Here's the list of what appears in my toolbox on the edit screen now; the first seven have always been there, as far as I remember:
Toolbox
  • What links here
  • Related changes
  • User contributions
  • Logs
  • E-mail this user
  • Upload file
  • Special pages
  • Delink common terms
  • Add metric units
  • Delink dates to dmy
  • Delink dates to mdy
  • All dates to dmy
  • All dates to mdy
  • Delink year-in-X dates
  • Delink dates to dmy+common terms
  • Delink dates to mdy+common terms
  • Make dates bold
Now that you mention it, maybe it is something I've added; I don't remember having used any of them before. And it certainly doesn't ever give an edit summary appropriate for "Add metric units". If so, I think I'll try to figure out how to remove it, and figure out how to get other people to stop using it as well. Gene Nygaard (talk) 02:39, 21 January 2010 (UTC)
It was that &^&^%%%$ User:Lightmouse; I must have added his script to see how it worked. I've removed it now. Gene Nygaard (talk) 02:52, 21 January 2010 (UTC)

Twiggy (hill)

Thanks for the idea! First I will start by compiling a list of all hills in England less than 100ft high. Saga City (talk) 16:05, 21 January 2010 (UTC)


Hidden Articles

Sorry, I am not quite clear on the context of your question:

Why is Elizabeth Hight a redlink? Have you done other articles like that?

but the article is actually Elizabeth A. Hight. Where did you see the redlink Elizabeth Hight? Mhjohns (talk) 14:09, 23 January 2010 (UTC)

Thanks, Gene, but I am not confused about redlinks. Go ahead and create a redirect to get to Elizabeth A. Hight -[REDACTED] can be edited by anyone and your contributions are appreciated. Mhjohns (talk) 14:22, 24 January 2010 (UTC)

Gene, the "creator" of the page did not "refuse" to create a redirect. You seemed to want to change the way some pages are named, and, since[REDACTED] is open for editing, you can do that. Being irritated because I did not do it your way to begin with is not very helpful. Here is a clearer way to express yourself in the future:

I noticed that you named a page Elizabeth A. Hight, but, since there are no other notable people named Elizabeth Hight and someone who types this simpler name will get a redlink, it is more appropriate to name the page Elizabeth Hight and use a redirect from Elizabeth A. Hight. If another Elizabeth Hight should surface, a disambiguation page could then be created. I have made these changes - you might want to use this technique in the future.

Gene, I think you will get a better response by using this technique, and I hope you find it helpful. Best regards Mhjohns (talk) 18:20, 24 January 2010 (UTC)

Iowa class battleship

Sorry, didn't know you'd be active at this time of the night, otherwise I'd have stuck a man at work tag on the article. How's the rebuilding look? I tried to address the issues, but I would like your opinion on the matter. TomStar81 (Talk) 09:04, 26 January 2010 (UTC)

Haven't seen much yet; first one I looked at had removed a link and left the ]] behind at the end, and had a "gun guns" redundancy, typo or whatever, and repeated "anti-aircraft guns" three times in one sentence. Guess you must have figured out where I am, to know that I'm working "at this time of the night"; given the way that one section looked, maybe we both should get some rest. I'll look at it more tomorrow. Gene Nygaard (talk) 09:27, 26 January 2010 (UTC)
And, of course, you don't know that it is "this time of night" for everybody who might be interested in this article. See time zone or something like that. Gene Nygaard (talk) 09:41, 26 January 2010 (UTC)

thanks for your help and advice

thanks for your help with Johann von Klenau, which was promoted to FA yesterday. Auntieruth55 (talk) 19:57, 26 January 2010 (UTC)

Sea levels and dam volumes

On Rehberg (Harz) and other articles you have changed links from Normalnull, the specific datum at Amsterdam from which the heights in those articles are measured from to sea level, a general article on the subject which doesn't even mention it. This may be because someone has incorrectly changed the redirect of 'Normalnull' to 'sea level', stating they are synonymous - they are clearly not. I have reverted the redirect so it points at Normaal Amsterdams Peil which is the Dutch name for this datum. However, I have also added 'sea level' to the See Also section of 'Normaal Amsterdams Peil'. In most cases I write it as ] so the layman sees a generic term he recognises, but those who click on the link go to the specific datum from which heights in western Europe are measured.

Turning to the dam etc. volumes, using the Sylvenstein Dam as the example, the original German article gives the volume as "1 Mio m³" which means "1 million cubic metres" i.e. 1 x 10 cubic metres. My sense is that although a hm³ (hectometre cubed i.e. 100m x 100m x 100m) is the same as a million cubic metres, the unit is not widely or readily understood by the average English reader, whereas "1 million m³" (with the equivalent in imperial if necessary) is much clearer. --Bermicourt (talk) 08:30, 30 January 2010 (UTC)

after an edit conflict as I was doing this, I see you figured the first part out on your own. That's the only really legitimate, justifiable use of the prefix hecto- anywhere; all in all we'd be better off if the CGPM had gotten rid of all the prefixes which are not powers of 1000, and consigned them all to the same fate as the now-obsolete myria-.
No, you've gotten mixed up somewhere. A hectometer is 100 m, not 10 m. And 100×100×100 = 1,000,000. Using {{convert}}, 1 hectometer (100 m). More with that conversion template:
1 cubic kilometer (1,000 hm)
1 cubic hectometer (1,000 dam)
1 cubic dekameter (1,000 m)
1 hm (1,000,000 m)
1 cubic meter (1,000 dm)
1 cubic decimeter (1,000 cm)
1 cubic centimeter (1,000 mm)
1 cubic meter (1.0×10 mm)
1 cubic megameter (1.0×10 hm)
and outside the template, since there isn't enough call for Mm conversions for it to handle them,
1 cubic megameter (1,000,000,000,000,000,000 m)
1 cubic megameter (1,000,000,000,000 hm)


A "hectare" got its name because it is a hectometer squared, (100 m)(100 m) = 10000 m², and then "are" was backformed from hectare.
Normalnull is just the German term for mean sea level, which really should be the article name rather than a redirect on English Misplaced Pages as you can see from the introduction. That, "mean sea level", is what is almost always meant when someone says "sea level" in English. It's just the details about getting to a "mean" level that vary somewhat. The stub article under the Normalnull name certainly didn't have any reliable, useful information at the time it was redirected to sea level; we can look at the history and see that. It would be better to put any specific datum into the sea level article, and to include as well the information at above mean sea level and at your Dutch datum article and any others in one comprehensive and comprehensible article. Note that redirects can now go to a specific section of an article, too (for a long time after I started editing here, using #REDIRECT] would only take you to the top of the article, even if a Normalnull section existed in the article. Now redirect works like links in an article: using ] gives you this link to Normalnull, click to see where it takes you.
Using "million" with a unit symbol rather than the spelled out name of the unit, especially for SI units, isn't "correct". It might squeak by in Misplaced Pages's house rules, but it is not in accordance with the rules of measurement standards organizations. Gene Nygaard (talk) 11:22, 30 January 2010 (UTC)
Besides, most Americans won't even admit they know what a "meter" is, as a unit of measure—and a good share of them really do not know what a "metre" is. So let's just get rid of those units, too! Some probably do know that the Canadians use those dinky little "litres" where it takes over 4.5 of them to make a gallon, rather than American "liters" where it only takes 3.8 to make a gallon. Gene Nygaard (talk) 11:32, 30 January 2010 (UTC) Just kidding about the gallons, of course. I do know the liters are the same and gallons different. Gene Nygaard (talk) 17:58, 30 January 2010 (UTC)
By the way, there's a whole lot more to it than to have a benchmark, too. You still need to compare that datum to a geoid, and there are numerous ways that can be done, to use it for the elevation of a lake in Germany, for example. That isn't explained at all in the Normaal Amsterdams Peil article. Gene Nygaard (talk) 11:47, 30 January 2010 (UTC)

Victor Hernández Cruz

Thank you for rectifying my mistake.--Lawrlafo (talk) 17:02, 30 January 2010 (UTC)

USS Congress

I was wondering if you could look over USS Congress (1799) when you have a few minutes free? I will soon be taking the article to FAC and have been impressed with your attention to detail during the FAR on Iowa class battleships. Please discuss any issues on the article talk page. Thanks. --Brad (talk) 01:12, 1 February 2010 (UTC)

Loktak Lake

In Loktak Lake, I must admit I didn't consider the |abbr=on parameter as the culprit. I tried several combinations - but all were with |abbr=on - and the only ones that didn't error were the simple conversions, not the ranges. Since seeing your subsequent edits, I have tried getting a copy of the version that I edited from, and simply removing the |abbr=on - ie {{convert|0|to|35|C|F}} which yields 0 to 35 °C (32 to 95 °F). Do you want me to paste that in as a replacement for the non-converted form currently there? --Redrose64 (talk) 15:03, 2 February 2010 (UTC)

If you like; it won't make any significant change (it will throw in those mostly useless nonbreaking spaces which aren't worth adding, and which clutter up edit pages needlessly and make them difficult to read for no good reason when added individually). Conversions don't have to be done with any particular template (and there are others that work better than this one for some purposes, e.g. {{height}} for human heights with its half-inch conversions from heights in meters)—and I run into as many problems or more of them with editors using the various conversion templates properly than I do with problems in conversions not using the templates. In addition to {{convert}} being incredibly complex (it takes well over 1000 pages of templates to work), with a steeper learning curve than most editors are willing to endure, there are a whole lot of bugs and glitches in addition to the problem of "abbr=" giving a problem with ranges when it doesn't give any error message (though it also doesn't work) for a single temperature:
  • {{convert|27|C|F|abbr=off}} giving you the form with symbols nonetheless: 27 degrees Celsius (81 degrees Fahrenheit) (compare that to {{convert|2700|N|lbf|abbr=off}} → 2,700 newtons (610 pounds-force) where the first term is spelled out)
  • {{convert|2.9|t|lb|sp=us}}, even with the spelling parameter set, gives us a spelling more foreign to American English than "litres" are: 2.9 metric tons (6,400 lb)
  • and not even any rudimentary dimensional analysis, letting stupid things like this slip through: {{convert|2.57|km|lb|sp=us}} → 2.57 kilometers ()
  • There are, of course, a number of cases where someone using the black box like this, and not seeing the output on the on the edit screen, will do reasonable-looking (on the edit screen) conversions such as a {{convert|12|oz|ml}} soft-drink can or the battleship has a range of {{convert|11700|nm|mi km|sp=us}} and end up with garbage in the article if they don't carefully review the results. I leave it an an exercise for you or other readers to remove the nowiki and preview these to see what happens.
So, though I do use {{convert}} quite often, there are cases when it should not be used. One of the biggest problems, of course, it that it has improperly introduced British spellings into thousands of articles written in American English, because of its improper default rather than making every editor specify the spellings. Gene Nygaard (talk) 15:48, 2 February 2010 (UTC)

Convert alt spellings

Gene, instead of constantly complaining about alternate input/output spellings that don't exist, as you most recently did here, why don't you simply create them yourself? It is only a redirect to the main one! You don't have to understand the code at all. It would save us all a lot of time, rather than demanding someone else do it. — Huntster (t @ c) 02:28, 15 February 2010 (UTC)

In that particular case, even the "F-change" is undocumented. It isn't clear that that is the most appropriate way to accomplish it. It isn't clear that it should become documented, even. It was never discussed; it is just something some editor decided to throw in there. So it isn't clear that making redirects is the best way to fix it.
But as far as why I don't do that most of the time, it is
  1. Largely because we need to get some understandings by the people who edit this template that we need a consistent look and feel—and we aren't going to get that unless the people who add new conversions start to understand what that look and feel should be, and do what they can to achieve it.
  2. As a consequence of a lack of a consistent look and feel, adding a redirect won't always be consistent what we already have. For example, Template:Convert/km/l does not redirect to Template:Convert/km/L, nor vice versa. They are two different template pages, despite the fact that they are used to convert the same unit. That is due to the stupid practice of using the input unit parameters to affect spelling and capitalization issues.
  3. I understand it well enough so that I could actually add those which are more than redirects, if I took a little time to make sure I was following the conventions myself.
  4. But I generally cannot fix the ones that already exist, even when the solution is obvious. Output spellings I cannot fix, for example. Making "sp=ca" and "sp=sv" and "sp=tur" work right are probably beyond what I can do as well.
  5. In some cases it is because the real solution is not to add the "missing" ones, but rather to delete the useless, befuddling, unnessary ones already there, the ones which accomplish nothing other than steeping the learning curve for using this template.
But I'm not going to do any of that, unless and until I see some evidence of a real attempt to clean things up. Business as usual won't get me to help out. If it starts working better than it has in the past, I could well jump in and help fix some of those things and to clean up the documentation mess.
As it stands now, {{convert}} remains a dangerous weapon in the hands of most editors who add it to articles. I still need convincing that the best solution is not to delete Template:Convert and all its subpages in their entirety. Gene Nygaard (talk) 03:20, 15 February 2010 (UTC)
My best suggestion would simply to be don't use it. It's been around a very long time, and it isn't going away. If it can be improved upon, that's fantastic, but I am deeply disturbed by the handful of editors who seem hellbent on attacking those who created it (I'm not one) because it doesn't do everything they want it to do. It's a bloody static template...it isn't intelligent, and I don't understand why folks think it should somehow clairvoyantly know what the editor is wanting it to do, or, as you say above, thinks it is somehow dangerous to the community. That really boggles my mind.
As to my original question, your response leaves me even more puzzled. In your first paragraph, you say that a redirect isn't the clear way to proceed. What? It's a redirect between "°F-change" and "F-change". Between "A·h" and "A.h". Between "hp.h" and "hph". Etc etc. There is no "fix" other than a simple redirect or rename (which itself will involve a redirect), which is *specifically* what you complained about. Your bullet point 1 above, I believe, points to the critical problem here: this is a collaborative effort, and it is simply *wrong* to demand action from others when you refuse to take simple actions yourself.
I want to be clear that I'm not attacking you or anything, just pointing out the inconsistencies of actions here. I think you have some fantastic ideas, some that would be great to implement and others that may be beyond what we're capable of doing (such as accounting for every spelling variation on the face of the earth, like your sp=sv and sp=tur (tr) examples above), but the way you go about suggesting those changes turns all but the already converted (like Wikid) against you. I'm serious about my earlier comment regarding honey and vinegar...it may not always work, but the batting average will still be better than if you try to bludgeon other volunteers into doing what you want. — Huntster (t @ c) 03:41, 15 February 2010 (UTC)

Further to this, there's no need to convert American English spellings to International English spelling as you did ] and change a link to a page that results in a redirect no different than the one that was in place just so you can have an International English spelling. It's completely unnecessary. I would revert them, but that too is unnecessary, but please stop. --Walter Görlitz (talk) 17:50, 16 February 2010 (UTC)

It's usually "advertise" in American English, and advertise in any other variety of English, as far as I know. Advertize might be an acceptable spelling, at least in American English, but it is far less common than advertise in the U.S. or anywhere else. In any case the spelling there does not appear in the article; it appears only in a comment to editors. My American English spell-checker here underlines the "advertize" spelling; it is an "also" variant in Webster's Third New International Dictionary, meaning that it sees some use but is not common.
Removing an unencyclopedic colloquialism abbreviation isn't a national varieties of English issue either. The redirects are also more specific to a section in the article, rather than just ot the top of the article. The units are amperes in American English, in Australian English, in Canadian English, in any English; for what its worth, they are "ampères" in Canadian French, but I haven't run into any problems with that being used on English Misplaced Pages.
If you want to deal with those varieties of English issues, go complain at Template talk:Convert about the impropriety of that template defaulting to British English, and making us jump through hoops to get American English. That has resulted in thousands of articles improperly using "metre" and "litre" spellings; I've fixed a few hundred of them and haven't made much of a dent in the problem. But unless more people complain about it at the template talk page, as I have done in the past, we aren't likely to get that changed. Compare
  • {{convert|7|m|ft}} with no spelling parameter → 7 metres (23 ft) can be
  • {{convert|7|m|ft|sp=us}} → 7 meters (23 ft) if and only if the editor adding the conversion knows that you need to jump through hoops to get American English, and knows what you need to do to achieve that. You don't see the results on the edit page; many editors adding that template probably are unwitting accessories to this crime, not even realizing that they are throwing British spellings into an articl using American English. Don't you think that instead the convert template should require everybody to specify the spelling to be used? Do your part by making that point at Template talk:Convert. Gene Nygaard (talk) 01:43, 17 February 2010 (UTC)

Sorting diacritics in the Slovene municipal template

Please provide a relevant argument supporting your recent "fix" of the Template:Municipalities of Slovenia (after reading mine) so that this doesn't become an edit war. Thank you, — Yerpo 08:32, 17 February 2010 (UTC)

Windmill articles

Re your recent copyedit, as the creator of lots of windmill-related articles on Misplaced Pages, the preferred conversion is from ft.in to m.cm - I've tweaked the conversion back to where it was so that the article conforms with the hundreds of others. Articles on mills in Europe give the measurements in m.cm, which are then converted to ft.in. Mjroots (talk) 07:00, 19 February 2010 (UTC)

I have no idea what you are talking about. In my recent edit, I merely fixed the conversion template that was there so that it would use properly use the adjective form. It is a "10-foot wheel" not a "10 feet wheel". You didn't tweak anything "back"—it never included inches, and it still doesn't after your edit. That's the really baffling part about your complaint. So I could help you out, if that's what you want. In the particular example given here, it might be undue precision to add inches, however. Do you know how precisely that measurement, which was originally just in feet in this case, was expressed? Is it to the nearest inch? If it isn't, you shouldn't be converting it as if it were. And if it isn't, you don't have centimeter precision either. It isn't a matter of what "windmill" articles use. Is is a matter of the precision of a particular measurement. Gene Nygaard (talk) 13:20, 19 February 2010 (UTC)
Well, 10 foot and 10 foot 0 inches are the same, aren't they? I generally prefer not to add the "0 inches" bit if the measurement is an exact number of feet, but I'll not revert the addition in the conversion as it's really not worth warring over. I'm just trying to keep the conversions consistent across all windmill articles. Your edit changed the precision of the conversion. I think that conversion to 0.000m is a little too precise, whereas a conversion to 0.0m gives an approximate 4" step (not precise enough). 0.00m is a good compromise between the two. Mjroots (talk) 13:32, 19 February 2010 (UTC)
No, they aren't the same. The 10 feet might be accurate to the nearest foot, in which case if it were expressed to the nearest inch it would be somewhere between 9 ft 6 in and 10 ft 6 in. OTOH, "10 feet 0 inches" should mean that it is somewhere between "10 ft ½ in" and "10 ft 1½ in". For this measurement, we can presume that the final zero in 10 feet is significant; however, in other measurements, you might have "10 feet" meaning "10±5 feet". Though if it is designed to be 10 feet 0.0 inches with one-tenth inch tolerance, it might still be referred to as ten feet. We don't always need to use the most precision we could use.
The precision of the output depends on the precision of the input. For something like a wheel that is designed to be a nice round number in some units, like this, it is okay to assume that it has enough precision to convert it to the centimeter level, and knowing it to the millimeter level isn't helpful. But when you have something in the same article that is a measured quantity rather than a design quantity, then only assume the precision expressed.
Note that in most conversions, you generally have at least two defensible options for the precision of the result, one a little bit more precise than the input, and one a little bit less precise. The less you know about the precision of the input, the more choices you need to pick from. In this case, as long as we don't use vulgar fractions or rounding decimally but to the nearest 5 cm or 5 mm or whatever, our choices for the results of the conversion are 3.0 m and 3.05 m. I wouldn't have changed the precision if I weren't already editing the "adj=on" parameter. I don't mind your changing it back to the other defensible option, 3.05 m. And I won't even insist that it include the "0-inch" on the other side if that is used. Gene Nygaard (talk) 13:55, 19 February 2010 (UTC)
Actually, a "10-foot (3 m) wheel" is also a third acceptable option here; like the 3.05 m, I might change that if I'm already editing something for another reason, but not in an edit by itself. Gene Nygaard (talk) 14:08, 19 February 2010 (UTC)

McCormick Tribune Plaza & Ice Rink FAC

I have responded to your concerns at Misplaced Pages:Featured article candidates/McCormick Tribune Plaza & Ice Rink/archive1. Could you strike resolved issues and consider whether you are ready to support this nominee.--TonyTheTiger (T/C/BIO/WP:CHICAGO/WP:FOUR) 23:52, 24 February 2010 (UTC)

I don't know if you are watching the article, but it was copyedited today. I thought you might want to reconsider supporting it.--TonyTheTiger (T/C/BIO/WP:CHICAGO/WP:FOUR) 05:55, 27 February 2010 (UTC)

Zinc smelting clarification tag

Please see my response at Talk:Zinc smelting. Wizard191 (talk) 16:02, 25 February 2010 (UTC)

"micron" vs "micrometer" for 10^-6 meter

Regarding the Gene Nygaard edit of Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer on 3 March 2010. This edit removed "microns" and replaced them with "micrometers", with an edit note "microns were thrown out in the '60s". I assume this refers to "Resolution 7 of the 13th meeting of the CGPM (1967/68)" http://www.bipm.org/en/CGPM/db/13/7/

So "microns" have been officially thrown out, but I note they are still in popular use, and the original WISE document that is referenced from the Wiki article at the end of the edited sentence, http://wise.ssl.berkeley.edu/documents/WISESPIE_SanDiego05.pdf by Mainzer et.al. (2005), does use microns. To quote from the abstract of that document, " will survey the entire sky in four bands from 3.3 to 23 microns". So the term is in current use. In the body of the paper, the unit is written µm using the lowercase Greek letter mu.

See also: http://en.wikipedia.org/Micrometre which mentions: "NOTE: The American spelling of "micrometer" is rarely used (micron is typically used instead), due to the existence of a measuring device of the same name."

So should a Misplaced Pages article aimed at the general public use the common, typical usage, or the scientifically approved, but rare usage? Bealevideo (talk) 20:44, 4 March 2010 (UTC)

Just because it still sees some use doesn't mean we should be using it. I can show you a lot of dinosaurs still using degrees Kelvin as well, but so what?
Even before my edit, that article already used the symbol for micrometers (µm), right up there in the second sentence and in the infobox, rather than the symbol for microns (µ). And that symbol for micrometers is just thrown out there, in the first usage, without either spelling out the unit, nor including a link to the micrometre article. So let's not have any nonsense about "general public use" in any case. We were already assuming that our readers are numerate enough to understand that first use of micrometers even though they are only in symbol form, not spelled out and not linked. Since we assume they already understand that form, why would they have any problem understanding it when it is spelled out later in the article.
The prefix micro- is well understood, no matter what unit of measure it is applied to. More people are going to understand "micrometer" than are going to understand "micron". When you see the numbers in front of it, some readers will do a double take but it shouldn't take long to figure out that if we are talking about 3.3 micrometers, we aren't talking about three working instruments and pieces of another broken one. At most "micron" might serve better as a "comfort word" (something they are familiar with, even if they don't understand it) for the readers who grew up in the days when "microns" were acceptable units.
The use of "micrometers" as a unit of measure is not rare. (And Misplaced Pages isn't a reliable source in any case, in either the Wikijargon sense or in a more real-world sense of the accuracy of claims such as that one.) It is quite common, as any search engine will show you quite easily. In the U.S., some people who don't like the ambiguity choose instead to use the "micrometres" spelling for this unit, even if they don't use the -re spelling for any other lengths. But most of the people who avoid using "micrometers" simply do so by sticking to its symbol instead, and not spelling it out.
The article also uses "microjanskies", for Pete's sake—though of course it was in a weird hyphenated, camel-case, non-plural "micro-Jansky" monstrosity. That usage might also found in the real world; being found there is no reason for us to accept it, any more than we should accept the microns which were thrown out in the 1960s. Gene Nygaard (talk) 22:06, 4 March 2010 (UTC)
To see the nonsense of that Misplaced Pages claim that "The American spelling of "micrometer" is rarely used", just look at examples you can see in this Google search:
Google hits
"20 micrometers" -wikipedia 52,900
Gene Nygaard (talk) 22:14, 4 March 2010 (UTC)

Case sensitive section links

Well, this link to the section #Query does not work for example with Firefox 3.5.8, Google Chrome 4.0.249, Firefox 3.0.6, Firefox 0.9 and Safari 4.0 for Windows. What kind of Firefox are you using? -- Basilicofresco (msg) 22:49, 9 March 2010 (UTC)

It does not work also with Firefox 1.5 on Windows, Firefox 2.0.0.4 on Windows, Konqueror 4.3 on Ubuntu 9.10 and Firefox 3.6 on Ubuntu 9.10. -- Basilicofresco (msg) 23:39, 9 March 2010 (UTC)

FAC

Hi Gene, have we resolved your concerns? If not, could you list any other concerns you have at the FAC? Thanks! ceranthor 20:39, 14 March 2010 (UTC)

Thanks for reminding me--I did intend to get back there. Gene Nygaard (talk) 21:36, 14 March 2010 (UTC)

R-R Merlin and Spitfire specs alterations

Would you please discuss your alterations to these articles on the talk pages before implementing your changes, and before you go through other articles to correct them? You are altering measurements which are given in the source material - if a respected engineer like Cyril Lovesy describes boost pressures as eg "+15 lb/in²" for a WW II aero engine he does so for a good reason; it is not up to you to alter such information without providing references; without references your conflicting changes can and will be removed. Secondly, please don't add kPa - again, this is your unilateral addition to accepted practice in these and similar articles (why not then add all possible conversions?). Other people have worked extremely hard to bring the Rolls-Royce Merlin up to Featured Article status, please respect their work by at least discussing your changes. Minorhistorian (talk) 23:35, 14 March 2010 (UTC)

You are missing the point - you are altering units which are used in the source material cited; they may be "silly...colloquialisms" to you but why should we believe you rather than an engineer like Stanley Hooker, who helped design the Merlin's supercharger, or Cyril Lovesy who was involved in many aspects of the Merlin's development (read the article cited)? Are you intending to go through every such article "correcting" them without providing source material and without at least some discussion as to why these changes are so suddenly and urgently needed? Statements such as "silly notion that ambiguous, technically improper and unencyclopedic colloquialisms have any place on Misplaced Pages....Those are just a scratching of the surface of the problems so badly in need of attention in articles like this" have no place in Misplaced Pages - it simply says that us poor, unscientific, silly, plebs, who have gone to a great deal of time and trouble to create or edit these articles, should stand back and let scientific experts such as your good self (who, up to the last few days, didn't bother to advise or assist in the process) take them apart again. If you want to help by all means do but for goodness sake don't take such a top-lofty attitude with other editors. Minorhistorian (talk) 20:51, 15 March 2010 (UTC)

Crow Butte revision

Hello Gene, I undid your edit to add conversions to this article as per mining conventions. For the first, total ore, converting 1.4 million metric tons to pounds, this is unnecessary. Total ore grades do not need to be converted to pounds, ounces, etc as this number has no real value. For the second, contained metal, the source states 4.1 million pounds of uranium oxide. I guess we could do a conversion on this number to get a metric ton equivalent, but as the values quoted from the source are rounded (millions for pounds, thousands for tonnes), we need to use those as the starting point. Cheers, Turgan 02:18, 22 March 2010 (UTC)

Stop and think for a bit, Turgan. Does it make any sense whatsoever to measure proven reserves of ore in kilograms, and resulting product in pounds? No, it doesn't, whether or not one or both of them is expressed in any of the various tons instead. They aren't even in the same highest-level system of measurements. One is metric, the other English.
Of course they are rounded. That's part of the basic rules of arithmetic. When you multiply two numbers together, you cannot gain any precision. In that multiplication, it is the least precise number that is controlling. A rough rule is that you should round the result to the same number of significant digits as the least precise multiplicand. For our numbers here, the proven yield of 1,461,800 metric tons has been multiplied by a guessed-at concentration of 0.13% kg/kg, or 0.0013.
So lets assume for the sake of argument that the numbers given are accurate to the precision stated, so we have 1,461,800±50 and 0.0013±5
Result before rounding: 1461800×0.0013 = 1900.34 metric tons
Highest possible: 1461850×0.00135 = 1973.4975
Lowest possible: 1461750×0.00125 = 1827.1875
Thus, the best we can do is to say that it is 1900 metric tons. In fact, even if the original assumptions are accurate, it might really round to two significant digits as either 1.8×10 or 2.0×10 metric tons, but the highest probability is that it would be 1.9×10 tons.
Rounding to thousands or millions or whatever doesn't matter; what matters is the significant digits. It doesn't matter if you call it 123 million metric tons, or 123 billion kilograms, or just plain 123 teragrams or 123 thousandths of a petagram. These are not counting numbers in any case; they are physical measurements, or here estimates of what the physical measurements could be in the future.
You also don't seem to have a very good grasp of the reason why we include conversions. We are doing so to increase the chances that our intended audience will understand what we are saying. Most of the world doesn't really understand pounds; they will use kilograms and their multiples (including metric tons, 1000 kg) for not only for uranium ore but for uranium oxide or uranium as well.
Another factor you don't seem to be considering is that when dual measurements are included, most readers are going to totally ignore one of them. It doesn't slow their reading down much to have the conversions; their brains simply don't bother even processing one of them.
However, when you have something like ore in metric tons multiplied by concentration gives product in pounds, that's jarring to everybody. Nobody is satisified. Nobody gets all of the information in familiar units. Having one of the units in metric units and the other in English units slows down their reading, it destroys their ability to understand what is being talked about. None of the readers get the information they need to connect the two measurements together, to figure out how they relate to each other. The will also wonder what the hell that "0.13%" has to do with anything; nobody is going to see that x pounds is 0.13% of y kilograms.
Note also that the "proven reserves" number here is way over-precise, too. You wouldn't even be able to measure the amount you actually took out of the ground in a given year at one particular mine to five-significant digit precision. Making a guess as to how much could possibly be taken out in the entire future cannot be done with nearly as much precision. In most cases like this, the overprecise numbers result from adding together several subcomponents. In addition, the rounding rules are different. They don't depend on the number of significant digits, but rather on the location of the decimal point. For example, if you add together 37,000 tons and 5 tons, you should still get 37,000 tons, not 37,005 tons (of course, if you have a whole bunch of small numbers, you don't do the rounding until after all of them are added up). But a lot of bean-counters who come up with numbers like this do not properly round their results. Gene Nygaard (talk) 11:57, 22 March 2010 (UTC)

Proposed deletion of Lewis Herreshoff

The article Lewis Herreshoff has been proposed for deletion because of the following concern:

no link to this redirectpage at present. Furthermore, Lewis Herreshoff should not be confused with Lewis Francis Herreshoff, his nephew.

While all contributions to Misplaced Pages are appreciated, content or articles may be deleted for any of several reasons.

You may prevent the proposed deletion by removing the {{dated prod}} notice, but please explain why in your edit summary or on the article's talk page.

Please consider improving the article to address the issues raised. Removing {{dated prod}} will stop the proposed deletion process, but other deletion processes exist. The speedy deletion process can result in deletion without discussion, and articles for deletion allows discussion to reach consensus for deletion. Nuttyrave (talk) 21:34, 24 March 2010 (UTC)

Efficiency and redirects

Gene, wouldn't it be more efficient -- when you find a page whose title has diacriticals and the equivalent non-diacritical redirect doesn't exist -- to simply create the redirect rather than bitching about it on the talkpage? DS (talk) 14:36, 27 March 2010 (UTC)

No. Whenever I run across some of these, the people involved with them are often involved in several similar articles which also do not have redirects. Every once in a great while, somebody takes the hint and a whole lot more get fixed than if I did it myself.
Note further what when I do create the redirects, nobody involved with the article ever knows either that it needed to be done, nor that it has been done. Creating redirects doesn't show up on the history of a page. Sure, I could tell them that I had done so on the talk page--but then all that supposed efficiency you mentioned vanishes, since I need to do both the talk page and the redirect itself--and nobody else is ever going to pick up the ball and fix any of them.
As far as "efficiency" goes, the simplest way to do that is with a page move. That does a much better job of getting peoples attention, but then they start bitching at me. I'll start doing that, if you get people to stand behind me if I do so. Gene Nygaard (talk) 15:16, 27 March 2010 (UTC)
How about making the redirect, then saying on the talk page "I just made this redirect - if anyone knows of similar articles which could use redirects from unaccented spellings, please help" or something. That way it gets fixed even if no-one reads your message, and if they do the explicit request might make them more likely to do something about it. Olaf Davis (talk) 15:39, 27 March 2010 (UTC)
Or post a request on WP:BOTREQ. DS (talk) 16:25, 27 March 2010 (UTC)

Pondemaat

I've replied at Template talk:Convert. I'm not in the habit of requesting conversions unless I have a need for them. Mjroots (talk) 07:13, 8 April 2010 (UTC)

Category talk:Given names

I added a fourth possibility for a name's not appearing in the category. It is the reason the names in question do not appear in the category. In addition to addressing the specific issue, I have tried to avoid a condescending tone. JimCubb (talk) 16:53, 3 June 2010 (UTC)

thrust to weight

in the thrust to weight article you suggest that the ratio needs units. if its the ratio of two of two forces it has no units. if its the ratio of a force/mass then it would be an acceleration and would have units of ft/s or m/s which is it --208.54.14.122 (talk) 06:05, 3 July 2010 (UTC)

The measurement you have for weight is mass, not force. That's what "weight" usually means in any case, despite what your science teacher may have told you. The ratio has units; many people like to pretend that they aren't making an error when they divide pounds force by pounds mass (or kilograms force by kilograms) and end up with a unitless number. But as you point out, it really does have units of acceleration. Gene Nygaard (talk) 08:11, 7 July 2010 (UTC)

Magnus von Wright alphabetised incorrectly

Your edit to the article Magnus von Wright in December 2006 alphabetised him incorrectly. If that alphabetisation would be used, his name would be "Magnus von Von Wright". JIP | Talk 14:58, 16 October 2010 (UTC)

Happy, happy

Happy New Year, and all the best to you and yours! (from warm Cuba) Bzuk (talk) 15:30, 1 January 2011 (UTC)

Request for comment

This message is being sent to you because you have previously edited the Misplaced Pages:Naming conventions (use English) page. There is currently a discussion that may result in a significant change to Misplaced Pages policy. Specifically, a consensus is being sought on if the policies of WP:UCN and WP:EN continues to be working policies for naming biographical articles, or if such policies have been replaced by a new status quo. This discussion is on-going at Misplaced Pages talk:Naming conventions (use English), and your comments would be appreciated. Dolovis (talk) 16:57, 19 May 2011 (UTC)

Attaboy!

Continually Excellent Work
Thanks, Gene, for your clear and useful upgrade of my small introduction to "Cran (unit)"..-GreggEdwards GreggEdwards (talk) 20:03, 31 July 2011 (UTC)

Merge discussion for Ducati 800SS

An article that you have been involved in editing, Ducati 800SS , has been proposed for a merge with another article. If you are interested in the merge discussion, please participate by going here, and adding your comments on the discussion page. Thank you. Sincerely, SamBlob (talk) 02:49, 14 November 2012 (UTC)

Season's tidings!

To you and yours, Have a Merry ______ (fill in the blank) and Happy New Year! FWiW Bzuk (talk) 15:59, 23 December 2012 (UTC)

Nearly three years later...

Hello, Gene Nygaard. You have new messages at Template talk:Miles-chains.
You can remove this notice at any time by removing the {{Talkback}} or {{Tb}} template.

Apologies for the tardiness of the reply!  An optimist on the run! 11:44, 25 January 2013 (UTC)

Vasile Avădanei

Hello and thanks for tagging this for notability back in 2008. It's still tagged 5 years later. You may want to take it to the Notability Notceboard or AfD to get it resolved. Best wishes, Boleyn (talk) 08:54, 30 January 2013 (UTC)

Request to take part in a survey

Hi there. I would very much appreciate it if you could spend ~2 minutes and take a short survey - a project trying to understand why the most active Misplaced Pages contributors (such as yourself) may reduce their activity, or retire. I sent you an email with details, if you did not get it please send me a wikiemail, so that I can send you an email with the survey questions. I would very much appreciate your cooperation, as you are among the most active Misplaced Pages editors who show a pattern of reduced activity, and thus your response would be extremely valuable. Thanks! --Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus| reply here 11:35, 25 July 2013 (UTC)

Hello, Gene Nygaard. Please check your email; you've got mail!
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A historical perspective on moment in physics and mathematics

I have posted a comment in your article/discussion on 'moment'. Please consider my request to elaborate the historical perspective on the issue. Bkpsusmitaa (talk) 16:38, 23 May 2014 (UTC)

Talk:Space_Shuttle_main_engine#Requested_move3

As a significant contributor to that article, you are invited to participate in a discussion about its title. All input welcome. Thank you, victor falk 14:39, 20 June 2014 (UTC)

Global account

Hi Gene! As a Steward I'm involved in the upcoming unification of all accounts organized by the Wikimedia Foundation (see m:Single User Login finalisation announcement). By looking at your your account, I realized that you don't have a global account yet. In order to secure your name, I recommend you to create such account on your own by submitting your password on Special:MergeAccount and unifying your local accounts. If you have any problems with doing that or further questions, please don't hesitate to ping me with {{ping|DerHexer}}. Cheers, —DerHexer (Talk) 10:53, 30 December 2014 (UTC)

ArbCom elections are now open!

Hi,
You appear to be eligible to vote in the current Arbitration Committee election. The Arbitration Committee is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the Misplaced Pages arbitration process. It has the authority to enact binding solutions for disputes between editors, primarily related to serious behavioural issues that the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the ability to impose site bans, topic bans, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The arbitration policy describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail. If you wish to participate, you are welcome to review the candidates' statements and submit your choices on the voting page. For the Election committee, MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 12:54, 23 November 2015 (UTC)

Old business: Section (land)

Hello, Gene! I happened to come across a very old discussion you started at Talk:Section (United States land surveying), which apparently resulted in a consensus to move back to the generic title. I don’t know much about the topic, aside from having spent most of my life in a part of Canada that’s surveyed according to a very similar scheme, but I think there should be at least some mention beyond the USA, noting the differences. I was wondering if there was some reason the move didn’t proceed. I suppose another option would be to start an article on the Canadian equivalent, but because there’d be a lot of redundant overlap I’d rather see a combined article, even with a large American section and a small Canadian one. I realize you haven’t been very active here recently but, as they say, there’s no deadline …—Odysseus1479 05:34, 6 May 2016 (UTC)

Requested move: Pączki → Paczki

Greetings! I have started a requested move discussion at Talk:Pączki#Requested move 2 January 2018, regarding a page relating to this WikiProject. Discussion and opinions are invited. Thanks — Kpalion 16:25, 8 January 2018 (UTC)

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