Revision as of 00:12, 18 April 2018 editBeyond My Ken (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Page movers, File movers, IP block exemptions, New page reviewers, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers263,582 edits →Citation style inconsistency← Previous edit | Revision as of 03:08, 18 April 2018 edit undoPsantora (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers17,899 edits →Citation style inconsistency: replyNext edit → | ||
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== Citation style inconsistency == | == Citation style inconsistency == | ||
There are at least four citation styles in use in the article at present. | There are at least four citation styles in use in the article at present. | ||
*Several source-specific citation templates are built using {{tl|citation}}, which is Citation Style 2. These have had {{para|mode}} added as an option, so they can emulate CS1. | *Several source-specific citation templates are built using {{tl|citation}}, which is Citation Style 2. These have had {{para|mode}} added as an option, so they can emulate CS1. | ||
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:Please read ]. The citations are relatively consistent '''''in their output''''', the way they read on the page, and that's what CITEVAR is talking about when it refers to "consistency", not about whether the reference uses a template or is "handrolled". How they got there is irrelevant, as long as they are easily accessible by the reader.{{parabr}}The form of reference you used was unclear and practically impossible for new editors of the page to follow. '''''I''''' certainly didn't understand it, and I write the vast majority of the article. () Referencing articles shouldn't require a degree in templatology.{{parabr}}Do not make '''''any'''''' article-wide changes in referencing style until you have a '''''clear consensus from the editors of this page to do so.''''' ] (]) 23:59, 17 April 2018 (UTC) | :Please read ]. The citations are relatively consistent '''''in their output''''', the way they read on the page, and that's what CITEVAR is talking about when it refers to "consistency", not about whether the reference uses a template or is "handrolled". How they got there is irrelevant, as long as they are easily accessible by the reader.{{parabr}}The form of reference you used was unclear and practically impossible for new editors of the page to follow. '''''I''''' certainly didn't understand it, and I write the vast majority of the article. () Referencing articles shouldn't require a degree in templatology.{{parabr}}Do not make '''''any'''''' article-wide changes in referencing style until you have a '''''clear consensus from the editors of this page to do so.''''' ] (]) 23:59, 17 April 2018 (UTC) | ||
::BTW, how much text have you added to this article? ] (]) 00:01, 18 April 2018 (UTC) | ::BTW, how much text have you added to this article? ] (]) 00:01, 18 April 2018 (UTC) | ||
:Hi {{u|Imzadi1979}}, in principal I agree with you regarding keeping references consistent within an article. I think you could be going about slightly more efficiently. Are you familiar with the {{tl|rp}} template? This allows for appending page numbers at the end of references so that the same reference can be re-used multiple times without having to write a new one each time a different page is referenced. I recently made a change to the ] article implementing it. See ] and this . If done smartly, it would reduce the total number of duplicate citations in this article greatly and allow them all to be grouped into their parent reference. Currently it is unclear to which reference "Augustyn & Cohen" or "Koeppel (2015)" is referring. Your version of the article helps this by adding an anchor link to the correct reference, but by using {{tl|rp}} all these various references can be collapsed into just one for each citation. Each page is still cited directly, just in a way that makes it easier to keep track of the various repeated references. Would it help if I gave an example from this article? - ]<small><sup>]<span class="plainlinks"></span></sup>/<sub>]</sub></small> 03:08, 18 April 2018 (UTC) |
Revision as of 03:08, 18 April 2018
New York City B‑class High‑importance | ||||||||||
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Urban studies and planning B‑class High‑importance | ||||||||||
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Untitled
The article was edited by 207.237.92.187 to state that the plan divided Manhattan into about "200 long, narrow blocks", instead of the 2000 that was previously stated. I've changed it back. The plan divides Manhattan into a grid of dimensions approximately 155 (streets) by 12 (avenues), and 155 times 12 is 1860, which is about 2000. Izzycat 01:06, 9 May 2006 (UTC)
Actual distance between avenues (mostly near 14th Street, if that matters)
I'm calculating this from a series of 1879 Bromley plats on the David Rumsey Map Collection.
- 11-10, 10-9, 9-8, 8-7, 7-6: 900 ft/0.17 mi (100 road, 800 block)
- 6-5, 5-4, 4-3: 1020 ft/0.19 mi (100 road, 920 block)
- 3-2: 710 ft/0.13 mi (100 road, 610 block)
- 2-1: 750 ft/0.14 mi (100 road, 650 block)
- 1-A: 703 ft/0.13 mi (90 road, 613 block)
- A-B: 736 ft/0.14 mi (70 road, 666 block)
- B-C, C-D: 746 ft/0.14 mi (70 road, 676 block)
--NE2 14:26, 4 January 2007 (UTC)
Wide streets
The normal width is 60 feet.
It should be pointed out here that the 60' number above includes the 15' sidewalks on each side. This would make the streets (as determined by the 'blacktop' surfacing) only 30'. The 100' avenue measurement is also affected, but is not as uniform, with the sidewalk widths varying. The numbers here (60' and 100') are from property line to property line. Frunobulax (talk) 17:35, 23 April 2008 (UTC)
- As I understand it, the sidewalk is part of the property. The 60' and 100' widths are from curb to curb. Alansohn (talk) 18:52, 23 April 2008 (UTC)
I am an architecture/engineering professional that is working re-drafting an UES site plan as I write this, which is the reason I am reading about this subject here in the first place. I am referencing the Sanborn Manhattan maps constantly in order to get the property lines correct for a 10 block area. I do not know for certain which way the 'sidewalk ownership' issue falls. But the 60' and 100' measures are basically from brickface to brickface; that is, from the facade of the building on one side of the street/avenue to the facade of the building on the other side. This much I am certain of. Plus, I took a tape measure to both sidewalks and the street to make sure they came out to 60', which they did. Frunobulax (talk) 20:22, 30 April 2008 (UTC)
- 14th Street, 100 feet
- 23rd Street, 100 feet
- 34th Street, 100 feet
- 42nd Street, 100 feet
- 57th Street, 100 feet
- 59th Street, 100 feet along Central Park only
- 72nd Street, 100 feet
- 79th Street, 100 feet
- 86th Street, 100 feet
- 96th Street, 100 feet
- 106th Street, 100 feet
- 110th Street, 60 feet east of Central Park; 80 feet west of 9th; 125 feet between 8th and 9th; 85? feet along Central Park (was 60 in 1891)
- 116th Street, 100 feet
- 125th Street, 100 feet (including LaSalle Street; the diagonal portion is also 100 feet)
- 135th Street, 100 feet
- 145th Street, 100 feet
- 155th Street, 100 feet
- 165th Street was to be 100 feet but does not seem to have been built that way
- 175th Street, 100 feet (it doesn't look like this was built as such)
- 185th Street, 100 feet west of Broadway (never built there)
- 195th Street, 100 feet (never built, period)
- 205th Street, 100 feet west of 10th Avenue (never built there)
- 207th Street, 100 feet? (east of 10th Avenue; widened for the bridge )
- 215th Street, 100 feet
- 225th Street, 100 feet
- Block widths (even next to wide streets)
- 212 feet, 1st to 2nd
- 212 or 211.11 feet, 2nd to 3rd
- 192 or 192.1 feet, 3rd to 4th
- 192.1 feet, 4th to 5th
- 194.125 feet, 5th to 6th
- 181.9 feet, 6th to 7th
- 195 feet, 7th to 8th
- 187.10 feet, 8th to 9th
- 184.6 feet, 9th to 10th
- 189.7 feet, 10th to 11th
- 206.6 feet, 11th to 16th
- 184 feet, 16th to 21st
- 197.6 feet, 21st to 42nd
- 200.10 feet, 42nd to 71st
- 204.4 feet, 71st to 86th
- 201.5 feet, 86th to 96th
- 201.10 feet, 96th to 125th
- 199.10 feet, 125th to at least 204th
The information north of 145th Street is mostly from 1879, and was not all built as shown, while the rest is from mainly after 1900. --NE2 11:46, 4 April 2007 (UTC)
Major interrruptions
Eh? Rock Center does not interrupt the grid plan; Times Square makes no major interruption, and Grand Central does. Or am I misunderstanding? Jim.henderson 03:33, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
Significant issues
This article has significant issues and is poorly written. If anything it deserves a major rewrite. The following passages from just a brief overview of three sections are not backed up with citations, and include weseal words and puffery.
"In what would become the U.S., the gridiron dominates" "Carson city may have the smallest" "the powerful De Lancey family" "Unfortunately, the land" "The streets of Lower Manhattan were more "organic"" "relatively inexperienced"
and the absolute worst culprit that I came across
"And in the meantime, the Commissioners were, generally speaking, distracted by various other personal and political business; although they met – infrequently – there is no record of what they discussed, or if they were getting closer to a decision about what their plan would entail."
This might constitute original research too. Llammakey (talk) 11:20, 16 June 2016 (UTC)
- Everything is sourced. Everything. BMK (talk) 15:22, 16 June 2016 (UTC)
- Then cite it. Otherwise I assume its original research or your not attributing. This isn't a book, this isn't a research paper. Everything must be attributed to its source. Llammakey (talk) 15:59, 16 June 2016 (UTC)
Accessibility fix per MOS reverted
I recently made a number of minor changes to this article, including adding a period at the end of a sentence (which is a style choice, I suppose) and converting bold headers into actual wikified headers per WP:PSEUDOHEAD. My edit was reverted. This is a basic accessibility issue. I am requesting that the reverting editor explain why a personal style choice trumps accessibility for subheadings in this article. Perhaps {{TOC limit}} could be used to achieve the desired effect? – Jonesey95 (talk) 06:18, 27 November 2016 (UTC)
- There is no accessibility issue. The headings are simply bolded words, which can be read by any screen reader. There is no need for the subheads under "References" to be hierarchical, cluttering up the TOC. "TOC limit" would affect the entire article, which is undesireable. Beyond My Ken (talk) 18:17, 27 November 2016 (UTC)
External links modified
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Citation style inconsistency
There are at least four citation styles in use in the article at present.
- Several source-specific citation templates are built using {{citation}}, which is Citation Style 2. These have had
|mode=
added as an option, so they can emulate CS1. - One source-specific temple was built using {{cite book}}, and several other footnotes also use that and {{cite news}}. These are Citation Style 1, and could use
|mode=cs2
to emulate CS2 if desired. - Several footnotes are hand-crafted and use no templates. They render output that's not consistent with either CS1 or CS2. In many cases, a space is missing between "p." or "pp." and the page number(s), and some use "Accessed" where the templates use "Retrieved" before an access date, with a variety of punctuation.
- The various shortened citations are hand-crafted and don't consistently display the year of publication, with a variety of formats for displaying the page numbers.
I added the facility for the source-specific templates to emulate either CS1 or CS2. I care not which is used, but the two should not be mixed in the same article as in here without using the mode parameter as needed to put them all into the same style. Those templates can now also support |ref=
which works with a variety of options for templated Harvard-style references to link between a shortened citation back to the full citation. {{Harvp}} supplies an output that's consistent with the rest, putting the author last names before the year in parentheses and the page number(s). Additionally, they can be used CMOS-style, with the first citation in full and a shortened cite for subsequent references. In any case, I'm moving on. Imzadi 1979 → 23:55, 17 April 2018 (UTC)
- Please read WP:CITEVAR. The citations are relatively consistent in their output, the way they read on the page, and that's what CITEVAR is talking about when it refers to "consistency", not about whether the reference uses a template or is "handrolled". How they got there is irrelevant, as long as they are easily accessible by the reader.The form of reference you used was unclear and practically impossible for new editors of the page to follow. I certainly didn't understand it, and I write the vast majority of the article. (89.5% authorship) Referencing articles shouldn't require a degree in templatology.Do not make any' article-wide changes in referencing style until you have a clear consensus from the editors of this page to do so. Beyond My Ken (talk) 23:59, 17 April 2018 (UTC)
- BTW, how much text have you added to this article? Beyond My Ken (talk) 00:01, 18 April 2018 (UTC)
- Hi Imzadi1979, in principal I agree with you regarding keeping references consistent within an article. I think you could be going about slightly more efficiently. Are you familiar with the {{rp}} template? This allows for appending page numbers at the end of references so that the same reference can be re-used multiple times without having to write a new one each time a different page is referenced. I recently made a change to the Cobble Hill, Brooklyn article implementing it. See here and this diff. If done smartly, it would reduce the total number of duplicate citations in this article greatly and allow them all to be grouped into their parent reference. Currently it is unclear to which reference "Augustyn & Cohen" or "Koeppel (2015)" is referring. Your version of the article helps this by adding an anchor link to the correct reference, but by using {{rp}} all these various references can be collapsed into just one for each citation. Each page is still cited directly, just in a way that makes it easier to keep track of the various repeated references. Would it help if I gave an example from this article? - Paul/C 03:08, 18 April 2018 (UTC)