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Nuance

I've been looking over the RfC at Talk:Ayurveda, trying to parse some of the votes there, and I saw your statement that: "The fact that Ayurveda is a pseudoscience is beyond doubt...The real question that needs to be examined is whether "Ayurveda is a pseudoscience" should be part of: (1) the first sentence; or (2) the opening paragraph; or (3) a later paragraph in the lead." I wonder if such a sweeping generalization is completely accurate. Looking at the article it looks like Ayurveda has been around for much longer than science...like thousands of years before Aristotle was even born. To be unambiguously pseudoscientific, Ayurveda would have had to claim to be both factual and scientific, but such a thing would have been impossible for most of Ayurveda's history. Do you think it be more accurate to say something like "Modern practice of Ayurveda is pseudoscience"? ~Awilley (talk) 18:38, 29 August 2020 (UTC)

@Awilley: Quite possibly. But Astrology has been around for thousands of years as well and look how that article starts off. Practitioners of Ayurveda unambiguously claim that methods which have no evidential or scientific basis actually heal people. That is as a clear an example of pseudoscience as I can imagine (as long as we're using the assumption that medicine works by scientific means, not by magic). We have two RfCs that concluded that Ayurveda is pseudoscientific and that represents long-standing consensus, so I don't think there's any point in trying to sugar-coat that fact, just to please an off-wiki-coodinated campaign of disruption by disgruntled fans of Ayurveda.
If you're interested in how I parsed the !votes, it goes like this:
!Votes as on 27 August 2020
Vote Voters count
First sentence Alexbrn, Crossroads, Retimuko, Tronvillain, Biochemistry&Love, Markworthen, Sitush, Jasksingh, Grayfell, Ozzie10aaaa, TylerDurden8823, JenOttawa, Flyer22 Frozen, Hemiauchenia, PainProf, GPinkerton, AnomalousAtom, Calton, PaleoNeonate, Idealigic, SerChevalerie, hako9, Johnuniq, AlmostFrancis, Beyond My Ken, Levivich, Johnbod 27
First paragraph Girth Summit, Adamfinmo, Ivanvector, Aman.kumar.goel, Azuredivay, Guy Macon, Dhawangupta, JoelleJay, Hob Gadling, JzG, Ravensfire, XOR'easter, BirdValiant, RexxS, Littleolive oil, PackMecEn 16
Oppose Zakaria1978, Field Marshal Aryan, 1990'sguy, Tessaracter, Shrikanthv, Srijanx22, Shashpant, IndyaShri, Shivkarandholiya12, Orientls, TimidGuy, Shashank5988, Elmidae, Accesscrawl, Capitals00, MBlaze Lightning 16
Oppose anywhere Siddsg, Shiv Sahil, Yoonadue, TheodoreIndiana, Mohanabhil, PratyushSinha101, Capankajsmilyo, Abhishek0831996, Amousey, Sanjoydey33, 117.230.63.64, My very best wishes, Mr cosmic king 12
Neutral Manabimasu 1
  • Nobody in the "First sentence group" specifically opposed the first paragraph.
  • Some in the "First paragraph group" opposed the first sentence, others would accept the first sentence as second choice.
  • The "Oppose anywhere" group are arguing to overturn a prior consensus and I don't believe they were participating in the actual RfC in good faith.
  • Many in the two oppose groups have no or very few edits outside of the topic; several were new accounts.
  • There has been a clear campaign coordinated on Twitter to distort consensus away from anything critical of Ayurveda.
My reading of the strengths of the arguments, the head-count and the attempts at distortion suggest to me that there exists a genuine consensus for including the phrase in the first paragraph, but only a weak consensus for the first sentence. Naturally, that depends on my giving much weight to the arguments that WP:PSCI should be followed; and very little to arguments that Ayurveda is not a pseudoscience. Others may weight those differently. --RexxS (talk) 19:34, 29 August 2020 (UTC)
Thank you, that seems a reasonable reading of the consensus there. I had meant to make a more thorough reading of the RfC and close it likely with something along those lines, but it looks like Sandstein beat me to it.
Responding to your Astrology point, I think that Lead sentence evidences a couple of problems we face on Wikipedia:
  1. I think that we editors have the unfortunate tendency to think, perhaps unconsciously, that the issues we spend the most time arguing about are the most important aspects of a topic. If, over many years, we spend 60% of our time on the talk page arguing about whether a topic is pseudoscience, then the importance of that question starts to overshadow everything else in our minds. We tend to seek out and study sources that specifically answer that question, and even as we read general sources about the topic we tend to do it with an eye for pseudoscience. We might even begin to believe that discussion of pseudoscience is the most important/prominent aspect in reliable sources about the topic.
    One way I've found to counter this "focus bias" is to take a step back and explore some high-level tertiary sources that give a birds eye overview of the subject in a small number of paragraphs. If you have a quality book source about the subject, sometimes the author will give you a quick overview of the subject in a few paragraphs in the preface. Or sometimes I'll look up the subject in an encyclopedia like Britannica. That gives me an idea of what is critically important to the subject, which is helpful in determining what is "due weight" for a Lead section here. I encourage you to try this experiment with an open mind, paying attention to your own reactions.
  2. I think that sometimes we editors get into a "righting great wrongs" mentality. We see ourselves as combating rampant falsehoods and we want to use articles as weapons of truth in that battle. There's a tendency to use words to reach out and slap readers in the face with cold hard truth. As satisfying as that might be for us writers, I think it's actually counterproductive for our readers, especially in a crowd-sourced medium like Wikipedia. People nowadays are primed to distrust online sources that strongly disagree with their preexisting views. The more overt the disagreement, the faster the people will stop reading and say, "This is biased". We obviously want to steer people away from unsafe medical practices and quackery, but the people who we most want to convince (those predisposed to mistrust of mainstream medicine) will be the first to assume that Wikipedia is controlled by big pharma, and turn to less reliable sources of information. If you look at sources like WebMD you'll see that they are written very cautiously with this in mind. They're writing to try to convince the most skeptical. Take their articles on Homeopathy for instance. There's no in-your-face declarations like "Homeopathy is pseudoscience". They make cautious, simply-worded explanatory statements like the following: "Some studies show that homeopathic remedies are helpful, while others don’t. Critics chalk up the benefits to the placebo effect. That’s when symptoms improve because you believe the treatment is working -- not because it really is. This can trigger the brain to release chemicals that briefly relieve the pain or other symptoms." or more directly, "There isn’t proof that homeopathic treatments work for any health condition."
Finally, I believe your appeal to the astrology article is weak because it is essentially an "other stuff exists" argument. The fact that a Wikipedia article uses the "_________ is a pseudoscience" construction in its first sentence doesn't mean that's a good way to write an encyclopedia. It would be a much stronger argument if you could provide examples of an external professionally-written encyclopedia that prominently uses that construction. In writing this post I did some research of my own and I didn't find anything at all like that, but I'm interested to see if you come up with something. ~Awilley (talk) 18:54, 31 August 2020 (UTC)
@Awilley: You may be confusing me with someone else. In 2014 I made 3 edits to Ayurveda and 4 edits to Talk:Ayurveda. In July and August I made 3 edits to Ayurveda and 40 to the talk page, all of which were in response to the massive recent effort, coordinated off-wiki, to whitewash the article of any critical commentary. In that period of time I made about 25,000 edits to around 6,000 pages. So I really don't think I qualify as someone who "over many years, [we] spend 60% of our time on the talk page arguing about whether a topic is pseudoscience", but you're entitled to your opinion.
I'm pleased you've developed a strategy to counter "focus bias". Personally, I just go and do more work on improving accessibility, or FA reviews, or improving the code used to import Wikidata information. I've never found the need to spend more than a few weeks concentrating on countering efforts to distort our content, albeit this hasn't been the first time. Nevertheless, I do sometimes look at other tertiary sources as you suggest. In fact in 1989, when my children were young, I invested in a complete 15th edition of Encyclopedia Britannica. So I just took your advice and consulted it to see what it said about Ayurveda. Sadly, it has no article of its own in either the Macropedia or the Micropedia. It has to make do with a passing mention in "Delhi", one sentence in "Alcohol consumption" and few mentions in the dozen paragraphs that Britannica devotes to India in "History of medicine and science". You see, no other encyclopedia has ever had anywhere near the resources to research, write and refine content on so many topics as Wikipedia. It's a fundamental mistake of nostalgia to overestimate the ability of older tertiary sources to cover topics in any detail. It's simply a fact that the absence of the word "pseudoscience" in my edition of Britannica does not in any way indicate that Ayurveda is not a pseudoscience; it merely indicates that Britannica didn't have the resources to cover the topic in anything other than a cursory manner. We are able to take advantage of the many good sources that make the point, along with two RfCs that came to the same conclusion.
I all too often see evidence of editors attempting to "right great wrongs". It might be my bias toward rational, scientific thought (I studied Natural Sciences at university), but I'm afraid I've witnessed a far greater number of SPAs attempting to remove the great wrong of Wikipedia's criticism of fringe beliefs than I have of established editors attempting to right a great wrong in the opposite direction.
I have to disagree with your suggestion that we treat obvious fringe beliefs such as homeopathy with kid gloves to avoid scaring off readers. That's not part of our mission, and anybody writing "Some studies show that homeopathic remedies are helpful, while others don’t. Critics chalk up the benefits to the placebo effect." on Wikipedia would rightly be castigated for giving false balance to critics and supporters of homeopathy. Those "critics" comprise the mainstream scientific view and shouldn't be marginalised in the way that WebMD does. You might want to have a look at the Reliable sources noticeboard for a few examples of how our editors consider it.
I'll see your argument that my appeal to the Astrology article is "weak" and raise you WP:PG: "Wikipedia's policy and guideline pages describe its principles and agreed-upon best practices." We develop our articles by analogy with other similar articles; our policies are descriptive, not prescriptive for that very reason. WP:OTHERSTUFFEXISTS is an essay about deletion discussions and really is a poor rejoinder to the argument that fringe and pseudoscientific topics should be prominently described as such per WP:PSCI, which is policy. I don't think I need to find other tertiary sources that mimic Wikipedia to justify our policies like PSCI. The number of secondary sources are all that concerns me, and the absence of critical commentary from Britannica and the likes is more a reflection of their inability to compete with our project. --RexxS (talk) 20:28, 31 August 2020 (UTC)
I don't think I'm confusing you with anybody else. I'm not talking about the Ayurveda article specifically, but more the alt-med topic area. There's a lot of editorial overlap on those pages, and a quick check shows that Talk:Chiropractic, Talk:Acupuncture, and Talk:Ayurveda are all in your top 10 talk pages edited. Though I'll admit I do sometimes mentally conflate editors who consistently take the same positions. So I do see you as kind of in the same "category" as people like JzG (not a criticism of you or JzG!). And to clarify, I'm not saying you or anybody spends 60% of their total Wikipedia time on the Ayurveda talk page; I'm suggesting that for some people, 60% of their time on the Ayurveda talk page is spent discussing pseudoscience. (Probably an exaggeration, but you get the point.)
It very well may be that Britannica isn't quite up to date on Ayurveda. Though they do have an article online here. Perhaps it is more up-to-date on similar topics. You could try chiropractic, acupuncture, astrology, or homeopathy. Perhaps one of these articles will explicitly label its subject as pseudoscience?
I get uncomfortable when people start criticizing reliable sources as inferior to Wikipedia. Rejecting sources because they aren't as militant about something as we think they should be is dangerous. Wikipedia is supposed to follow and reflect reliable sources. And the tone we use should reflect the very best sources. The tail should not wag the dog.
You mentioned that WP:OTHERSTUFFEXISTS is only about deletion discussions. That's not exactly true. (You may have been thinking about WP:OTHERSTUFF.) Regardless, the logical fallacy is still relevant. (Example: Astrology is labeled "pseudoscience" in the first sentence, and Astrology is a Wikipedia article about a pseudoscience-related topic. Ayurveda is a Wikipedia article about a pseudoscience-related topic, therefore Ayurveda should be labeled "pseusoscience" in the first sentence.)
I see your quote from WP:PG, and I realize that Wikipedia has its own set of best practices, policies, and guidelines. But that alone doesn't mean much until you can cite which policies and guidelines encourage first-sentence labeling like the "_______ is pseudoscience" construction in question. I don't know of any, but I can think of a few that discourage that kind of writing. While WP:NPOV and MOS:WORDS include some oddly specific exceptions for the word "pseudoscience", the bulk of policy makes it clear that it is better to describe how something is pseudoscience rather than to bluntly state that something is pseudoscience. To be clear, my concern isn't whether the topic is pseudoscience (the answer is yes). Nor is it whether we should make it clear in the article that it's pseudoscience (again, obviously yes). My concern is how we should do that. And based on what I've read so far I think a better way to do that is to avoid the value-laden label and use phrases like "_________ has not been proven to be any more effective than the placebo effect in scientific studies" or "Claims that _______ can actually cure disease go against current scientific knowledge and have not been substantiated by medical research." ~Awilley (talk) 00:45, 1 September 2020 (UTC)
@Awilley: You are absolutely right that I've found myself editing for brief periods in controversial medical topics, where I've consistently taken the line that supports the modern, mainstream perspective and opposes efforts to legitimise practices that have no basis in scientific fact. Beside chiropractic, acupuncture and now Ayurveda, I've also been involved in Talk:Abotion and the articles concerning medical marijuana. Those are not alt-med, but are articles where a push has been made at some point by SPAs to swing Wikipedia's article away from critical coverage to something anodyne or even positively supportive of superstitious nonsense. You are therefore right that almost 100% of my time on those talk pages will have been spent in arguing the mainstream view and rebuffing the arguments of the SPAs. On the other hand, that makes up a relatively tiny proportion of my contributions to Wikipedia as a whole.
I don't think that it's a question of whether Britannica is up to date on Ayurveda. After all, it's difficult to make advances in a fringe theory that's been consistently wrong in its basic tenets for 5,000 years. The problem with all of the Britannica articles is that they are all too often written by a single author. There are some exceptions whose byline given as "The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica" (which links to a page that is "unavailable"). Consequently, its Ayurveda article devotes a meagre 5 paragraphs to the subject, and a reader could easily come away with the impression that it is a functional medical system, equipped to deal with medical conditions in just the same way as our modern medical system does. It lacks any criticism of the practices, so many of which are well documented as dangerous. The one paragraph on chiropractic neglects to mention that the system is founded on the principle of treating "vertebral subluxation" (a non-existent condition), nor that there is no evidence for any effect beyond placebo, with the exception of chronic lower back pain, where it is as good as any of several other interventions. The Britannica article on acupuncture is considerably larger and does at least mention that it defies clinical practice, but still credulously repeats the nonsense about Qi flowing through 12 meridians, and fails to report any of the trials showing that sham acupuncture is just as effective. And so on. Britannica quite clearly has cursory content on those topics and fails to place them in the modern perspective, or to give anything other than an "in-universe" narration for much of the time. You may well feel that treating a topic from within its own perspective is the right thing to do, but that fails to adequately cover what we know about so many fringe topics.
If you take the time to examine these RfCs, guidelines and policies, I believe there is an inescapable imperative to describe Ayurveda as pseudoscience, at least within the first paragraph:
  • Talk:Ayurveda/Archive 12 #Category:Pseudoscience – "There is clear support here for adding Category:Pseudoscience to this article as a result of the reliable source coverage of it as a pseudoscience. The primary opposing argument is that Ayurveda is old and therefore shouldn't be labelled pseudoscience for its entire history - there have been strong arguments against this on the basis that it makes testable claims today which have been regarded as pseudoscientific in reliable sources."
  • Talk:Ayurveda/Archive 13 #Pseudoscience – "Consensus is that Ayurveda's status as pseudoscientific is well documented enough that it does not need to be ascribed to a particular source or sources."
  • WP:FRINGE/PS – "Proposals which are generally considered pseudoscience by the scientific community, such as astrology, may properly contain that information and may be categorized as pseudoscience."
  • WP:PSCI – "While pseudoscience may in some cases be significant to an article, it should not obfuscate the description of the mainstream views of the scientific community. Any inclusion of pseudoscientific views should not give them undue weight. The pseudoscientific view should be clearly described as such."
  • MOS:LEAD – "[The lead] serves as an introduction to the article and a summary of its most important contents."
  • MOS:BEGIN – "[The opening paragraph] should establish the context in which the topic is being considered by supplying the set of circumstances or facts that surround it."
  • MOS:FIRST – "[T]he first sentence should give a concise definition: where possible, one that puts the article in context for the nonspecialist. Similarly, if the title is a specialized term, provide the context as early as possible" and "Try to not overload the first sentence by describing everything notable about the subject. Instead use the first sentence to introduce the topic, and then spread the relevant information out over the entire lead."
Nobody in all of the discussions has produced a single policy-based reason why we should not follow Wikipedia's established practices, as documented in our policies and guidelines, and implement the consensus that we should describe Ayurveda as a pseudoscience, and do that prominently. Wikipedia has greater depth of coverage than Britannica and chooses to examine topics with a critical eye, rather than pander to the topic's own view of itself. The body of the article is the place to explain how Ayurveda falls well short of any acceptable standards of verifiability, as it does. The lead is not intended to go into the detail of its subject, but to present to the reader the important facts about it. In my opinion (and that of many other editors), one of the key facts about Ayurveda is that it claims to make use of an internally-consistent theory having the veneer of being scientific (vata, pitta, and kapha) to produce results, while being completely unable to demonstrate the truth of that theory. That is a classic definition of pseudoscience and we should not shirk from saying so. --RexxS (talk) 13:39, 1 September 2020 (UTC)
I said above, Nor is [my concern] whether we should make it clear in the article that it's pseudoscience (again, obviously yes). Let me clarify that I too think that should be in the Lead as well as the body. First paragraph is reasonable. I think we're in complete agreement through the first 6 of the 7 bullet points above. But I read your 7th point (MOS:FIRST) as saying we should not be cramming the word "pseudoscience" into the first sentence. "Pseudoscience" is a specialized term that requires some unpacking. It's useful for categorization, but we tend to overuse it in our prose on Wikipedia. Here's a completely unrelated example of a poor lead sentence that uses too much jargon: "'Jehovah's Witnesses is a millenarian restorationist Christian denomination with nontrinitarian beliefs distinct from mainstream Christianity." We're using specialized words like "nontrinitarian", essentially giving the genus and species, but without actually giving the reader much useful information. It would be more clear to say later in the paragraph something like, "Jehovah's Witnesses use the Bible and identify as Christians, but reject some mainstream Christian doctrines like the idea that Jesus is one of three divine persons that constitute God." ("Nontrinitarian" is another word like "Pseudoscience" that Wikipedians like to use.)
To answer another implied question above, no, I don't think that treating a topic from within its own perspective is the right thing to do. I've spent a good deal of time editing articles about religion, and I'm constantly using phrases like "Adherents believe that ____________." I would never support making unverifiable statements in Wikipedia's voice. Although with religious belief it's a bit different than pseudoscience in that we would never go over to the Catholic church article and write "Catholics believe that God created the universe from nothing, which is incompatible with modern scientific knowledge." The reader already knows that religious belief isn't verifiable by science and doesn't need to be reminded in every other sentence. And most religions don't claim that their beliefs are scientific. But I'm way off topic.
Anyway, I have probably bothered you enough. Thank you for discussing. I hope I've swayed you a bit on the question of directly labeling topics as "pseudoscience" in the first sentence vs. explaining how it's pseudoscience later on in the paragraph. And I hope you don't walk away from this thinking I'm just another "pro-fringe" editor. My interest is in having an encyclopedia that's accessible, professional, and, well, encyclopedic. And speaking to your concern about having SPAs constantly coming out of the woodwork to criticize the article, in my experience that problem subsides dramatically when you are able to write an article not just accurately, but with the neutral tone that people expect from an encyclopedia. ~Awilley (talk) 17:49, 1 September 2020 (UTC)

WikiProject Medicine Newsletter – September 2020

Issue 4—September 2020


WikiProject Medicine Newsletter


Greetings! A relatively quiet month yields a shorter newsletter. The featured section is taking the month off, but please continue to drop comments and ideas at the newsletter talk page. Here is what's happening this month:

Newly recognized content

Willis J. Potts nom. Larry Hockett, reviewed by Ajpolino
Niacin nom. David notMD, reviewed by Ajpolino
Prostate nom. Tom (LT), reviewed by Dunkleosteus77
Ureter nom. Tom (LT), reviewed by Dunkeosteus77






Nominated for review

Complete blood count nom. Spicy
Parkinson's disease at featured article review. Discussion here
Anatomical terms of location nom. Tom (LT)
Antibiotic sensitivity testing nom. Tom (LT), under review by Larry Hockett
Endell Street Military Hospital nom. G. Moore and Dormskirk
Marie Wittman nom. Pi.1415926535, under review by The Most Comfortable Chair
Horace Smithy nom. Larry Hockett
Charles Bingham Penrose nom. Larry Hockett
Louise Bourgeois Boursier nom. Doug Coldwell
Injector pen nom. Berchanhimez

News from around the site

  • A few restrictions on signatures are being gently phased in to make signatures consistently machine-identifiable. This will enable the development of new talk page tools (and fix some holes in our current tools). Affected editors (~ 900 at English Wikipedia) will be contacted. You can see if you're on the naughty list here.

Discussions of interest

For a list of ongoing discussions in WP:MED-tagged articles, see Wikipedia:WikiProject Medicine/Discussions
Also, a reminder to see Article Alerts for a list of medicine-related AfDs, CfDs, merge discussions, and more!

Discuss this issue

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Ajpolino (talk) 02:32, 3 September 2020 (UTC)

IP 162.238.56.66 following user edits

Hi RexxS, I appreciate the warning you offered [1] in response to my complaint [2].

However, you didn't address the other issue in my complaint, which is that fully half of this IP's [3] edits since late July ([4][5][6]) were made to support a dispute that User:Jaydoggmarco was involved in, as my post showed here [7]. This is strong evidence of IP socking or meatpuppetry, which has also been a big problem at Kiki Camarena, as Hipal mentioned on that Talk Page [8]. ToBeFree blocked the IP [9] in that case, but it's a huge pain to contend with IPs being used to remove content from multiple academic sources across different pages on this encylopedia [10][11]. -Darouet (talk) 16:26, 3 September 2020 (UTC)

Thanks for the note, Darouet, but I'm up to my armpits in alligators at Ayurveda and COVID-19, so I'm trying not to take on any more investigations where other admins like ToBeFree are already familiar with the issues. Hipal is a very experienced editor and looks to be working to finding solutions to those issues as well. If the problems don't abate, then please ask me again and I'll look for ways of helping, even if I'm short of time. Cheers --RexxS (talk) 16:36, 3 September 2020 (UTC)
OK, I remember and very much appreciate your COVID-19 work. Do you happen to follow the "This Week in Virology" podcast? I have really liked those, and they provide a nice overview of much of the scientific and clinical work being done in the area of COVID. This week they brought back Christian Drosten of Germany.
@ToBeFree: if you had time to look into this, I'd appreciate it. -Darouet (talk) 16:48, 3 September 2020 (UTC)
Sorry, I currently can't thoroughly investigate the situation, and I prefer the central noticeboards WP:ANI (or WP:AE, if there is no ANI thread already, and if applicable) for this kind of requests. You have correctly created an ANI thread; I can't close it earlier than others. ~ ToBeFree (talk) 17:48, 3 September 2020 (UTC)
This isn't even my IP address, There are a lot more people who disagree with you than you think. Jaydoggmarco (talk) 20:52, 3 September 2020 (UTC)

WLM Wikidata to Commons ? technical solution

I am currently looking at walking to add some photos to commons as part of Wiki Loves Monuments & looking at the interactive map. Many of those showing in red (ie we do not yet have a photo) already have pics in commons but the WLM map does not know this as, although wikidata has the "National Heritage List for England number" (Property:P1216), the entry on commons does not include Template:Listed building England (and presumably other UK countries).

In the light of this I have been doing this manually, but will only be able to do a few hundred and there must be thousands (or tens of thousands) of cases where this applies, therefore I wondered if a bot or similar technology would be able to add the template and relevant NHLE number to the commons entry which would then, 24 hrs later, turn the WLM map from red to blue. This is beyond my technical capabilities but I thought you, or your talk page stalkers, with knowledge of wikidata might be able to assess whether this would be possible and how difficult it would be.

A worked example that I have done manually:

  • The WLM map showed red for "Arlington Mill (Including Cottages Previously Listed As Abutting Arlington Mill) Arlington Mill Cottages (Including Cottages Previously Listed As Abutting Arlington Mill)" in the village of Bibury
  • Commons has a picture for this
  • Wikidata has an entry (Q26590605) for this building. It includes the NHLE identifier 1303546 - if you click on this it takes you to the NHLE record for the building
  • I edited the commons page and added {{Listed building England |1=1303546 }} ( using the template and adding the NHLE number)

Would it be possible to get a bot (or other technical solution) to replicate the process I did manually for several thousand entries in this situation?— Rod talk 07:38, 4 September 2020 (UTC)

(talk page stalker) @Rodw: I think the maps work on whether image (P18) is set in the Wikidata entry, not whether the image is tagged on Commons. A while ago I put together a list of NHLE items with Commons categories but no image, see User:Mike Peel/NHLE no image with commonscat, currently around 3500 entries. I was trying to figure out a way to bot-add the images, but the problem is that it often needs human choice to decide which image is the most relevant one to add. Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 10:30, 4 September 2020 (UTC)

Roger Moore

Hello. You recently added comments when you restored an Edit of mine, on Roger Moore's Page. Since then, that Contribution about Moore's record releases has again be removed. I made a comment upon this at the bottom of Moore's Page, where it says, from memory, something like, "Discus this page", etc., (Sic); it's the one just under 'Edit History'. Could I ask you, please, to add to your interest in this subject by considering making an observation upon the act of reomoving the Entry, again, whether you hold the same opinion as before, when you restored it ? The Discussion can be found under: 'Interesting Inconsistent Editorializing'. Thanks very much. Heath St John. Heath St John (talk) 20:02, 4 September 2020 (UTC)

Hi, Heath St John. I saw the discussion, but I don't have much to add beyond the comment I already made. I restored your original edit because it was removed as a result of being unsourced, and I thought it would be easy to source (and it was). The second removal was on account of "This stuff is unimportant, exciting no comment in WP:SECONDARY sources". In other words, the other editor found it WP:UNDUE for the article. I'm afraid that I don't have enough familiarity with the topic to be be able to dispute that judgement. It's probably no more trivial than his books, but unfortunately – unlike his books – the record was released over 50 years ago, so contemporary secondary sources are going to be difficult to find. I apologise for not being of more help. --RexxS (talk) 12:29, 5 September 2020 (UTC)

Hello. Thanks. To me, we create so many complications for ourselves. The Site is supposed to be a source of factual proof, however boring another might find it. If they find it so, the, they move on, and the truth remains true. Many truths are not found interesting by many people; they remain truel especially unacknowledged truth, which doesn't seek or require approval. This is a good example. It's true; someone finds it tedious: fine; it's removed, yet remains true, but being so still doesn't allow it to be included on a Site that's supposed to be dedicated to it. People reading this in the future shall then know that a Site to which they've turned for information has some Editors who've 'Edited' the complete truth from the Record because they've not found it personally entertaining. A great shame. Thanks for your time.

Heath St John (talk) 13:49, 5 September 2020 (UTC)

Image issue

Hi, RexxS - there's an image issue Bengali language that is leaving a lot of white space after the lead. I can't figure out and would appreciate some guidance here. I'm thinking it's either in the template defaults or an image size I'm not finding, or did the center command do it? Atsme Talk 📧 18:36, 5 September 2020 (UTC)

@Atsme: it's the use of {{clear}} that causes most of the whitespace on wide screens – I've just removed two of them. The real problem is that the infobox is too big and there are far too many images, tables, etc. for the amount of text, so there will be screen widths where it doesn't look right, no matter what you do. --RexxS (talk) 01:53, 6 September 2020 (UTC)

Hi RexxS. Go to WP:Requests for undeletion, click on the 'Francais' language link, it takes you to fr:Wikipédia:Demande de restauration de page which seems correct. Once there, click on 'English' in the left column and it takes you to D. Todd Christofferson, a biographical page. Expected behavior would be to take you back to Wikipedia:Requests for undeletion. This problem doesn't occur if you go to and from the Spanish Wikipedia; it appears specific to French. But how could it be? The Wikidata item at www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q13429672 seems to have all its entries correct. EdJohnston (talk) 03:20, 6 September 2020 (UTC)

A section had the code [[en:D. Todd Christofferson|Wikipedia en anglais]] - which I presume is coded on frwp to override a Wikidata link - but I'm not sure. Regardless, removing it and purging the page seems to have re-linked it appropriately User:EdJohnston - regards, -bɜ:ʳkənhɪmez (User/say hi!) 03:27, 6 September 2020 (UTC)
The fix was your edit on frwp to change fr:Wikipédia:Demande de restauration de page/Refusées#D. Todd Christofferson, David Todd Christofferson. The next mystery is *why* that worked but I'll go quietly away now! Thanks, EdJohnston (talk) 03:44, 6 September 2020 (UTC)
Same here - my understanding is that interlanguage links on enwp only override the wikidata links if they're unpiped - but apparently that piped link was overriding it on frwp. I posted on their non-french community portal regarding the issue, so maybe someone there can investigate it - it was honestly just a hunch I wasn't 100% sure would work to begin with haha. -bɜ:ʳkənhɪmez (User/say hi!) 03:48, 6 September 2020 (UTC)

Nomination for merging of Module:Wikidata Infobox

Module:Wikidata Infobox has been nominated for merging with Module:WikidataIB. You are invited to comment on the discussion at the module's entry on the Templates for discussion page. Thank you. Gonnym (talk) 12:22, 15 September 2020 (UTC)

September

September
Dahlias in Walsdorf

I like today's Main page, with the TFA (thank you for help with the image questions!) on the anniversary day (of both dedication and our concert), a DYK, and a great photographer who didn't make it soon enough, Jürgen Schadeberg, - more on my talk, mostly about the tribute to Brian who shared his sources. --Gerda Arendt (talk) 20:36, 1 September 2020 (UTC)

In contrast: matching colours music to the Dahlias, "brute loud and secretly quiet". - The music (specifically "Meermenschen") was given to me for my birthday. A funeral in 2 days. Brute. - Good points about the alt-texts for DYK images, btw, thank you! --Gerda Arendt (talk) 14:19, 15 September 2020 (UTC)

somewhat complicated paragraph breaks and accessibility

From observing previous discussions, it seems to me that either you will know this, or will know who knows.

I understand the philosophy and general idea behind being careful about list elements (I may be using wrong terminology, but I think I understand the idea).

I understand about using {{paragraph break}} instead of "*Lorem ipsum" on one line and ":Lorem ipsum" on the next. I mean, I understand that:

  • Line one (*Line one)
Line two (:Line two)

is wrong, but

  • Line one
    Line two (*Line one {{pb}}Line two)

is OK.

What I can't figure out how to achieve - and am concerned is impossible - is a legitimate syntax for:

  • Line one
    1. numbered item under one
    2. numbered item under one
Line two (a paragraph break from line one, but no bullet, and NOT on the level of the numbered items.

Is there a way to achieve that without causing screen reader headaches? --Floquenbeam (talk) 20:55, 18 September 2020 (UTC)

Possible, with actual HTML for the numbered lists.

*Line one<ol><li>Item 1</li><li>Item 2</li></ol> Line two

Yields:

  • Line one
    1. Item 1
    2. Item 2
    Line two

--Izno (talk) 21:02, 18 September 2020 (UTC)

Basic wikitext syntax doesn't support this; there's no way to continue a list item from an earlier level. Help:List § Continuing a list item after a sub-item shows how you could use the {{ordered list}} or {{bulleted list}} templates to achieve this, if you'd rather not use the raw HTML (which has its own challenges when combined with how line breaks and white space get handled by the parser). isaacl (talk) 21:54, 18 September 2020 (UTC)

I forgot Possibility #3 - a talk page watcher would know. Thank you, User:Isaacl, I'll play around with {{ordered list}} and the like, and see if I can reach a point where it's marginally intuitive. But I have a bad feeling that if I'm already replying with an indent to someone else's comment, that maybe I won't be able to mix and match their wiki-markup and my html or template magic. Sandbox, here I come! --Floquenbeam (talk) 01:19, 19 September 2020 (UTC)
Oh, I'm sorry User:Izno, I missed that there were two signatures. Thank you, as well. I'll do some playing. --Floquenbeam (talk) 01:21, 19 September 2020 (UTC)
Yeah, in threaded discussions, sometimes I'll just resort to outdenting my reply so I can better manage the internal formatting. Like the help section says, it's a design tradeoff to make wikitext format simpler. isaacl (talk) 05:13, 19 September 2020 (UTC)

URLs

Please answer question on my talk page about if URL is the same as DOI, and doi-access=free is set. AManWithNoPlan (talk) 15:17, 19 September 2020 (UTC)

Double archives

I just noticed at Talk:Ruth Bader Ginsburg that there are two archive areas, one within all the talkpage templates (which apparently is the “real” one) and another (which says there are no archives) underneath all the project template boxes. I don’t know how to fix that without screwing it up, plus I’m kind of invested in the topic, so could you do a little gnoming over there?Montanabw(talk) 02:15, 19 September 2020 (UTC)

The lower box says "No archives yet." because User:ClueBot III/Indices/Talk:Ruth Bader Ginsburg doesn't exist. --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 10:17, 19 September 2020 (UTC)
@Montanabw: I never use ClueBot to do archiving, so I'm unfamiliar with its requirements. @Redrose64: can you fix it and save me from having to research all the issues, please? --RexxS (talk) 13:18, 19 September 2020 (UTC)
These edits sorted it all out. Put simply: before that lot, ClueBot III had never archived the page, so didn't know that Talk:Ruth Bader Ginsburg/Archive 1 already existed. Whilst that was created more than ten years ago, the threads archived there were due to: MiszaBot I (talk · contribs); lowercase sigmabot III (talk · contribs); and User:Technical 13/1CA. In addition, an IP had decided to add two threads somewhere in the middle. Quite a wide variety. --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 20:00, 19 September 2020 (UTC)
Thanks, Redrose64. I assume that the problem arises when the archiving bot is switched from one to another without giving the latest bot a chance to initialise itself. Cheers --RexxS (talk) 01:54, 20 September 2020 (UTC)