Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Years
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[edit] Still active?
I've moved Wikipedia:WikiProject Years to the Inactive section of the WikiProject page, as it hasn't been edited since Nov 1st; I wanted to let you all know, and ask if you're still working on it. If so, feel free to move it back up into the active section. JesseW 07:35, 3 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- Still working on what?
- the content of Wikipedia:WikiProject Years page?
- the content of the year pages?
- something else?
- -- Smjg 10:42, 18 Jan 2005 (UTC)
I've joined and am active (see below for new discussionTrevor MacInnis
[edit] Format problems
I am seeing too many bits like this:
- July 27 - Shea Hillenbrand, baseball player
- July 27 - Alex Rodriguez, baseball star
which comes out a mess for any user whose date format pref is set to little-endian. It is necessary to linkify all instances of the date for it to be formatted properly. How can we get this message across to everyone? -- Smjg 10:42, 18 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Looking now, some of them are being formatted like this:
- July 27
- Shea Hillenbrand, baseball player
- Alex Rodriguez, baseball star
and sometimes with ":" or " -" following the date, while others remain as separate first-level bullet points. This applies to both year and day-of-year pages. We ought to decide on one format and stick to it. -- Smjg 17:06, 12 May 2005 (UTC)
Now the survey has produced a consensus. We shall make them look like this:
- July 27 - Shea Hillenbrand, baseball player
- July 27 - Alex Rodriguez, baseball star
-- Smjg 17:24, 24 October 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Numbers and Years
There have been a few sporadic discussions of this recently. I'd like to see all of the digits at the default artucle/redirect for 0 through 9; and we should rethink how we redirect people to year articles. The primary reason for leaving years at the default NNNN artielc is to make linking of dates easy. We can still consider whether we want that to be the article proper, or a redirect from NNNN --> NNNN AD, AD NNNN, or NNNN (year). +sj + 19:28, 12 May 2005 (UTC)
- There are some NPOV reasons to specify what is meant by a given year-number, aside from simple parity with numbers themselves. For instance people who date things according to other calendars -- lunar calendars, or dated from some other epoch -- will have to make do with something like 3824 (Mnpxjr Calendar), or just 3824 MC... that said, the most frequent reference to many four-digit numbers will of course be to that year AD. +sj +
[edit] Yearbot
People who are working on year articles may be interested in User:Gdr/Yearbot, a program I've written that assists with the updating of "Births" and "Deaths" sections of year articles, by gathering entries from the birth and death categories for the year and examining the articles to try to discover descriptions, dates, and sort keys. I've used it to update all the years in the range 1500–1600 and it works well if used by a careful operator. I'm making the source code available in case someone else wants to use the program. Gdr 21:50, 2005 May 23 (UTC)
- Wikipedia:People_by_year/Reports/Stats#Articles_also_covered_by_year_pages : shows how many articles of a given year in the categories for year of birth/death are also linked from the year pages.
- I updated the list today with data from May 16. -- User:Docu
Yes, you can see quite clearly from the stats that by May 16 I had covered 1500–1509! Yearbot won't quite bring the counts up to 100% for all years, because articles about people whose dates are uncertain (and therefore not appropriate for inclusion on the year articles) nonetheless often belong to a category anyway. A typical example is Giovanni Angelo Montorsoli who is in Category:1507 births even though it is not known whether he was born in that year. Gdr 17:33, 2005 Jun 17 (UTC)
- Hmm, working on year articles is a good way of finding duplicates. Just today I found John Hale and John P. Hale; Charles Frederick of Holstein-Gottorp and Karl Friedrich, Duke of Holstein-Gottorp; Geert Groote and Gerhard Groot; Felim O'Conor and Felim mac Aedh Ua Conchobair; Claude Perrin and Claude Victor-Perrin, duc de Belluno; Eleanor of Aragón and Leonora of Aragon... Gdr 23:54, 2005 Jun 17 (UTC)
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- Good point! Here is a report that identifies some of them: People by year/Reports/People with same birth and death year. It currently matches year of birth, death and part of the sortkey. It seems to dig up a lot of {{1911}} articles imported twice. -- User:Docu
[edit] Discussion
I think that the section "this year in art, culture, and fashion" should be left out. I prefer the frame that has links to those pages. LittleDan 16:48 16 Jun 2003 (UTC)
- Yep. It is redundant and takes up unnecessary space (I hate having to list things twice). I vote for just having the box links and leaving out the actual section. Oh and each other heading should be a real heading (==) instead of just being bolded. --mav
- No, I like the bolded look. It cleans up the page. We don't want giant headings everywhere. But there is one problem with deleting the art, culture, and fashion section. Parts of it might not be listed in the individual pages, so we'd have to check each one. I've deleted the 'art, culture, and fashion' section from the template. LittleDan 15:22 17 Jun 2003 (UTC)
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- I would also prefer having actual headings as it makes editing (especially for long articles) easier. If it can be done automatically (some script) for all pages then it would be great, otherwise might as well leave them as they are. Dori 01:29, 16 Aug 2003 (UTC)
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- I'd also like to add my support to the idea of headings being real headings and not just bolded. It's best (especially in the long run) to use proper mark-up not just a lower-level description of what it looks like. If headings appear too big on some browsers (they don't on mine), then that can be fixed by CSS markup. Furthermore, the Wikipedia:Guide to Layout recommends this. -- Cabalamat 02:29, 29 Aug 2003 (UTC)
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- I also agree with the headings. It looks like we are close to a consensus here. olivier 17:38, 30 Sep 2003 (UTC)
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- I'm involved in the current project for the year in science pages, and have been adding links to them from the general year pages as they are built. I much prefer the See also boxes rather than art, culture, and fashon heading, as the year in science doesn't seem to fit there, yet it seems clunky to add another section just for the year in science link. Additionally, I agree with using headings over bolded headlines, and have been editing pages to use headings whenever I'm adding the "year in science" link. Hope I didn't step on anyone's toes. Gentgeen 09:52, 1 Nov 2003 (UTC)
Regarding specific dates, there are a lot of Wikipedia pages that refer to a specific date (day, month and year) on which an event occurred. These are not automatically put on the page for that year. Wouldn't it be nice if they were, in a semi-automated way (this could be done on a batch process running perhaps once per day or once per week). As an example of what I mean, consider the Eurofighter Typhoon site.
This contains the sentence:
- The maiden flight of the Typhoon prototype took place on March 27, 1994 (then just known as the Eurofighter EF 2000).
The automatic process could insert this entry in the appropriate place in the 1994 page:
- March 27 - AUTOMATED ENTRY from Eurofighter Typhoon: The maiden flight of the Typhoon prototype took place on March 27, 1994 (then just known as the Eurofighter EF 2000).
I expect there are a few things in this proposal that need to be ironed out.
-- Cabalamat 02:39, 29 Aug 2003 (UTC)
- The main problem is that it gets so many bad entries. Most of these should simply be deleted again, the rest would probably need editing. If you do this at all, I'd propose to use to create some 1994/Temp page, and then create entries from there. I have the feeling that getting a list of them is the only useful thing here; rewriting might well be easier than editing. Andre Engels 11:16, 30 Sep 2003 (UTC)
- I would suggest to have an additional paragraph: Monarchs/Presidents. The idea being to know who was in office where during that year. For instance, when I would read: "The Seven Years' War (1756 - 1763) pitted Great Britain, Prussia and Hanover against France, Austria, Russia, Sweden, and Saxony." I could click on the dates and see who were the guys in power during that period. See my embryonic proposal at: 1756. olivier 00:29, 30 Sep 2003 (UTC)
- I love that. It only makes boring year pages more attractive! -- Taku
- Can we put practical rulers as well? Like Monarchs/Presidents/Practical rules or something. For example, in 1756 Japan was ruled by shogun. -- Taku
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- Same situation for Prime Ministers of the UK, Chancellors of Germany, various Governors... I agree that we should find a satisfying title for the paragraph that would include all of them. Monarchs/Presidents/Practical rulers is a bit bulky... olivier 01:40, 30 Sep 2003 (UTC)
- I know it doesn't sound good. Simply rulers or national leaders? -- Taku
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- I think that's a good term, yes. Andre Engels 11:18, 30 Sep 2003 (UTC)
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- Sounds good. Another option would be "Heads of states". olivier 17:38, 30 Sep 2003 (UTC)
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- I like Heads of states. If no objection is seen, I am going to change the heading. -- Taku 23:21, Oct 3, 2003 (UTC)
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- Popes, antipopes, some important ministers and leaders of breakaway or important dependent territories could also usefully find their way in the list. Does "heads of states" cover these guys adequately? I would say it does, but I would be happy to have other opinions. olivier 08:38, 4 Oct 2003 (UTC)
I'm definitely coming in late to this discussion (which I only found out because of Olivier's edit to AD 680), but I do have a couple of reservations:
- Won't this overwhelm entries of earlier years where outside of the "Heads of states" section there might only be one or two entries? (Hopefully this will not always be the case, but as one person who is trying to add content to entries before AD 1000, there are far more years that would be overwhelmed than not.)
- Where do we draw the line on inclusion of "Heads of states"? For example, currently there are about 170 sovereign countries in the World -- which ones do we include & exclude? The problem only gets more entangled the further back we go, & we lay ourselves open to charges of being selective. (For example, including every king of Sparta while omitting any mention of the kings of Nubia, or various client kingdoms of China or the current Indian Empire.)
Until these points are addressed, could the addition of this section be kept to the entries after AD 1000 -- & preferably after 1500? Those entries tend to be quite verbose, & a section like this would be of most benefit. -- llywrch 20:47, 16 Oct 2003 (UTC)
- Interesting. I would almost be tempted to say that having all the lists of the all the heads of states pre-1000 or pre-15000 would be a good problem to have. Basically, we are talking about a problem that we do not have yet, but that we will have sometime down the road, after the "heads of states" lists become overpopulated (It is far from being the case at this point). 3 points come to my mind to tentatively address these issues:
- 1- Let us go back to the reason why we want (or don't want) to have the list of "heads of states" in the years' pages. I have started to include this section in order to generate a discussion, and also because I felt the need to have this information at some point. As I said before, having a page detailing what the world looked like in 680 would be interesting - to me, at least, and slightly more useful than knowing, for instance, who was born this year. Figuring out why we want these lists might help us figure out who should be in the lists. (I know I am not solving the problem here...)
- 2- Regarding the overwhelming issue. IF you intend to add the births/death and changes of power of all the rulers you are mentioning, then the list of heads of states should not be longer than the other lists on the page. I agree that this would make these pages VERY long. Now, the question is also whether we want to include all these events in the years' pages, and we arrive at a broader question: which granularity do we want to have on these pages? The question has been raised by User:Mazzy at Wikipedia talk:Timeline standards, but no agreement has been reached yet, as far as I know.
- 3- Wikipedia dynamics. In my Wikipedia experience, problems are best solved when they actually arise. Here is my suggestion: if some people feel enthusiatic about filling such huge lists as detailed "Heads of states" lists, then let us let them do it. It is a work that we probably want to see being done, and if we impose restrictions at this early stage, then these contributions might be postponed for a very long time. If we eventually figure out that some lists have grown out of control, then we could for instance simply create a separate page "Heads of states in 680".
- Bottom line. My suggestion is to continue populating these lists, and if they grow too big, let us create separate pages. That reminds me a bit of a discussion we had at Talk:East Germany (see 29 Jun 2003). In this case, I belive that the presence of the template has generated more contributions than if it had not been applied. Of course, these are my suggestions, and I am glad to read others' opinions. olivier 23:42, 16 Oct 2003 (UTC)
I would suggest to reduce the 'this year in...' box to only those years where at least one of these actually exist, and then still only those that actually do exist. Having an empty link to 1001 in sports on 1001 is just silliness, in my opinion. Andre Engels 11:16, 30 Sep 2003 (UTC)
- Your voice and the voice of reason seem to be pretty close... olivier 17:38, 30 Sep 2003 (UTC)
See my suggestion for The world in at 1220. olivier 03:46, 5 Oct 2003 (UTC)
I'd like to suggest the following addition to the template for year pages, at e.g. 80:
- Alternate uses: see Number 80
in wikimarkup:
- :''Alternate uses: see [[Number 80]]''
at the beginning of the pages. Number 80 is a redirect to eighty.
This would replace notes such as (on 10):
- For the number 10, see ten
- There are quite a few albums called 10, including recordings by LL Cool J and Pearl Jam. For a complete list, see Ten.
or (on 24):
- For the number 24, see twenty-four.
- For the television series, see 24 (television).
--User:Docu
- I added it. -- User:Docu
Formatting change: Following the introduction of the TOC feature, recent years (e.g. 2002, 2003) use section headers instead of the three ' .. I'd suggest to update the template this way and use section headers for Events Births Deaths Nobel Prizes. --User:Docu
- Fully agree with section headers in years' articles. olivier 15:45, Dec 21, 2003 (UTC)
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- Ok then, I added the result to Wikipedia:Timeline standards. -- User:Docu
<from Wikipedia talk:Timeline standards > I'm having trouble with Docu here. Will people agree with me that, given that the number articles are, for example, at one hundred two, not Number 102, it makes sense that the links from the year pages to the number pages point to one hundred two and not to the redirect Number 102? Also, since any "third" uses of numbers besides the numbers itself and the years are to be listed at the number pages, that there is no point in duplicating those at the year pages, hence we don't need "alternate uses", only the link to the number page? --Wik 10:58, Feb 15, 2004 (UTC)
- I agree with Docu that it looks better to have the number in digits rather than spelt out, would you be happy with something like;
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- For the number, see the article on the number 102.
- -- Ams80 11:04, 15 Feb 2004 (UTC)
- I don't mind if wick changes the links from Number 102 to Number 102. BTW according to some of the notes, changes to the template are being discussed on Wikipedia:Wikiproject Years, until then, we should leave the template as it had been, and not make any unilateral changes. -- User:Docu
102 (number) seems to have the vast majority of votes on Talk:List of numbers/Deletion
</from Wikipedia talk:Timeline standards >
I suggest changing
- Alternate uses: see Number 80
to
- For the number, see eighty.
Direct links are to be preferred. This way the reader sees right away that the number articles are at the spelled out word. The redirect here is a pointless confusion. --Wik 03:08, Feb 17, 2004 (UTC)
Per majority vote, it should be changed to 80 (number) in anticipation of the move to this format.
- I agree, not much use to change the template to the old format. If a direcly link is perferred, we could just use :''Alternate uses: see [[80 (number)|Number 80]]'' -- User:Docu
[edit] page layout
Just has this page pointed out to me. This template may have been used to set up a large number of the year pages but perhaps 50% of the more recent hundred years or so no longer conform to it (not me I've only talked about it). In particular in many pages the year in topic has been replaced by a "see also" box in the TRH of the page with the same information in it, in many pages the box has been added and just duplicates the paragraph. A few pages have neither. Furthermore the year in topic paragraph has started growing virtually all of the referred page (especially in television) as bullets carried over.
For this reason I have proposed on my talk pages and the year talks 1700-2000 that we get everything onto a standard format and suggested we go for the "see also" boxes not the paragraph (to avoid carry over of sub-bullets and reduce page length). I gave a month's notice and have just had this page pointed out to me. So I will not change them yet and ask you to consider (bearing in mind that the status quo described above is already heavily broken by someone else). --(talk)BozMo 17:32, 11 May 2004 (UTC)
I will also copy over reactions of several other people to this proposal on my talk page here:
I think the page layout for years is inconsistent and a bit messy. The perfect year in my view is 1896 1921 etc. where the year by topic only appears as a box in the top right of the page. Some years instead have year by topic as a paragraph 1801. Some have both. In some cases the paragraph duplicates a lot of info under the link 1945 especially for year-television. Clearly people have gone to a lot of trouble putting these things in as part of organic growth and I do not want to upset people by pruning them out without discussion. So I have marked on some of the year pages (running very slowly today) and referred it here for comments. --BozMo
If no one comments in a month I will change the pages I have marked in the way I have proposed and mark a load more pages. But I'll have to find a sensible time of day to do it: --BozMo
1850-1950 now all flagged for change --BozMo 19:22, 6 May 2004 (UTC)
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- Looks good in principle. I've been copying snippets from a few selected years for the fledgling Maori Wikipedia. Not standardised yet. I'd be pleased to see more standardisation of the English version before adding many more years to Maori. No hurry! Robin Patterson 20:26, 6 May 2004 (UTC)
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- Looks good. I think many of the pages already conform to that format. But one thing to keep in mind is we are in the process of removing all "Heads of State" portions and adding links to List of state leaders in 1850 (or whatever year). These state leaders pages are by no means complete yet, but are being worked on, and will continue to be for quite some time, I imagine. -R. fiend 21:21, 6 May 2004 (UTC)
- --BozMo 10:07, 7 May 2004 (UTC)Thanks. Compliance is about 50% currently but post 1950 compliance is zero. I will do the earlier pages first.
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- If I remember correctly the extra info in the 1950-onward pages was put there before the separate "Year in" pages were developed. So my personal preference is to move the info to the subpages. However I think it would be good to have a poll on it (post-1950 I mean, I notice 1945 is the same too), but I'm unsure where to put a poll where it would get found by those interested. Anyway I'm definitely willing to help out with the changes. - Hephaestos|§ 14:02, 7 May 2004 (UTC)
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Thanks, particualrly for the offer to help! Agree a poll is a good idea. The size of proposed deletion gets much worse once TV gets going, which is why I am being careful as I don't want to upset them. Anyway lets wait a month as promised and them fix pre 1950s which will make sorting the later pages look less personal. --BozMo 14:12, 7 May 2004 (UTC)
Bozmo, there is already a standard for timeline pages. See Wikipedia:Timeline standards for more information. If you wish to make everything conform to the already agreed upon standard, please do so, otherwise, dont arbitrarily start changing pages to what you would like to see. Submit what you want to change to Wikipedia:WikiProject Years, and if there is a consensus, you can start making the changes you want to. Thanks! Theon 16:55, May 11, 2004 (UTC)
BozMo- I just looked over a couple of the pages you referred to as being good pages, and they are pages that are already standards compliant. I think that if you want to go in and standardize pages to the already agreed to standard, thats perfectly fine. I was worried you were going to create a completely new standard (as some people have tried to do) and go start changing things arbitrarily (which incidentally, is part of the reason why everything is so messy now). Just so long as you dont go about deleting things, and try to categorize everything within the agreed to standard, we should be ok.
Theon 18:21, May 11, 2004 (UTC)
Perhaps I am being unclear. What I am proposing exactly is deleting the "year in topic" paragraph from all pages which still have it including all the sub bullets and replacing it, where one does not already exist, with a "see also" box. Effectively turning 1849 into 1850. But post 1950 this involves deleting a significant sub-bullets (which are repeated on other pages but not in the see also box). You'll appreciate this is a number of days work and I would prefer a very good agreement before starting... I am being ultra cautious!--BozMo 19:09, 11 May 2004 (UTC)
- I dont have a problem with that proposal, but see if you cant clean up the box in 1850 so that the text within the box is justified to the left, right now the text is touching the right hand side fo the box, which looks unclean. Theon 20:47, May 11, 2004 (UTC)
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- Tried a few things and cannot manage it. I will try in the sandbox when I have time unless anyone has a good idea?--BozMo 10:18, 12 May 2004 (UTC)
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- Ive formatted the 1850 box, the trick is you have to get rid of the bullets, they screw it up. Border should be 1px, cell padding should be 10px and you need a <br> tag after each entry, that centers everything, and if you want to put - in front of each entry, that still looks nice. Theon 15:50, May 12, 2004 (UTC)
[edit] Year Navbox
Years: 1999 2000 2001 - 2002 - 2003 2004 2005 |
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Decades: 1970s 1980s 1990s - 2000s - 2010s 2020s 2030s |
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Centuries: 19th century - 20th century - 21st century News by month: 2002 in architecture |
I've always thought that the navigational elements at the top of the year pages were rather unattractive, so I've worked up a template for a navbox and implemented it on 2000 through 2005 for now. The 2002 box is located at right. Comments/thoughts? -- Seth Ilys 23:46, 24 May 2004 (UTC)
- Did you implement this as a MediaWiki page? It looks good, maybe you should talk to BozMo. Hes trying to standardize the infobox for years from about 1700 on (see above discussion) Theon 02:04, May 25, 2004 (UTC)
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- Thanks both for drawing me here. Yes I like the box display but (1)I strongly prefer it if you could get rid of the "year in topic" paragrapgs at the same time (2) it would be nice to have a family of variations for different time periods since what is available for these boxes varies a lot (3) I wonder if we can do something better with the content box. However, I think that (1) at least is a debate we'll have to have. As mentioned if you get the 1950s onward agreed (which is where the contraversy is I and others will happily sort the other few thousand years). It took me a while to find this page I think we need to identify other people likely to argue and bring them here too --BozMo|talk 18:42, 26 May 2004 (UTC)
[edit] Inter-Language Links
Is there an automated way/bot that can add inter-language links to the years? The Chinese Wiki now has a page for every year after 28BC, and a smattering of pages before that. The links are all quite regular. The AD years are like this: "1002年", or "34年", the BC years are like this: "前1002年","前34年". I'm guessing some of the other languages follow their own patterns as well. --Vina 06:13, 2 Jul 2004 (UTC)
[edit] Year in (Nations)
I've been trying to standardize all the year pages generally along the lines of this newer format. I think 1700-1920 basically follow that pattern now. The main difference between this format and the other prevalent one is that the "Heads of states" are deleted and instead there is a link to a separate page below the "year in topic" box. My new concern is that there are alot of "(year) in India", "Germany", "UK", etc. popping up. It used to just be Canada, which just seemed kind of random, but now its getting too cluttered. We could soon easily have a couple dozen more links under the other year in topic links. Is there a way we can streamline this? Maybe have one link to an index of all the counties covered for that year? I'd like to finish up the 20th century soon, but this is sort of in the way. Any suggestions? -R. fiend 20:58, 9 Aug 2004 (UTC)
[edit] Days of the week
Some years have days of the week on every event (eg 1985) and some don't (eg 1991). I think it would be better if we removed the days of the week from every year because they are not necessary. I think we need to make it uniform. 132.205.47.180 zh:Wikipedia:WikiProject年
[edit] Expanding birth and death listings
For those who want to expand the listings on year pages, People by year offers a report on how many people listed in the year categories are also listed on the year pages (1800-2004).
On 2004 October 13, the percentages range:
- for births: from 0% (e.g. none of the 3 births in Category:1993 births is listed on 1993) to 100% (2004)
- for deaths: from 2% (1858) to 36% (1962).
As the report just checks if the article in the category is directly linked from the year page, articles linked through redirects or listed in the events section get miscounted.
BTW the report is at Wikipedia:People by year/Reports/Stats#Articles_also_covered_by_year_pages.
-- User:Docu
[edit] Headings for Ancient History
The template, while reasonable for the modern age, is unwieldy for those years which find themselves relatively empty of events (or perhaps I should say modern knowledge of events). The unintentional result is that the header is larger then the list of events, and thus, looks strange and ridiculous. There are also four seperate edit boxes for three to seven lines of text sometimes, straining reality even more. I have edited and looked at hundreds of these years, most of my work done primarily in the 800s, 900s, 1100s and 1200s and in those backwaters this template has been replaced most of the time with a bolding of Events, Births and Deaths instead of the larger versions. While this is holding up for most of it, User:Docu has recently brought it to my attention that this template is being violated and I am violating it on many edits, trying to eliminate the spare large headings in the midst of forests of smaller ones. I submit that this smaller template be used for those years with few events and births known to us, and the larger template be left to years of fuller knowledge. --TheGrza 01:29, Apr 13, 2005 (UTC)
(I set 908 to the template to show the insanity of the template for these years.)--TheGrza 01:35, Apr 13, 2005 (UTC)
- The template you favor is in fact the older version of this template. Many pages that haven't been edited since still have it. Personally, I tend to agree that three section headers aren't optimal in pages with little content, but I still favor consistency and would keep them. A better sample for using bolded letter might be 900, as 908 doesn't have any content at all anyways (at least when you set it to the template). If 908 wasn't a year page, it would already have been deleted.
- BTW depending on the skin the three headers look more or less imposing and an easy way to add at least something to 908 is Category:908 deaths (there is no subcategory for Category:Births by year for 908. -- User:Docu
[edit] Ancient years, decades, and centuries
I have been toiling in obscurity in the mid-12th century, and was hoping someone would stop by and have a look. Currently I've completed year articles 1249 through 1267, and the decade article 1250s. I'm particularly interested in what people think of the 1250s article, in which I've taken the following (unusual) steps:
- Added a couple paragraphs discussing the decade's major events in an easy-to-read prose form;
- Categorized the most (but not all) of the decade's events into themes so they are more easily parsed (I tried to leave out really inconsequential events that made year articles just because we don't know anything else that happened that year); and
- Picked out only the most important / noteworthy births and deaths, rather than list all of the known births / deaths in the decade.
(Also, I've tried to add relevant pictures to the year articles to make them more visually interesting. What do you think?)
My goal is to create a system where people can "zoom out" from year to decade to century to get a good sense of a particular time in history. For example, if a reader reads only 1257, he would have no idea that one of the dominating trends in that decade was the Mongol expansion; by using the "for broader historical context" links at the top of the page, he is directed to see 1250s which summarizes in prose the two main themes in the decade as (basically) "Mongol expansion in Asia; cultural changes in Europe". Eventually, he could zoom out to 13th century and see the time he is interested in in the context of historical eras and ages, and very broad political and cultural changes.
Since this is somewhat different than existing usage of decade and century pages, I was hoping to get some feedback from this group. Thanks! - Bryan is Bantman 21:30, May 2, 2005 (UTC)
- Another question I have -- for early years such as these, dates of birth and death are often unknown. What is the appropriate way to order births and deaths within a given year? I have either been putting more significant people first, or ignoring the problem and putting them in in the order I find them. I suppose alphabetically is NPOV, but it's hard to put minor barons high on the list and bury popes, kings, and emperors in the middle.
- A related question is for people whose year of birth or death is uncertain. For "born c. xxxx", I put them in that year only; I think that's relatively straightforward. The question is for those with "born xxxx or xxxx+1" dates; should they be included in both year articles, the earliest or latest year by convention, or excluded altogether? - Bryan is Bantman 21:36, May 2, 2005 (UTC)
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- In my opinion if year of birth or death is uncertain, leave the person out of the list in the year. The article is about the year, after all. However, adding it in the proper decade may be feasible. Sholtar 23:00, May 18, 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Is vs. Was
I noticed that almost all of the years say "(year) is a common year..." as opposed to "(year) was a common year..." A couple that I've noticed say was but the consensus goes with is. I think this is incorrect. As the year has already occurred, it should be was. The current year at any given time could say is, or even better in my opinion could have something special saying "(year) is the current year, and is..." or something to that effect. Future years could say will be. I think that this would be more grammatically correct and would probably read better as well. Any opinions? If nobody's against it for a couple weeks I'll go through and change them all. Sholtar 23:17, May 18, 2005 (UTC)
- I think that for events in a given year, it is standard to use the present tense. In that sense, it is consistent to use the present tense in describing the year itself. Grammatically, we're in for a semantically confusing discussion; but my opinion is that past years continue to exist as descriptors of historical periods, and therefore present tense is appropriate. As an example, I'll use another period and another verb -- it is clear that "The Stone Age describes the period of prehistory when stone tools were prevalent" is better than "The Stone Age described...", because the phrase "stone age" is still a good descriptor of that (past} period. There is no reason we can't replace "Stone Age" in the above example with "1953", or "describes" with "is"; the grammar is preserved. Just one man's opinion. - Bryan is Bantman 23:41, May 18, 2005 (UTC)
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- Yeah I was thinking of it from that perspective as well. However, while you can replace "Stone Age" with "1953," I'm not so sure about replacing "describes" with "is." I don't know for sure from a grammatical standpoint, but it would seem to me that "describes" is kind of like the phrase venir de, meaning "just," in French. It takes the present tense but can describe the past tense. Again, I'm not sure if this is true from a grammatical standpoint but that's how it seems to me. In addition... "was" just seems to sound better to me. Sholtar 02:34, May 19, 2005 (UTC)
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- In addition, another thing I just realized... "describes" refers to the definition as a term, whereas "is" refers to the object itself. Sholtar 02:35, May 19, 2005 (UTC)
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- Perhaps we can all vote at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Years/Survey#Question 3. I certainly find "is" confusing, it seems as though the year is still ongoing. --Commander Keane 06:56, August 6, 2005 (UTC)
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[edit] Calendar links
All of the years link to a calendar of that year in the heading, where they say this year is a common/leap year starting on (day of the week). Some of them have a little parenthetical remark saying (link takes you to calendar). Others don't. I recommend standardizing this by having none of them link to it or have the parenthetical remark, and instead have on the line below or in some other convenient location a note saying "(year) calendar," or, "A calendar for (year)," or something else to that effect. They would retain the phrase saying that it is a common/leap year, etc. but would link to the article about common/leap year and the article about that day of the week. What do you think? Sholtar 03:56, May 19, 2005 (UTC)
Any opinions on this? I also think the calendars in the article itself really, really need to go. They make the articles look horrible and they're quite pointless. Sholtar | talk 03:29, Jun 16, 2005 (UTC)
- Unless there are any opinions on this soon I'm going to remove the calendars from the articles themselves, probably tomorrow. Sholtar | talk 19:14, Jun 23, 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Unnecessary duplication
I recently noticed that the 'year in topic' sections contain a lot of the events that are already in the respective cutoff pages (xxxx in television/film/music, etc). Not only that, but while the events in the other pages are regularly updated, the events in the main year page haven't, meaning they've been left like that for about two years now. For example, compare this event from 1939 in television:
- September 1 - The anticipated outbreak of World War II brings television broadcasting at the BBC to an abrupt end at 12:10 p.m. at the conclusion of the Mickey Mouse cartoon, Mickey’s Gala Première. The last words broadcast are of a Garbo caricature saying "Ah tink ah kiss you now". It was feared that the VHF waves of television would act as a perfect homing signal for guiding enemy bombers to central London: in any case, the engineers of the television service would be needed for the war effort, particularly for RADAR. The BBC would resume its broadcasting, with the same Mickey Mouse cartoon, after the war in 1946.
...to the same event in the 'Year in topic' section of 1939:
- September 1 - As World War II began, BBC television abruptly stopped its broadcasting in the middle of a Mickey Mouse cartoon (The BBC would resume its broadcasting at that same point after the war in 1945)
Not only is the 1939 version much shorter, but it's also inaccurate (1945 instead of 1946, interrupted in the 'middle' instead of at the conclusion, etc). Therefore, I suggest we remove all the events listed in the Year in Topic sections, and just have a list directing visitors to the respective cutoff pages. There's no point in updating the events, as that would just cause even more needless duplication. Agreed? BillyH 8 July 2005 11:54 (UTC)
- I think the way to go here is to eliminate the "Year in topic" section from the page entirely, and leave it up to the reader to go to the more specific pages through the box at the top of the page. If anything is very notable from these pages it will be in the events section anyways.Trevor MacInnis 23:04, 27 July 2005 (UTC)
[edit] new standards
Centuries: | 19th century - 20th century - 21st century |
Decades: | 1890s 1900s 1910s - 1920s - 1930s 1940s 1950s |
Years: | 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 |
Since most of the layouts of millennia, centuries, decades, and years pages in the history timeline do not look like the standard proposed here. I will be taking it upon myself to rewrite the standards (and even suggest a few new ones. Nav boxes seem to be accepted, so I'll start with those (example at right).Trevor MacInnis 19:37, 26 July 2005 (UTC)
[edit] My proposals
Since many pages now have Nav boxes (see: 1920s, 1924, 20th century, 2nd millennium), i propose that these are the new standard. In the past these boxes were each written out by hand, but I propose an Infobox template for each type which could be edited to keep them all the same. You can see these Infoboxes at my page here and their practical use at 3rd millennium, 21st century, 2005, and 1990s.
You can see some flexibility built into the boxes. For example the {{yearbox}} infobox can be placed at 2005 and also at 2005 in music.
I have made this edit at Wikipedia:Timeline standards as well. Trevor MacInnis 19:37, 26 July 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Shorter boxes
Millennia: | 2nd millennium - 3rd millennium - 4th millennium |
Centuries: | 19th century - 20th century - 21st century |
Decades: | 1890s 1900s 1910s - 1920s - 1930s 1940s 1950s |
Years: | 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 |
Decades: | 1890s 1900s 1910s - 1920s - 1930s 1940s 1950s |
Centuries: | 19th century - 20th century - 21st century |
[edit] year in topic box
Since it links to the least articles so far, I've updated the 21st Century year in topic box to align with the new {{yearbox}}. Example below, which you can see in action at 2005:
Years: | 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 20072008 2009 |
Decades: | 1970s 1980s 1990s - 2000s - 2010s 2020s 2030s |
Centuries: | 20th century - 21st century - 22nd century |
News by month: | Jan - Feb - Mar - Apr - May - Jun Jul - Aug - Sep - Oct - Nov - Dec |
WikiProject Years in topic: | |
Arts | Architecture - Art - Literature - Music - Film - Television - Home video |
Politics | Elections - Int. org. leaders - Politics - State leaders |
Science and tech | Aviation - Rail transport - Science |
By country | Canada - India - Iraq - Ireland - South Africa |
Other topics | Deaths - Video gaming - Religious leaders - Sport |
Trevor MacInnis 01:21, 27 July 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Survey
In order to focus everyones thinking, I think a survey is in order. Check it out here, and ask anybody you think might be interested to check it out. The more people respond the better we can respond to the answers. And add any questions you think needing answers.Trevor MacInnis 02:04, 28 July 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Project template
Should a project template in talk page of each year article (like from Talk:1997 etc) direct people to this project? --Commander Keane 07:05, August 6, 2005 (UTC)
- Good idea. I've made one {{YearsProject}} and have started putting it out there, but the are soooo many years to go. - Trevor MacInnis 16:27, 9 August 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Timeline Infoboxs in cell form
In order to connect the different boxes and make things look better (and easier to put on new pages) I've tried out a new form where the boxes are individual cells within and overall infobox. This is based upon the form used on Mountain pages such as Matterhorn.
The format would be as follows
- {{timeline infobox start}} this template "opens" the box
- {{millenniabox test}}, {{yearbox test}}, {{decadebox test}}, {{centurybox test}}, {{C21YearInTopic}} these templates fill the box in. Any combination can be used. (Note: At the moment the YearInTopic template has to come last, and if it does the infobox finish does not need to be used, but I would change this if put into use so that the YearInTopic box could be placed anywhere and the next box is required.)
- {{Timeline infobox finish}} This template closes the box.
Some examples are:
Millennia: | 2nd millennium - 3rd millennium - 4th millennium |
Years: | [[{{{yp1}}} in aviation|{{{yp1}}}]] [[{{{yp2}}} in aviation|{{{yp2}}}]] [[{{{yp3}}} in aviation|{{{yp1}}}]] [[{{{year}}} in aviation|{{{year}}}]] [[{{{ya1}}} in aviation|{{{ya1}}}]] [[{{{ya2}}} in aviation|{{{ya2}}}]] [[{{{ya3}}} in aviation|{{{ya3}}}]] |
Decades: | 1880s 1890s 1900s 1910s 1920s 1930s 1940s |
Centuries: | 19th Century - 20th century - 21st century |
WikiProject Years by topic: |
News by month |
Jan - Feb - Mar - Apr - May - Jun Jul - Aug - Sep - Oct - Nov - Dec |
Arts |
Architecture - Art - Literature - Music (Country, UK) - Film - Television - Home video |
Politics |
Elections - Int'l leaders - Politics - State leaders - Sovereign states |
Science and technology |
Archaeology - Aviation - Birding/Ornithology - Meteorology - Rail transport - Science - Spaceflight |
Sports |
Sport - Australian Football League - Baseball - Football (soccer) - Ice Hockey - Motor Racing - Tennis |
By place |
Africa - Argentina - Australia - Canada - Denmark - India - Iraq - Ireland - Japan - Luxembourg - Malaysia - Mexico - New Zealand - Philippines - Singapore - South Africa - Switzerland - United Kingdom -Wales - Zimbabwe |
Other topics |
Deaths - Awards - Gay rights - Games - Law - Religious leaders - Video gaming |
Birth and death categories |
Births - Deaths |
Establishments and disestablishments categories |
Establishments - Disestablishments |
Works category |
Works |
or:
Centuries: | 19th Century - 20th century - 21st century |
Decades: | 1880s 1890s 1900s - 1910s - 1920s 1930s 1940s |
Years: | 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 19171918 1919 |
or:
- Trevor MacInnis 01:09, 10 August 2005 (UTC)
- This proposed form never recieved any support and I will be deleting the templates shortly. - Trevor MacInnis(Talk | Contribs) 22:31, 19 September 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Years
This is a serious issue that I think should be addressed. Why are the year pages referenced in BC and AD, and searching for BCE gives you a redirect, when really, searching for "4 BC" should redirect you to "4 BCE"? And if I'm looking for the year 4 CE, 4 AD will redirect me to 4, but 4 CE won't get me anywhere. The pages of specific years should really be using the universally accepted neutral form of BCE and CE, as the use of BC and AD in any article is usually considered offensive by anyone who doesn't feel the need to organize history around the supposed birth of a Jew named Joshua (also known as Jesus). I don't know if it's possible to do a massive rehaul of pages and just change every single date to neutral form, but any input is appreciated. Sputnikcccp 11:56, 12 August 2005 (UTC)
- BCE/CE are not well known amongst the general public worldwide (certainly I have never ever seen the terms used here). Nor are they neutral - where there have been attempts to introduce them to a wider audience they have met with derision (in the case of the Royal Ontario Museum), confusion and anger (when only the teaching of what BCE/CE meant (and nothing else) was introduced into the English national curriculum) and offence leading to questions in both chambers of the New South Wales parliament (when one question in one exam swapped BC to BCE). So unless we wish to cause widespread confusion, anger and offence, we'll keep the pages where they are. There's nothing stopping you adding redirects though, if you think they may be useful, jguk 15:25, 12 August 2005 (UTC)
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- While I do see how using BC/AD my cause offence to some, using BCE/CE may cause offence to others. A balance must be struck. Currently AD is not included in the title or text of the current year pages. In fact the first statement is "2004 is a leap year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar" (the De facto standard calander system). Changing the pages to 2004 CE would (in my opinion) do more harm than good. As for BC vs BCE, well, there are a lot of BCs in the navbar, but no mention of BC in the text. If you move the page then you have to move the decade, century, millennia, categories etc.... For the time being I think creating redirects from BCE/CE to BC/AD is enough. Trevor MacInnis 15:42, 12 August 2005 (UTC)
Well, you both have made excellent points. I guess we'll have to leave things where they are, and I appreciate your civility in a topic where it easily could have disintegrated into hostility. Sputnikcccp 21:16, 14 August 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Content Rules
I've had the recent years pages on my watchlist for a while and I regularly delete non-notable and trivial events. I think it'd be good to have some general guidelines on the content, not just the format, of year pages. Things like annual sporting events, anniversaries of certain dates, movements of royal families, transport accidents, weather events, release of pop culture events - we need some general rules for these things I think, they're always cropping up Psychobabble 02:26, 30 August 2005 (UTC)
- Definitely. I addressed a couple things in Talk:2005#Entertainment releases, please comment/add. DDerby(talk) 07:21, 16 September 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Standards needed quickly
Hi, folks. A fellow just asked about a date in 1965 on the Help Desk. I was going to refer him to 1965, but then I saw there is no calendar there. Looking around at the years ... wow, what a mess. 1965 has no infobox, no on-page calendar, and no calendar link. 1966 has a calendar link and an infobox, but no on-page calendar. 1967 and 1968 have them all, but their first lines are written differently. 2000 has a differently formatted infobox. Etc.
So, sorry for butting into an ongoing discussion, but may I suggest that some tentative standards for year pages be agreed upon very quickly, so we can put the year pages into some semblance of consistency? The standards can certainly be discussed and modified further, but right now things are in a bad state.
Therefore, may I suggest that, for now, we do this for recent years:
- The first line reads something like
1967 was a common year starting on Sunday (link goes to calendar) of the Gregorian calendar.
- Any further information about the year ("This was the official International Year of the Slug") goes in the next paragraph.
- Every year gets an infobox and on-page calendar.
- The infobox always includes links to (at least!) the next and previous years. Thus, for example, the infobox currently on 2000, although I like the style, is unacceptable, since it contains no link to 1999.
- As usual, disambiguation info ("This article is about the year 2000. For other uses of 2000, see 2000 (number).") is italic, indented, and above the first line.
Lastly, what infobox should be used?
Again, there is no reason the ongoing discussion on standards should not continue, but I think things need to be prettied up right now. Also, other issues, like AD/CE, which births should be listed, etc. are less urgent, and I don't feel any need to have those settled immediately.
— Nowhither 18:30, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
- Nowhither, I appreciate your interest in this issue, but (notwithstanding your recent help desk request) there is no pressing need to complete this project urgently -- much better that it be done right. A detailed survey has recently closed and is currently being tabulated; that will be a good tool to see what issues have been settled and which still need discussing. I think the ones you're most concerned about will be resolved by that survey, so hold tight just a few more days. - Bantman 19:01, September 1, 2005 (UTC)
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- Right. And about the survey, sorry about the delay but I'm currently swamped at work (I'm there right now!) but I hope to have it done tonight or tommorow. - Trevor MacInnis(Talk | Contribs) 20:23, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
- Thanks for the replies. A couple of days (or even a week or three) is certainly reasonable. My concern was that discussion about this has been going on, on this page, for about 4 months. And similar discussions on the main page go back over 2 years. I'm all for high-quality year articles, but if we wait until everyone agrees on what The Perfect Year Article looks like, then we may just wait forever. The year articles are a very prominent, important part of Wikipedia, so I think it is important that they be in at least reasonable shape pretty much all the time. In any case, I look forward to the results. And, those of you who are working on this, your work is appreciated. — Nowhither 21:28, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
- Right. And about the survey, sorry about the delay but I'm currently swamped at work (I'm there right now!) but I hope to have it done tonight or tommorow. - Trevor MacInnis(Talk | Contribs) 20:23, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
Survey results are in!. Lots of issues seem to have support (and some don't). To start let's implement the following:
1. Infoboxes have support. Let's put Template:Yearbox and Template:C21YearInTopic on each page in the 21st century to start, and see what happens. If there are concerns about what in the templets then they can be changes later, but there's no harm in using them now.
2. The following form for multiple events is supported. Lets changeover pages to it.
- January 31 - Event 1
- January 31 - Event 2
Anything else people think we can get started on? - Trevor MacInnis(Talk | Contribs) 19:31, 4 September 2005 (UTC)
- On a related note, if anything needs to be update immediatly its the Wikipedia:Timeline standards. I know that everything we're doing right now is just proposed, but the current standards on that page are extremely out of date. Not one mention of infoboxes, which the majority of modern times pages now use. I'd like to get started on updating this. I think everyone should read over the survey, the past discussions here and on the talk pages of the survey and at the Timeline standards, and make the required edits to the "example year" on this projects main page. By the end on September 2005 'at the latest we should have a standard to put forth. - Trevor MacInnis(Talk | Contribs) 00:55, 5 September 2005 (UTC)
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- Things to get started on: putting infoboxes, calendar links, and on-page calendars on all the recent years.
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- Concerning the example year, it looks pretty good. I think three things can be improved, however. In order from most to least important, they are:
- Putting the current year in the middle of the years in the infobox, so that there are always links to the previous year and the next year.
- Noting that the link to a calendar actually is one. So replace this:
2004 is a leap year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar.
2004 is a leap year starting on Thursday (link goes to calendar) of the Gregorian calendar.
- Clarifying the Chinese calendar years. For example, the Year of the Monkey is not exactly 2004, but rather January 22, 2004 – February 8, 2005. (See also the comment after the table on the Chinese New Year page.)
- However, at the risk of sounding like a broken record (anyone remember those?) I think that getting the years in decent shape soon-ish trumps all of these. And the example year is a quite reasonable format to put them all in, IMHO.
- — Nowhither 20:06, 5 September 2005 (UTC)
- Concerning the example year, it looks pretty good. I think three things can be improved, however. In order from most to least important, they are:
[edit] Survey Results
The results are in from the survey. Some discussion was started on the surveys talk page but I think that may fracture discussions so I'm moving it all here and creating a redirect at the survey talk to this page. Copied text follows. - Trevor MacInnis(Talk | Contribs) 17:08, 12 September 2005 (UTC)
[edit] From Survey talk page:
So the results are in! Lots of support for some items, division for others. Questions still remain about some areas, and a 2nd Survey (or maybe just a lively discusion) may be in order. Maybe a standard page could be written using these results and people could edit it. Perhaps we should pick a page, say 2002, to test things out on? Good start though, way to go everyone! - Trevor MacInnis(Talk | Contribs) 04:19, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
Yearboxes: A late vote for a content-rich yearbox; not like the 18th-c ones. A narrower box as the content diminishes, yes; and a fixed-width pair of tables, so each template is a complete table within itself. +sj +
[edit] Calendars
Just noticed a survey about calendars on year articles. The Wikiproject Calendars put it out and since its results directly affect us here I thought people would like to check it out. Since our survey indicated people don't want calendars on year pages I'm not sure how this will all turn out. See the survey here - Trevor MacInnis(Talk | Contribs) 02:40, 3 September 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Infobox
Infoboxes seem to be the way to go, but i think the main concern people have is the way they look on some screens. Sj seems to have put that concern to bed with his edits of Template:C21YearInTopic nad Template:Yearbox. The boxes are now at a set width of 350px and a couple of well placed breaks and abrev's. All seems well to spread this use to the other templates involved. - Trevor MacInnis(Talk | Contribs) 19:17, 4 September 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Julian, Gregorian and other calendars
When debating the Julian/Gregorian issues, we seem to have all forgotten one thing: different countries switched over at different times. Should we refer to both for all years between 1582 and 1926? Moreover, is there any consistency at the moment in whether dates of events/births/deaths in this range are given in Julian or Gregorian?
I meant to reply on a possible format for XXXX in other calendars. Maybe something like this:
1456 in | Julian equivalent |
---|---|
Hindu Calendar (Saka era) | 14 March 1399 - 13 March 1400 |
Hindu Calendar (Vikrama era) | March 21, 1529 - March 20, 1530 |
Islamic Calendar | ? |
Jewish Calendar | ? |
and for the conversions to other calendars:
Julian Calendar | 1456 |
Proleptic Gregorian Calendar | 10 January 1456 - 9 January 1457 |
Hindu Calendar (Saka era) | ? |
Hindu Calendar (Vikrama era) | ? |
Islamic Calendar | ? |
Jewish Calendar | ? |
with some 'appropriate' choice of Julian or Gregorian for the year in question. But we probably ought to deal with the Julian/Gregorian debate as a whole before worrying about this. -- Smjg 12:35, 5 September 2005 (UTC)
- We should refer to both Julian Calendar and Gregorian calendar for all years between 1582 and 1926 whenever dates concern countries and areas using Julian calendar at that time. This is what I am doing for Russian events in 19th century. Otherwise, Gregorian calendar dates only should be fine.--Jusjih 07:24, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Deaths Section
I know people support having all deaths on the year page but I see a major problem arising from this. If every name is to be listed then that will add 112kb to the 2004 page alone (that's the current size of Deaths in 2004). I personally think that if there should be a limit, say world figures and leaders, entertainment icons etc. Redlinks should especially be omitted. I don't know what the upper limit will end up being though. - Trevor MacInnis(Talk | Contribs) 21:16, 5 September 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Roman numerals?
Someone is adding the year in roman numerals to year pages. I was looking at 2000 and was wondering what the heck the (MM) was after the year. I reverted it as vandalism before it came to me. But I think the roman numerals will just confuse people. --Pmsyyz 05:27, 21 September 2005 (UTC)
- He's added them again. Should I revert them? He also tends to run the years and roman numerals together and bold both, the result of which is incredibly ugly. --DropDeadGorgias (talk) 21:53, 1 November 2005 (UTC)
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- It would be nice if there was a standard way to add them. -- User:Docu
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- I'm kind of of the opinion that the roman numeral can be put in the infobox along with any other alternate nomenclatures. Anyway, that user is back... I don't know, should I revert the bolding of the roman numerals? It's irritating that he's not following the wikiproject and not responding to any comments, but I don't know what to do. --DropDeadGorgias (talk) 22:40, 10 November 2005 (UTC)
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- The inclusion after the current notation [ 2000 (MM) ] is indeed less than optimal. It may be an advantage to include it another way in the initial text [ 2000 (Roman: MM) ] or [ 2000 (MM) ], unless there is an elegant way to add it to an infobox.
- You may want to invite the anon user to comment (on his talk page or editing notes). -- User:Docu
[edit] Hi:
Hi, just letting everyone know that I'm joining your group here. I'm looking forward to putting down the dates for everything, unless we don't do that... But I suppose we do, so anyway.... If you don't want me in the group, that's fine, cause I wouldn't want me in your group either, (Just kidding). K, bye...Spawn Man 04:19, 4 October 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Popular Culture/Comic Strips
I recently added the debut of the Dick Tracy comic strip to the Events section of 1931 (Date October 4). But I'm not completely happy with putting it there. It doesn't seem in keeping with the other events. However, I don't know if it really belongs in 1931 in literature... is a comic strip literature? I think maybe a new type of timeline article like Years- or Decades in popular culture would be appropriate, but we already have music and television as their own year in articles. I don't want to drop it altogether, I think it's significant enough for some type of timeline (and a broader category than just comic strips), but just can't figure out the right place for it. Any thoughts? Thanks, --LiniShu 19:44, 14 October 2005 (UTC)
- Yes, comics are counted as literature, so are nursery rhymes, books etc... I don't think we should create a new category, as as you said, we already have tv & music etc... Spawn Man 03:02, 27 October 2005 (UTC)
Well, I did go ahead and move the Dick Tracy debut from the main 1931 article to 1931 in literature, per Spawn Man's consensus that such a move would not be inappropriate. Actually, after checking out 1931 in art, I saw that the birth of a comic strip artist was listed in that article, and furthermore Wikipedia:WikiProject Comics#Hierarchy definition places comic strips in the heirarchy for both art and literature. So, I added Dick Tracy to 1931 in art as well. Thanks again, Spawn Man, for your perspective.
[edit] Links to years
There is some discussion at Wikipedia_talk:Manual_of_Style_(dates_and_numbers)#Links_on_years_in_Luxembourg_.28city.29.23History on when the years should be linked. Some editors use the current wording to justify delinking all year pages. -- User:Docu
[edit] Special Article
I've made a special article and it only includes turbulent years and also i've made a link to a special article that sill dont have a formal name yet (for now it is called 2001-2005) its only about the events that happened in that time period (most of it bad news which is the reason for creating this article. I've havent put any information in it but heres the links if you want to start this article:
- 2001 year in review
- 2002 year in review-nicknamed year of layoffs, payoffs and chaos.
- 2003 year in review
- 2004 year in review
- 2002 year in review (CNN.com
ask me if you have any questions or commentsStorm05 19:26, 20 December 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Timeline Infobox (YearInTopic) and sporadically busy countries
I do love the look of the sidebar (like {{C19YearInTopic}}), but there is a problem:
The sidebar contains links to certain busy countries, but not others. In some years, other countries were busy, too, such as 1830 in France. I don't like the current situation in which an editor who edits a year has to choose between
- adding a "See also" section (which is unsatisfactory since it is miles away from the other country links in the sidebar) or
- Writing the country below the century box (ugly!) or
- Adding it to the century box (or requesting the addition) - The solution obviously can't be to indiscriminately include each such "sporadically busy" country in all sidebars for a whole century.)
Or is there another option? Common Man 05:35, 9 January 2006 (UTC), revised 03:02, 12 January 2006 (UTC)
[edit] 2005 in the United States AFD
Editors may be interested in the AFDs for 2005 in the United States and 2004 in the United States. Kappa 18:36, 17 January 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Pictures in year articles
Pictures enliven pages, and provide valuable learning aids for visual types. With pages like Mammal as a model, I therefore added pictures to the pages from 1825 to 1838.
What do others think - is this helpful?
Background of this question: I found a nice little niche for me by cleaning up the year articles. So far I went from 1818 to 1838 and set myself the goal of going through the whole century with the hope of eventually earning one of those barn stars. I enjoyed doing this until an RC patroller of merit reverted one of the pictures because he felt there was "no need for it in article" and threatened to remove all of them ([1], [2]). Thus, I ceased and desisted, but it took the joy out of my little project. I would like to continue improving these articles without being bullied, which I feel is inappropriate given my track record of constructive contributions to Wikipedia. Common Man 19:04, 18 January 2006 (UTC)
- I think pictures are great in year articles - they add needed visual interest and can be quite relevant. Lots of people agree; if you need back up for your discussion with the reverting editor, find the survey on year articles (linked to somewhere above on this talk page, I think), which shows a solid consensus for adding images to year articles. - Bantman 19:11, 18 January 2006 (UTC)
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- I agree there should be picture, but the reversion may have to do with the fact that the picture was included as part of the infobox. I think a better form to follow would be like on 2005, where the pictures are along the page near the related text item. - Trevor MacInnis (Talk | Contribs) 19:25, 18 January 2006 (UTC)
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- Good point. I now realize I should have added "19th century" to the headline. This certainly looks better on 2005. I triad that, too [3], but since the articles of the 19th century are much smaller (events section about half a screenful, often even ends before the infobox) I felt that it just looks much nicer this way and moved it into the infobox. Generally, more than one picture would cram the page. But if we need more, it is also possible to keep them in the infobox (which can be regarded as sort of a sidebar). Common Man 20:13, 18 January 2006 (UTC)
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- Ok, I understand now why you did it that way. The only problem now is that the current standard for the infobox will not allow for this. I and others have been (slowly) updated the pages but as you can see we have a ways to go. As an example I updated to 1825 infobox to the current standard and now the picture must be seperate. I do agree that in short articles it can be placed just below the infobox. Keep it up! - Trevor MacInnis (Talk | Contribs) 20:35, 18 January 2006 (UTC)
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- Thank you for your encouragement! The new layout does take getting used to. I'm missing the "sidebar" feel one gets when the picture is in the infobox (similar to the mammal page). OTOH, it puts the picture at the top, which makes it immediately visible even on small monitors, inviting to pleasantly browse through the year pages. Common Man 20:51, 18 January 2006 (UTC)
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- I agree with Trevor; the infoboxes need to be immediately visible to be useful in navigation, while the picture don't have to be. That said, they are an attractive addition, and I entirely support adding them in the 2005 style. Keep up the good work! Warofdreams talk 10:31, 19 January 2006 (UTC)
- Hey, I take exception to the report that I "bullied" Common Man! I did no such thing - I saw an edit which I thought was inappropriate (and still do - I cannot see why the "Years" articles need illustrations, as they increase the size of the article, nor why any particular event should be chosen to illustrate a year, as (a) the illustration is best found in the article itself and (b) potentially implies a precedence of one event over the others). I reverted the edit adding the picture, and only the one edit, giving those reasons. Stephenb (Talk) 10:46, 19 January 2006 (UTC)
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- You did threaten to revert all of them. That's what I meant by "bullying".
- But let's not quibble over words and let bygones be bygones. I do appreciate that you're taking the time to go on RC patrol, and you seem to be very effective, which is something I wouldn't be able to do as well as you. I think Wikipedia can only prosper when we respect each other. If you take that to heart then I wish you success with all of your future endeavours! Common Man 11:11, 19 January 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Intro statement?
Some questions have arisen lately on what exactly is the intro statement supposed to be. I think it would be good to have another quick discussion/vote on this and get the issue settled. The following are a few examples in current use:
[edit] From 2005
2005 (MMV) was a common year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar. It corresponded to the years 5765-5766 in the Hebrew Calendar, 1425-1426 in the Islamic Calendar, 1383-1384 in the Iranian calendar and 2758 a.u.c.
[edit] From 2004
2004 (MMIV) was a leap year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar.
[edit] From 1979
1979 (MCMLXXIX) is a common year starting on Monday.
[edit] From 1800
1800 was a common year starting on Wednesday (see link for calendar).
So I think the options we have to decide are:
[edit] Present or past tense?
[edit] Present
- Was indicates that it is now something else. - Trevor MacInnis (Talk | Contribs) 16:24, 24 January 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Past
[edit] Link to calendar(s)?
[edit] Yes
- Until someone creates a separate page with them all on it I think each one should be spelled out.
[edit] No
[edit] (see link for calendar) statement
[edit] Yes
[edit] No
- I think people realise that blue text means a link - Trevor MacInnis (Talk | Contribs) 16:24, 24 January 2006 (UTC)
Anything else? - Trevor MacInnis (Talk | Contribs) 16:24, 24 January 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Exact dates
I basically like the references to other calendars - however, I'm missing one important detail. When do these years begin and end? They don't all begin on January 1, do they? If they start on different days then "correspond" is just a lame weasel word which we should replace with exact dates. Common Man 17:04, 24 January 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Coins from each year
69.161.13.162 (talk • contribs) has added external links to a number of year articles for a site showing a variety of coins from that year. Should this be treated as link spam, or are these links actually useful? An example is [4] for 1942.-gadfium 02:54, 30 January 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Template- Germany
The 1920 articles are missing- By Country: Germany, France , wheareas non-existant "192x in Mexico" articles are linked. And BTW, how can u edit a meta template, is it? Ksenon 05:02, 18 February 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Different calendars
User:Philip Stevens has recently created Template:Different calendars and placed it on some of the most recent years pages. It may be the solution to some of the problems with the intro (as to how to deal with the links to calendars etc.). Does anyone have an opionion about it? - Trevor MacInnis (Talk | Contribs) 20:22, 18 February 2006 (UTC)
- I have an opinion for how to improve the "Hindu calendar" portion (see talk). But otherwise I like it a lot, for what it's worth! QuartierLatin1968 17:50, 21 March 2006 (UTC)
- I think this is a very good idea but I do have some doubts about the chose of some of the calendars. The Japanese calendar, for example, uses the length of reign of emperors to decide a year, so it doesn’t work for any years in the future. As the Template only seems to be attached to years of the 21st century, only the first six years of are currently relevant. Also, I don’t think that the Runic calendar or Ab urbe condita are used any more. I feel there should be a further discussion, ether here or at Template talk:Different calendars, to decide which calendars are suitable for this template. Hera1187 10:48, 22 March 2006 (UTC)
[edit] New WikiProject
Take a look at the newly-created Wikipedia:WikiProject Current events. The two WikiProjects may be able to work together on a few things. joturner 02:32, 6 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Wikipedia:WikiProject Timelines
I have just reformatted the moribund Wikipedia:WikiProject Timelines so that people who are interested can add themselves to the membership section and co-operate on developing Wikipedia:Timeline standards and specific time line articles. --Philip Baird Shearer 15:28, 23 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Years in music
Is there still a WikiProject Years in music? I searched for it very hard, and I didn't find it, which disappoints me, because Years in music articles are very chaotic and unstandardized. And, does WikiProject Years policy also apply to Years in music? Thanks. --Methegreat 23:11, 6 May 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Derek Avaritt?
Who on Earth is Derek Avaritt, and why do we need to know of his birth?
[edit] 666
On June the 6th, 2006, someone moved the article 666 to 666 (year) [5] and made 666 a redirect to 666 (disambiguation). That day I visited a page containing a link to the year 666 and came on the dab page. I did not know about this project and started disambiguating a lot of links (666 -> 666 (year) or others). Later I found out about this project. I reverted all my edits and changed 666 to be redirect page to 666 (year) so all the links are correct again. But since this is not the wanted situation (according to this project) it probably is best to move 666 (year) back to 666 and make 666 (year) a redirect to 666 instead. That way the old situation is restored and page 666 again follows the same policy that is used for all other years. Cpt. Morgan 14:57, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- I'm not convinced that we shouldn't make an exception in this case, actually; I would guess that 666 should actually redirect to Number of the Beast, since it's far more commonly used in that sense than any of the other options. Kirill Lokshin 15:10, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- Although I see your point and don't really mind what the choice will be (and will happily start removing dab links again :)), such an exception will be the start of more XXXX year pages being moved to XXXX (year) and replaced by a disambiguation page. If 666 points to another page, why not also the page 1 (surely the number has greater implications than the year, compare 1 with 1 (disambiguation)). Cpt. Morgan 16:28, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- Please move it back. The date system depends on the years being at the number rather than elsewhere. -- User:Docu
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- So moved. Rich Farmbrough 13:46 29 June 2006 (GMT).
[edit] Turning years articles into prose
I want to propose a big change to the structure proposed by this project to years articles. Last month, I posted the proposal in the Village Pump (read the "Turning years articles into prose" section) which consisted of turning years articles (like 2005) from lists and timeline to prose. These articles could be well-written summaries about what happened during the year in all fields. It will be divided by topic (politics, science, sports...) rather than months. It would be an enthusiatic community work, and relativly simple with very easy-to-find sources and pictures. So what are your thoughts? CG 17:54, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
- In my opinion, past efforts to turn century articles into prose resulted in disjointed, eurocentric, and error-riddled pablum. See 19th century and The 20th century in review. I don't think it's possible to summarize a year or a century. --Sean Brunnock 18:07, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
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- Yes I know, every one would want to add events in his country or region. That's why I proposed in the Village Pump two steps: First we discuss and vote for the events that are important enough to be included and then comes the writing. CG 18:28, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
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- If you want a list of events, then a timeline would be the best format. It's easier for people to edit. --Sean Brunnock 20:38, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
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- Again, I don't think you can summarize a year. Can you provide an example that would prove me wrong? --Sean Brunnock 22:00, 29 July 2006 (UTC)
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- Again, if you read the Village Pump (the link I provided earlier), you could see two examples: 1922 in Germany and de:1974 from the German Wiki. However the German article has a lot of POV and German bias, a problem I intend to fix here. CG 07:42, 30 July 2006 (UTC)
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- Let's keep this discussion here. Looking at de:1974, it seems that you want to segregate events by region. Is that an advantage over listing events chronologically? I can't read German, but it appears that the 1974 article just proves my point. It's extremely eurocentric. The Soviet Union isn't even mentioned in the "Politik" section. The 1922 in Germany article only discusses politics. I don't want to nitpick. I just want to see one decent summary of a year that is under 32 KB. --Sean Brunnock 11:23, 30 July 2006 (UTC)
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- It seems that you're missing the point. First, there's no ongoing discussion in the Village Pump. I started one a month ago (you can see it here) but it didn't go far. Second, the 1974 article is just an example, and like I said, it contains a lot of flaws and balance and POV problems. But, if it doesn't exist yet doesn't mean that it's impossible. We just need more discussion. CG 15:22, 30 July 2006 (UTC)
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- I don't think we should discuss changing all of the year articles into prose if you can't provide proof that it would be an improvement. --Sean Brunnock 15:28, 30 July 2006 (UTC)
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- I'm just suggesting a new way of presenting years articles that would make them more interesting. I've read some works that does the same thing with some variations and I found them great. We don't need proof that this is works. We just need community support. And if it doesn't work, nothing's lost, we return back to the old article. The only must now is some discussion and some more users to participate (other than me and you). CG 15:56, 30 July 2006 (UTC)
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- I'd have to vote against a prose style as well. I think some principles of web design are at work here, namely the idea that people read Web pages in visual chunks, and I think that's what people hit the year pages for: bullet points. When I look up a year, it's because I want a quick glance at what was going on in the world at that time. Users expecting quick bites of information are going to be discouraged by an article format, and will likely go to another site for the highlights they're looking for. I'd be on board for a separate "Year in Review" article, though. Elizabeyth 19:21, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
- I'd be favor for the other way round. Years articles written in prose will improve Wikipedia quality while the timeline will be moved to Timeline if ####. CG 08:01, 3 August 2006 (UTC)
- I realize that you think it would be a good idea, but you haven't provided any reasoned argument as to why, either in your response to me or in any of your responses to Sean above, whereas we both provided reasons why we think the format should stay as it is. "Improving Wikipedia quality" is too generic to convince people of such a huge change. Can you be more specific about why you think your way would be better? Elizabeyth 17:10, 3 August 2006 (UTC)
- Since I didn't have much support for this I'll just drop it. Thank you for your comments. CG 18:09, 5 August 2006 (UTC)
- I realize that you think it would be a good idea, but you haven't provided any reasoned argument as to why, either in your response to me or in any of your responses to Sean above, whereas we both provided reasons why we think the format should stay as it is. "Improving Wikipedia quality" is too generic to convince people of such a huge change. Can you be more specific about why you think your way would be better? Elizabeyth 17:10, 3 August 2006 (UTC)
- I'd be favor for the other way round. Years articles written in prose will improve Wikipedia quality while the timeline will be moved to Timeline if ####. CG 08:01, 3 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] "b." and "d." vs. "born" and "died"
Hi all, is there a standard somewhere for the birth and death listings on year pages? For example, in a given year's birth listings, there may be "Joe Smith, American person (d. 2000)," and in another year's listings (mostly pre-20th and 21st centuries), it would be "Joe Smith, American person (died 2000)." I checked the main Manual of Style and it seems to indicate that the word should be spelled out. I asked about it in the discussion and got a generic "yes, conformity is the idea" type response, so I began killing some time by changing them to the full word on random year pages. Now I've found this Project, so, my apologies if I've gone against a pre-determined style decision. Should I revert the pages I've changed? Elizabeyth 19:03, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] 2006 in Doctor Who
I created this as a sandbox, and wonder if anyone else thinks it's worthwhile exercise, or if it's a stupid idea and unutterable listcruft... ;) I'll move to main space if anyone else likes it is an idea. Tim! 18:07, 17 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Project directory
Hello. The WikiProject Council has recently updated the Wikipedia:WikiProject Council/Directory. This new directory includes a variety of categories and subcategories which will, with luck, potentially draw new members to the projects who are interested in those specific subjects. Please review the directory and make any changes to the entries for your project that you see fit. There is also a directory of portals, at User:B2T2/Portal, listing all the existing portals. Feel free to add any of them to the portals or comments section of your entries in the directory. The three columns regarding assessment, peer review, and collaboration are included in the directory for both the use of the projects themselves and for that of others. Having such departments will allow a project to more quickly and easily identify its most important articles and its articles in greatest need of improvement. If you have not already done so, please consider whether your project would benefit from having departments which deal in these matters. It is my hope that all the changes to the directory can be finished by the first of next month. Please feel free to make any changes you see fit to the entries for your project before then. If you should have any questions regarding this matter, please do not hesitate to contact me. Thank you. B2T2 00:32, 26 October 2006 (UTC)
[edit] "b." and "d." vs. "born" and "died"
Is there a firm policy on the standard? I just noticed that a new editor has taken it upon himself to work his way through all of the year pages, methodically changing every "b." and "d." to "born" and "died". This is completely contradictory to the standards on the Wikipedia:WikiProject Days of the year, where "b." and "d." are enforced. -- Jim Douglas (talk) (contribs) 06:09, 1 November 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Userbox
I found this Userbox created by User:Guðsþegn:
AD | This user prefers traditional terminology in date-naming |
I thought it was an interesting idea, and if anyone wants to add it to their userpage just use the template {{User Anno Domini}}
--Grimhelm 10:21, 2 December 2006 (UTC)
[edit] New templates for Chinese calendar conversion
This template can do conversion from Julian day to Chinese calendar within 4 AD to 2044 AD.