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The Signpost: 08 January 2014

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  • Public Domain Day: Why the year 2019 is so significant
    Public Domain Day—January 1, 2014—gives me an opportunity to reflect on this important asset, mandated by the Constitution of the United States.
  • Traffic report: Tragedy and television
    The various maladies that befall humanity got some well-known faces this week: the death of the well-liked actor James Avery topped the list, but Michael Schumacher, who is in a coma after a skiing accident, also drew attention.
  • News and notes: WMF employee forced out over "paid advocacy editing"
    On 8 January, the Wikimedia Foundation notified the Wikimedia-l mailing list that Sarah Stierch, a popular Wikimedian and the Foundation's Program Evaluation Community Coordinator, was no longer an employee of the Wikimedia Foundation, as a result of being paid to create articles on the English Wikipedia.

Wikidata weekly summary #92

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This Month in GLAM: December 2013

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Headlines

To assist with preparing the newsletter, please visit the newsroom. Past editions may be viewed here.

Subscribe/Unsubscribe · Global message delivery 17:04, 11 January 2014 (UTC)

This Month in Education: January 2014

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Headlines

To assist with preparing the newsletter, please visit the newsroom. Past editions may be viewed here.

If this message is not on your home wiki's talk page, update your subscription.

VisualEditor newsletter for Janaury 2014

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Since the last newsletter, the VisualEditor team has worked mostly minor features and fixing bugs. A few significant bugs include working around a bug in CSSJanus that was wrongly flipping images used in some templates in right-to-left (RTL) environments (bug 50910) a major bug that meant inserting any template or other transclusion failed (bug 59002), a major but quickly resolved problem due to an unannounced change in MediaWiki core, which caused VisualEditor to crash on trying to save (bug 59867). This last bugs did not appear on any Wikipedia. Additionally, significant work has been done in the background to make VisualEditor work as an independent editing system.

As of today, VisualEditor is now available as an opt-out feature to all users at 149 active Wikipedias.

  • The character inserter tool in the "Insert" menu has a very basic set of characters. The character inserter is especially important for languages that use Latin and Cyrillic alphabets with unusual characters or frequent diacritics. Your feedback on the character inserter is requested. In addition to feedback from any interested editor, the developers would particularly like to hear from anyone who speaks any of the 50+ languages listed under Phase 5 at mw:VisualEditor/Rollouts, including Breton, Mongolian, Icelandic, Welsh, Afrikaans, Macedonian, and Azerbaijani.
  • meta:Office hours on IRC have been heavily attended recently. The next one will be held this coming Wednesday, 22 January at 23:00 UTC.
  • You can now edit some of the page settings in the "options" dialog – __NOTOC__ and __FORCETOC__ as selection (forced on, forced off, or default setting; bugs 56866 and 56867) and __NOEDITSECTION__ as a checkbox (bug 57166).
  • The automated browser tests were adjusted to speed them up and bind more correctly to list items in lists, and updated to a newer version of their ruby dependencies. You can monitor the automated browser tests' results (triggered every twelve hours) live on the server.
  • Wikipedia:VisualEditor/User guide was updated recently to show some new and upcoming features.

Looking ahead: The character formatting menu on the toolbar will get a drop-down indicator next Thursday. The reference and media items will be the first two listed in the Insert menu. The help menu will get a page listing the keyboard shortcuts. Looking further out, image handling will be improved, including support for alignment (left, right, and center) and better control over image size (including default and upright sizes). The developers are also working on support for editing redirects and image galleries.

Subscriptions to this newsletter are managed at Wikipedia:VisualEditor/Newsletter. Please add or remove your name to change your subscription settings. If you have questions or suggestions for future improvements, or if you encounter problems, please let everyone know by posting a note at Wikipedia:VisualEditor/Feedback. Thank you! Whatamidoing (WMF) 20:09, 17 January 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Wikidata weekly summary #93

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The Signpost: 15 January 2014

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  • Technology report: Architecture Summit schedule published
    The proposed schedule for the MediaWiki Archicture Summit has been published. The two main plenary sessions will be about HTML templating, and Service-oriented architecture.
  • Op-ed: Licensed for reuse? Citing open-access sources in Wikipedia articles
    It is heavily ironic that two decades after the World Wide Web was started — largely to make it easier to share scholarly research — most of our past and present research publications are still hidden behind paywalls for private profit. The bitter twist is that the vast majority of this research is publicly funded, to the tune of hundreds of billions of dollars worldwide each year.
  • Traffic report: The Hours are Ours
    We now can get a far more accurate picture of which short surges in popularity are likely natural and which are not.
  • WikiProject report: WikiProject Sociology
    This week, we studied human social behavior with the folks at WikiProject Sociology.

Wikidata weekly summary #94

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The Signpost: 22 January 2014

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  • News and notes: Modification of WMF protection brought to Arbcom
    The Wikimedia Foundation's Director of Community Advocacy's application of pending changes level two on the article Conventional PCI—an action taken under its rarely used office actions policy—has escalated to the Arbitration Committee after an editor upgraded it to full protection.
  • Featured content: Dr. Watson, I presume
    Fifteen articles, nine lists, twenty pictures, and one topic were promoted to "featured" status on the English Wikipedia over the last two weeks.
  • Special report: The few who write Wikipedia
    On 15 January, Wikipedia turned thirteen years old. In that time, this site has grown from a small site that was known to only a select few to one of the most popular websites on the internet. At the same time, recent data suggests that there is a power curve among users, where the comparative few who are writing most of Wikipedia have most of the edits. The result of this is that there is going to be bias in what is created, and how we deal with it as Wikipedians is indicative of the future of the site. Furthermore, this brings up what we have to do in order to combat this bias, as there are many ideas, but the question is whether they will work or not.
  • Technology report: Architecting the future of MediaWiki
    This week we're interviewing Brion Vibber about the then-upcoming Architecture Summit. Brion is a long time Wikipedian, the first employee of the Wikimedia Foundation, and currently the lead software architect working with the mobile team.
  • Traffic report: No show for the Globes
    While the 71st Golden Globe Awards, held on 12 January, had an impact on the top 25, their presence was largely absent from the Top 10. With the exception of Best Actor winner Leonardo DiCaprio, the only Golden Globe entrants in the Top 10 are films that would have been there anyway.

Wikidata weekly summary #95

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The Signpost: 29 January 2014

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  • Traffic report: Six strikes out
    There are times when this job is hard. As an analogy, imagine navigating in fog at night, except you don't know where you are, you don't know where you want to go, and your flashlight keeps dying on you.
  • WikiProject report: Special report: Contesting contests
    Contests have existed almost as long as the English Wikipedia. Contestants have expanded hundreds of articles and made tens of thousands of edits. Although it may seem as though there aren't any negatives to contests, they have occasionally become a divisive topic on the English Wikipedia.
  • News and notes: Wiki-PR defends itself, condemns Wikipedia's actions
    Wiki-PR, a public relations agency, whose employees used a sophisticated array of concealed user accounts to create, edit, and maintain several thousand Wikipedia articles for paying clients, has told Business Insider that it was demonized by the online encyclopedia. Jordan French, Wiki-PR's CEO, said he believes the Wikimedia Foundation "painted" his company to look like an "evil entity" that is "scrubbing truths from Wikipedia".

The Signpost: 29 January 2014

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  • Traffic report: Six strikes out
    There are times when this job is hard. As an analogy, imagine navigating in fog at night, except you don't know where you are, you don't know where you want to go, and your flashlight keeps dying on you.
  • WikiProject report: Special report: Contesting contests
    Contests have existed almost as long as the English Wikipedia. Contestants have expanded hundreds of articles and made tens of thousands of edits. Although it may seem as though there aren't any negatives to contests, they have occasionally become a divisive topic on the English Wikipedia.
  • News and notes: Wiki-PR defends itself, condemns Wikipedia's actions
    Wiki-PR, a public relations agency, whose employees used a sophisticated array of concealed user accounts to create, edit, and maintain several thousand Wikipedia articles for paying clients, has told Business Insider that it was demonized by the online encyclopedia. Jordan French, Wiki-PR's CEO, said he believes the Wikimedia Foundation "painted" his company to look like an "evil entity" that is "scrubbing truths from Wikipedia".

Wikidata weekly summary #96

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This Month in GLAM: January 2014

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Headlines
  • France report: Public Domain Day; photographs
  • Germany report: WMDE-GLAM-Highlights in 2014
  • Netherlands report: New Years Reception; 550 years States General; Content donation University Museum; Wikipedians in Residence; OpenGLAM Benchmark Survey
  • Sweden report: Digitization; list creation
  • Switzerland report: The Wikipedians in Residence of the Swiss National Library have started their work
  • UK report: Voices from the BBC Archives plus Zoos, coins and Poets
  • USA report: GLAM-Wiki activities in the USA
  • Open Access report: Open Access Media Importer; Open Access File of the Day
  • Calendar: February's GLAM events

To assist with preparing the newsletter, please visit the newsroom. Past editions may be viewed here.

Subscribe/Unsubscribe · Global message delivery 02:39, 12 February 2014 (UTC)

The Signpost: 12 February 2014

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  • In the media: WikiVIP; Art Feminism; Medical articles; PR manipulation; Azerbaijani Wikipedia
    As reported in various media outlets this week, including The Next Web and The Daily Dot, this past week, Wikimedia Commons and various language Wikipedias are working together to encourage subjects of Wikipedia articles to record a 10-second clip of their voice to be appended to their Wikipedia article.
  • Technology report: Left with no choice
    Software evolution does not always mean that features are being added. It also means that old fat is being trimmed. It is no different for MediaWiki.
  • News and notes: WMF bites the bullet on affiliation and FDC funding, elevates Wikimedia user groups
    In a bold move, the Wikimedia Foundation's Board of Trustees has announced a major change in policy concerning affiliated groups in the worldwide movement, and FDC funding levels to eligible chapters and thematic organizations over the next two years. Both decisions were published last Tuesday after considerable post-meeting consultation with the FDC and the Affiliations Committee (AffCom). The core of the first decision is
  • Featured content: Space selfie
    Thirteen articles, three lists, and twenty-five images were promoted to "featured" status on the English Wikipedia from 19 January to 1 February.
  • Traffic report: Sports Day
    Two great sporting events, the Super Bowl and the Winter Olympics, collide in one week, transforming the top ten into a festival of flying feet, a carnival of colliding caraniums and a bacchanal of bouncing balls, combined to influence Wikipedia's most popular articles last week.
  • WikiProject report: Game Time in Russia
    In celebration of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, we revisited the team at WikiProject Russia to learn how the project has changed since our first interview in 2011.

Wikidata weekly summary #97

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This Month in Education: February 2014

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VisualEditor Newsletter—February 2014

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Since the last newsletter, the VisualEditor team has worked on some small changes to the user interface, such as moving the reference item to the top of the Insert menu, as well as some minor features and fixing bugs, especially for rich copying and pasting of references.

The biggest change was the addition of more features to the image dialog, including the ability to set alignment (left, right, center), framing options (thumbnail, frame, frameless, and none), adding alt text, and defining the size manually. There is still some work to be done here, including a quick way to set the default size.

  • The main priority is redesigning the reference dialog, with the goal of providing autofill features for ISBNs and URLs and streamlining the process. Current concept drawings are available at mw:VisualEditor/Design/Reference Dialog. Please share your ideas about making referencing quick and easy with the designers.
  • A few bugs in the existing reference dialog were fixed. The toolbar was simplified to remove galleries and lists from the reference dialog. When you re-use references, it now correctly displays the references again, rather than just the number and name. If you paste content into a dialog that can't fit there (e.g. ==section headings== in references), it now strips out the inappropriate HTML.
  • You can now edit image galleries inside VisualEditor. At this time, the gallery tool is a very limited option that gives you access to the wikitext. It will see significant improvements at a later date.
  • The character inserter tool in the "Insert" menu is being redesigned. Your feedback on the special character inserter is still wanted, especially if you depend on Wikipedia's character inserters for your normal editing rather than using the ones built into your computer.
  • You can now see a help page about keyboard shortcuts in the page menu (three bars next to the Cancel button) (T54844).
  • If you edit categories, your changes will now display correctly after saving the page (T50560).
  • Saving the page should be faster now (T61660).
  • Any community can ask to test a new tool to edit TemplateData by leaving a note at T53734.

Looking ahead: The link tool will tell you when you're linking to a disambiguation or redirect page. The warning about wikitext will hide itself after you remove the wikitext markup in that paragraph. Support for creating and editing redirects is in the pipeline. Looking further out, image handling will be improved, including default and upright sizes. The developers are also working on support for viewing and editing hidden HTML comments, some behavioral magic words like DISPLAYTITLE, and in-line language setting (dir="rtl").

If you have questions or suggestions for future improvements, or if you encounter problems, please let everyone know by posting a note at Wikipedia:VisualEditor/Feedback. Thank you! Whatamidoing (WMF) 04:21, 20 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]

The Signpost: 19 February 2014

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  • Technology report: ULS Comeback
    Runa Bhattacharjee has notified the community that the Foundation is ready to turn the Universal Language Selector back on.
  • WikiProject report: Countering Systemic Bias
    WikiProject Countering System Bias aims to combat imbalanced coverage while encouraging neglected cultural perspectives and points of view, both in articles and in the larger Wikipedia community. As you'll see from the varied experiences and motivations of our nine respondents, the biases that the folks at WP CSB tackle run the full gamut of human characteristics and dispositions. The interview that follows unveils many of Wikipedia's greatest shortcomings.
  • Featured content: Holotype
    Five articles, seven lists, forty-three pictures, and two portals were promoted to "featured" status on the English Wikipedia in the last two weeks.
  • Traffic report: Chilly Valentines
    Valentines Day got a somewhat muted reception this week, overshadowed by continuing coverage of the Winter Olympics in Sochi and the death of Shirley Temple.

Wikidata weekly summary #98

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Historiography

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Hi there, Ruud - I've been working on cleaning up the contents of Category:Historiography in recent days. I just came across Category:Academic genealogies and its main article, and I'm perplexed as to why you chose Category:Historiography of science as a parent cat, rather than Category:History of science. I've already implemented that change, but I thought I'd give you the opportunity to offer an explanation if you feel that there is a sound reason for to designate them as "historiography". Regards, Cgingold (talk) 13:18, 24 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]

I don't remember doing that, or why. Category:History of science indeed seems like a much more appropriate parent category. Feel free to correct it. Regards, —Ruud 13:37, 24 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for your amazingly quick reply, Ruud. Btw, when I saw your pic on your User page I thought to myself, "Yes, he does look like a really nice guy!" You may be Ruud, but you are not at all "rude". :) Best regards, Cgingold (talk) 13:46, 24 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]
Actually, now I try to recall why I made this categorization, the following came to mind: the main article on Academic genealogy is probably somewhat more of a meta-historical concept than a historical one. The articles in Category:Academic genealogies, containing actual academic genealogies, definitely belong in Category:History of science, but I'll leave the categorization of Academic genealogy to your judgment. —Ruud 13:53, 24 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for your followup comment. I will take another look with that in mind just to be sure I got it right! Cgingold (talk) 14:02, 24 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]

The Signpost: 26 February 2014

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  • Forum: Should Wikimedia modify its terms of use to require disclosure?
    About a week ago, the Wikimedia Foundation proposed to modify the Wikimedia projects' terms of use to specifically ban paid editing, by adding a new clause titled "Paid contributions without disclosure". We have asked two users, one in favor of the measure (Smallbones) and one opposed (Pete Forsyth), to contribute their opinions on the matter.
  • Featured content: Odin salutes you
    Eight articles, three lists, and nine pictures were promoted to "featured" status on the English Wikipedia last week.
  • Special report: Diary of a protester: Wikimedian perishes in Ukrainian unrest
    Ukraine has been gripped by widespread protests over the past three months. Due to a decision by former president Viktor Yanukovych—at Russia's urging—to abandon integration with the European Union, the country was (and in many ways still is) split between the Europe-favoring Ukrainian-speaking western half and the Russian-speaking east and south. Hundreds have died during the unrest, leaving thousands of family members and friends to bury their loved ones. This week our Wikimedian colleagues in Ukraine are facing that challenge after the death of one of their own.
  • News and notes: Wikimedia chapters and communities challenge Commons' URAA policy
    Following a trend started by Wikimedia Israel, Wikimedia Argentina has published an open letter challenging the recent deletion of hundreds of images from the Commons under its policy on URAA-restored copyrights, relating to the United States' 1994 Uruguay Round Agreements Act.
  • Traffic report: Snow big deal
    The 2014 Winter Olympics had more of an impact on the Top 25 than the Top 10, which had to shoulder old stalwarts like the death list, Reddit threads, TV shows and the eternal presence of Facebook; still, with four slots, it's the most searched topic on the list.

Wikidata weekly summary #99

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Wikidata weekly summary #100

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This Month in GLAM: February 2014

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Headlines
  • France report: National Archives; Sèvres & mass uploads; Wikipedians in the European Parliament
  • Germany report: Claim open culture, again and again
  • India report: National Museum, New Delhi, India (January 2-5, 2014)
  • Netherlands report: Art and Feminism; Wikipedian in Residence; War memorials

To assist with preparing the newsletter, please visit the newsroom. Past editions may be viewed here.

Subscribe/Unsubscribe · Global message delivery 14:47, 9 March 2014 (UTC)

This Month in GLAM: February 2014

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Headlines
  • France report: National Archives; Sèvres & mass uploads; Wikipedians in the European Parliament
  • Germany report: Claim open culture, again and again
  • India report: National Museum, New Delhi, India (January 2-5, 2014)
  • Netherlands report: Art and Feminism; Wikipedian in Residence; War memorials

To assist with preparing the newsletter, please visit the newsroom. Past editions may be viewed here.

Subscribe/Unsubscribe · Global message delivery 14:47, 9 March 2014 (UTC)

(test) The Signpost: 05 March 2014

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  • Traffic report: Brinksmen on the brink
    There's nothing like a good old bit of Cold War nostalgia, combined with a suitably scary international incident, to focus our attention on the real world. That said, nothing could stem our outpouring of affection for the beloved comedian Harold Ramis, whose death managed to top the week in the face of those international concerns.
  • News and notes: Wikipedia Library finding success in matching contributors with sources
    This week, the Signpost caught up with the Wikipedia Library (TWL), which aims to connect reference resources with Wikipedia editors who can use them to improve articles. Funded through the Wikimedia Foundation's Individual Engagement Grants program, TWL has a new "visiting scholars" initiative and a microgrants program in the works.
  • Featured content: Full speed ahead for the WikiCup
    The WikiCup competition is ongoing, while six articles, three lists, and ten pictures were promoted to "featured" status of the English Wikipedia this week.
  • WikiProject report: Article Rescue Squadron
    This week, the Signpost delved into the English Wikipedia's Article Rescue Squadron.

Wikidata weekly summary #101

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The Signpost: 12 March 2014

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  • News and notes: Wikimedians celebrate International Women's Day, Women's History Month
    Wikimedians around the world gathered to celebrate Women's History Month and the associated International Women's Day by holding editathons. If you lived in the United Kingdom, you had the opportunity to attend Wikimedia UK's event at the Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology, part of University College London and host to one of the largest collections of Egyptian and Sudanese artifacts in the world.
  • Traffic report: War and awards
    An intensely busy week, as a confluence of celebratory, curious and urgent topics pushed typical residents like Facebook and Deaths in 2014 out of the top ten entirely.
  • Featured content: Ukraine burns
    Five articles, two lists, and 52 pictures were promoted to "featured" status on the English Wikipedia this week.

This Month in Education: March 2014

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Headlines

To assist with preparing the newsletter, please visit the newsroom. Past editions may be viewed here.

If this message is not on your home wiki's talk page, update your subscription.

VisualEditor newsletter—March 2014

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Since the last newsletter, the VisualEditor team has mostly worked on changes to the template and image dialogs.

The biggest change in the last few weeks was the redesign of the template dialog. The template dialog now opens in a simplified mode that lists parameters and their descriptions. (The complex multi-item transclusion mode can be reached by clicking on "Show options" from inside the simplified template dialog.) Template parameters now have a bigger, auto-sizing input box for easier editing. With today's update, searching for template parameters will become case-insensitive, and required template parameters will display an asterisk (*) next to their edit boxes. In addition to making it quicker and easier to see everything when you edit typical templates, this work was necessary to prepare for the forthcoming simplified citation dialog. The main priority in the coming weeks is building this new citation dialog, with the ultimate goal of providing autofill features for ISBNs, URLs, DOIs and other quick-fills. This will add a new button on the toolbar, with the citation templates available picked by each wiki's community. Concept drawings can be seen at mw:VisualEditor/Design/Reference Dialog. Please share your ideas about making referencing quick and easy with the designers.

  • The link tool now tells you when you're linking to a disambiguation or redirect page. Pages that exist, but are not indexed by the search engine, are treated like non-existent pages (T56361).
  • Wikitext warnings will now hide when you remove wikitext from the paragraph you are editing.
  • The character inserter tool in the "Insert" menu has been slightly redesigned, to introduce larger buttons. Your suggestions for more significant changes to the special character inserter are still wanted.
  • The page options menu (three bars, next to the Cancel button) has expanded. You can create and edit redirect pages, set page options like __STATICREDIRECT__, __[NO]INDEX__ and __[NO]NEWEDITSECTION__, and more. New keyboard shortcuts are listed there, and include undoing the last action, clearing formatting, and showing the shortcut help window. If you switch from VisualEditor to wikitext editing, your edit will now be tagged.
  • It is easier to edit images. There are more options and they are explained better. If you add new images to pages, they will also be default size. You can now set image sizes to the default, if another size was previously specified. Full support for upright sizing systems, which more readily adapt image sizes to the reader's screen size, is planned.
  • VisualEditor adds fake blank lines so you can put your cursor there. These "slugs" are now smaller than normal blank lines, and are animated to be different from actual blank lines.
  • You can use the Ctrl+Alt+S or ⌘ Command+⌥ Option+S shortcuts to open the save window, and you can preview your edit summary when checking your changes in the save window.
  • After community requests, VisualEditor has been deployed to the Interlingual Occidental Wikipedia, the Portuguese Wikibooks, and the French Wikiversity.
  • Any community can ask for custom icons for their language in the character formatting menu (bold, italic, etc.) by making a request on Bugzilla or by contacting Product Manager James Forrester.

The developers apologize for a regression bug with the deployment on 6 March 2014, which caused the incorrect removal of |upright size definitions on a handful of pages on the English Wikipedia, among others. The root cause was fixed, and the broken pages were fixed soon after.

Looking ahead: Several template dialogs will become more compact. Looking further out, the developers are also working on support for viewing and editing hidden HTML comments. You will be able to see the Table of Contents change live as you edit the page, rather than it being hidden. In-line language setting (dir="rtl") may be offered to a few Wikipedias soon.

If you have questions or suggestions for future improvements, or if you encounter problems, please let everyone know by posting a note at Wikipedia:VisualEditor/Feedback or by joining the office hours on 19 April 2014 at 2000 UTC. Thank you! MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 22:44, 20 March 2014 (UTC)[reply]

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If you have feedback on how to make SuggestBot better, please let us know on SuggestBot's talk page. Regards from Nettrom (talk), SuggestBot's caretaker. -- SuggestBot (talk) 15:17, 21 March 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Wikidata weekly summary #102

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The Signpost: 19 March 2014

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  • WikiProject report: We have history
    This week, we visited WikiProject History, an ancient project with roots dating back to 2001. The project is home to 196 pieces of Featured material and 483 Good and A-class articles independent of the vast accomplishments of its various child projects. WikiProject History maintains a lengthy list of tasks, oversees the history portal, and continues to build Wikipedia's outline of history.
  • Featured content: Spot the bulldozer
    Twelve articles, fourteen lists, and six pictures were promoted to 'featured' status on the English Wikipedia last week.
  • Traffic report: Into thin air
    The utterly mystifying events surrounding Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, which has not fallen from the sky so much as vanished from it entirely, has left an information-starved public scrambling for precedents, some logical, some... not.
  • Technology report: Wikimedia engineering report
    The Wikimedia engineering report for February 2014 has been published. A summarized version is also available. Major news include

The Signpost: 26 March 2014

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  • Comment: A foolish request
    April Fools' Day is rapidly approaching. Every year, members of the community pull pranks and make (or attempt to make) humorous edits to pages across the project. Every year, the community follows April Fools' Day with a contentious debate about whether or not it is necessary to impose limits on April Fools' Day jokes for future years. It is a polarizing issue.
  • Traffic report: Down to a simmer
    Topics like the 2014 Crimea crisis or the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 eased down the list, making way for such traditional topics as St Patrick's Day, Reddit threads and even Google Doodles, which have reappeared after a long absence.
  • Recent research: Wikipedians' "encyclopedic identity" dominates even in Kosovo debates
    Have you wondered about differences in the articles on Crimea in the Russian, Ukrainian, and English versions of Wikipedia? A newly published article entitled "Lost in Translation: Contexts, Computing, Disputing on Wikipedia" doesn't address Crimea, but nonetheless offers insight into the editing of contentious articles in multiple language editions through a heavy qualitative examination of Wikipedia articles about the Kosovo in the Serbian, Croatian, and English editions.
  • News and notes: Commons Picture of the Year—winners announced
    Results for the two-stage 2013 Commons Picture of the Year have been announced. This year's winning photograph (above) shows a lightbulb that has been cracked, allowing inert gas to escape—and oxygen to enter, so that the tungsten filament burns. From the flames rise elegant curls of blue smoke.
  • Op-ed: Why we're updating the default typography for Wikipedia
    On 3 April, we will roll out some changes to the typography of Wikipedia's default Vector skin, to increase readability for users on all devices and platforms. After five months of testing, four major iterations, and through close collaboration with the global Wikimedia community, who provided more than 100 threads of feedback, we’ve arrived at a solution which improves the primary reading and editing experience for all users.
  • Technology report: Why will Wikipedia look like the Signpost?
    As you have probably read on this weeks op-ed, or via various other channels of announcement, 3 April will see the introduction of the Typography refresh (or update) for the Vector skin on all Wikipedias. Other projects like Commons will have this update rolled out a few days prior.
  • WikiProject report: From the peak
    This week, the Signpost interviewed the English Wikipedia's Mountains WikiProject.

Wikidata weekly summary #103

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Wikidata weekly summary #104

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The Signpost: 02 April 2014

[edit]
  • Special report: On the cusp of the Wikimedia Conference
    The annual Wikimedia Conference is about to start in Berlin, hosted by Wikimedia Germany, which won the bid to hold the event over three others. This will be the fifth time the chapter has hosted the Wikimedia Conference—it did so from 2009 to 2012, with attendance ranging from 100 to 180 Wikimedians. This year 160 people are expected at the four-day event, which is mainly for representatives of affiliated Wikimedia organisations. The conference has been built around two themes: Organisation, structures, and grants and Success and impact.
  • Featured content: April Fools
    The Signpost's "Featured content" writers had a bit of fun this week.
  • Traffic report: Regressing to the mean
    The mysterious fate of MH370 still tops the list, but in all other respects our readership has retreated from the real world into its pop-cultural happy place: TV, movies, music, Reddit and Google Doodles all made an appearance.

This Month in GLAM: March 2014

[edit]




Headlines

To assist with preparing the newsletter, please visit the newsroom. Past editions may be viewed here.

Subscribe/Unsubscribe · Global message delivery 20:15, 10 April 2014 (UTC)

Wikidata weekly summary #105

[edit]

The Signpost: 09 April 2014

[edit]
  • News and notes: Round 2 of FDC funding open to public comments
    Community review is open for the four applications in the second and final round of applications to the WMF's Funds Dissemination Committee for 2013–14. Three eligible organisations have applied for funding under the newly named "annual program grants": Wikimedia France, Wikimedia Norway, and the India-based Centre for Internet and Society, which last November was recognised as eligible to apply for FDC funding purposes.
  • WikiProject report: WikiProject Law
    This week, we interviewed the Law WikiProject.
  • Special report: Community mourns passing of Adrianne Wadewitz
    "I remember laughing and talking and laughing and talking at Wikimania 2012. I took this picture of her that she used for a long while as a profile pic. Someone on Facebook said it looked 'skepchickal', which she loved."
  • Traffic report: Conquest of the Couch Potatoes
    Television has always been a topic of choice on this site, but it exploded this week. Fully six slots were devoted to television shows, as the final episode of How I Met Your Mother, one of the most popular Wikipedia searches of the last few years, coincided with the season finale of The Walking Dead and the upcoming fourth season of Game of Thrones. The number rises to 8 if movies released on video and new TV tech are are included.
  • Featured content: Snow heater and Ash sweep
    Five article, five lists, and ten pictures were promoted to 'featured' status on the English Wikipedia last week.

This Month in Education: April 2014

[edit]




Headlines

To assist with preparing the newsletter, please visit the newsroom. Past editions may be viewed here.

Anna Koval (WMF) (talk) 21:44, 15 April 2014 (UTC)[reply]

If this message is not on your home wiki's talk page, update your subscription.

Articles you might like to edit, from SuggestBot

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Note: All columns in this table are sortable, allowing you to rearrange the table so the articles most interesting to you are shown at the top. All images have mouse-over popups with more information. For more information about the columns and categories, please consult the documentation, and please do get in touch on SuggestBot's talk page with any questions you might have.

Views/Day Quality Title Content Headings Images Links Sources Tagged with…
770 Quality: High, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: GA Windows 1.0 (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more sources Add sources
271 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: B Eiffel (programming language) (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Add sources
27 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Meta-circular evaluator (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Add sources
698 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: B, Predicted class: B Scheme (programming language) (talk) Add sources
1,275 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: C Wire transfer (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Add sources
18 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Start Idola theatri (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Add sources
40 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Synchronous programming language (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Cleanup
1,320 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: B C++11 (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Cleanup
360 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Visual programming language (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more sources Cleanup
320 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: B Scope (computer science) (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Expand
370 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: C Memoization (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Expand
53 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Start United States Assistant Attorney General (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more sources Expand
58 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Feminist technoscience (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more sources Unencyclopaedic
88 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: C Post Cold War era (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Unencyclopaedic
205 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: B Saadi Shirazi (talk) Please add more sources Unencyclopaedic
190 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Higher-order function (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Merge
533 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: B, Predicted class: B Type system (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Merge
131 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: B Pipeline (software) (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more sources Merge
316 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Malbolge (talk) Please add more content Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Wikify
41 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: B Safety in numbers (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Wikify
96 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Start Erik Meijer (computer scientist) (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Wikify
3 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Closure (Gabrielle song) (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Orphan
3 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Stub Ann Howe (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Orphan
1 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Appeal in South African law (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Orphan
7 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
99 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Martin Odersky (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
21 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Luca Cardelli (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
10 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub International Conference on Functional Programming (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
15 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Andrew Appel (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
15 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Stub Higher-order programming (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub

SuggestBot picks articles in a number of ways based on other articles you've edited, including straight text similarity, following wikilinks, and matching your editing patterns against those of other Wikipedians. It tries to recommend only articles that other Wikipedians have marked as needing work. We appreciate that you have signed up to receive suggestions regularly, your contributions make Wikipedia better — thanks for helping!

If you have feedback on how to make SuggestBot better, please let us know on SuggestBot's talk page. Regards from Nettrom (talk), SuggestBot's caretaker. -- SuggestBot (talk) 15:26, 18 April 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Wikidata weekly summary #106

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The Signpost: 23 April 2014

[edit]
  • Special report: 2014 Wikimedia Conference—what is the impact?
    The annual Wikimedia Conference wound up last Sunday, 13 April—a four-day meeting costing several hundred thousand dollars, hosted in Berlin by Wikimedia Germany and attended by more than 100 Wikimedians.
  • Op-ed: Five things a Wikipedian in residence can do
    Hey you—yeah you, the Wikipedian! Do you want to help a museum, a library, a university, or other organization explore ways to engage with Wikipedia? Great—you should offer your expertise as a Wikipedian in residence!
  • News and notes: Wikimedian passes away
    Cynthia Ashley-Nelson, who edited as "Cindamuse" on the Wikimedia projects, passed away in her sleep at the Wikimedia Conference in Berlin on 10 April.
  • Wikimania: Winning bid announced for 2015
    After just over a month of deliberation, the Wikimania jury has selected Wikimedia Mexico's bid to host Wikimania 2015 in Mexico City, with a proposed date of 15–19 July.
  • Traffic report: Reflecting in Gethsemane
    If I were the kind of person who made snap judgments based on flimsy evidence, I'd say our readership is in a funk.
  • Featured content: There was I, waiting at the church
    Fourteen articles, four lists, seven pictures, and one topic attained "featured" status on the English Wikipedia over the last two weeks.

VisualEditor newsletter—April 2014

[edit]

Since the last newsletter, the VisualEditor team has mostly worked on performance improvements, image settings, and preparation for a simplified citation template tool in its own menu.

  • In an oft-requested improvement, VisualEditor now displays red links (links to non-existent pages) in the proper color. Links to sister projects and external URLs are still the same blue as local links.
  • You can now open templates by double-clicking them or by selecting them and pressing Return. This also works for references, images, galleries, mathematical equations, and other "nodes".
  • VisualEditor has been disabled for pages that were created as translations of other pages using the Translate extension (common at Meta and MediaWiki.org). If a page has been marked for translation, you will see a warning if you try to edit it using VisualEditor.
  • When you try to edit protected pages with VisualEditor, the full protection notice and most recent log entry are displayed. Blocked users see the standard message for blocked users.
  • The developers fixed a bug that caused links on sub-pages to point to the wrong location.
  • The size-changing controls in the advanced settings section of the media or image dialog were simplified further. VisualEditor's media dialog supports more image display styles, like borderless images.
  • If there is not enough space on your screen to display all of the tabs (for instance, if your browser window is too narrow), the second edit tab will now fold into the drop-down menu (where the "Move" item is currently housed). On the English Wikipedia, this moves the "Edit beta" tab into the menu; on most projects, it moves the "Edit source" tab. This is only enabled in the default Vector skin, not for Monobook users. See this image for an example showing the "Edit source" and "View history" tabs after they moved into the drop-down menu.
  • After community requests, VisualEditor has been deployed as an opt-in feature at Meta and on the French Wikinews.
The drop-down menu is on the right, next to the search box.

Looking ahead: A new, locally controlled menu of citation templates will put citations immediately in front of users. You will soon be able to see the Table of Contents while editing. Support for upright image sizes (preferred for accessibility) is being developed. In-line language setting (dir="rtl") will be offered as a Beta Feature soon. Looking further out, the developers are also working on support for viewing and editing hidden HTML comments. It will be possible to upload images to Commons from inside VisualEditor.

If you have questions or suggestions for future improvements, or if you encounter problems, please let everyone know by posting a note at Wikipedia:VisualEditor/Feedback or by joining the office hours on Monday, 19 May 2014 at 18:00 UTC. If you'd like to get this on your own page, subscribe at Wikipedia:VisualEditor#Newsletter for English Wikipedia only or at meta:VisualEditor/Newsletter for any project. Thank you! Whatamidoing (WMF) (talk) 20:23, 23 April 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Wikidata weekly summary #107

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The Signpost: 30 April 2014

[edit]
  • News and notes: WMF's draft annual plan turns indigestible as an FDC proposal
    Like hammering a square peg into a round hole, the Wikimedia Foundation has submitted a draft annual plan for 2014–15 to its own Funds Dissemination Committee. Unlike the WMF's submission to the FDC's inaugural round in October 2012, the "proposal" does not seek funding.
  • Traffic report: Going to the Doggs
    Not much to report this week. The same post-Easter celebrations (4/20, Earth Day) were popular again this year, except last year we were still reeling from the Boston Marathon bombing.
  • Breaking: The Foundation's new executive director
    The Wikimedia Foundation has announced that its new executive director will be Lila Tretikov, until now a chief product officer in Silicon Valley.
  • WikiProject report: Genetics
    This week, we unraveled the mysteries of WikiProject Genetics.
  • Featured content: Browsing behaviours
    Four articles and sixteen featured pictures were promoted to 'featured' status on the English Wikipedia last week.

Wikidata weekly summary #108

[edit]

The Signpost: 07 May 2014

[edit]
  • News and notes: New system of discretionary sanctions; Buchenwald; is Pirelli 'Cracking Wikipedia'?
    The English Wikipedia's Arbitration Committee (ArbCom) introduced the first form of what are known as the "discretionary sanction" (DS) in 2009. A new DS regime, called Discretionary sanctions (2014), is the result of an elaborate review process involving both the community, since last September, and the committee, for more than a year.
  • Traffic report: TMZedia
    For all the claims of Wikipedia bringing the world's knowledge to all who want it, it seems the human race most wants is a tabloid newspaper; a quick source for TV listings, pop culture facts, celebrity gossip and, above all, scandal—with some nice juicy racism thrown in too.
  • In focus: Foundation announces long-awaited new executive director
    In a live video stream on 1 May, the Wikimedia Foundation announced that Lila Tretikov will be replacing Sue Gardner, its executive director. Gardner, who has been in the position since 2007, declared her intention to leave more than a year ago.
  • In the media: Google and the flu; Adrianne
    Boston Children's Hospital postdoctoral fellow David McIver and a team have determined that using page view statistics from Wikipedia, they can track flu progression better than the Center for Disease Control can using Google searches.
  • WikiProject report: Singing with Eurovision
    Formed in 2003, the Eurovision WikiProject boasts four featured articles and 22 good articles. The Eurovision Song Contest 2014 is currently taking place in Copenhagen, Denmark, so we went to the stage to talk with one of the project's members.
  • Featured content: Wikipedia at the Rijksmuseum
    Four articles, two lists, and five pictures were promoted to "featured" status on the English Wikipedia last week.

Wikidata weekly summary #109

[edit]

This Month in GLAM: April 2014

[edit]




Headlines

To assist with preparing the newsletter, please visit the newsroom. Past editions may be viewed here.

This Month in Education: May 2014

[edit]




Headlines

To assist with preparing the newsletter, please visit the newsroom. Past editions may be viewed here.

MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 20:09, 15 May 2014 (UTC)[reply]

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Articles you might like to edit, from SuggestBot

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Note: All columns in this table are sortable, allowing you to rearrange the table so the articles most interesting to you are shown at the top. All images have mouse-over popups with more information. For more information about the columns and categories, please consult the documentation, and please do get in touch on SuggestBot's talk page with any questions you might have.

Views/Day Quality Title Content Headings Images Links Sources Tagged with…
194 Quality: Low, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: Start Evaluation strategy (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Add sources
273 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: B Common Lisp (talk) Please add more sources Add sources
790 Quality: Low, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: Start Abstract data type (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Add sources
396 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: B Subroutine (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Add sources
50 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Eager evaluation (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Add sources
372 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Stub Message (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Add sources
201 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Start Hand signals (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Cleanup
361 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: B Python syntax and semantics (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Cleanup
664 Quality: High, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: FA Yandex (talk) Cleanup
68 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Operational semantics (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Expand
5 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Heinrich Suter (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Expand
9 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: B History of the Scheme programming language (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Expand
47 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: B Harmony search (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more sources Unencyclopaedic
20 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Cassandra (novel) (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Unencyclopaedic
12 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Motorcycle lane (talk) Please add more content Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Unencyclopaedic
40 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Stub Object-based language (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Merge
640 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: B ?: (talk) Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Merge
46 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: B Name resolution (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Merge
20 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Unbounded nondeterminism (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Wikify
400 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: B Comparison of C Sharp and Java (talk) Please add more images Wikify
51 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: B Falcon (programming language) (talk) Please add more sources Wikify
22 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: B Lateral computing (talk) Please add more sources Orphan
5 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: B Junction Grammar (talk) Please add more wikilinks Orphan
3 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Start Atlas do Visconde de Santarém (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Orphan
21 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Id (programming language) (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
42 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Stub Specification language (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
11 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Stub ΛProlog (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
26 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Mibefradil (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more sources Stub
17 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Robert Harper (computer scientist) (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
13 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Stub Divergence (computer science) (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub

SuggestBot picks articles in a number of ways based on other articles you've edited, including straight text similarity, following wikilinks, and matching your editing patterns against those of other Wikipedians. It tries to recommend only articles that other Wikipedians have marked as needing work. We appreciate that you have signed up to receive suggestions regularly, your contributions make Wikipedia better — thanks for helping!

If you have feedback on how to make SuggestBot better, please let us know on SuggestBot's talk page. Regards from Nettrom (talk), SuggestBot's caretaker. -- SuggestBot (talk) 15:16, 16 May 2014 (UTC)[reply]

The Signpost: 14 May 2014

[edit]
  • WikiProject report: Relaxing in Puerto Rico
    This week, the Signpost jumped over the ocean to chat with the Puerto Rico WikiProject.
  • News and notes: 'Ask a librarian'—connecting Wikimedians with the National Library of Australia
    Editors of Australian-related topics on the English Wikipedia may have noticed an odd addition if they viewed the article's talk pages. For example, on Talk:Darwin, Northern Territory, they might be drawn in by the question mark, nested within what is often a sea of WikiProject templates: "Need help improving this article? Ask a librarian at the National Library of Australia, or the Northern Territory Library." Just what is this?
  • Featured content: On the rocks
    Six articles, seven lists, and four pictures were promoted to 'featured' status on the English Wikipedia this week.

Wikidata weekly summary #110

[edit]

VisualEditor newsletter—May 2014

[edit]

Did you know?

The cite menu offers quick access to up to five citation templates. If your wiki has enabled the "⧼visualeditor-toolbar-cite-label⧽" menu, press "⧼visualeditor-toolbar-cite-label⧽" and select the appropriate template from the menu.

Existing citations that use these templates can be edited either using the "⧼visualeditor-toolbar-cite-label⧽" tool or by selecting the reference and choosing the "⧼visualeditor-dialogbutton-reference-tooltip⧽" item in the "Insert" menu.

Read the user guide for more information.

Since the last newsletter, the VisualEditor team has mostly worked on the new citation tool, improving performance, reducing technical debt, and other infrastructure needs.

The biggest change in the last few weeks is the new citation template menu, labeled "⧼visualeditor-toolbar-cite-label⧽". The new citation menu offers a locally configurable list of citation templates on the main toolbar. It adds or opens references using the simplified template dialog that was deployed last month. This tool is in addition to the "⧼visualeditor-dialogbutton-reference-tooltip⧽" item in the "Insert" menu, and it is not displayed unless it has been configured for that wiki. To enable this tool on your wiki, see the instructions at VisualEditor/Citation tool.

Eventually, the VisualEditor team plans to add autofill features for these citations. When this long-awaited feature is created, you could add an ISBN, URL, DOI or other identifier to the citation tool, and VisualEditor would automatically fill in as much information for that source as possible. The concept drawings can be seen at mw:VisualEditor/Design/Reference Dialog, and your ideas about making referencing quick and easy are still wanted.

  • There is a new Beta Feature for setting content language and direction. This allows editors who have opted in to use the "Language" tool in the "Insert" menu to add HTML span tags that label text with the language and as being left-to-right (LTR) or right-to-left (RTL), like this: <span lang="en" dir="ltr">English</span>. This tool is most useful for pages whose text combines multiple languages with different directions, common on Right-to-Left wikis.
  • The tool for editing mathematics formulae in VisualEditor has been slightly updated and is now available to all users, as the "⧼math-visualeditor-mwmathinspector-title⧽" item in the "Insert" menu. It uses LaTeX like in the wikitext editor.
  • The layout of template dialogs has been changed, putting the label above the field. Parameters are now called "fields", to avoid a technical term that many editors are unfamiliar with.
  • TemplateData has been expanded: You can now add "suggested" parameters in TemplateData, and VisualEditor will display them in the template dialogs like required ones. "Suggested" is recommended for parameters that are commonly used, but not actually required to make the template work. There is also a new type for TemplateData parameters: wiki-file-name, for file names. The template tool can now tell you if a parameter is marked as being obsolete.
  • Some templates that previously displayed strangely due to absolute CSS positioning hacks should now display correctly.
  • Several messages have changed: The notices shown when you save a page have been merged into those used in the wikitext editor, for consistency. The message shown when you "⧼visualeditor-toolbar-cancel⧽" out of an edit is clearer. The beta dialog notice, which is shown the first time you open VisualEditor, will be hidden for logged-in users via a user preference rather than a cookie. As a result of this change, the beta notice will show up one last time for all logged-in users on their next VisualEditor use after Thursday's upgrade.
  • Adding a category that is a redirect to another category prompts you to add the target category instead of the redirect.
  • In the "Images and media" dialog, it is no longer possible to set a redundant border for thumbnail and framed images.
  • There is a new Template Documentation Editor for TemplateData. You can test it by editing a documentation subpage (not a template page) at Mediawiki.org: edit mw:Template:Sandbox/doc, and then click "Manage template documentation" above the wikitext edit box. If your community would like to use this TemplateData editor at your project, please contact product manager James Forrester or file an enhancement request in Bugzilla.
  • There have been multiple small changes to the appearance: External links are shown in the same light blue color as in MediaWiki. This is a lighter shade of blue than the internal links. The styling of the "Style text" (character formatting) drop-down menu has been synchronized with the recent font changes to the Vector skin. VisualEditor dialogs, such as the "⧼visualeditor-toolbar-savedialog⧽" dialog, now use a "loading" animation of moving lines, rather than animated GIF images. Other changes were made to the appearance upon opening a page in VisualEditor which should make the transition between reading and editing be smoother.
  • The developers merged in many minor fixes and improvements to MediaWiki interface integration (e.g., edit notices), and made VisualEditor handle Education Program pages better.
  • At the request of the community, VisualEditor has been deployed to Commons as an opt-in. It is currently available by default for 161 Wikipedia language editions and by opt-in through Beta Features at all others, as well as on several non-Wikipedia sites.

Looking ahead: The toolbar from the PageTriage extension will no longer be visible inside VisualEditor. More buttons and icons will be accessible from the keyboard. The "Keyboard shortcuts" link will be moved out of the "Page options" menu, into the "Help" menu. Support for upright image sizes (preferred for accessibility) and inline images is being developed. You will be able to see the Table of Contents while editing. Looking further out, the developers are also working on support for viewing and editing hidden HTML comments. VisualEditor will be available to all users on mobile devices and tablet computers. It will be possible to upload images to Commons from inside VisualEditor.

If you have questions or suggestions for future improvements, or if you encounter problems, please let everyone know by posting a note at mw:VisualEditor/Feedback or by joining the office hours on Thursday, 19 June 2014 at 10:00 UTC. If you'd like to get this newsletter on your own page (about once a month), please subscribe at w:en:Wikipedia:VisualEditor/Newsletter for English Wikipedia only or at meta:VisualEditor/Newsletter for any project. Thank you! Whatamidoing (WMF) 22:16, 21 May 2014 (UTC)[reply]

The Signpost: 21 May 2014

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  • News and notes: "Crisis" over Wikimedia Germany's palace revolution
    Last Sunday the board of Wikimedia Germany passed 9–1 a vote of no confidence in the chapter's executive director, Pavel Richter, who has held the position since 2009. With more than 50 employees, an annual budget approaching $10 million, and the right to conduct its own fundraising through the Wikimedia Foundation's (WMF) site banners, Wikimedia Germany is the second-largest organisation in the movement after the WMF itself. The decision was announced on the Wikimedia mailing list by the chapter chair, Nikolas Becker.
  • Traffic report: Doodles' dawn
    It's a relief to see Google Doodles having an impact again; their wide coverage means that they inspire curiosity on many subjects which, for reasons of nationality, ethnicity or gender, might not be known in the English-speaking world. It's a shame then, that Wikipedia so often fails to keep up; articles on Google Doodles are almost invariably C-class, and seldom do justice to their subjects. Still, interest in Google Doodles has been waning in recent months—Audrey Hepburn last week was the first to top the list since December—so any rise in popularity is worth celebrating.

Wikidata weekly summary #110

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Request for comment

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Hello there, a proposal regarding pre-adminship review has been raised at Village pump by Anna Frodesiak. Your comments here is very much appreciated. Many thanks. Jim Carter through MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 06:47, 28 May 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Wikidata weekly summary #111

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The Signpost: 28 May 2014

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  • News and notes: The English Wikipedia's second featured-article centurion; wiki inventor interviewed on video
    With the promotion to featured article of Grus (constellation) on 17 May, Casliber became Wikipedia's second featured-article centurion, following Wehwalt's groundbreaking achievement last December. Cas's first FA, Banksia integrifolia, a group effort, was promoted on 16 November 2006. His first solo project, Diplodocus, followed in January 2007; he has rarely been off the FAC since. In a second story, Ward Cunningham, an American computer programmer who invented the wiki, was interviewed by the WMF.
  • Featured content: Zombie fight in the saloon
    Wikipedia editor Sven Manguard's work is quite underappreciated a lot of the time, most likely because people haven't heard of it yet: He's developed good relationships with game companies, and is thus able to get full-resolution screenshots released under a Creative Commons license for use on Wikipedia and elsewhere. This week's trove of new featured items on the English Wikipedia comprises seven articles, three lists, and four pictures.
  • Traffic report: Get fitted for flipflops and floppy hats
    In the US, Memorial Day marks the unofficial beginning of summer, and summer is definitely on people's minds this week, with summer films Godzilla and X-Men: Days of Future Past, the apparently designated summer song "Fancy" by Iggy Azalea, and summer TV show, Game of Thrones.
  • Recent research: Predicting which article you will edit next
    Wikipedia in the eyes of its beholders; "Chinese-language time zones" favor Asian pop and IT topics on Wikipedia; and bipartite editing prediction in Wikipedia.

Wikidata weekly summary #112

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The Signpost: 04 June 2014

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  • Special report: IEG funding for women's stories: a new approach to the gender gap
    Individual engagement grants (IEGs) are announced twice yearly by a volunteer WMF committee, the most recent of which we covered last December. The scheme, launched at the start of last year, awards funds to individuals or teams of up to four to produce high-impact outcomes for the WMF's online projects. It favours innovative approaches to solving critical issues in the movement.
  • News and notes: Two new affiliate-selected trustees
    New trustee Frieda Briosch from Italy: we face "a couple of headaches", she says: "how to boost editors, which includes the development of the next strategic plan, and how to keep our project always 'glamorous'."
  • Op-ed: "Hospitality, jerks, and what I learned"—the amazing keynote at WikiConference USA
    I never feel quite adequate trying to paraphrase Sumana's words: she is so articulate. I highly encourage every person who reads this article to directly watch her keynote—it directly speaks to a lot of Wikimedia's most significant issues, made with great eloquence. We have a serious issue with retaining editors, and parts of her speech could serve as a pretty good partial blueprint towards how we could begin to fix that problem.
  • Featured content: Ye stately homes of England
    David Iliff, or Diliff, as he is known on here outside of the file pages for his many, many, excellent photographs, is one of Wikipedia's longest-standing professional-standard photographers. This week, the Signpost salutes him.
  • Traffic report: Autumn in summer
    The northern summer is a time when one is meant to celebrate the exuberance of life; instead, commemoration of the dead was a significant theme this week.

This Month in GLAM: May 2014

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Headlines
  • Netherlands report: Libraries; Wikidata & DBpedia; Wikipedians in Residence; Open Culture Data
  • Norway report: 2 x GLAM edit-a-thons
  • Sweden report: Award, competitions and Coat of Arms
  • UK report: No trouble at t'mill; Assisting Metropolitan Police with image licensing enquiries; Wikimania is coming
  • USA report: New Edit-a-thons; GLAM at Wikiconference USA; Activities in New York City
  • Open Access report: WikiProject Open Access launched on the English Wikisource
  • Calendar: June's GLAM events

To assist with preparing the newsletter, please visit the newsroom. Past editions may be viewed here.

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Note: All columns in this table are sortable, allowing you to rearrange the table so the articles most interesting to you are shown at the top. All images have mouse-over popups with more information. For more information about the columns and categories, please consult the documentation, and please do get in touch on SuggestBot's talk page with any questions you might have.

Views/Day Quality Title Content Headings Images Links Sources Tagged with…
615 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Inheritance (object-oriented programming) (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more sources Add sources
346 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: C Esoteric programming language (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more sources Add sources
64 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Pure function (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Add sources
21 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Stub Axiomatic semantics (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Add sources
97 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Poon Lim (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Add sources
195 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Stub Standard ML (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Add sources
207 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Japanese role-playing game (talk) Please add more content Please add more sources Cleanup
5,204 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: B Java (programming language) (talk) Please add more sources Cleanup
266 Quality: High, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: A Monitor (synchronization) (talk) Please add more sources Cleanup
224 Quality: Low, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: Start Type theory (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more sources Expand
132 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Stub Physical address (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more sources Expand
89 Quality: High, Assessed class: B, Predicted class: FA History of mathematical notation (talk) Expand
979 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: B Lagrangian point (talk) Unencyclopaedic
117 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Stub List (abstract data type) (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more sources Unencyclopaedic
3,282 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: B Object-oriented programming (talk) Unencyclopaedic
22 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Top type (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more sources Merge
644 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: B Printf format string (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Merge
119 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Runtime system (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Merge
15 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Logtalk (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Wikify
57 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Stub Gosu (programming language) (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Wikify
1,411 Quality: Low, Assessed class: B, Predicted class: Start Parsi (talk) Please add more sources Wikify
3 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Start Ruy de Queiroz (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Orphan
3 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Faceted Application of Subject Terminology (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Orphan
3 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: C Uclid (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Orphan
9 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Patrick Cousot (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
64 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Stub Potato paradox (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
25 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Stub Type constructor (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more sources Stub
28 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Start Abstract semantic graph (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more sources Stub
29 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Fasoracetam (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
11 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub John C. Mitchell (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub

SuggestBot picks articles in a number of ways based on other articles you've edited, including straight text similarity, following wikilinks, and matching your editing patterns against those of other Wikipedians. It tries to recommend only articles that other Wikipedians have marked as needing work. We appreciate that you have signed up to receive suggestions regularly, your contributions make Wikipedia better — thanks for helping!

If you have feedback on how to make SuggestBot better, please let us know on SuggestBot's talk page. Regards from Nettrom (talk), SuggestBot's caretaker. -- SuggestBot (talk) 14:16, 13 June 2014 (UTC)[reply]

The Signpost: 11 June 2014

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  • News and notes: PR agencies commit to ethical interactions with Wikipedia
    Eleven public relations agencies have declared their intention to follow "ethical engagement practices" in Wikipedia editing. The results were published last Tuesday: a joint statement from the participating PR agencies—representing five of the top ten global agencies and all but one of the top ten in the United States—clarifying their views and practices with regards to the Wikimedia projects.
  • Traffic report: The week the wired went weird
    It seems that, more than commemorating the great moments in our history, more than even anticipating great sporting events, what our audience wants is the weird.
  • Paid editing: Does Wikipedia Pay? The Moderator: William Beutler
    William Beutler (WWB), author of the blog The Wikipedian, is a long-time editor and community-watcher. He is also a paid editor (WWB Too). Well—not anymore—because he gave up direct editing of articles in 2011. Instead, for the past three years he has followed Jimmy Wales' Bright Line rule in acting as a researcher and consultant for companies and clients that want to suggest changes to Wikipedia articles and engage on the Talk page.
  • Special report: Questions raised over secret voting for WMF trustees
    Last week we reported the announcement of two new affiliate-selected WMF trustees. The board of trustees is the most powerful and influential body in the movement, and chapters have been permitted to select two of the 10 seats since 2008, for two-year terms that start in even-numbered years.
  • Featured content: Politics, ships, art, and cyclones
    Five articles, one list, twelve pictures, and one topic were promoted to 'featured' status last week on the English Wikipedia.

Wikidata weekly summary #113

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This Month in Education: June 2014

[edit]




Headlines

To assist with preparing the newsletter, please visit the newsroom. Past editions may be viewed here.

MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 05:12, 16 June 2014 (UTC)[reply]

If this message is not on your home wiki's talk page, please update your subscription.

The Signpost: 18 June 2014

[edit]
  • Featured content: Worming our way to featured picture
    Five articles, five lists, 22 pictures, and one portal were promoted to 'featured' status on the English Wikipedia last week.
  • Special report: Wikimedia Bangladesh: a chapter's five-year journey
    The Bangladesh chapter of the Wikimedia movement was formed in 2009. They received official local registration from the national authorities on 10 June 2014. The long road in between was subject to much persistence, patience, and luck—along with a good deal of worry.
  • Traffic report: You can't dethrone Thrones
    To the surprise of absolutely no one, the 2014 FIFA World Cup was the main draw this week, taking four slots. People appeared desperate to bone up on their trivia; checking not only this year's World Cup, but the last one. Even so, they still couldn't push Game of Thrones from the top ten. It will be interesting to see what happens come next week's season finale.
  • WikiProject report: Visiting the city
    This week, the Signpost came in from the hinterland to interview members of the Cities WikiProject.

Wikidata weekly summary #114

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VisualEditor global newsletter—June 2014

[edit]
The character formatting menu

Did you know?

The character formatting menu, or "Style text" menu lets you set bold, italic, and other text styles. "Clear formatting" removes all text styles and removes links to other pages.

Do you think that clear formatting should remove links? Are there changes you would like to see for this menu? Share your opinion at MediaWiki.org.

The user guide has information about how to use VisualEditor.

The VisualEditor team is mostly working to fix bugs, improve performance, reduce technical debt, and other infrastructure needs. You can find on Mediawiki.org weekly updates detailing recent work.

  • They have moved the "Keyboard shortcuts" link out of the "Page options" menu, into the "Help" menu. Within dialog boxes, buttons are now more accessible (via the Tab key) from the keyboard.
  • You can now see the target of the link when you click on it, without having to open the inspector.
  • The team also expanded TemplateData: You can now add a parameter type "date" for dates and times in the ISO 8601 format, and "boolean" for values which are true or false. Also, templates that redirect to other templates (like {{citeweb}}{{cite web}}) now get the TemplateData of their target (bug 50964). You can test TemplateData by editing mw:Template:Sandbox/doc.
  • Category: and File: pages now display their contents correctly after saving an edit (bug 65349, bug 64239)
  • They have also improved reference editing: You should no longer be able to add empty citations with VisualEditor (bug 64715), as with references. When you edit a reference, you can now empty it and click the "use an existing reference" button to replace it with another reference instead.
  • It is now possible to edit inline images with VisualEditor. Remember that inline images cannot display captions, so existing captions get removed. Many other bugs related to images were also fixed.
  • You can now add and edit {{DISPLAYTITLE}} and __DISAMBIG__ in the "Page options" menu, rounding out the full set of page options currently planned.
  • The tool to insert special characters is now wider and simpler.

Looking ahead

[edit]

The VisualEditor team has posted a draft of their goals for the next fiscal year. You can read them and suggest changes on MediaWiki.org.

The team posts details about planned work on VisualEditor's roadmap. You will soon be able to drag-and-drop text as well as images. If you drag an image to a new place, it won't let you place it in the middle of a paragraph. All dialog boxes and windows will be simplified based on user testing and feedback. The VisualEditor team plans to add autofill features for citations. Your ideas about making referencing quick and easy are still wanted. Support for upright image sizes is being developed. The designers are also working on support for viewing and editing hidden HTML comments and adding rows and columns to tables.

Supporting your wiki

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Please read VisualEditor/Citation tool for information on configuring the new citation template menu, labeled "⧼visualeditor-toolbar-cite-label⧽". This menu will not appear unless it has been configured on your wiki.

If you speak a language other than English, we need your help with translating the user guide. The guide is out of date or incomplete for many languages, and what's on your wiki may not be the most recent translation. Please contact me if you need help getting started with translation work on MediaWiki.org.

VisualEditor can be made available to most non-Wikipedia projects. If your community would like to test VisualEditor, please contact product manager James Forrester or file an enhancement request in Bugzilla.

Please share your questions, suggestions, or problems by posting a note at mw:VisualEditor/Feedback or by joining the office hours on Saturday, 19 July 2014 at 21:00 UTC (daytime for the Americas and Pacific Islands) or on Thursday, 14 August 2014 at 9:00 UTC (daytime for Europe, Middle East, Asia).

To change your subscription to this newsletter, please see the subscription pages on Meta or the English Wikipedia. Thank you! Whatamidoing (WMF) (talk) 04:59, 25 June 2014 (UTC)[reply]

The Signpost: 25 June 2014

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  • News and notes: US National Archives enshrines Wikipedia in Open Government Plan
    The US National Archives and Record Administration (NARA) have committed to engaging with Wikimedia projects in their newest Open Government Plan. The biannual effort is a roadmap for how the agency will accomplish its goals in the digital age.
  • Traffic report: Fake war, or real sport?
    Despite the interest generated by its season finale, Game of Thrones still couldn't top the World Cup, which still dominated interest, as evidenced by the fact that this top 10 is virtually identical to last week's, just with a different dead celebrity.
  • Featured content: Showing our Wörth
    Ten articles and eleven pictures were promoted to "featured" status on the English Wikipedia this week.
  • WikiProject report: The world where dreams come true
    This week, the Signpost visited the land of Disney, blockbusters, explosions, dream sequences, and cultural masterpieces: film.
  • Recent research: Power users and diversity in WikiProjects
    In a recent paper, Jacob Solomon and Rick Wash investigate the question of sustainability in online communities by analysing trends in the growth of WikiProjects.

Wikidata weekly summary #115

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Wikidata weekly summary #116

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The Signpost: 02 July 2014

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  • In the media: Wiki Education; medical content; PR firms
    The Los Angeles Times highlighted a recent Wiki Education Foundation (WEF) course at Pomona College in their article "Wikipedia pops up in bibliographies, and even college curricula". We interviewed Char Booth, the campus ambassador for the course, for additional details.
  • Traffic report: The Cup runneth over... and over.
    With Game of Thrones over for another year, the World Cup dominated yet again. And that is pretty much that. This list isn't likely to be particularly eventful until the Cup is won.
  • News and notes: Wikimedia Israel receives Roaring Lion award
    Wikimedia Israel (WMIL) has won a Roaring Lion in the category of Internet and cellular for its public outreach during the tenth anniversary of the Hebrew Wikipedia in July 2013.
  • Featured content: Ship-shape
    Six articles, five lists, seventeen pictures, and one topic were promoted to "featured" status on the English Wikipedia this week.
  • Technology report: In memoriam: the Toolserver (2005–14)
    In the early hours of Tuesday morning, Wikimedia Deutschland's Toolserver project was switched off, marking the end of one of the Wikimedia movement's longest running Chapter-led projects. The Toolserver, which was in fact a collection of servers, first came online in 2005, hosting hundreds of webpages and scripts ("tools") made available for use by Wikimedia readers, editors and administrators.

This Month in GLAM: June 2014

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Headlines
  • Belgium report: Bouchout Declaration on Open Access to Biodiversity data; Virtual collaboration in the government
  • France report: Round table in Brussels; Video at Sèvres; 70th anniversary of the D-Day
  • Germany report: Exhibition photography
  • Mexico report: Edit-a-thon of Museo Soumaya; simulthaneous edit-a-thon in Argentina, Mexico and Spain about Spanish Exile; new cultural partner of Wikimedia México
  • Netherlands report: Music edit-a-thon; Library workshops; Videos, maps and Japanese art donations; Wiki Loves Earth
  • Sweden report: Wiki Loves Monuments is being prepared for Sweden
  • UK report: Free Culture; Image releases
  • USA report: A GLAM Day Out! in Philadelphia; Local History at the Local Library
  • Wikimania report: GLAM presentations at Wikimania
  • Open Access report: Open biodiversity data; Automated import of scholarly journal articles into Wikisource
  • Calendar: July's GLAM events

To assist with preparing the newsletter, please visit the newsroom. Past editions may be viewed here.

Articles you might like to edit, from SuggestBot

[edit]

Note: All columns in this table are sortable, allowing you to rearrange the table so the articles most interesting to you are shown at the top. All images have mouse-over popups with more information. For more information about the columns and categories, please consult the documentation, and please do get in touch on SuggestBot's talk page with any questions you might have.

Views/Day Quality Title Content Headings Images Links Sources Tagged with…
354 Quality: Low, Assessed class: B, Predicted class: Start Variable (computer science) (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more sources Add sources
70 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: C Type class (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more sources Add sources
193 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: B Tail call (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Add sources
61 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Option type (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more sources Add sources
182 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Fold (higher-order function) (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Add sources
4,310 Quality: High, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: A C (programming language) (talk) Add sources
141 Quality: High, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: FA History of the floppy disk (talk) Cleanup
3,347 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: B Regular expression (talk) Please add more sources Cleanup
48 Quality: Low, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: Start Rice's theorem (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Cleanup
65 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start CLU (programming language) (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Expand
202 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Point in polygon (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Expand
218 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Concurrent computing (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Expand
819 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: B Pascal (programming language) (talk) Please add more sources Unencyclopaedic
10 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Start Quark Framework (talk) Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Unencyclopaedic
250 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Start Nurofen (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Unencyclopaedic
1,159 Quality: Low, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: Start Compiler (talk) Please add more sources Merge
15 Quality: Low, Assessed class: List, Predicted class: Start Comparison of programming languages (strings) (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more sources Merge
1 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Stub Sara Cohen (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Merge
426 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Declarative programming (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more sources Wikify
46 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Nemerle (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more sources Wikify
370 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Fourth-generation programming language (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more sources Wikify
6 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start POSXML (talk) Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Orphan
14 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: List, Predicted class: B Outline of databases (talk) Please add more sources Orphan
3 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Sergei N. Artemov (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Orphan
15 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Stub Bounded quantification (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
6 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Polymorphic recursion (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
19 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Church–Rosser theorem (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
6 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Stub Higher-Order and Symbolic Computation (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
4 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Peter O'Hearn (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
7 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Stub Greiner-Hormann clipping algorithm (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub

SuggestBot picks articles in a number of ways based on other articles you've edited, including straight text similarity, following wikilinks, and matching your editing patterns against those of other Wikipedians. It tries to recommend only articles that other Wikipedians have marked as needing work. We appreciate that you have signed up to receive suggestions regularly, your contributions make Wikipedia better — thanks for helping!

If you have feedback on how to make SuggestBot better, please let us know on SuggestBot's talk page. Regards from Nettrom (talk), SuggestBot's caretaker. -- SuggestBot (talk) 17:45, 11 July 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Informal note

[edit]

Hey, I notice that you have HighBeam access and you seem to have a few topicons. That being said, if you are interested, I've created {{Wikipedia:HighBeam/Topicon}}. No reply to this message is necessary (and I won't see it unless you ping me), just wanted to let you know it was available. Happy editing! — {{U|Technical 13}} (etc) 23:58, 11 July 2014 (UTC)[reply]

The Signpost: 09 July 2014

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  • Special report: Wikimania 2014—what will it cost?
    Last May, James Forrester announced to the world that London had been awarded the 2014 Wikimania conference. Functioning as the Wikimedia movement's annual conference, it is separate from the chapter-focused Wikimedia Conference. The first, located in Frankfurt, took place in 2005 and had 380 attendees. London, the tenth, is now expected to attract 1500. With Wikimania ambition, attention, and attendance rising significantly over the last nine years, how have this year's monetary costs come to be?
  • Wikimedia in education: Exploring the United States and Canada with LiAnna Davis
    The Wikimedia Education Program currently spans 60 programs around the world; students and instructors participate at almost every level of education. The Education program Signpost series presents a snapshot of the Wikimedia Global Education Program as it exists in 2014.
  • Traffic report: World Cup, Tim Howard rule the week
    Unsurprisingly, the World Cup continued to dominate the English Wikipedia's viewing statistics. In particular, the record-breaking performance of US goalkeeper Tim Howard and the tournament-ending injury to Brazil's Neymar drove large amount of views to their articles.

Wikidata weekly summary #117

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This Month in Education: July 2014

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14:07, 15 July 2014 (UTC)

If this message is not on your home wiki's talk page, update your subscription.

The Signpost: 16 July 2014

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  • Special report: $10 million lawsuit against Wikipedia editors withdrawn, but plaintiff intends to refile
    On the same day the Wikimedia Foundation (WMF) announced it would offer assistance to English Wikipedia editors embroiled in a legal dispute with Yank Barry, the lawsuit has been withdrawn without prejudice at the request of Barry's legal team—but this action is being described as "strategic" so that they can refile the lawsuit with a "new, more comprehensive complaint."
  • Featured content: The Island with the Golden Gun
    Eight articles, three lists, and 28 pictures were promoted to "featured" status on the English Wikipedia last week.
  • News and notes: Bot-created Wikipedia articles covered in the Wall Street Journal, push Cebuano over one million articles
    The Swedish Wikipedia's prolific Lsjbot, which has created a significant proportion of the site's 1.7 million articles and has nearly single-handedly pushed it to being the fourth-largest Wikipedia, was covered in the Wall Street Journal this week. The newspaper reported that the bot has created 2.7 million articles, which is apparently a reference to the Waray-Waray and Cebuano Wikipedias, where Lsjbot is also active, and that "on a good day", it creates 10,000 articles.

Wikidata weekly summary #118

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The Signpost: 23 July 2014

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  • Traffic report: The World Cup hangs on, though tragedies seek to replace it
    Last week I predicted that the World Cup dominance on the report would be over—but I was wrong. The World Cup Final fell on the 13th of July, which was actually the first day of the week covered by this report, not the last day of the last report. Hence, five of the Top 10 this week are again World Cup related-topics.
  • News and notes: Institutional media uploads to Commons get a bit easier
    Galleries, libraries, archives, and museums (GLAMs) today are facing fewer barriers to uploading their content onto Wikimedia projects now that the new GLAM-Wiki Toolset Project has been launched. The tool, which is the fruit of a collaboration between Europeana and several Wikimedia chapters, relieves GLAMs from having to write their own automated scripts and gives them a standardized method of uploading large amounts of their digitized holdings.
  • Forum: Did you know?—good idea, needs reform
    The English Wikipedia's did you know (DYK) section has been a feature of the site's main page since February 2004. From the beginning, the section has served as a place to highlight Wikipedia's newest articles. But over the last few years, the did you know section has gotten steadily larger and more complex, and non-notable or plagiarized articles have occasionally slipped through the reviewing process, leading numerous editors to call for reforms to the system. We asked two editors to share their views.
  • Featured content: Why, they're plum identical!
    Ten articles, five lists, and 25 pictures were promoted to featured status on the English Wikipedia last week.

Wikidata weekly summary #119

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The Signpost: 30 July 2014

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  • Book review: Knowledge or unreality?
    In Common Knowledge: An Ethnography of Wikipedia, Dariusz Jemielniak discusses Wikipedia from the standpoint of an experienced editor and administrator who is also a university professor specializing in management and organizations. In Virtual Reality: Just Because the Internet Told You, How Do You Know It's True?, Charles Seife presents a more broadly themed work reminding us to question the reliability of information found throughout the Internet.
  • Recent research: Shifting values in the paid content debate
    Kim Osman has performed a fascinating study on the three 2013 failed proposals to ban paid advocacy editing in the English language Wikipedia. Using a Constructivist Grounded Theory approach, Osman analyzed 573 posts from the three main votes on paid editing conducted in the community in November 2013.
  • News and notes: How many more hoaxes will Wikipedia find?
    Another hoax on the English Wikipedia was uncovered this week—not by any thorough investigation, but through the self-disclosure of an anonymous change made when the editors were in their sophomore year of college. The deliberate misinformation had been in the article for over five years with plenty of individuals noticing, but not one suspected its authenticity. This leads to one obvious question: how many more are there?
  • Traffic report: Doom and gloom vs. the power of Reddit
    We indeed moved far away from football this week, and further into much more serious issues of war and death. The Israel-Palestinian conflict continues to dominate the news, and the top 10, with Gaza Strip, Israel, and Hamas. The top 25 also includes Palestine and the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. Death also lies behind the popularity of James Garner, the American actor who died on July 19th, Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, and deaths in 2014.
  • Featured content: Skeletons and Skeltons
    Two articles, four lists, and seven pictures attained featured status on the English Wikipedia last week.

Wikidata weekly summary #120

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Category:Documentary films about geology

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Category:Documentary films about geology, which you created, has been nominated for possible deletion, merging, or renaming. If you would like to participate in the discussion, you are invited to add your comments at the category's entry on the Categories for discussion page. Thank you. Shawn in Montreal (talk) 20:09, 5 August 2014 (UTC)[reply]

VisualEditor newsletter—July and August 2014

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The VisualEditor team is currently working mostly to fix bugs, improve performance, reduce technical debt, and other infrastructure needs. You can find on Mediawiki.org weekly updates detailing recent work.

Screenshot of VisualEditor's link tool
Dialog boxes in VisualEditor have been re-designed to use action words instead of icons. This has increased the number of items that need to be translated. The user guide is also being updated.

The biggest visible change since the last newsletter was to the dialog boxes. The design for each dialog box and window was simplified. The most commonly needed buttons are now at the top. Based on user feedback, the buttons are now labeled with simple words (like "Cancel" or "Done") instead of potentially confusing icons (like "<" or "X"). Many of the buttons to edit links, images, and other items now also show the linked page, image name, or other useful information when you click on them.

  • Hidden HTML comments (notes visible to editors, but not to readers) can now be read, edited, inserted, and removed. A small icon (a white exclamation mark on a dot) marks the location of each comments. You can click on the icon to see the comment.
  • You can now drag and drop text and templates as well as images. A new placement line makes it much easier to see where you are dropping the item. Images can no longer be dropped into the middle of paragraphs.
  • All references and footnotes (<ref> tags) are now made through the "⧼visualeditor-toolbar-cite-label⧽" menu, including the "⧼visualeditor-dialogbutton-reference-tooltip⧽" (manual formatting) footnotes and the ability to re-use an existing citation, both of which were previously accessible only through the "Insert" menu. The "⧼visualeditor-dialogbutton-referencelist-tooltip⧽" is still added via the "Insert" menu.
  • When you add an image or other media file, you are now prompted to add an image caption immediately. You can also replace an image whilst keeping the original caption and other settings.
  • All tablet users visiting the mobile web version of Wikipedias will be able to opt-in to a version of VisualEditor from 14 August. You can test the new tool by choosing the beta version of the mobile view in the Settings menu.
  • The link tool has a new "Open" button that will open a linked page in another tab so you can make sure a link is the right one.
  • The "Cancel" button in the toolbar has been removed based on user testing. To cancel any edit, you can leave the page by clicking the Read tab, the back button in your browser, or closing the browser window without saving your changes.

Looking ahead

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The team posts details about planned work on the VisualEditor roadmap. The VisualEditor team plans to add auto-fill features for citations soon. Your ideas about making referencing quick and easy are still wanted. Support for upright image sizes is being developed. The designers are also working on support for adding rows and columns to tables. Work to support Internet Explorer is ongoing.

Feedback opportunities

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The Editing team will be making two presentations this weekend at Wikimania in London. The first is with product manager James Forrester and developer Trevor Parscal on Saturday at 16:30. The second is with developers Roan Kattouw and Trevor Parscal on Sunday at 12:30.

Please share your questions, suggestions, or problems by posting a note at the VisualEditor feedback page or by joining the office hours discussion on Thursday, 14 August 2014 at 09:00 UTC (daytime for Europe, Middle East and Asia) or on Thursday, 18 September 2014 at 16:00 UTC (daytime for the Americas; evening for Europe).

If you'd like to get this newsletter on your own page (about once a month), please subscribe at w:en:Wikipedia:VisualEditor/Newsletter for English Wikipedia only or at Meta for any project. Thank you! Whatamidoing (WMF) (talk) 18:14, 8 August 2014 (UTC)[reply]

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Views/Day Quality Title Content Headings Images Links Sources Tagged with…
330 Quality: Low, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: Start OCaml (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Add sources
1,105 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: B Scala (programming language) (talk) Add sources
15 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Idola specus (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Add sources
574 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: B Smalltalk (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Add sources
233 Quality: Low, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: Start Theory of computation (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more sources Add sources
498 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: B, Predicted class: B First-order logic (talk) Please add more sources Add sources
15 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Gödel (programming language) (talk) Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Cleanup
105 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Stub Blunted on Reality (talk) Please add more content Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Cleanup
267 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: B, Predicted class: B Control flow (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Cleanup
28 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Shōen (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Expand
9 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Haskell 98 features (talk) Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Expand
685 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Data type (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more sources Expand
3,745 Quality: High, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: FA RAID (talk) Please add more images Unencyclopaedic
150 Quality: High, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: FA Sinophobia (talk) Unencyclopaedic
376 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Callback (computer programming) (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Unencyclopaedic
107 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Virtual address space (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more sources Merge
95 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Stub Stream (computing) (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more sources Merge
100 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: C Foreign function interface (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Merge
4 Quality: Low, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: Start Roshdi Rashed (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Wikify
200 Quality: High, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: FA Legality of Bitcoins by country (talk) Please create proper section headings Wikify
223 Quality: High, Assessed class: B, Predicted class: A Abū Rayḥān al-Bīrūnī (talk) Please add more sources Wikify
1 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Ataenius (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Orphan
1 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Stub Auguste Island (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Orphan
6 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start 3D sound localization (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Orphan
43 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Stub Aristeia (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
77 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Google Fit (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more sources Stub
29 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Vatti clipping algorithm (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
4 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Supercombinator (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
6 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Combinator library (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
5 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Stub Constructed product result analysis (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub

SuggestBot picks articles in a number of ways based on other articles you've edited, including straight text similarity, following wikilinks, and matching your editing patterns against those of other Wikipedians. It tries to recommend only articles that other Wikipedians have marked as needing work. We appreciate that you have signed up to receive suggestions regularly, your contributions make Wikipedia better — thanks for helping!

If you have feedback on how to make SuggestBot better, please let us know on SuggestBot's talk page. Regards from Nettrom (talk), SuggestBot's caretaker. -- SuggestBot (talk) 01:06, 9 August 2014 (UTC)[reply]

The Signpost: 06 August 2014

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  • Technology report: A technologist's Wikimania preview
    As the start of Wikimania proper on 8 August approaches, the Signpost looks ahead to what its dozens of presentations might offer the technologically-inclined, whether attending in person or taking advantage of what promises to be a strong digital offering.
  • Traffic report: Ebola
    Serious news continues to dominate the most popular articles chart on Wikipedia this week, with the Ebola virus disease far and away in the top spot. In the top 25, we see the related articles Ebola virus, which talks about biological aspects, at #18 and 2014 West Africa Ebola outbreak at #19.

Wikidata weekly summary #121

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This Month in GLAM: July 2014

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Headlines

To assist with preparing the newsletter, please visit the newsroom. Past editions may be viewed here.

Wikidata weekly summary #122

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Wikidata weekly summary #114

Discussion at Wikipedia:Files for deletion/2014 August 16#File:Hearts XP.png

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You are invited to join the discussion at Wikipedia:Files for deletion/2014 August 16#File:Hearts XP.png. Thanks. Dogmaticeclectic (talk) 14:40, 17 August 2014 (UTC)[reply]

The Signpost: 13 August 2014

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  • Special report: Twitter bots catalogue government edits to Wikipedia
    Slate reports that Tom Scott, co-creator of the emoji social network Emojli, created a Twitter bot called Parliament WikiEdits to automatically tweet a link to any Wikipedia edits made from an IP address belonging to the Parliament of the United Kingdom. Scott's bot initially did not tweet any links to edits made from Parliament and, according to Scott, an "insider" reports that their IP addresses changed. Despite this, Scott's Twitter bot has inspired similar creations in numerous other countries.
  • Traffic report: Disease, decimation and distraction
    It's been a grim few weeks. It says something that formerly arresting crises like the war in Ukraine, Boko Haram and the 2014 Israel–Gaza conflict, despite still being ongoing, have fallen out of the top 10 to make way for the 2014 West Africa Ebola outbreak and the equally if not more intense conflict against the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant.
  • Wikimania: Promised the moon, settled for the stars
    Wikimania 2014 was held last week in the Barbican Centre in London. Below, the Signpost's former "Technology report" writer Harry Burt (User:Jarry1250) shares his thoughts on a bustling conference.
  • News and notes: Media Viewer controversy spreads to German Wikipedia
    Wikimedia Foundation staff members have now been granted superpowers that would allow them to override community consensus. The new protection level came as a response to attempts of German Wikipedia administrators to implement a community consensus on the new Media Viewer. "Superprotect" is a level above full protection, and prevents edits by administrators.
  • Op-ed: Red links, blue links, and erythrophobia
    Erythrophobia is the fear of, or sensitivity to, the colour red. Recently, I have seen more and more erythrophobic Wikipedians; specifically, Wikipedians who are scared of red links. In Wikipedia's early days, red links were encouraged and well-loved, and when I started editing in 2006, this was still mostly the case. Jump forward to 2014, and many editors now have an aversion to red links.
  • In the media: Monkey selfie, net neutrality, and hoaxes
    The Observer reported (August 2) that Google would "restrict search terms to a link to a Wikipedia article, in the first request under Europe's controversial new 'right to be forgotten' legislation to affect the 110m-page encyclopaedia."

This Month in Education: August 2014

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The Signpost: 20 August 2014

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  • Op-ed: A new metric for Wikimedia
    Denny Vrandečić argues that "We should focus on measuring how much knowledge we allow every human to share in, instead of number of articles or active editors."

Wikidata weekly summary #123

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The Signpost: 27 August 2014

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  • Traffic report: Viral
    "This was a week when an actual virus, Ebola, competed for attention with several viral social phenomena; most notably the Ice Bucket Challenge..."

Wikidata weekly summary #124

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Note: All columns in this table are sortable, allowing you to rearrange the table so the articles most interesting to you are shown at the top. All images have mouse-over popups with more information. For more information about the columns and categories, please consult the documentation, and please do get in touch on SuggestBot's talk page with any questions you might have.

Views/Day Quality Title Content Headings Images Links Sources Tagged with…
13 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Idola tribus (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Add sources
181 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Value (computer science) (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Add sources
1,325 Quality: High, Assessed class: FA, Predicted class: FA Super Nintendo Entertainment System (talk) Add sources
233 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: B Scope (computer science) (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Add sources
14 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Start Idola theatri (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Add sources
632 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: B Shea butter (talk) Please add more content Please add more sources Add sources
223 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: B Eiffel (programming language) (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Cleanup
1,276 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: B C++11 (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Cleanup
164 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: C Formal methods (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more sources Cleanup
277 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: C Memoization (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Expand
61 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: B, Predicted class: B Adjoint functors (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Expand
90 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Start DRAKON (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Expand
197 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Xenia (Greek) (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Unencyclopaedic
68 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: B, Predicted class: C Hindley–Milner type system (talk) Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Unencyclopaedic
181 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: B Comparison of programming paradigms (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Unencyclopaedic
691 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: B, Predicted class: B Type system (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Merge
158 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Stub Higher-order function (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Merge
88 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Tagged union (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more sources Merge
1,269 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: B Fortran (talk) Please add more sources Wikify
144 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: C Relational operator (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more sources Wikify
23 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Trimming (computer programming) (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Wikify
5 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Closure (Gabrielle song) (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Orphan
3 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Anastasia Chernyavsky (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Orphan
4 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub 2Geom (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Orphan
1 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Stub Raynox (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
10 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
3 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Stub National Harmonica League (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
3 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Category of finite-dimensional Hilbert spaces (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
7 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Ian Carr (guitarist) (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
15 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Stub Higher-order programming (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub

SuggestBot picks articles in a number of ways based on other articles you've edited, including straight text similarity, following wikilinks, and matching your editing patterns against those of other Wikipedians. It tries to recommend only articles that other Wikipedians have marked as needing work. We appreciate that you have signed up to receive suggestions regularly, your contributions make Wikipedia better — thanks for helping!

If you have feedback on how to make SuggestBot better, please let us know on SuggestBot's talk page. Regards from Nettrom (talk), SuggestBot's caretaker. -- SuggestBot (talk) 00:06, 6 September 2014 (UTC)[reply]

The Signpost: 03 September 2014

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  • Arbitration report: Media viewer case is suspended
    "On 1 September, the Arbitrators voted to suspend the Media Viewer case for 60 days. After the suspension period is up, the case is to be closed unless the committee votes otherwise. The case suspension comes in response to several new initiatives and policies announced by the Wikimedia Foundation that may make the case moot. In the same motion, the committee declared that Eloquence's resignation of the administrator right was "under the cloud" and that he can only regain the right through another RfA."
  • Traffic report: Holding Pattern
    "This week we saw three of the top ten articles remain in place, with the Ice Bucket Challenge at #1, Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis at #2, and Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant at #5, all for a second straight week..."
  • WikiProject report: Gray's Anatomy (v. 2)
    "This week, the Signpost went out to meet WikiProject Anatomy, dedicated to improving the articles about all our bones, brains, bladders and biceps, and getting them to the high standard expected of a comprehensive encyclopaedia."

This Month in GLAM: August 2014

[edit]




Headlines

To assist with preparing the newsletter, please visit the newsroom. Past editions may be viewed here.

Wikidata weekly summary #125

[edit]

The Signpost: 10 September 2014

[edit]
  • Op-ed: Media Viewer software is not ready
    Last month, I wrote an open letter to the Wikimedia Foundation, inviting others to join me in a simple but important request: roll back the recent actions—both technical and social—by which the Wikimedia Foundation has overruled legitimate decisions of several Wikimedia projects.
  • Traffic report: Refuge in celebrity
    Even though it's not quite 3/4 over, it's safe to say that 2014 will go down as a year of war, mass murder, plane crashes and terrible diseases. While certainly paying it some heed, it's not surprising that Wikipedia viewers tried this week to find any alternative to that litany of tragedy and pain, and their chosen method of escape was, as usual, celebrity.
  • Featured content: The louse and the fish's tongue
    The amazing and strange tongue-eating louse replacing a fish's tongue! Because isopods, the subject of a new featured article, are both awesome and really damn weird!
  • WikiProject report: Checking that everything's all right
    This week, the Signpost decided to have a look around with WikiProject Check Wikipedia a maintenance project not concerned so much with articles' content, but in all the tiny errors that are to be found scattered within them. Their front page gives a list of things they mainly focus on ...

This Month in Education: September 2014

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Updates, reports, news, and stories about how Wikipedia and Wikimedia projects are used in education around the world.

The Signpost: 17 September 2014

[edit]
  • WikiProject report: A trip up north to Scotland
    As Scotland is deciding its future this week, we thought it might be a good idea to get to know the editors of WikiProject Scotland and talk to them about the project.
  • Featured content: Which is not like the others?
    Four articles, two lists, and 51 pictures were promoted to "featured" status this week on the English Wikipedia.

The Signpost: 24 September 2014

[edit]
  • Featured content: Oil paintings galore
    Six articles, four lists, one topic, and 17 pictures were promoted to "featured" status this week on the English Wikipedia.
  • In the media: Indian political editing, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Congressional chelonii
    The Hindustan Times speculates (September 18) that politicians and their supporters are "sanitizing" their articles in advance of the 2014 Maharashtra State Assembly election. The Times notes the absence of significant controversies in the articles of particular politicians and the presence of heavily promotional language.
  • Traffic report: Wikipedia watches the referendum in Scotland
    This could be the beginning of a new era for this list. Until now, decisions to remove suspicious content have been largely educated guesswork. This week though, we have a new collaborator who can shine a light on the origins and patterns, sorting once and for all the webwheat from the cyberchaff.
  • WikiProject report: GAN reviewers take note: competition time
    A year and a week later, we're with some of the members of WikiProject Good Articles, who wanted to share the news of their upcoming contest within the project, the GA Cup. The aim of this friendly competition, which is held in the same light friendly manner of the WikiCup and the Core Contest, is to reduce the backlog of unreviewed articles at Good article nominations which has been a constant problem for quite a few years for those running the GA process.
  • Arbitration report: Banning Policy, Gender Gap, and Waldorf education
    Banning Policy finishes the workshop phase on 23 September. Parties have proposed findings of fact on the topics of the 3RR, the role of Jimbo Wales, and proxying for banned users. A request for arbitration was posted on 20 September about Landmark Worldwide.

Wikidata weekly summary #126

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Articles you might like to edit, from SuggestBot

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Note: All columns in this table are sortable, allowing you to rearrange the table so the articles most interesting to you are shown at the top. All images have mouse-over popups with more information. For more information about the columns and categories, please consult the documentation, and please do get in touch on SuggestBot's talk page with any questions you might have.

Views/Day Quality Title Content Headings Images Links Sources Tagged with…
15 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Jurji Zaydan (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Add sources
651 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: B, Predicted class: B Scheme (programming language) (talk) Add sources
2,991 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: B Odyssey (talk) Please add more sources Add sources
621 Quality: Low, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: Start Informatics (academic field) (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more sources Add sources
198 Quality: Low, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: Start Evaluation strategy (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Add sources
454 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: B Subroutine (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Add sources
456 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: C Python syntax and semantics (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Cleanup
45 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Synchronous programming language (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more sources Cleanup
218 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: C Microsoft Windows library files (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more sources Cleanup
422 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Enumerated type (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more sources Expand
76 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Linear logic (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Expand
66 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Operational semantics (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Expand
1,978 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: B, Predicted class: B 2014 Israel–Gaza conflict (talk) Unencyclopaedic
2,450 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: C Homer (talk) Unencyclopaedic
771 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: B Comparison of Java and C++ (talk) Please add more sources Unencyclopaedic
90 Quality: Low, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: Start Terminal and nonterminal symbols (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Merge
58 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: B Name resolution (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Merge
819 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: B Stack (abstract data type) (talk) Please add more sources Merge
450 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: B Comparison of C Sharp and Java (talk) Please add more images Wikify
16 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Unbounded nondeterminism (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Wikify
1,048 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: B YAML (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Wikify
4 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Stub Abbas Nalbandian (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Orphan
7 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: B Lateral computing (talk) Please add more sources Orphan
2 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Stub Active Learning in Higher Education (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Orphan
4 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Stub David Gordon Lyon (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
21 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Robert Harper (computer scientist) (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
7 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub J. Roger Hindley (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
22 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Id (programming language) (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
14 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub International Conference on Functional Programming (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
11 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Stub Divergence (computer science) (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub

SuggestBot picks articles in a number of ways based on other articles you've edited, including straight text similarity, following wikilinks, and matching your editing patterns against those of other Wikipedians. It tries to recommend only articles that other Wikipedians have marked as needing work. We appreciate that you have signed up to receive suggestions regularly, your contributions make Wikipedia better — thanks for helping!

If you have feedback on how to make SuggestBot better, please let us know on SuggestBot's talk page. Regards from Nettrom (talk), SuggestBot's caretaker. -- SuggestBot (talk) 00:36, 4 October 2014 (UTC)[reply]

The Signpost: 01 October 2014

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  • Dispatches: Let's get serious about plagiarism
    This article was first published in the Signpost in 2009. Written by several long-standing editors, including the late Adrianne Wadewitz, the article was subjected to extensive commentary and ultimately influenced the English Wikipedia's plagiarism guideline. With recent debates about close paraphrasing vis-à-vis plagiarism, we feel that this dispatch retains its relevance and deserves a second airing.
  • WikiProject report: Animals, farms, forests, USDA? It must be WikiProject Agriculture
    This week, the Signpost went down to the farm to have a look at the work of WikiProject Agriculture, which has been in existence since 2007 and has a scope covering crop production, livestock management, aquaculture, dairy farming and forest management.
  • Traffic report: Shanah Tovah
    Jews wished each other Shanah Tovah ("Good year") this week as Rosh Hashanah was our most popular article. It was also a week not dominated by heavy news and tragedies, so aside from Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (#2, sixth week in the Top 10), our popular article list runs the gamut of current events including new television series Gotham (#3), the 2014 Asian Games (#4), and Reddit-fueled popularity for German director Uwe Boll (#7).
  • Featured content: Brothers at War
    As the hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the American Civil War draws to a close, the race to improve content continues. The Battle of Franklin, fought on November 30, 1864, will, quite appropriately, be Picture of the Day for November 30, 2014, its 150th anniversary. If you want to help commemorate the American Civil War, why not help out at the Military History WikiProject's Operation Brothers at War. Or help out with the World War I centennial, just starting up, Operation Great War Centennial.

Wikidata weekly summary #127

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VisualEditor newsletter—September and October 2014

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Did you know?

TemplateData is a separate program that organizes information about the parameters that can be used in a template. VisualEditor reads that data, and uses it to populate its simplified template dialogs.

With the new TemplateData editor, it is easier to add information about parameters, because the ones you need to use are pre-loaded.

See the help page for TemplateData for more information about adding TemplateData. The user guide has information about how to use VisualEditor.

Since the last newsletter, the Editing team has reduced technical debt, simplified some workflows for template and citation editing, made major progress on Internet Explorer support, and fixed over 125 bugs and requests. Several performance improvements were made, especially to the system around re-using references and reference lists. Weekly updates are posted on Mediawiki.org.

There were three issues that required urgent fixes: a deployment error that meant that many buttons didn't work correctly (bugs 69856 and 69864), a problem with edit conflicts that left the editor with nowhere to go (bug 69150), and a problem in Internet Explorer 11 that caused replaced some categories with a link to the system message, MediaWiki:Badtitletext (bug 70894) when you saved. The developers apologize for the disruption, and thank the people who reported these problems quickly.

Increased support for devices and browsers

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Internet Explorer 10 and 11 users now have access to VisualEditor. This means that about 5% of Wikimedia's users will now get an "Edit" tab alongside the existing "Edit source" tab. Support for Internet Explorer 9 is planned for the future.

Tablet users browsing the site's mobile mode now have the option of using a mobile-specific form of VisualEditor. More editing tools, and availability of VisualEditor on smartphones, is planned for the future. The mobile version of VisualEditor was tweaked to show the context menu for citations instead of basic references (bug 68897). A bug that broke the editor in iOS was corrected and released early (bug 68949). For mobile tablet users, three bugs related to scrolling were fixed (bug 66697, bug 68828, bug 69630). You can use VisualEditor on the mobile version of Wikipedia from your tablet by clicking on the cog in the top-right when editing a page and choosing which editor to use.

TemplateData editor

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A tool for editing TemplateData will be deployed to more Wikipedias soon. Other Wikipedias and some other projects may receive access next month. This tool makes it easier to add TemplateData to the template's documentation. When the tool is enabled, it will add a button above every editing window for a template (including documentation subpages). To use it, edit the template or a subpage, and then click the "Edit template data" button at the top. Read the help page for TemplateData. You can test the TemplateData editor in a sandbox at Mediawiki.org. Remember that TemplateData should be placed either on a documentation subpage or on the template page itself. Only one block of TemplateData will be used per template.

Other changes

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Several interface messages and labels were changed to be simpler, clearer, or shorter, based on feedback from translators and editors. The formatting of dialogs was changed, and more changes to the appearance will be coming soon, when VisualEditor implements the new MediaWiki theme from Design. (A preview of the theme is available on Labs for developers.) The team also made some improvements for users of the Monobook skin that improved the size of text in toolbars and fixed selections that overlapped menus.

VisualEditor-MediaWiki now supplies the mw-redirect or mw-disambig class on links to redirects and disambiguation pages, so that user gadgets that colour in these in types of links can be created.

Templates' fields can be marked as 'required' in TemplateData. If a parameter is marked as required, then you cannot delete that field when you add a new template or edit an existing one (bug 60358).

Language support improved by making annotations use bi-directional isolation (so they display correctly with cursoring behaviour as expected) and by fixing a bug that crashed VisualEditor when trying to edit a page with a dir attribute but no lang set (bug 69955).

Looking ahead

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The team posts details about planned work on the VisualEditor roadmap. The VisualEditor team plans to add auto-fill features for citations soon, perhaps in late October.

The team is also working on support for adding rows and columns to tables, and early work for this may appear within the month. Please comment on the design at Mediawiki.org.

In the future, real-time collaborative editing may be possible in VisualEditor. Some early preparatory work for this was recently done.

Supporting your wiki

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At Wikimania, several developers gave presentations about VisualEditor. A translation sprint focused on improving access to VisualEditor was supported by many people. Deryck Chan was the top translator. Special honors also go to संजीव कुमार (Sanjeev Kumar), Robby, Takot, Bachounda, Bjankuloski06 and Ата. A summary of the work achieved by the translation community has been posted here. Thank you all for your work.

VisualEditor can be made available to most non-Wikipedia projects. If your community would like to test VisualEditor, please contact product manager James Forrester or file an enhancement request in Bugzilla.

Please join the office hours on Saturday, 18 October 2014 at 18:00 UTC (daytime for the Americas; evening for Africa and Europe) and on Wednesday, 19 November at 16:00 UTC on IRC.

Give feedback on VisualEditor at mw:VisualEditor/Feedback. Subscribe or unsubscribe at Meta. To help with translations, please subscribe to the Translators mailing list or contact Elitre at Meta. Thank you!

Whatamidoing (WMF) (talk) 00:10, 8 October 2014 (UTC)[reply]

The Signpost: 08 October 2014

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  • Traffic report: Panic and denial
    The first case of the Ebola virus on US shores sent people into a tizzy, rushing to their keyboards to try and learn what they could.

This Month in GLAM: September 2014

[edit]




Headlines

To assist with preparing the newsletter, please visit the newsroom. Past editions may be viewed here.

Wikidata weekly summary #128

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The Signpost: 15 October 2014

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  • Arbitration report: One case closed and two opened
    The Banning Policy case was closed on 12 October. Arbcom affirmed that users have "considerable leeway" in terms of how their talk pages are managed.
  • Traffic report: Now introducing ... mobile data
    We are pleased to report that the WP:5000 has now been updated to include mobile views, including a column reflecting the percentage of views coming from mobile devices.
  • WikiProject report: Signpost reaches the Midwest
    Today, it's the turn of WikiProject Ohio to give us an interview probing deep into of how they manage to run a project covering one fiftieth of the United States, and the workings of how they manufacture their successes and other articles.

Wikidata weekly summary #129

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The Signpost: 22 October 2014

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Category:Category talk:C programming language family

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Category:Category talk:C programming language family, which you created, has been nominated for possible deletion, merging, or renaming. If you would like to participate in the discussion, you are invited to add your comments at the category's entry on the Categories for discussion page. Thank you. Andy Dingley (talk) 12:15, 24 October 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Wikidata weekly summary #114

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The Signpost: 29 October 2014

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  • Featured content: Go West, young man
    By the way, there is a monster at the end of this article
  • Maps tagathon: Find 10,000 digitised maps this weekend
    Rather than the usual WikiProject Report, this week our guest author Jheald is telling us about a campaign to identify thousands of old maps which have been digitised, to make them available for georeferencing and upload
  • Traffic report: Ebola, Ultron, and Creepy Articles
    Ebola virus disease leads the Report for the fourth straight week. The rest of the list is primarily a mix of pop culture topics, including movie Avengers: Age of Ultron (#4) whose trailer was leaked early, and the death of Oscar de la Renta (#7). A BuzzFeed article on creepy Wikipedia articles, no doubt well-timed with Halloween (#9) around the corner, was responsible for three articles in the Top 25, including June and Jennifer Gibbons (#10), Taman Shud Case (#17), Joyce Vincent (#25). And the internet-run-amok controversy of Gamergate cracked the Top 25 for the first time at #19.
  • Recent research: Informed consent and privacy; newsmaking on Wikipedia; Wikipedia and organizational theories
    In new research conducted in light of proposed changes to data protection legislation in the European Union (EU), authors Bart Custers, Simone van der Hof, and Bart Schermer conducted a comparative analysis of social media and user-generated content websites’ privacy policies along with a user survey (N=8,621 in 26 countries) and interviews in 13 different EU countries on awareness, values, and attitudes toward privacy online.

Articles you might like to edit, from SuggestBot

[edit]

Note: All columns in this table are sortable, allowing you to rearrange the table so the articles most interesting to you are shown at the top. All images have mouse-over popups with more information. For more information about the columns and categories, please consult the documentation, and please do get in touch on SuggestBot's talk page with any questions you might have.

Views/Day Quality Title Content Headings Images Links Sources Tagged with…
13 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Proof calculus (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Add sources
222 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Read–eval–print loop (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Add sources
747 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: B, Predicted class: B Windows 98 (talk) Please add more sources Add sources
308 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: B Common Lisp (talk) Please add more sources Add sources
190 Quality: High, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: A University of al-Qarawiyyin (talk) Please add more images Add sources
1,641 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: B, Predicted class: C Ruby (programming language) (talk) Add sources
4,497 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: B Java (programming language) (talk) Please add more sources Cleanup
17 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start C Sharp 2.0 (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Cleanup
248 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Japanese role-playing game (talk) Please add more content Please add more sources Cleanup
17 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub DirectX Graphics Infrastructure (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Expand
228 Quality: Low, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: Start Pimsleur method (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more sources Expand
219 Quality: Low, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: Start Type theory (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more sources Expand
75 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Metaclass (talk) Please add more content Please add more sources Unencyclopaedic
178 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Stub List (abstract data type) (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more sources Unencyclopaedic
30 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: C GURPS Infinite Worlds (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Unencyclopaedic
33 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Top type (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more sources Merge
688 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: B ?: (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Merge
408 Quality: Low, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: Start Tree (graph theory) (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Merge
46 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: B Safety in numbers (talk) Please add more images Please add more sources Wikify
551 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: C Tcl (talk) Please add more content Please add more sources Wikify
13 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Device driver synthesis and verification (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Wikify
6 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: B Junction Grammar (talk) Please add more wikilinks Orphan
3 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Homeric Prayer (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Orphan
2 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Ariyalur division (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Orphan
14 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Benjamin C. Pierce (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
74 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Early Cretaceous (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more sources Stub
1,464 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Stub Do not go gentle into that good night (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
13 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Early Imbrian (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
873 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Drop bear (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
18 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Start Muḥammad ibn Ibrāhīm al-Fazārī (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more sources Stub

SuggestBot picks articles in a number of ways based on other articles you've edited, including straight text similarity, following wikilinks, and matching your editing patterns against those of other Wikipedians. It tries to recommend only articles that other Wikipedians have marked as needing work. We appreciate that you have signed up to receive suggestions regularly, your contributions make Wikipedia better — thanks for helping!

If you have feedback on how to make SuggestBot better, please let us know on SuggestBot's talk page. Regards from Nettrom (talk), SuggestBot's caretaker. -- SuggestBot (talk) 02:25, 1 November 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Wikidata weekly summary #131

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New Wikipedia Library Accounts Now Available (November 2014)

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Hello Wikimedians!

The TWL OWL says sign up today :)

The Wikipedia Library is announcing signups today for, free, full-access accounts to published research as part of our Publisher Donation Program. You can sign up for:

  • DeGruyter: 1000 new accounts for English and German-language research. Sign up on one of two language Wikipedias:
  • Fold3: 100 new accounts for American history and military archives
  • Scotland's People: 100 new accounts for Scottish genealogy database
  • British Newspaper Archive: expanded by 100+ accounts for British newspapers
  • Highbeam: 100+ remaining accounts for newspaper and magazine archives
  • Questia: 100+ remaining accounts for journal and social science articles
  • JSTOR: 100+ remaining accounts for journal archives

Do better research and help expand the use of high quality references across Wikipedia projects: sign up today!
--The Wikipedia Library Team.23:19, 5 November 2014 (UTC)

You can host and coordinate signups for a Wikipedia Library branch in your own language. Please contact Ocaasi (WMF).
This message was delivered via the Global Mass Message to The Wikipedia Library Global Delivery List.

VisualEditor newsletter—November 2014

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Screenshot on an iPad, showing how to switch from one editor to the other
Did you know?

VisualEditor is also available on the mobile version of Wikipedia. Login and click the pencil icon to open the page you want to edit. Click on the gear-shaped settings in the upper-right corner, to pick which editor to use. Choose "Edit" to use VisualEditor, or "Edit source" to use the wikitext editor.

It will remember whether you used wikitext or VisualEditor, and use the same editor the next time you edit an article.

The user guide has information about how to use VisualEditor. Not all features are available in Mobile Web.

Since the last newsletter, the Editing Team has fixed many bugs and requests, and worked on support for editing tables and for using non-Latin languages. Their weekly updates are posted on Mediawiki.org. Informal notes from the recent quarterly review were posted on Meta.

Recent improvements

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The French Wikipedia should see better search results for links, templates, and media because the new search engine was turned on for everyone there. This change is expected at the Chinese and German Wikipedias next week, and eventually at the English Wikipedia.

The "pawn" system has been mostly replaced. Bugs in this system sometimes added a chess pawn character to wikitext. The replacement provides better support for non-Latin languages, with full support hopefully coming soon.

VisualEditor is now provided to editors who use Internet Explorer 10 or 11 on desktop and mobile devices. Internet Explorer 9 is not supported yet.

The keyboard shortcuts for items in the toolbar's menus are now shown in the menus. VisualEditor will replace the existing design with a new theme from the User Experience / Design group. The appearance of dialogs has already changed in one Mobile version. The appearance on desktops will change soon. (You can see a developer preview of the old "Apex" design and the new "MediaWiki" theme which will replace it.)

Several bugs were fixed for internal and external links. Improvements to MediaWiki's search solved an annoying problem: If you searched for the full name of the page or file that you wanted to link, sometimes the search program could not find the page. A link inside a template, to a local page that does not exist, will now show red, exactly as it does when reading the page. Due to a error, for about two weeks this also affected all external links inside templates. Opening an auto-numbered link node like [1] with the keyboard used to open the wrong link tool. These problems have all been fixed.

TemplateData

[edit]

The tool for quickly editing TemplateData will be deployed to all Wikimedia Foundation wikis on Thursday, 6 November. This tool is already available on the biggest 40 Wikipedias, and now all wikis will have access to it. This tool makes it easier to add TemplateData to the template's documentation. When the tool is enabled, it will add a button above every editing window for a template (including documentation subpages). To use it, edit the template or a subpage, and then click the "Edit template data" button at the top. Read the help page for TemplateData. You can test the TemplateData editor in a sandbox at Mediawiki.org. Remember that TemplateData should be placed either on a documentation subpage or on the template page itself. Only one block of TemplateData will be used per template.

You can use the new autovalue setting to pre-load a value into a template. This can be used to substitute dates, as in this example, or to add the most common response for that parameter. The autovalue can be easily overridden by the editor, by typing something else in the field.

In TemplateData, you may define a parameter as "required". The template dialog in VisualEditor will warn editors if they leave a "required" parameter empty, and they will not be able to delete that parameter. If the template can function without this parameter, then please mark it as "suggested" or "optional" in TemplateData instead.

Looking ahead

[edit]

Basic support for inserting tables and changing the number of rows and columns in tables will appear next Wednesday. Advanced features, like dragging columns to different places, will be possible later. The VisualEditor team plans to add auto-fill features for citations soon. To help editors find the most important items more quickly, some items in the toolbar menus will be hidden behind a "More" item, such as "underlining" in the styling menu. The appearance of the media search dialog will improve, to make picking between possible images easier and more visual. The team posts details about planned work on the VisualEditor roadmap.

The user guide will be updated soon to add information about editing tables. The translations for most languages except Spanish, French, and Dutch are significantly out of date. Please help complete the current translations for users who speak your language. Talk to us if you need help exporting the translated guide to your wiki.

You can influence VisualEditor's design. Tell the VisualEditor team what you want changed during the office hours via IRC. The next sessions are on Wednesday, 19 November at 16:00 UTC and on Wednesday 7 January 2015 at 22:00 UTC. You can also share your ideas at mw:VisualEditor/Feedback.

Also, user experience researcher Abbey Ripstra is looking for editors to show her how they edit Wikipedia. Please sign up for the research program if you would like to hear about opportunities.

If you would like to help with translations of this newsletter, please subscribe to the Translators mailing list or contact us directly, so that we can notify you when the next issue is ready. Subscribe or unsubscribe at Wikipedia:VisualEditor/Newsletter. Thank you!

Whatamidoing (WMF) 20:41, 6 November 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Small comment

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I respect you and your decisions.

In my opinion the style of lambda calculus page is dangerous. It shows complete disrespect to the reader. I don't think that is a good image for academics.

Every is up to you. It is your page. You don't need to insult me to achieve your goal. But if you need to, so be it.

Thepigdog (talk) 14:14, 13 November 2014 (UTC)[reply]

The Signpost: 05 November 2014

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  • In the media: Predicting the flu, MH17 conspiracy theories
    "Rachel Feltman, in The Washington Post (November 4), examined research in which a team, mostly from Los Alamos National Laboratory, headed by Kyle Hickman developed a model that enabled them "to successfully predict the 2013-2014 flu season in real time" by employing "an algorithm to link flu-related Wikipedia searches with CDC data from the same time." Apparently when individuals search for information about the flu and its symptoms in Wikipedia when they feel ill, this generates data useful in forecasting the the flu season."
  • Traffic report: Sweet dreams on Halloween
    "It is, perhaps, ironic that humanity chose the week of Halloween to finally put its fears to bed. Let's face it: 2014 has been a year of tragedies, conflicts, plagues and pain, and eventually something had to break... Whether we at last came to terms with our limited ability to affect events, shoved those events under the carpet, or just decided to let go and move on, we turned our eye to more positive things, such as sports heroes, hotly anticipated movies, and lifelong learning; two Google doodles appeared in the top 25 for the first time since the beginning of August."

Wikidata weekly summary #132

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This Month in GLAM: October 2014

[edit]




Headlines

To assist with preparing the newsletter, please visit the newsroom. Past editions may be viewed here.

Wikidata weekly summary #133

[edit]

The Signpost: 12 November 2014

[edit]
  • In the media: Amazon Echo; EU freedom of panorama; Bluebeard's Castle
    "Technology media outlets are abuzz after the November 6 unveiling of the Amazon Echo, an Internet-connected voice command device"; "The EUobserver talks (November 4) with Dimitar Dimitrov (User:Dimi z) about the lack of freedom of panorama in some European Union countries and its implications for Wikimedia projects"; "Scott Cantrell, classical music critic for the Dallas Morning News, recounts efforts to verify an uncited claim in the Wikipedia article for the Béla Bartók opera Bluebeard's Castle."
  • Traffic report: Holidays, anyone?
    This was very much a week dominated by holidays and pop culture over current events, with new film Interstellar taking the top spot followed by holidays Day of the Dead (#2), Guy Fawkes and his Night (#4 and #5), and Halloween (#8, and its third week on the list). And a foursome of television shows, all return visitors, appear to setting up residence on the greater Top 25: The Walking Dead (#11), American Horror Story: Freak Show (#14), Gotham (#16), and The Flash (#18).
  • WikiProject report: Talking hospitals
    We return to our interview format this week, speaking with the participants of WikiProject Hospitals. This project, formed in 2010, has no Featured content and only three Good articles, yet aided by around 30 hard-working Wikipedians covers a topic that is essential to life.

Wikidata weekly summary #134

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The Signpost: 26 November 2014

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  • In the media: A Russian alternative Wikipedia; Who's your grandfather?; ArtAndFeminism
    Numerous media outlets are reporting on a November 14 statement on the website of the Boris Yeltsin Presidential Library announcing the formation of a Russian "alternative" to Wikipedia, a "regional electronic encyclopedia" dedicated to "Russian regions and the life of the country".
  • WikiProject report: Back with the military historians
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711 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: C Inheritance (object-oriented programming) (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more sources Add sources
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610 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: B, Predicted class: C Windows 3.1x (talk) Please add more content Please add more sources Cleanup
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128 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Free variables and bound variables (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Expand
224 Quality: Low, Assessed class: C, Predicted class: Start Pattern matching (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Expand
63 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: C Homotopy type theory (talk) Please add more content Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Expand
380 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Start Fourth-generation programming language (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more sources Unencyclopaedic
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60 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Start, Predicted class: Start Name binding (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Merge
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19 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: Stub Jean-Yves Girard (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
29 Quality: Medium, Assessed class: Stub, Predicted class: C Beast Mode (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub
25 Quality: Low, Assessed class: Unassessed, Predicted class: Stub Bounded quantification (talk) Please add more content Please create proper section headings Please add more images Please add more wikilinks Please add more sources Stub

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Wikidata weekly summary #135

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This Month in Education: October 2014

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Updates, reports, news, and stories about how Wikipedia and Wikimedia projects are used in education around the world.

MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 20:55, 3 December 2014 (UTC)[reply]

This Month in Education: November 2014

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Updates, reports, news, and stories about how Wikipedia and Wikimedia projects are used in education around the world.

The Signpost: 03 December 2014

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Wikidata weekly summary #136

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Toploftical

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Yes, that is an alternative id I use sometimes. I just looked up Sock Puppet and did not know it was such a bad thing. I used it because of the Privacy exception. I am slightly known to one of the people mentioned and did not want to cause him any embarrassment. I am sorry that you do not think that there is any conflict of interest on the HoTT page. I believe there is. I guess I will just give up on trying to fix it even though it is a bit of a mess.

I notice that within a short time after removing my delete tag that you added a comment to the IAS talk page regarding the negative comments of Hamming. I hope this was not a case of Wikihounding--Foobarnix (talk) 22:15, 8 December 2014 (UTC)[reply]

The Signpost: 10 December 2014

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This Month in GLAM: November 2014

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Headlines
  • Australia and New Zealand report: ALIA partnership goes countrywide
  • Belgium report: Workshops for collection holders across Europe; Founding event of Wikimedia Belgium; Wiki Loves Monuments in Belgium & Luxembourg; Plantin-Moretus Museum; Edit-a-thon at faculty library in Ghent University; Image donation UGentMemorie; Upcoming activities
  • France report: Wiki Loves Monuments; mass upload; Musée de Bretagne
  • Germany report: Facts, fun and free content
  • Ireland report: Ada Lovelace day in Dublin
  • Italy report: National Library Conference; Wiki Loves Monuments; Archaeological Open Data; BEIC
  • Netherlands report: Video challenge; Wikidata workshop and hackathon; Wikipedia courses in libraries; WWII editathon
  • Norway report: Edit-a-thon far north at the Museum of Nordland (Nordlandsmuseet)
  • Spain report: Picasso, first Galipedia edit-a-thon, course in Biblioteca Reina Sofía and free portraits
  • South Africa report: Wiki Loves GLAMs, Cape Town
  • Sweden report: Use, reuse and contributions back and forth
  • UK report: Medals, maps and multilingual marvels
  • Special story: ORCID identifiers
  • Open Access report: Open proposal: Wikidata for Research; Open Access signalling
  • Tool testing report: Tools for references, images, video, file usage; Popular Pages
  • Calendar: December's GLAM events

To assist with preparing the newsletter, please visit the newsroom. Past editions may be viewed here.

Homotopy type theory

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Please wait a few minutes before deleting everything. I was in the process of adding detailed discussion of these tags to Talk:Univalent foundations. Wait an hour or two and then state your objections there. You might want to take a look this page--15:52, 14 December 2014 (UTC)

remarks added on 12-17-14

On 8 December 2014 you challenged me with the statement, There might be potential for a conflict of interests here, but I'm not seeing any to be honest. You also haven't offered anything more than hypotheticals.

I now respond to that challenge.

The history–and especially the relationship between Univalent foundations and Homotopy type theory–is misrepresented in the current WP articles. Consider:

The first higher-dimensional models were constructed by Awodey and Warren in 2005 using Quillen model categories, and were presented at several conferences thereafter. These included FMCS 2006[1] at which Warren gave a talk entitled "Homotopy models of intensional type theory", a special conference about identity types at Uppsala in 2006[2] at which Warren gave a talk entitled "Model categories and intensional identity types", and PSSL86 in 2007[3] at which Awodey gave a talk entitled "Homotopy type theory" (this may have been the first public usage of that term, which was coined by Awodey). Awodey and Warren summarized their results in the paper "Homotopy theoretic models of identity types", which was posted on the ArXiv preprint server in 2007[4] and published in 2009; a more detailed version appeared in Warren's thesis "Homotopy theoretic aspects of constructive type theory" in 2008.

Some confusion is understandable because on his UF page in WP, VV uses "(Univalent) Foundations in three different senses:

1. his programme (or just vision) of the eventual outcome of HoTT, as done by him, as a foundation for constructive, machine-checkable math;
2. the work that has already been done and is being done, by many people, on HoTT, as embodied in the HoTT book. For example, VV mentions the work of Coquand and his collaborators on cubical type theory. I strongly believe that Coquand considers himself to be contributing to HoTT, not to VV's fork;
3. most specifically, to the particular library called Univalent Foundations written by VV in Coq and put on github. There seems to be no question that this predates other actual libraries. This was later revised by Shulman and put into the HoTT library, which was later added to many people.

AFAIK, everyone but VV uses "HoTT" and "UF" interchangeably, as in the title of the HoTT book or in the nLab page on HoTT

UF is now VV's name for his new fork. It used to mean the same as HoTT, as in the title of the book. UF does not at all predate HoTT. HoTT was developed independently by Awodey and Warren at about the same time as VV's UF. The term "homotopy type theory" is Awodey's. VV added his Axiom of Univalence and universes. These were quickly accepted as part of HoTT.

Nobody doubts VV's central role in the development of HoTT. But I want to emphasize the VV has personally written most of Homotopy type theory article, much of his own biographical article Vladimir Voevodsky, and all of Univalent foundations article. If that is not conflict of interest I do not know what is.

Actually I sort of agree with User:Mark viking that the HoTT article's history section should be purged of synthesis, cut back to just the most basic uncontroversial facts or removed altogether until secondary sources develop. IAC, the current version written by VV is just plain wrong.

citations for Homotopy type theory

Forgive me for adding a reflist tag to your talk page. It was the most handy way to handle my references. Feel free to remove it.--Foobarnix (talk) 17:38, 17 December 2014 (UTC)[reply]

remarks added on 12-17-14

Thank you for your continuing work on this acticle. Adding the cover the HoTT book was a great idea. I do think that listing all of the participants in the 'Special Year' is unnecessary. If the idea was to make sure everybody gets credit, there are other ways to do that. Moreover, the list makes no distinction between the participants and the visitors–a distinction probably important to the main researchers. Anybody who is interested can simply click on the link to the book to find this list. I recommend taking it out. The article is already getting a bit cluttered.--Foobarnix (talk) 00:16, 23 December 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Wikidata weekly summary #137

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New Wikipedia Library Accounts Now Available (December 2014)

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Hello Wikimedians!

The TWL OWL says sign up today :)

The Wikipedia Library is announcing signups today for, free, full-access accounts to published research as part of our Publisher Donation Program. You can sign up for new accounts and research materials from:

Other partnerships with accounts available are listed on our partners page. Do better research and help expand the use of high quality references across Wikipedia projects: sign up today!
--The Wikipedia Library Team.00:22, 18 December 2014 (UTC)

You can host and coordinate signups for a Wikipedia Library branch in your own language. Please contact Ocaasi (WMF).
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The Signpost: 17 December 2014

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Wikidata weekly summary #138

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VisualEditor newsletter—December 2014

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Screenshot showing how to add or remove columns from a table

Did you know?

Basic table editing is now available in VisualEditor. You can add and remove rows and columns from existing tables at the click of a button.

The user guide has more information about how to use VisualEditor.

Since the last newsletter, the Editing Team has fixed many bugs and worked on table editing and performance. Their weekly status reports are posted on Mediawiki.org. Upcoming plans are posted at the VisualEditor roadmap.

VisualEditor was deployed to several hundred remaining wikis as an opt-in beta feature at the end of November, except for most Wiktionaries (which depend heavily upon templates) and all Wikisources (which await integration with ProofreadPage).

Recent improvements

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Basic support for editing tables is available. You can insert new tables, add and remove rows and columns, set or remove a caption for a table, and merge cells together. To change the contents of a cell, double-click inside it. More features will be added in the coming months. In addition, VisualEditor now ignores broken, invalid rowspan and colspan elements, instead of trying to repair them.

You can now use find and replace in VisualEditor, reachable through the tool menu or by pressing ⌃ Ctrl+F or ⌘ Cmd+F.

You can now create and edit simple <blockquote> paragraphs for quoting and indenting content. This changes a "Paragraph" into a "Block quote".

Some new keyboard sequences can be used to format content. At the start of the line, typing "* " will make the line a bullet list; "1. " or "# " will make it a numbered list; "==" will make it a section heading; ": " will make it a blockquote. If you didn't mean to use these tools, you can press undo to undo the formatting change. There are also two other keyboard sequences: "[[" for opening the link tool, and "{{" for opening the template tool, to help experienced editors. The existing standard keyboard shortcuts, like ⌃ Ctrl+K to open the link editor, still work.

If you add a category that has been redirected, then VisualEditor now adds its target. Categories without description pages show up as red.

You can again create and edit galleries as wikitext code.

Looking ahead

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VisualEditor will replace the existing design with a new theme designed by the User Experience group. The new theme will be visible for desktop systems at MediaWiki.org in late December and at other sites early January. (You can see a developer preview of the old "Apex" theme and the new "MediaWiki" one which will replace it.)

The Editing team plans to add auto-fill features for citations in January. Planned changes to the media search dialog will make choosing between possible images easier.

Help

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If you would like to help with translations of this newsletter, please subscribe to the Translators mailing list or contact us directly, so that we can notify you when the next issue is ready. Subscribe or unsubscribe at Meta.

Thank you! WhatamIdoing (WMF) (talk) 23:37, 20 December 2014 (UTC)[reply]