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== Numerals in a sequence ==
== Anomalies in the template for converting measurements. ==


'Phase 1' or Phase one'? This appears to be a case that's not explicitly covered.
I have discovered an anomaly with using the 'convert' template. Look at this:


The AP Stylebook recommends using figures for sequences in its section on "Numbers":
: {{convert|4700|mi2|km2}}
"Also use figures in all tabular matter, and in statistical and sequential forms", from which I infer that for sequences, such as 'phase 1', figures should be used for clarity and consistency.


Similarly, chapter 9 of The Chicago Manual of Style advises using figures when referring to a sequence.
: {{convert|4699|mi2|km2}}


I propose adding similar explicit advice to this section of the MOS.
When converted into square kilometres, 4699 sq miles comes out 170 km<sup>2</sup> '''more''' than 4700 sq miles. Lose one square mile, gain 65.6 square miles!


-- ] (]) 20:10, 19 October 2024 (UTC)
I think the problem may occur because of rounding when a number ends in two zeros.
*As usual, what's needed before something's added to MOS is examples of this being an issue on multiple articles -- see ]. Are editors not able to work this out for themselves on individual articles? Anyway, why does the word "Phase" need this in particular? Why not "Section" and "Part" and any other words like that? {{pb}}The advice from APA and CMS are great if you're making up a new sequence for your thesis, but that's not us. It's hard to imagine an article using a phrase like "Phase 1" or "Phase One" on its own -- that is, other than in imitation of the phrasing of sources. So follow the sources; for example, ] refers to ''Phase I'' and ''Phase II'' and ''Phase III''., because that's the form the Act uses. We're not going to override that in the name of consistency with other, unrelated articles. ]] 22:00, 19 October 2024 (UTC)
*:To clarify: I'm using 'Phase' purely as an example. The issue of using figures for sequences applies to any sequence. including 'Section' and 'Part' - and other examples: "Game 3", of a sequence of nine; 'Chapter 9' of a sequence of 24; 'Week 4' of a limitless sequence.
*:I raise this issue in the context of differing editorial practices in the ] article, where both figures and words have been used to reference the same phases and weeks of the inquiry. I sought guidance from the MOS and found none.
*:I'd be content to follow the sources, without adding bloat to the MOS, if I could be confident that that's an accepted stylistic convention in this instance. -- ] (]) 22:27, 19 October 2024 (UTC)
*::Such names are very often established by authoritative sources and constitute proper names; we should follow the sources rather than renaming them. Per EEng, we only need a MOS guideline if our sources don't provide clear names and either there is dissent among editors or consistency across articles would be of significant benefit. In the Post Office case, I see the phases have been titled Phase 1, Phase 2 etc by the inquiry so unless the inquiry's inconsistent, we can follow that source. Still, I see that this is a live issue at that ] article, so it would be wrong to establish a new guideline or issue some sort of MOS talk-page ruling without the knowledge of the other editor; pinging {{u|MapReader}}. ] (]) 14:56, 20 October 2024 (UTC)
*:::Between ] and ], multi-episode ''Doctor Who'' stories could have titles in any of the four combinations of (i) "Episode ..." or "Part ..."; (ii) numbers as figures or as words. The decision as to which format to use was probably in the hands of the series producer, but in our articles about each story, we give the actual title shown on screen - except that where the on-screen title is all-capitals, we reduce it to title case. Certain ''Doctor Who'' reference books do the same, so we're following the sources. --] &#x1f339; (]) 18:18, 20 October 2024 (UTC)
*::::The question raised was "differing editorial practices in the British Post Office scandal article". Sounds like a matter of internal consistency, which is different. For all manner of things -- this being one IMO -- we might not need consistency among articles, but it does look bad within articles. Surely we already have a rule addressing that general issue tho? ] (]) 13:24, 21 October 2024 (UTC)
*:::::I think we don't. In articles on TV series it's common to have expressions like "season 3" and "episode 7", which seem to go against our current wording (use words for numbers below 10). ] (]) 16:37, 21 October 2024 (UTC)
*::::::It is indeed a matter of internal consistency and it does look bad, as ] says. Within the one article (]), we have (e.g.) both "Phase 3 hearings" and "Phases five and six". Is there in fact a rule addressing this general issue? -- ] (]) 18:47, 21 October 2024 (UTC)
*::::::From ]: "Comparable values nearby one another should be all spelled out or all in figures, even if one of the numbers would normally be written differently." Unless you are dealing only with series with fewer than 10 seasons each with fewer than 10 episodes, it is more in line with MOS to give all season and episode numbers in digits rather than words. --] (]) (]) 13:15, 22 October 2024 (UTC)
*:::::::True, but series with less than ten seasons aren't all that rare, and there are also miniseries with less than ten episodes. ] (]) 16:39, 22 October 2024 (UTC)
*:::::::Whether or not it's in line with MOSNUM, we frequently – I suspect in the vast majority of cases – give series/season and episode numbers in digits. I've been dipping into ]. Articles on individual episodes do routinely begin e.g. " the ninth and final episode of the first season" but with digits in the infobox. Articles on a season/series list episodes using digits, and articles on a show list series/seasons and episodes with digits, regardless of whether there are more or less than ten, in keeping with the examples in ]. Articles are often titled ''&lt;show&gt; season &lt;n&gt;'' where n is a digit, never a word, in accordance with ]. Sampling our ], I see the same treatment in titles, infoboxes, and listings.{{pb}}I very much doubt that editors would accept changes to those FAs and GAs to bring them into line with ], that FA and GA assessors will start to apply ] in such cases, that any move requests would succeed, or that ] and ] will be brought into line with the current ]. Changing ] might be easier. ] (]) 08:20, 23 October 2024 (UTC)
*::::::::I agree, a small addition to MOS:NUMERAL might be a good thing. ] (]) 17:00, 23 October 2024 (UTC)
*:::::::Your final sentence doesn't follow from your statement. It would be more in keeping with the MOS to give all in words. ] (]) 11:16, 23 October 2024 (UTC)
* Generally concur with EEng and NebY. It's clear that certain conventions adhere strongly to certain things, and these conventions will be readily apparent from the source material about those things. WP is not in a position to impose an artificial WP-invented consistency on them that makes no sense for those familiar with the subject (e.g. referring to "issue number seven" of a comic book or "the three ball" in a game of pool). Where nothing like a consistent convention can be observed for the topic at hand, then MOSNUM already provides us with a default to fall back to: use "one" through "nine", then "10" onward. This is the case with centuries, for example. There is no overwhelming source preference for either "third century BC" or "3rd century BC" in reliable sources. (Books tend to prefer the former, journals use the latter more than books do because journal publishers are more interested in compression/expediency. Scroll through first 10 pages of GScholar resuls and see how much variance there is, and how frequent the numeral style is compared to "traditional" spelling-out. That said, GScholar searches do include some books as well as journals.) Following our default system, we naturally end up with "third century BC" and "12th century BC". (Of course, our material doesn't perfectly follow this; our editors are human, not robots. Well, mostly.) <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] 😼 </span> 15:04, 24 November 2024 (UTC)


== μs vs us ==
Therefore it is risky to rely blindly on the conversion template. It may give anomalous results.


Which style I should use for micro seconds? Does μs "Do not use precomposed unit symbol characters"? ] (]) 04:44, 30 October 2024 (UTC)
Please let me know if this issue should be raised elsewhere. ] (]) 06:45, 8 August 2009 (UTC)


:The 2 characters "μ" and "s" are just fine. The precomposed symbols advice is to guard against particular fonts that combine them into a single character because many software readers for the sight impaired do not know all of these symbols. <span style="border:1px solid blue;border-radius:4px;color:blue;box-shadow: 3px 3px 4px grey;">]&nbsp;<span style="font-size:xx-small; vertical-align:top">]&nbsp;</span></span> 04:53, 30 October 2024 (UTC)
:<code><nowiki>{{convert|4700|mi2|sigfig=4}}</nowiki></code> gives {{convert|4700|mi2|sigfig=4}}. You just have to use the significant figures setting. For many articles that rounding is appropriate; if you write 4,700 nobody is going to expect it to be exactly that. If you write 4,699 they will expect it to be exactly that. ] (]) 12:07, 8 August 2009 (UTC)
:But do use μ, not "u". The latter was something of an early-Internet halfassed approach, but we have Unicode now. <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] 😼 </span> 15:09, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
::Well, in my humble view, this is another reason not to use a conversion template, but to allow fellow editors, including newbies, maximum control over all aspects of the construction. I'm all for keeping it simple, and if that means using a calculator, so be it. ] ] 12:57, 8 August 2009 (UTC)


== Day, date month format ==
:::I disagree. If a newbie just throws the numbers in, a more experienced editor can use {{tlx|convert}} later. The thing about using the template, if e.g. something changes in MOS then EVERY article that uses it will get that change. ] (]) 13:45, 8 August 2009 (UTC)


:::Well I do agree to the extent that it can be fiddly to get right and there are some things it simply can't do. But on the whole, if you can do it with the template, you should. ] (]) 13:53, 8 August 2009 (UTC) Greetings and felicitations. I assume that such constructions as "Wednesday, 24 February" are discouraged, but I can't find it in the text or the this page's archives. (The comma seems unnecessary to me.) May I please get confirmation or refutation? ] (]) 04:28, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
*] and ] cover the allowed and disallowed formats. Unless the day of the week is ''vitally'' important then we leave it out. <span style="border:1px solid blue;border-radius:4px;color:blue;box-shadow: 3px 3px 4px grey;">]&nbsp;<span style="font-size:xx-small; vertical-align:top">]&nbsp;</span></span> 06:16, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
*:This specifically regards the "]" article, and its Konomiya Hadaka Matsuri infobox, which includes the days of the week. —] (]) 07:40, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
*::Ah, the mysterious East. ]] 08:06, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
*Salutations and hugs and kisses to you too.
**If your question is whether day-of-week should be gratuitously included with dates for no particular reason, the answer is ''No''. That is, if the day-of-week is somehow relevant to the narrative, sure, include it, but otherwise no.
**Assuming we're in some situation where (per the preceding) inclusion of day-of-week is indeed justified, maybe your question is how to append the D.O.W.
***If the date is {{nobr|''February 24''}} or {{nobr|''February 24, 2024''}}, then without doubt the right format is ''Wednesday, February 24'' or ''Wednesday, February 24, 2024''.
***According to "Elite editing" (whoever they may be -- search the text "inverted style" on that page), the corresponding answers for {{nobr|''24 February''}} and {{nobr|''24 February 2024''}} are {{nobr|''Wednesday, 24 February''}} and {{nobr|''Wednesday, 24 February 2024''}}. To me that does seem right -- {{nobr|''Wednesday 24 February 2024''}} (all run together, no commas at all) seems intolerable.
:The question naturally arises as to whether MOS should offer advice on all the above. My answer, as usual, is provisionally ''No'', per ]. ]] 08:02, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
::Looking at the article, the date is the 12th day of the Chinese year and the day of the week has no significance. I would remove the day of the week from all those dates in the infobox. For what it's worth, I spent most of the 1990s in Hong Kong/China. Major holidays based on the Chinese calendar treat the day of the week in the same way that we treat the day that Christmas falls on. <span style="border:1px solid blue;border-radius:4px;color:blue;box-shadow: 3px 3px 4px grey;">]&nbsp;<span style="font-size:xx-small; vertical-align:top">]&nbsp;</span></span> 09:18, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
:::Okay—will do. Thank you both. ^_^ —] (]) 09:21, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
:The new 18th edition of ''The Chicago Manual of Style'' gives advice about commas in dates in ¶ 6.14. When giving examples they mostly give examples with words after the end of the date so the punctuation at the end of the date is illustrated. Some examples:
:*The hearing was scheduled for 2:30 p.m. on Friday, August 9, 2024.
:*Monday, May 5, was a holiday; Tuesday the 6th was not.
:] (]) 16:56, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
:Concur with EEng on avoiding adding a rule about this, as more ]. It's just a matter of basic writing sense, basic comma usage in competent English. Our MoS's purpose is not that of ''CMoS'' or ''Fowler's'', trying to answer every imaginable usage question. Just those that have an impact on reader comprehensibility and/or recurrent editorial strife. <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] 😼 </span> 15:18, 24 November 2024 (UTC)


==Spacing with percentage points==
I think the trouble is that as the rounding cuts in automatically unless it is overriden. The default position can be a trap for the unwary. An over-precise conversion can be overridden; the opposite may not be noticed by the uninformed.] (]) 14:08, 8 August 2009 (UTC)
A question regarding spacing of percentage point (pp) usage. I have always assumed there is no space between the number and pp (e.g. 5.5pp not 5.5 pp), on the basis that you wouldn't put a space between a number and a percentage sign (5% not 5 %). There is no reference to this in the MOS, but the ] article uses it unspaced. It might be good to have it clarified in the MOS as I see regular changes adding spacing, which I am not sure is correct. Cheers, ] ]] 23:49, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
*] says "omit space". <span style="border:1px solid blue;border-radius:4px;color:blue;box-shadow: 3px 3px 4px grey;">]&nbsp;<span style="font-size:xx-small; vertical-align:top">]&nbsp;</span></span> 23:54, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
*:Perhaps I am missing something, but as far as I can see, it says to omit space when using the percentage symbol (%) but nothing about when using pp? ] ]] 00:21, 6 November 2024 (UTC)
*::Apologies, I missed the "point" word in your question. <span style="border:1px solid blue;border-radius:4px;color:blue;box-shadow: 3px 3px 4px grey;">]&nbsp;<span style="font-size:xx-small; vertical-align:top">]&nbsp;</span></span> 01:49, 6 November 2024 (UTC)
*% is essentially a constant factor (.01), but ''pp'' is more like a unit so my intuition says it should be spaced. I note that the ] article uses a space before ''bp'' (mostly, anyway). I'll be interested to hear what others think. ]] 18:23, 6 November 2024 (UTC)
*:You've got this back to front. Percent (%) is a standard unit symbol and should be spaced, whereas pp is a made up abbreviation, meaning you can put it anywhere you want, space or unspaced. I know MOSNUM says otherwise, which is WP's prerogative. In other words, if we need a rule, let's make one up and apply it, but there's no logic involved. ] (]) 21:06, 6 November 2024 (UTC)
*Dondervogel, "Percent (%) is a standard unit symbol and should be spaced". Huh? It's not an ISO unit symbol, is it. No spacing in English, unlike French. On pp, I agree with EEng: space it. ] ] 11:10, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
*::Absolutely. When it comes to peepee, always space it . ]] 21:36, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
*:Yes, "%" is an ISO standard unit symbol. ] (]) 12:45, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
*::What is it the unit of? ] (]) 13:14, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
*:::Nothing. It's a ]. To the original q: I don't see "pp" used often, in fact rarely. It's probably better written out in full on first use, and if there are subsequent uses, follow the guidance at ]. --] &#x1f339; (]) 19:58, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
*::::It's used widely in election infoboxes where there isn't space to write it out. ] ]] 22:25, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
*:::I will answer Gawaon's valid question in two parts. The first part is a quotation from ISO 80000-1:2009 (emphasis added)
*:::*In some cases, per cent, symbol %, where 1 % := 0,01, is used as a submultiple of the coherent unit one.
*:::*EXAMPLE 4
*:::*reflection factor, r = 83 % = 0,83
*:::*Also, per mil (or per mille), symbol ‰, where 1 ‰ := 0,001, is used as a submultiple of the coherent unit one.Since the units “per cent” and “per mil” are numbers, it is meaningless to speak about, for example, percentage by mass or percentage by volume. Additional information, such as % (m/m) or % (V/V) shall therefore not be attached to '''the unit symbol %'''. See also 7.2. The preferred way of expressing, for example, a mass fraction is “the mass fraction of B is w B = 0,78” or “the mass fraction of B is wB = 78 %”. Furthermore, the term “percentage” shall not be used in a quantity name, because it is misleading. If a mass fraction is 0,78 = 78 %, is the percentage then 78 or 78 % = 0,78? Instead, the unambiguous term “fraction” shall be used. Mass and volume fractions can also be expressed in units such as µg/g = 10-6 or ml/m3 = 10-9.
*:::Notice the deliberate space between numerical value (e.g., 83) and unit symbol (%). ] (]) 22:10, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
*:::The second part is a partial retraction, quoting from ISO 80000-1:2022, which supersedes the 2009 document:
*:::* If the quantity to be expressed is a sum or a difference of quantities, then either parentheses shall be used to combine the numerical values, placing the common unit symbol after the complete numerical value, or the expression shall be written as the sum or difference of expressions for the quantities.
*:::*EXAMPLE 1
*:::*l = 12 m - 7 m = (12 - 7) m = 5 m, not 12 - 7 m
*:::*U = 230 ⋅ (1 + 5 %) V = 230 ⋅ 1,05 V ≈ 242 V, not U = 230 V + 5 %
*:::The space is still there between numerical value (5) and percentage symbol (%), but I could not find an explicit reference to "%" as a unit symbol. I'm unsure how to interpret that change, but I'll report back here if I find further clarification. ] (]) 22:16, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
*:::I found this in
*:::*In keeping with Ref. , this Guide takes the position that it is acceptable to use the internationally recognized symbol % (percent) for the number 0.01 with the SI and thus to express the values of quantities of dimension one (see Sec. 7.14) with its aid. When it is used, a space is left between the symbol % and the number by which it is multiplied . Further, in keeping with Sec. 7.6, the symbol % should be used, not the name "percent."
*:::*Example: xB = 0.0025 = 0.25 % but not: xB = 0.0025 = 0.25% or xB = 0.25 percent
*:::*Note: xB is the quantity symbol for amount-of-substance fraction of B (see Sec. 8.6.2).
*:::*Because the symbol % represents simply a number, it is not meaningful to attach information to it (see Sec. 7.4). One must therefore avoid using phrases such as "percentage by weight," "percentage by mass," "percentage by volume," or "percentage by amount of substance." Similarly, one must avoid writing, for example, "% (m/m)," "% (by weight)," "% (V/V)," "% (by volume)," or "% (mol/mol)." The preferred forms are "the mass fraction is 0.10," or "the mass fraction is 10 %," or "wB = 0.10," or "wB =10 %" (wB is the quantity symbol for mass fraction of B—see Sec. 8.6.10); "the volume fraction is 0.35," or "the volume fraction is 35 %," or " φB = 0.35," or "φB = 35 %" (φB is the quantity symbol for volume fraction of B—see Sec. 8.6.6); and "the amount-of-substance fraction is 0.15," or "the amount-of-substance fraction is 15 %," or "xB = 0.15," or "xB = 15 %." Mass fraction, volume fraction, and amount-of-substance fraction of B may also be expressed as in the following examples: wB = 3 g/kg; φB = 6.7 mL/L; xB = 185 mmol/mol. Such forms are highly recommended (see also Sec. 7.10.3).
*:::*In the same vein, because the symbol % represents simply the number 0.01, it is incorrect to write, for example, "where the resistances R1 and R2 differ by 0.05 %," or "where the resistance R1 exceeds the resistance R2 by 0.05 %." Instead, one should write, for example, "where R1 = R2 (1 + 0.05 %)," or define a quantity Δ via the relation Δ = (R1 - R2) / R2 and write "where Δ = 0.05 %." Alternatively, in certain cases,the word "fractional" or "relative" can be used. For example, it would be acceptable to write "the fractional increase in the resistance of the 10 kΩ reference standard in 2006 was 0.002 %."
*:::As with ISO 80000-1:2022, there is always a space between numerical value (e.g., 35) and the percentage symbol (%), but no mention of % as a unit symbol. ] (]) 22:38, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
*:::::{{tq|there is always a space between numerical value (e.g., 35) and the percentage symbol (%)}}{{snd}}Maybe in NIST-world, but not here on Misplaced Pages (see ]), so I don't see how any of that helps us with the issue at hand. ]] 23:29, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
*::::::I was correcting a misconception that % is not a unit symbol when it is. At least it was until 2022. I find it best not to leave incorrect statements unchallenged or they take on a life of their own. ] (]) 00:24, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
*:::::::Um, OK, but you do realize that WP does not follow NIST's advice about spacing it, yes? ]] 00:44, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
*::::::::Yep, and I wasn't trying to change that. My contributions have been to
*::::::::*correct a factual error (yours)
*::::::::*respond to questions from Tony and Gawaon
*::::::::I have not weighed in on the main thread regarding percentage points because I don't expect my opinion (based not on NIST's utterings but on the ISO standards on which they are based) to be taken seriously, so why would I waste my e-breath? ] (]) 09:41, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
*It is not conventional to space "%" in English. Nearly no publishers do this, and our MoS doesn't say to do this or incidentally illustrating doing this, so don't do this. "pp" here is a unit abbreviation for ''percentage point'' ("the unit for the arithmetic difference between two percentages)", so space it. % is not a unit abbreviation/symbol, but a quantity symbol, so it's in a different class. It's more like the ~ in "~5&nbsp;ml". That the spelled-out equivalent "approximately", like the spelled out "percent", is spaced apart from the numeral is irrelevant. <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] 😼 </span> 15:24, 24 November 2024 (UTC)


==Do we have to convert inches for wheels?==
:The template reads the precision of the input number and matches the precision of the output accordingly. This is in accord with the MoS and normal mathematical practice. There is no anomaly. An over-precise conversion ''can'' be overridden, sure, but are the uninformed any more likely to fix an over-precise than an under-precise one? In the majority of cases the template will not give the wrong precision. 4,700 sq mi ≈ 12,000 km<sup>2</sup> is correct as is 4,699 sq mi ≈ 12,170 km<sup>2</sup>. It is the conversion templates ''without'' this type of default rounding which are more prone to produce output with incorrect precision. To those unwary I can only say "Get wary." ]<sub>&nbsp;]·]</sub> 15:11, 8 August 2009 (UTC)
I see people adding conversions to mentions of screen sizes and wheel dimensions - is this really necessary? Even in or , automobile and bike wheels are universally referred to by inches; rim diameters are expressly . To me, adding conversions for these types of dimensions adds unnecessary clutter, harming readability for no return whatsoever. I haven't read the entire MOS today, apologies if I missed a mention of these situations. <span style="background:#ff0000;font-family:Times New Roman;">]]</span> 17:24, 13 November 2024 (UTC)


:It looks like sizing bike wheels in inches is not universal. I see many charts in the I-net such as that use both metric and imperial/American units for bike wheels and tires. Whether the convert template handles them correctly is another issue. ] 17:43, 13 November 2024 (UTC)
::It's a bit of a circular argument that it conforms with MoS since this is a discussion on a subpage of the MoS.
:On the matter of wheel sizes, not all are inches. See ] and my reply. Even for a conventional non-Denovo wheel, the dimensions are a bastard mixture: "195/65 R 15" means a tyre that is 195 mm wide on a 15-inch rim. --] &#x1f339; (]) 19:10, 13 November 2024 (UTC)
::Yes, there is the Michelin TRX and the Denovo. Just as we wouldn't convert the "195" when we write 195/60 R15, I don't think we ought to convert the diameter either. I would treat all of these tire dimensions as one would nominal measurements, rather than inserting unnecessary templates. Bicycle tires, meanwhile, proved more varied than I was aware of. <span style="background:#ff0000;font-family:Times New Roman;">]]</span> 04:33, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
:::I agree with Mr.Choppers on this subject. I think wheels sizes on cars are a compromise between the USA and the rest of the world. There are metric rims on older vehicles but pretty rare on new vehicles. ] (]) 11:40, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
::::{{ping|Avi8tor}} - I was actually triggered by you converting screen dimensions, but five minutes online showed me that the modern world has indeed begun dropping the use of inches for screens. My gut was wrong. <span style="background:#ff0000;font-family:Times New Roman;">]]</span> 13:36, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::Many people around the planet know only millimetres, so it makes sense to have both. I notice in France the data information on television screen size have it in both inches and millimetres. ] (]) 17:57, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
*I agree with Aviator, who didn't mention that aviation uses "feet" for altitude—needs conversion in my view. ] ] 07:30, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
*:I thought that ] is not a measure of distance but of pressure, so perhaps it should be converted to pascals first. I'm not saying one should not then convert to metres too - only that the conversion would need some care. ] (]) 22:06, 22 December 2024 (UTC)


==RfC Indian numbering conventions==
::I do agree however that yeah if you put in 4,700 it is unlikely it is going to be exactly 4,700 (of whatever) and so misleading to a ridiculously over-precise value. If you pur in 4,699 presumably you mean that (and not 4,698 or 4.701) and should be converted more accurately. It comes down to common sense. My little book here gives logs and other things such as trig functions to 8 sig figs. Most floating point maths used in computers is at double-precision and has about 12 sig figs (decimal) in the mantissa. If it is good enough for rocket science and subatomic modelling (and it is cos I have programmed it) then I think it ridiculous to be more precise than that. There are all kinds of more precise representations but in real science and engineering that is plenty: in fact single precision (5 or 6 sig figs decimal) is usually good enough, but with modern processors using a double is as fast, if not faster, than a single. And the same applies to humans as computers. Of course propagation errors ''may'' occasionally require higher representations in intermediate results, but on Misplaced Pages that hardly applies, unless the underlying templates are so off that they preduce an obviously bizarre result such as 1 cm = 1.00001 cm or whatever.
{{atop
| result = There is consensus to continue using crore and lakhs when appropriate.


Most participants also generally agreed with SchreiberBike's conditions (or a variant) - '''Always 1) link it on first use, 2) include what it is a measure of (rupees can not be assumed), 3) also include conventional numbering, and 4) allow it only in articles about the subcontinent'''.
::I see no problem here. These templates are a bit fiddly and I am sure if we were starting from scratch we would change a lot of things, but we aren't and we can't. It is one of those things an editor just has to do. The {{tlx|cite}} templates are also trick but everyone expects those to be used. ] (]) 04:55, 9 August 2009 (UTC)


However, this RFC suffered from structural issues that a precise wording isn't agreed on yet. Any changes from status quo should go through a clearer future discussion or RFC on just that.
:::If we put the template in question up against a statistically representative sample of typical editors with calculators, I'd put my money behind the template to give the most appropriate levels of precision for the typical measurements you find on Misplaced Pages. ]<sub>&nbsp;]·]</sub> 08:06, 9 August 2009 (UTC)


{{nac}} ] (]) 22:02, 24 December 2024 (UTC)
The behaviour contradicts the ], but as a mathematician I think this is one of the situations where that is actually justified. Besides, I don't see how we can avoid it. Consider:
}}
{|class=wikitable
<!-- ] 17:01, 21 December 2024 (UTC) -->{{User:ClueBot III/DoNotArchiveUntil|1734800468}}
|-
I am revisiting an issue that was last brought up 6 years ago ] and settled without a strong consensus.
|{{convert|0.47000|mi2|km2}}
|{{convert|4.7000|mi2|km2}}
|{{convert|47.000|mi2|km2}}
|{{convert|470.00|mi2|km2}}
|{{convert|4700.0|mi2|km2}}
|-
|{{convert|0.4700|mi2|km2}}
|{{convert|4.700|mi2|km2}}
|{{convert|47.00|mi2|km2}}
|{{convert|470.0|mi2|km2}}
|style="background:#ffdddd;"|{{convert|4700|mi2|km2}}
|-
|{{convert|0.470|mi2|km2}}
|{{convert|4.70|mi2|km2}}
|{{convert|47.0|mi2|km2}}
|style="background:#ddddff;"|{{convert|470|mi2|km2}}
|style="background:#ffdddd;"|{{convert|4700|mi2|km2}}
|-
|{{convert|0.47|mi2|km2}}
|{{convert|4.7|mi2|km2}}
|{{convert|47|mi2|km2}}
|style="background:#ddddff;"|{{convert|470|mi2|km2}}
|style="background:#ffdddd;"|{{convert|4700|mi2|km2}}
|-
|{{convert|0.5|mi2|km2}}
|{{convert|5|mi2|km2}}
|{{convert|50|mi2|km2}}
|{{convert|500|mi2|km2}}
|{{convert|5000|mi2|km2}}
|}
Notice that in the last column we always write 4,700, whether we mean 2, 3 or 4 significant digits. Similarly, in the penultimate column it's not clear whether 470 has 2 or 3 significant digits. The template needs to guess. We can't make it guess correctly in all situations, but if it makes sure to under-, rather than overestimate the number of significant digits in doubtful cases, then it's more likely to be <s>wrong</s> right than if it does the opposite. And even if the template gets the intended number of significant digits wrong, then except in situations where a human reader can infer it from the context it is usually correct and encyclopedic to round the numbers.


I think we should avoid using Indian numbering conventions unless it is needed for context. For instance, if we want to list the box office take of an Indian movie, don't use "crore", use "millions". This isn't about disrespecting a culture, it's about using internationally favored notation and unit conventions. We should use "millions" instead of "crore" for the same reason we favor meters over feet. There is no reason that India-related articles should be an enclave of Indian conventions. People who are not Indian will struggle with these things, it will weaken Misplaced Pages's role as an information tool for everyone.
But there is an unrelated anomaly in the top right cell of the table. I am taking this to ], because it's clearly a bug that needs fixing. ] ] 09:40, 9 August 2009 (UTC)


:::¶ I don't see the anomaly at first glance, Hans. If you're being so precise as to specify 4,700.0 square miles, then you are giving 5 significant digits, which are converted to 5 significant metric digits. The range is between 4,699.95 sq. miles and 4,700.05 sq. miles; otherwise the figure would be either no more than 4,699.9 square miles or no less than 4,700.1 square miles ] (]) 21:05, 10 August 2009 (UTC) This is not the same thing as currency. It is appropriate to list an Indian movie's box office take in rupees. Providing a US$ conversion is optional, but a good idea since the US dollar is widely used around the world as a reserve currency. But write it as "millions of rupees", not "crores of rupees". ] (]) 16:38, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
:What's the common usage in english? ] (]) 16:45, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
Do we really need this whole conversion business at all? As stated above, the conversion is not 100% reliable and it's not "official info" anyway. Maybe we should just use English units in American/British articles and metric units everywhere else. ] (]) 10:29, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
::I don't think most people in the US understand what "crore" is, and would not recognize it as part of the English language. The online says it means ten million, specifically, a unit of value equal to ten million rupees or 100 lakhs. I think most people in the US would not even understand that a currency is being mentioned.
::--] (]) 17:00, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
:::Not just people in the US. Nobody outside of India can be expected to know what a crore is. ] (]) 17:15, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
:We use meters over feet? Where?
:{{tqb|In non-scientific articles with strong ties to the United States, the primary units are US customary (pounds, miles, feet, inches, etc.)}} ] (]) 17:50, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
::You get extra points for saying "US customary" and not "Imperial". 😉 ] (]) 18:20, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
:::{{smalldiv|1=imperial :3 ] (]) 18:30, 16 November 2024 (UTC)}}
:I agree with ], do not use "crore", use "millions". Misplaced Pages is for a worldwide audience. ] (]) 18:03, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
::Kinda like how US units are used for US articles, I don't see the harm in using "crore", and it's way more work to manually convert to millions every time a member of India's vast diaspora in the Global North adds "crore" to an article, not knowing our ManualOfStyle. ] (]) 18:19, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
:Except we don't favor meters over feet — we use both. That's what the ] is for.
:Speaking as a non-Indian, who can never remember what how many is a "crore": I'm fine with it, as long as the ]. ] (]) 18:18, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
:We already make an exception for ]. I see no good reason for barring a second exception. State in ] and convert to a unit non-Indians can understand (millions of ]s?). ] (]) 20:48, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
The article for the French movie '']'' lists the budget as "9.5 million", using a point as a decimal separator. In France they use commas for this, ie "9,5 million". We don't use the French notation convention for France-related articles. ] (]) 17:14, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
:Is it the French style to use that notation in English? A different unit elicits way less confusion than a reversed decimal separator meaning anyways. ] (]) 17:50, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''Bad RFC'''; see ] and the rest of the guidance there too. Unsurprisingly, this has just started out as a disorganized discussion that doesn't resemble a normal RFC...you might want to just remove the tag, get some feedback, and then start a proper one in a bit (separate subsections for discussion and survey are pretty helpful too). ] (]) 18:21, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
*:{{replyto|Kurzon}} I did {{diff|Misplaced Pages talk:Manual of Style|prev|1257781055|advise you}} not to jump straight for a full-blown thirty-day formal RfC without first exhausting the suggestions at ]. --] &#x1f339; (]) 18:39, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
:This RfC is clearly improperly formatted, ]; thank you to our unregistered friend for pointing this out.
::Oh come now. It seems to be developing nicely, I doubt that any editors are swayed by the wording. it's not perfect but perfect is the enemy of good and its good enough. ] (]) 04:47, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
:::That reply was before the appropriate discussion centers were notified and before discussion started to develop. It's not just formatting; it's that there was no prior discussion. Now we're effectively having both at the same time, especially when an informal discussion could've resulted in consensus without a time-consuming process. ] (]) 16:08, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
:Consistency and clarity to our international readership are valid arguments in favor of prohibiting "crore" and "lakh". However, Aaron Liu makes good points about the fact that we allow local variation in articles with local ties, e.g. all of ]. I am unsure where I sit on this issue. I would like to see some Indian editors weigh in on this. ] </span>]] 19:58, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
::I also agree that crores are too obscure (as are lakhs), with use limited to South Asia. Feet and inches, while retrograde and infinitely useless, were used across most of the world not many generations ago. The major unit in Japanese is 万 (man), which is 10,000, but we do not use that because most people wouldn't know it. Engvar is somewhat different: we cannot avoid choosing between "colour" and "color", for instance, whereas we can easily write the globally recognized "millions" rather than crores. As for ]'s comment: if someone adds crore, it will be there until fixed – it's not pressing enough of a problem to hunt down every instance. <span style="background:#ff0000;font-family:Times New Roman;">]]</span> 20:03, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
:::Good point about 万 – I completely forgot that Chinese has similarly different units. I think that settles it – either we allow crore and lakh alongside the ] (which I think is ridiculous) and an infinite variety of customary units, or we allow none.
:::(Two counterarguments: 1. This is a ] argument, which is a logical fallacy. To which I say no, we can't give only one country special treatment, we ought to be fair. 2. The East Asian units are non-Latin characters and thus more impractical than "crore". This is true.) ] </span>]] 20:15, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
:::On the subject of the myriad, I agree with Toads's second counterargument: there is no widely-recognized English translation for the unit in some "East Asian variant" of English; they just convert it to ] in translations.{{tqb|we cannot avoid choosing between "colour" and "color", for instance, whereas we can easily write the globally recognized "millions" rather than crores.}}Part of my argument is that "crore" vs long scale is basically the same thing as "colour" vs "color": anonymous editors are going to add them. A ton. Expecting people to not use crore is like expecting people to not spell "colour". It's not pressing enough to hunt down, sure, but you're going to see sweet summer children adding crore into crore-free articles again and again and again. ] (]) 01:14, 17 November 2024 (UTC)
::By the way, I've left a (neutrally-worded) note about this discussion at the Talk page of WikiProject India. ] </span>]] 20:16, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''Don't allow crore.''' In the interest of making articles understandable to a wider audience, we already do this for the decimal marker (.) and separator for groups of 3 digits (,) as previously mentioned. We also ] even though long-scale hasn't entirely died out in the British Isles. ] (]) 21:16, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
*:The decimal marker and long/short scale have a much better reason for their ban: The symbols they use have very different meanings outside of their local context, while crore, lakh, etc. do not. ] (]) 01:04, 17 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''Don't allow crore''' Per ]. This is not comparable with US v metric units where we report both - that is just a case of which is primarily reported. Furthermore, imperial units have a relatively recent historical usage across English. It is not like other issues of ENGVAR such as colour v color or ise v ize that do not affect understanding. {{tq|For an international encyclopedia, using vocabulary common to all varieties of English is preferable}} - to the point of being paramount. ] (]) 22:38, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''Allow''' ''crore'', ''lakh'' and ], '''but always''', 1) link it on first use, 2) include what it is a measure of (rupees can not be assumed), 3) also include conventional numbering, and 4) allow it only in articles about the subcontinent.&nbsp;]&#124;] 23:13, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
*:I agree with all of these conditions. While I remain somewhat ambivalent on the use of “crore” in general, we must provide enough context for non-Indian readers to understand them. ] </span>]] 13:56, 17 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''Allow''' ''crore'', ''lakh'' per ], and with the same caveats. ] (]) 00:03, 17 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''Allow ScreiberBike''', per my comments above. ] (]) 01:20, 17 November 2024 (UTC)
* '''Allow ScreiberBike'''. But see also ] - "You may use the Indian numbering system of lakhs and crores ''but should give their equivalents in millions/billions in parentheses''" <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 00:30, 18 November 2024 (UTC)</small>
* '''Allow''' ''crore'', ''lakh'' and ], '''but always''', 1) link it upon first use <u>in every section where it appears</u>, 2) include what it is a measure of (rupees can not be assumed), 3) also include conventional numbering <u>using template {{tl|convert}}—i.e., don't convert yourself</u>, and 4) allow it only in articles about the subcontinent. ] (]) 23:11, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
*: Hm; was very surprised to notice that the {{tl|convert}} template does not currently support lakhs and crores. I think it should, and started ] about that. If you wish to comment, please go to ]. Thanks, ] (]) 23:50, 18 November 2024 (UTC)
*::The convert template converts units, like feet and metres. Crores and lakhs are not units, but multipliers. It would be like convert being used to convert between hundreds, thousands, millions etc. --] &#x1f339; (]) 22:52, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
*:::The {{tlx|lakh}} and {{tlx|crore}} templates make more sense than overloading {{tlx|convert}}. <span style="border:1px solid blue;border-radius:4px;color:blue;box-shadow: 3px 3px 4px grey;">]&nbsp;<span style="font-size:xx-small; vertical-align:top">]&nbsp;</span></span> 23:02, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
*:I agree with SchreiberBike and others; "crores" and "lakhs" can always be used to add colour/color to an article as long as those requirements are met. <span style="background:#ff0000;font-family:Times New Roman;">]]</span> 04:50, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''Do not allow'''. This is not the same as variations of English in wide use where there are multiple widespread usages (color or colour). While SchreiberBike's conditions for use are reasonable, I would say that the standard international measurements should always be primary and subcontinent-specific numbering as a secondary only in articles about the subcontinent. ] (]) 09:50, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
*:What does "widespread" mean? ] (]) 12:17, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
{{block indent|em=1.6|1=<small>Notified: ]. ] (]) 01:04, 21 November 2024 (UTC)</small>}}<!-- Template:Notified -->
*'''Allow, but always ...''' exactly as Mathglot laid out above (other than, per Stepho-wrs and Redrose64, {{tnull|convert}} isn't actually the right template, or at least isn't presently). I would add a further caveat that these traditional Indic units (technically, multipliers) should be given secondarily not primarily, but I could live without that. <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] 😼 </span> 11:55, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''Allow''' when appropriate, under conditions set out by ScreiberBike. Also, this RfC does not meet ]. ] <sup>] · ]</sup> 02:18, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''Do not allow''' crore et al. It's not only native English-speakers who haven't a clue what it means when reading India-related articles; it's non-natives too. ] ] 07:32, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
*:I don't get what native/non-native speakers have to do with the issue. ] (]) 12:21, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
* '''Allow per ScreiberBike''' for South Asian articles. ] (]) 17:29, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''Allow''' All Indian academic/professional textbooks and all Indian reliable sources, with few exceptions for specific conditions, use lakhs/crores when denoting INR and millions/billions when denoting foreign currencies. Not allowing is not an option, unless editors want to disregard Indian readers. Using X million rupees is almost as uncommon in India as using Y lakh dollars. My suggestion -- for articles that use {{tl|Use Indian English}} force editors to '''1) link it on first use, 2) include what it is a measure of (rupees can not be assumed)''' with Indian comma separator at 00 after thousands and for articles that don't use that template force editors to '''always''' use millions/billions with 000 comma separator. — ] (]) 03:01, 23 November 2024 (UTC)
*:'''Strongly disallow''' use of Indian comma separator. That would only serve to confuse. We don't permit a French comma separator on English Misplaced Pages. The Indian comma would be much worse. ] (]) 09:11, 23 November 2024 (UTC)
*:I concur entirely with Dongervogel_2 on this side-point; we cannot mix-and-match numeric separator styles. We've repeatedly had debates in the past about permitting "," instead of "." as a decimal point to suit the preference of some subset of readers, and the answer is always firmly "no", so this isn't going to be any different. I'm not a professional researcher in this area, but I have looked into the matter in the course of various style debates, and the evidence clearly shows Indian publications using "Western" number formatting systems (or whatever you want to call them) on a regular basis, though often alongside the Indic {{lang|hi-Latn|krore}}, etc., system. That is, it's just not plausible that English-using readers in/from India have any difficulty understanding our numeric material, especially after the rise of the Internet has exposed them to content from all over the world since the mid-1990s and pretty much ubiquitously since the early 2010 with the rise of mobile data. <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] 😼 </span> 14:49, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
*::{{tq | “it's just not plausible that English-using readers in/from India have any difficulty understanding our numeric material …”}} Of course the same could be said of American readers and the spelling of ‘colour’. <span style="font-family:Avenir, sans-serif">—&nbsp;<span style="border-radius:5px;padding:.1em .4em;background:#faeded">]</span>&nbsp;(])</span> 17:41, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
*:::What isn't the same is how many editors will add "colour" into articles while most wouldn't add numbers in the Indian system. ] (]) 18:30, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
*::::I’m genuinely not sure what your point is? Editors are more likely to (erroneously) change spelling to ‘colour’, so that gives them more grounds for the MOS giving them parity with American English? I know we should be realistic about what we can control, but I don’t love that logic. <span style="font-family:Avenir, sans-serif">—&nbsp;<span style="border-radius:5px;padding:.1em .4em;background:#faeded">]</span>&nbsp;(])</span> 03:18, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
*:::::Yes, that or add spelling that says "colour" is what I'm saying. ] (]) 04:03, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
*:::::Like I would campaign for navboxes to be placed in the "see also" section if it weren't so widespread and unduly investative to correct. The corrections for disallowing crore are the same thing to me. ] (]) 04:11, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
*:::On this attempt at a ''color'' ]: "What isn't the same" even more pertinently is that the cases aren't parallel in any way. ''Crore'' and ''lakh'' are not barely noticeable spelling differences of an everyday word used the same way in every single dialect of English; they're a radically different system of approaching large-ish numbers. There is no audience capable of reading en.wikipedia for whom either ''colour'' or ''color'' is impenetrable. If HTGS's pseudo-analogy is intended to suggest that ENGVAR should be undone on the same basis that we would rejecte or further restrain use of ''crore'' and ''lakh'', that doesn't work since they're not actually analogous at all, plus the fact that not a single element of MoS is more dear to the community than ENGVAR; it is never, ever going away. If HTGS isn't actually suggesting we get rid of ENGVAR but is instead trying to suggest that opposition to ''crore'' is pretty much the same as advocating the death of ENGVAR, that's not cogent either, for the same false-analogy reason plus scoops of ], ], and ] fallacies plopped on top. Aaron Liu's original "what isn't the same" point is that most editors will use ''color'' or ''colour'' as contextually appropriate in our content, yet very few will ever add ''lakh'' or ''crore'' to an Indic-connected article. That could be argued to be suggestive of a {{lang|la|de facto}} community consensus already existing against those units' use at en.wikipedia. While it's worth considering, it's clouded by ] in that a comparatively small percentage of our editors are from India or its immediate environs, so the statistics are probably not usefully comparable even if they could be gathered with certainty. I would suggest that the reasons to rarely use ''crore/lakh'' and to always convert when used at all, has to do with end-reader comprehensibility, not with editor preference or usage rates. <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] 😼 </span> 12:54, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
*::Because, the fact is, we aren’t using varieties of English solely to ensure accuracy or intelligibility. They are also being used to avoid recreating the Anglo-American hegemony that exists in published English, and to foster a connection in the community with the most interest in the subject. <span style="font-family:Avenir, sans-serif">—&nbsp;<span style="border-radius:5px;padding:.1em .4em;background:#faeded">]</span>&nbsp;(])</span> 18:05, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
*:::This is not MakeLocalsAsHappyAsPossiblePedia or EngageInCrossCulturalFeelGoodBackscratchingPedia or RightGreatWrongsPedia. It may be unfortunate in some sense that a "Western" (now globally internationalized) enumeration system dominates nearly everywhere (with arguably more benefits than costs), but it is a fact. And it has nothing to do with "Anglo-American" anything, being the same system used by the French and the Russians and the Japanese and so on, and predating both America and England and even the English language, going back to ancient Eurasia very broadly, from the Rome to China. (There's an incidental British correlation of course: it was largely the English, along with the Dutch, who pushed this system in India. That makes it socio-politically and emotively connected to India–UK and Indian–Western relations, but it is not an Anglic counting system and we are not to be confused by sentiment.) More to the point, the "job" of this site is to communicate clearly with as many English-competent readers as possible. The simple fact is that virtually no one outside of the Subcontinent and nearby islands (plus first-generation emigrées therefrom), think in or even understand ''lakh'' and ''crore''; meanwhile pretty much everyone in India and thereabouts {{em|also}} understands millions, and hundreds of thousands, even if it is not their immediate mental model and they have to convert a bit in their heads, like Americans with metric units. There is no ] to be had here; the sides are not equivalent. Finally, it is not the goal of our articles on Indic culture, history, geography, economics, etc., to appeal to and primarily serve the interests of people in South Asia, but {{em|everyone}}. For this reason, I'm supportive of retaining the permissibility of ''crore'' and ''lakh'' in relevant articles as long as they are always converted into the now globally prevalent enumeration system, and usually with that first unless there's an important contextual reason to use ''lakh/crore'' first. Best of both worlds: everyone gets to understand the material, and Indic numbering is not deleted. It's pretty much the same situation as American customary ("imperial") units of measurement: most of the world doesn't use or understand them, but we should not ban them, just always convert them to metric. (The only difference I can see is "wiki-political": our American editorial and read bases are so large that it would be very difficult to get consensus to always put American units second after metric even in articles about American subjects. That really {{em|should}} be the rule, but it'll be hard to get there.) <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] 😼 </span> 12:54, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
*'''Do not allow crore''' - I am not convinced that this word is actually English, and this is the English-language wikipedia. It seems that this is a foreign word that is used ''alongside'' English in areas that have ties to the language this word is from. Even in these areas, it seems that English speakers there fully understand what "millions", "thousands", etc mean, and there have been attestations linked above where they use both, presumably to help English speaking people understand what number is being referred to. My perspective here is colored by being an American expat living in Japan... in day-to-day speech, I will sometimes mix the languages and say "Oh, this costs 3 man yen." But I am under no circumstances thinking that "man" meaning "ten thousand" is English. I'm using another language's word. That's what it looks like they are doing here. ] (]) 07:01, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
*:As an alternative, I would also accept allowing crore only if the "millions" number is included alongside it. ] (]) 07:28, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
*:"Gumption" is borrowed from Scots; it is English. "Chutzpah" is borrowed from Yiddish; it is English. "Powwow" is borrowed from East-American indigenous language; it is English. "Crore" is borrowed from Hindustani; it is ]. All of the above are attested by dictionaries, while "man" to mean myriads is not. ] (]) 18:28, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''Allow crore''' - my gut feeling is to disallow it because it is not English as understood by the majority of English readers (including native speakers from UK/US/Australia/etc and second language speakers from China/S.America/Europe/etc). However, crore and lakh are words that Indians practically think in even when speaking English. We have a similar problem where an article is marked as British English and has 99 occurrences of "litre" - an American will still add new stuff with "liter" because it is so naturally to them. In the same way, we will be pushing it up hill trying to get them to stop. So, we should let them use it in articles related to the Indian region but never on anything outside that region. Each first usage should link to ] and ] so that the few non-Indian region readers have a clue what's going on. I would not bother with conversion to millions - once you learn that they are just putting 0's at the end it becomes easy enough in a short time and conversions just clutter up the article. But do not allow grouping like 1,00,000 under any circumstances.<span style="border:1px solid blue;border-radius:4px;color:blue;box-shadow: 3px 3px 4px grey;">]&nbsp;<span style="font-size:xx-small; vertical-align:top">]&nbsp;</span></span> 02:41, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''Don't allow crore'''. If there are people who don't know what "million" is, well some level of literacy is required here, yes. As to "link on first use", no, links are supposed to be "here's some extra/more detailed info about the subject if you want" not "you need to interrupt the flow of your reading and go off the page to understand this word". ] (]) 04:57, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
*:Actually that's exactly what links are for. Readers who know the general topic well can just read an article straight forwardly. But readers new to the general topic are likely to come across words they don't know yet and can follow the links to learn. Eg, in car articles we often talk about the ]. If you are new to the detailed study of cars then you can follow that link and then return later. <span style="border:1px solid blue;border-radius:4px;color:blue;box-shadow: 3px 3px 4px grey;">]&nbsp;<span style="font-size:xx-small; vertical-align:top">]&nbsp;</span></span> 06:09, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
*:And if anybody thinks that a politely worded MOS rule will stop them adding crore and lakh then consider that at https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Nissan&diff=1256595427&oldid=1256557060 somebody added a MDY style date in spite of the article having 186 references in DMY style. I fix these (in both directions) practically daily. People do whatever comes natural and do not consider that any other way even exists.
*: But I do feel a little better after my vent :) <span style="border:1px solid blue;border-radius:4px;color:blue;box-shadow: 3px 3px 4px grey;">]&nbsp;<span style="font-size:xx-small; vertical-align:top">]&nbsp;</span></span> 11:35, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
*::{{+1}} and it’s worth reiterating that most advocates here are suggesting that the Indic value should always be “translated” into a Western value in parentheses, so most naïve readers would still be able to parse the article without following the link. <span style="font-family:Avenir, sans-serif">—&nbsp;<span style="border-radius:5px;padding:.1em .4em;background:#faeded">]</span>&nbsp;(])</span> 06:21, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''Do not allow crore'''—India-related articles are for international readership. No one outside the subcontinent is familiar with ''crore''. It is a disservice to readers to allow it. ] ] 06:24, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
*:If they are not familiar with crore they can read the conversion to millions. And if they also want to learn about ] they can click on the link. I see no disservice. ] (]) 12:49, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
*:Perhaps some are not aware but English Misplaced Pages is heavily used in India. The ] from 2023 had five items about Indian movies and movie stars. The latest week's most viewed ] had ] and '']''. According to ] there are 128 million English speakers there. If we say to basically never use ''crore'' and ''lakh'', we are sending a discouraging, even insulting, message to many of our readers and editors.&nbsp;]&#124;] 13:51, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
* '''Allow''' in articles with strong ties to India, provided that the conversion is shown at first use. Hey, we could even write {{tq|In non-scientific articles with strong ties to <s>the United States</s> India, the primary <s>units are US customary (pounds, miles, feet, inches, etc.)</s> multipliers are Crore and Lakh}}. See ]. Also, it is very relevant that a huge fraction of en.wiki readers are Indian. "ccording to a 2011 census, 10.2% of the Indian population speaks English. This figure includes all Indians who speak English as a first, second, or third language. 10% of India's population is approximately 145 million people." Twice as many as in the UK, half as many as in the US. --] (]) 11:49, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''Allow''' only with linking and conversion as per Mathglot. The most practical solution for both Indian and non-Indian readers. ] (] · ]) 23:41, 8 December 2024 (UTC)
===Discussion===
Maybe this can be solved technologically so that every user sees numbers in the way they are accustomed to? ]<sub>]</sub> 20:43, 8 December 2024 (UTC)
:This could be done for logged in users, but the vast majority of readers are not logged in with an account. Similar solutions have been proposed for date style and variety of English, but they won't work.&nbsp;]&#124;] 20:50, 8 December 2024 (UTC)
{{abot}}


== Which era? ==
:But this is the English-LANGUAGE Misplaced Pages, not tied to any one country.
I'm inviting fellow editors to figure out whether ] should use BC / AD or BCE / CE. The issue is that the article mixes eras and when I went back to see which was first, I saw it originally used "BC/BCE" and it stayed like that for years. The thread: ]. Thanks! <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) </small>
:] applies so status quo ante should apply. (FWIW, Judaism and Islam have religious perspectives on Jesus of Nazareth, so the neutral style seems entirely appropriate.). --] (]) 00:18, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
::Agreed on the last part. As for the procedural matters, all of our ] principles ultimately default/fallback to the style used in the first non-stub version that used one of the competing styles, if consensus fails. ] is the general principle, the root rule: Don't change from one acceptable style without a very good reason. If there is or you expect resistance, discuss to establish consensus. If you don't get consensus for your change (i.e., there is consensus against you), it stays the {{lang|la|status quo ante}}. If there's no consensus on which would be better (which is often the case and likely the one in this case), then use the version established earliest. For particular things covered by ], ], ], ], we simply reiterate this principle and process more topically, and these ones also basically resolve to an additional rule: don't change that particular kind of style without establishing consensus first {{em|even if}} you're sure you've got a good reason and don't think there should be resistance.<!-- --><p>The STYLEVAR process actually sometimes (namely when there's clearly no firm consensus in favor of the {{lang|la|status quo ante}}, either) overrides the usual Misplaced Pages {{lang|la|status quo ante}} principle, which in practice amounts to "fall back to whatever the discussion closer thinks is more or less a pretty long-term {{lang|la|status quo}}". That usually works for a lot of things, but for these "I will win my Holy Style War or die trying" tedious cyclic ] typographic disputes, it has proven unworkable, because the dispute lives on and on, simply shifting in stages to: what constitutes a {{lang|la|status quo}}; how long is long enough; whether interruptions in the use of the alleged {{lang|la|status quo}} have reset its tenure; whether this *VAR-imposed consensus discussion was followed when the alleged {{lang|la|status quo}} was imposed; if not, then whether that imposition pre-dated STYLEVAR requiring it; and yadda yadda yadda. There's just no end to it, because it's too often a super-trivial but deeply obsessive PoV-pushing exercise grounded in prescriptivist emotions (mixed sometimes with nationalist, or socio-politically activistic, or my-profession-vs.-yours, etc.). The style-war-ending default of falling back to the first major edit that established one of the competing styles is arbitrary (in both senses), but it is {{em|the end of it}}, and we move on to something more productive.</p><!-- --><p>For this particular article: If "it originally used 'BC/BCE{{'"}} in the original post isn't a typo, and really does mean that the style was mixed from day one, then that's a rare edge case, and JMF's "status quo ante should apply" is probably the only reasonable approach. (Even from an excessively proceduralist viewpoint: If STYLEVAR and its application ERAVAR impose an overriding principle that in this case cannot actually be applied, then the default necessarily must be the normal Wikipedian {{lang|la|status quo ante}} principle, even if for matters like this it tends to lead to re-ignition of the dispute again in short order. Not every solution is perfection.) <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] 😼 </span> 12:02, 23 December 2024 (UTC)</p>
:::But what would be the status quo ante in this case? Surely you can't mean the mixed BC/BCE style? ] (]) 08:56, 24 December 2024 (UTC)


== Four questions ==
:In the UK and Ireland metric is commonly mixed with Imperial units in everyday life; in the UK some things such as road distances and heights, and pints of beer served on draight, MUST be measured in Imperial; in Canada metric is most commonly used, with occasional use of US Customary simply because of the close ties with the US; in Australia and New Zealand exclusively metric and so on.


#Can 24-hour clock be used in articles with strong ties to United States (I have seen no US-related articles with 24-hour clock) such as: "The Super Bowl begins at 18:40 ET?
:Last night I was talking to someone from mexico and said that Cambridge was about 80 km from London, whereas I would never say that to an English person (I would say about 50 miles). Yes, the conversions need to exist. Again, if using {{tlx|convert}} and the MoS then says "don't use conversions except in this or that circumstance" we can probably change the templates and 90% of articles will immediately conform (the remainder being for things like historical use of units, or quoted sources, etc). So, even if the conversion is not particularly useful in itself, simply as a marker that "this is a measurement" is. I know {{tlx|val}} also stands for that purpose but the same applies, mutatis mutandis. It is also extremely helpful for people translating across different Misplaced Pages (what am I supposed to do, for example, if I translate a French article about an American car?) ] (]) 10:51, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
#Can 12-hour clock be used with UTC time?
#How are primary units of an article determined if the article has strong ties to both US and Canada, as Canada-related articles always use metric units first? For example, ] is such an article, and it currently uses imperial units first, but it would be more logical to use metric units first as a Canada-related article.
#Why mixed units are not used with metric units? Why it is either 1.33 m or 133 cm, but never 1 m 33 cm? --] (]) 23:04, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
#:I'd add a fifth question: why does Misplaced Pages not use ISO dates, i.e. yyyy/mm/dd? They are becoming more common internationally. ] (]) 00:02, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
#::# I wouldn't recommend it.
#::# Probably?
#::# That should be decided on a case-by-case basis.
#::# No benefit for the additional visual or semantic complexity; that's part of the appeal of the metric system, right?
#::# English-language sources never use this format, and the English Misplaced Pages bases its style on that of other English-language media.
#::<span style="border-radius:2px;padding:3px;background:#1E816F">]<span style="color:#fff">&nbsp;‥&nbsp;</span>]</span> 00:58, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
#:::You write "English-language sources never use this format", but this is untrue. ISO date format is widely used in scientific publishing and it is standard in aviation and for machine processing. Have a look at the Misplaced Pages entry ]. You might be surprised.] (]) 23:35, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
#::::I personally use ISO format on my devices; if it helps, you can replace "never" with "almost never". <span style="border-radius:2px;padding:3px;background:#1E816F">]<span style="color:#fff">&nbsp;‥&nbsp;</span>]</span> 23:36, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
::#] says 12 and 24 clocks are equally valid. It's just that the majority of native English speakers use 12 hour clocks, so they choose to use 12 hour clocks. If you create an article (or are the first to mention times within an existing article) then you can choose. Don't change an existing article from one to the other. With the possible exception of US Army articles, you may get kick-back from readers not familiar with the MOS. See the ] essay.
::#UTC is an offset. It is a separate question from how you format that time. UTC can be used with either 12 or 24 hour clocks. See ] but it doesn't actually say much.
::#Primary units are based on ''strong'' ties to a country. If you have multiple countries with a mix of units then you have multiple weak ties and no strong ties. Therefore we default to metric first, as per ]. Only articles with strong ties to the US and UK get to use imperial units first.
::#A major benefit of metric is that we can change from m to cm to mm to km just by shifting the decimal point. Splitting it into 1 m 33 cm makes that harder and is now rarely used in metric countries. It was more common in my country of Australia during the first 20 years after metrication when we copied our old imperial habits but it fell out of favour and we now universally say 133 cm, 1.33 m or 1330 mm as appropriate. Countries using imperial units tend to use split units because it is so hard to convert miles to feet, gallons to ounces, etc in your head.
::#] dates are allowed in limited cases (mostly references and tables where space is limited). It is not used in prose because it is not yet common for native English speakers to use this in their day-to-day lives. Note that any other purely numeric format is strictly disallowed. See ] <span style="border:1px solid blue;border-radius:4px;color:blue;box-shadow: 3px 3px 4px grey;">]&nbsp;<span style="font-size:xx-small; vertical-align:top">]&nbsp;</span></span> 01:09, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
::#:(In terms of accuracy in my own answers, 2 out of 5 ain't bad right?) <span style="border-radius:2px;padding:3px;background:#1E816F">]<span style="color:#fff">&nbsp;‥&nbsp;</span>]</span> 01:11, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::Being OCD helps 😉 <span style="border:1px solid blue;border-radius:4px;color:blue;box-shadow: 3px 3px 4px grey;">]&nbsp;<span style="font-size:xx-small; vertical-align:top">]&nbsp;</span></span> 01:58, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::I'm unsure how to medicalize it, but I'm certainly obsessive and compulsive, and it only helps somewhat! <span style="border-radius:2px;padding:3px;background:#1E816F">]<span style="color:#fff">&nbsp;‥&nbsp;</span>]</span> 02:00, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
::Answering #2 and #4 only
::*2. No. The clarity of UTC is obtained only with a 24-hour clock.
::*4. You could write 1 m + 33 cm if you want, but why make life so complicated? The plus sign is needed because without it a multiplication is implied (1 m 33 cm = 0.33 m<sup>2</sup>).
::] (]) 07:43, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:::The answer to Q2 will depend at least in part on whether UTC was chosen because it's local time or because it's the international time standard. It would make no sense to allow the 12-hour clock for events in London between March and October, but ban it for events between October and March. ''''']'''''&nbsp;<small>'']''</small> 14:56, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
::::{{rto|Kahastok}} I don't get this reply. The time of an events in London is given according to BST (= UTC+01:00) in summer and according to GMT (= UTC+00:00) in winter{{snd}} normally without either qualification stated unless it is the weekend when the time changes. It the time zone matters (for an internationally televised live event, for example), the time is normally given both ways: in the local and in the international notations. (Or did you not realise that GMT is just another timezone, not a synonym for UTC though often used that way, especially by seafarers.) ] (]) 15:58, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::I don't accept that UTC is always distinct from GMT. Usually there is not enough information about the reasons a particular author used one or the other abbreviation to tell if the author intended a distinction or not. ] (]) 17:15, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::Well OK, if we're going to insist that the sub-second formal discrepancy between GMT and UTC is somehow vitally important (despite all evidence to the contrary) the split hairs do not count in the case of Lisbon, where the local time in the winter is defined as UTC, rather than just being UTC in practice. Why would we say that a winter event in Lisbon has to use the 24-hour clock, but a summer event does not?
:::::For the record, I don't think I have ever seen a time recorded at {{tq|17:00 GMT (17:00 UTC)}} and I would like to see examples of that usage. ''''']'''''&nbsp;<small>'']''</small> 19:48, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::and you never will, because it would be pedantic in the extreme. In fact most timestamps you see anywhere will be just one of (a) not stated, because it is for local use; (b) the local timezone (notation adjusted according to whether or not DST is in operation); (c) a poor third at "front of house" (excepting worldwide online systems like Misplaced Pages), UTC time. Use of both (b)&(c) at once is very rare, vanishingly so if b=GMT or even BST.
::::::Jc3s5h is certainly correct for use of GMT in almost all sources pre this century and still quite a few recently{{snd}}it will take 50 years to fall out of use as a world standard, I suspect. Perhaps more ... who would think that there are still people who insist on ]s?
::::::Just to be clear, I am not proposing that we introduce an MOS rule mandating any notation. Just clarifying that GMT is not a synonym for UTC. ] (]) 20:25, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::If you weren't aiming to be {{tq|pedantic in the extreme}}, why bring it up? And in particular, why claim - specifically in the context of GMT vs UTC - that {{tq|the time is normally given both ways: in the local and in the international notations}} in situations where time zone matters? '''']''''&nbsp;<small>'']''</small> 21:22, 22 December 2024 (UTC) s
::My 2c:
::# Not just English speakers, anybody with an analogue wristwatch display does so. BUT (in the UK at least), train, bus and plane timetables are invariably shown using 24 hour clock notation. Basically, anywhere that it matters, where ambiguity might arise.
::##The application of am and pm to 12:00 noon and midnight seems to be a perennial source of dispute, see ]. Good luck with writing an MOS guidance that avoids that minefield.
::# I was about to declare that ]s never exceeds 12:00 so crisis, what crisis? But I think there is a UTC+13:00 on one of the Pacific islands near the date line?
::# Stepho, the use of imperial units in the UK is dying out, literally as well as metaphorically since they are preferred by the older generation. Don't be fooled by the rail-fans insistence on ]s{{snd}} all UK railway engineering has been done in metric since 1975. So no, ] applies to UK articles too. {{midsize|Except articles under the aegis of ], of course. --] (]) 15:43, 22 December 2024 (UTC)}}
::# I concur with Stepho's reply.
::# Anybody who puts their boiled egg upside down should be taken out and beheaded immediately! (aka, ask us again in a 100 years time but it is a non-starter right now.)
::Here endeth the lesson. ] (]) 15:40, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:::You say, {{tq|the use of imperial units in the UK is dying out}}. Is it therefore your contention that the British (or even just younger British people) all use kilometres really and just put miles on all the road signs to confuse foreigners? ''''']'''''&nbsp;<small>'']''</small> 19:48, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
::::Because of the multitude of road signs and therefore the huge cost of moving from miles, that one will likely never change. In most other fields, however, there has been a progressive move toward using metric measurements in the UK over recent decades. ] (]) 04:05, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::Never mind that other countries that went metric changed our road signs just fine. <span style="border:1px solid blue;border-radius:4px;color:blue;box-shadow: 3px 3px 4px grey;">]&nbsp;<span style="font-size:xx-small; vertical-align:top">]&nbsp;</span></span> 05:09, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::{{@|Dondervogel 2}}, why must UTC be 24 hours? UTC is just a timezone. Technically it is no different any other timezone and the other time zones can use either 12 or 24 hour times as they wish. Of course, UTC is a little special in that it gets used as the "universal" timezone. And when somebody wants to be unambiguous they tend to use 24 hour time. And when they want to be really unambiguous they write it as UTC rather than local. But a lot of that is just convention. They could equally well say 4:00 pm UTC and still be very precise and unambiguous.
:::::Also, why do you need the "+". In the 1970s in Australia (just after metrication) we used to see "1 m 33 cm" a lot. I've never seen anyone think that it was multiplication. It was more likely from the habit of doing "4 ft 7 in". Once we learnt that writing it as 1.33 m or 133 cm made conversion between them trivial (just shift the little dot), we dropped the complication of mixed units. <span style="border:1px solid blue;border-radius:4px;color:blue;box-shadow: 3px 3px 4px grey;">]&nbsp;<span style="font-size:xx-small; vertical-align:top">]&nbsp;</span></span> 05:09, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::*UTC is not a time zone. It's a time standard, and it uses a 24-hour clock.
::::::*In the language of the SI, symbols have special meanings. If you mean addition (as here) you need a "+" sign. In the absence of any other symbol, a space denotes multiplication. Outside the SI you can invent any conventions you want, and Misplaced Pages sometimes chooses to depart from the SI, via MOSNUM. I don't believe MOSNUM permits this particular departure.
::::::] (]) 08:30, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:Remsense, one reason Misplaced Pages can't rely on ISO 8601 throughout is that some articles express dates in the ], or even the ], and ISO 8601 only allows the ]. ISO 8601 is fine for airline schedules and hotel reservations, but it truly sucks for history. ] (]) 15:13, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
::::If we can't get Americans to switch to DMY, or Brits to switch to MDY, what hope do we have of getting both groups to switch to YMD? --] &#x1f339; (]) 00:03, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
::::: I think the biggest problem with YMD, besides unfamiliarity, is that you frequently want to suppress the Y part when it's understood, and that's harder to do when it's at the start. --] (]) 00:14, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::I think the UN should enforce use of DMY worldwide on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, MDY on Tuesdays and Thursdays, and of course dedicate the weekends to YMD. <span style="border-radius:2px;padding:3px;background:#1E816F">]<span style="color:#fff">&nbsp;‥&nbsp;</span>]</span> 00:20, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::Whaaaaat? Why would we want the least fun format on the {{em|weekend}}? <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] 😼 </span> 09:02, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::Year-first encourages us to meditate on the long term while many are less occupied at work. <span style="border-radius:2px;padding:3px;background:#1E816F">]<span style="color:#fff">&nbsp;‥&nbsp;</span>]</span> 08:59, 24 December 2024 (UTC)
:My responses to these questions would be:
:# There is no strong tie of "18:40" format to the US, or the UK, or whatever. It's a format used in a variety of military, otherwise-governmental (e.g. transport/transit scheduling), and sometimes scientific and a few other contexts, and that's true inside and outside the US. It's a completely abnormal format outside of those kinds of contexts, and people don't use it on an everyday basis (that I know of; maybe there is some English-using country in which it has been so aggressively imposed that it's become an everyday norm there and people don't know what "3 pm" means any more, but I'm not aware of such a place). MOS:NUM grudgingly permits its use, but 24-hour format verges on "user-hateful" and should be avoided in most circumstances (i.e. where it's not an established norm for the subject in question).
:#*On JMF's side point about "12:00 pm", MoS could easily have a rule about this, just to settle the confusion, which is common among the general populace, but not among reliable sources on time and writing, in which it virtually always corresponds to "12:00" in 24-hour time, with "12:00 am" being "00:00". MoS saying something about it, though, should be to avoid it in favor of "midnight" and "noon", because confusion among everyday people persists. (My city is gradually changing all of its "No Parking 12 AM – 6 AM, Street Cleaning, Tu, Th" signs to "No Parking 12:01 AM – 6:01 AM, Street Cleaning, Tu, Th" because of this factor).
:# Meaningless, confused question. As Stepho-wrs explained, UTC is an offset, not a format. There's a standardized way of writing {{em|the name of}} a UTC time-zone offset, e.g. as "UTC+05:00", but that's not relevant to how times are used or referred to (in various styles) for typical human consumption. Likewise, the Unicode name of "@" is "{{Unichar|0040}}", but this has no implications for use of the symbol or for plain-English references to it; writing "the at-sign" is not an error. When WP puts "3:05 pm, February 3, 2002 (UTC)" in someone's sig to conform to their date settings in the WP "Preferences" panes, that is also not an error.
:#* Stepho-wrs (which surprises me, given the above) wondered why UTC offset names use a +. It's because the offsets run both directions, e.g. "UTC−05:00" is US and Canadian eastern standard time, and rendering the positive ones as "UTC 05:00" or "UTC05:00" would be problematic for humans and automation alike in various ways. The + isn't any more superfluous than the leading 0 on 00–09.
:# A Canada–US squabble over ordering: A) Who cares? We have {{tlx|convert}} for a reason. B) This is a pretty good argument (from Stepho-wrs): "If you have multiple countries with a mix of units then you have multiple weak ties and no strong ties. Therefore we default to metric first, as per ]." B) If that argument were not persuasive, then ] still already covers this: When there are two competing acceptable styles, do not change from one to the other without an objectively defensible reason. Try to establish consensus on the article's talk page about which should be preferred, if you are convinced a change should happen. ] such a consensus cannot be reached, then default to whatever was used in the first post-stub version of the article (same as with ENGVAR disputes, and CITEVAR ones). So, we are not missing any rules.
:# It's "1.33 m" (not "1 m 33 cm") primarily because that is how the metric system is internationally standardized and how it is used in the real world, rather consistently. The two-units version is also less concise, and annoyingly repetitive because of how the units are named. And the system is designed to be decimal from the ground up. Thus Steoph-wrs observation: "Once we learnt that writing it as 1.33 m or 133 cm made conversion between them trivial (just shift the little dot), we dropped the complication of mixed units." It's not WP's role to treat occasionally-attestable but very disused variants away from a near universal system as if they had become norms and must at all costs be permitted. (Much of MoS's role is eliminating unhelpful variation that is confusion or which causes cyclic dispute, even if we settle on something arbitrary; but most of MOS:NUM is not arbitrary but standards-based.) As for US customary (or "imperial" units, never mind the British empire doesn't exist any longer and what's left of it metricated a long time ago), you can find decimal uses of it for various purposes in real-world publications (e.g. "0.35 in"), but it tends to be for special purposes, like establishing margin widths when printing on non-metric paper, and in electronic media when calculation or sorting might be needed. But the typical use of such units is in "3 ft 7 in" form because they are unrelated units, and because the two-unit split format is deeply conventionalized, including in various industries like construction. That's not true of "3 m 7 cm".
:#*I don't buy Dondervogel_2's "multiplication implied" argument. Virtually no one outside of some particular ivory towers (and even then only in specialist material that was explicit about it) would ever interpret any "# unit1 # unit2" construction, in any context, as a multiplication operation. The real world routinely uses formats like this and {{em|never}} means multiplication by it. E.g. look at the fine print on any laptop's or other device's power-brick; you'll likely see back-to-back, undivided measurement-and-unit-symbol pairs, like "12&nbsp;W&nbsp;&nbsp;3.7&nbsp;A".
:# Skeptic2's add-on ISO-dates question: WP doesn't use 2024-12-23 format (except for special purposes) because it is not a norm, anywhere (as an ENGVAR or other geographical or dialect consideration). It's only standardized within specific industries, systems, processes, organizations, and other specialized usage spheres. (I use it very, very frequently in web development and other coding. But it's not something I'd use in a letter or a novel or an op-ed, because it's a format for computers, and for precision and cross-language exchange among engineers and scientists, not a format for everyday communication.) I've never seen one iota of evidence of broad and increasing acceptance of ISO among the general public for daily use, in regular writing (though ability to parse it has likely increased in the last 30 years because of the Internet and the amount of people's exposure to code that uses it). But it does not match anyone but maybe an ultra-nerd's English-language parsing. If you're American, probably (unless you are older and rural) what you think and say aloud to express today's date is "December 23, 2024" or perhaps "December 23rd, 2024". If you're not American, you probably (some Canadians are an exception too) would express it as some variant of "23 December 2024", "23rd December, 2024", or "the 23rd of December, 2024", depending on your age, social background, country of origin, etc. (American yokels often use the last of those; I have relatives in the Deep South who do it habitually.) These correspond closely (between exactly and too-close-to-matter) to MOS:DATE's two "M D, YYYY and "D M YYYY" formats. An ISO date does not. It's very unnatural. It requires the reader (most readers, anyway) to stop and "translate" it in their heads, thinking about which block of numbers means what, and so on. (I've been using ISO dates on a daily basis since around 1990, and I still have to think about it a little, and once in a while get it wrong, especially shortly after transferring from narrative work to coding work.) Worse, many people do not know at all whether that represents YYYY-MM-DD or YYYY-DD-MM; lots of non-geeky non-Americans mistakenly think it's the latter because they are used to D M YYYY order otherwise, and the idea of the month coming before the day is foreign to them, an annoying Americanism. I run into this problem in a great deal of online content.
:<span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] 😼 </span> 09:02, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
::Official documents in South Africa are YYYY-MM-DD, I personally use it to name bank statements etc. on my computer because they are easier to find. It depends on what you are used to. ] (]) 12:56, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
:::It isn’t however very readable, on articles of prose. ] (]) 18:20, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
::::To reiterate a distinction that's not potentially reducible to cultural acclimation, it's clear that purely numerical formats are less natural in prose. <span style="border-radius:2px;padding:3px;background:#1E816F">]<span style="color:#fff">&nbsp;‥&nbsp;</span>]</span> 18:23, 29 December 2024 (UTC)


== Unit formatting ==
:To Hans: I would not write {{xt|4,700}} if only the first two digits are significant: instead, I'd write {{xt|4.7&nbsp;thousand}}; likewise, I'd not write "50" if only the first digit is significant (third cell of bottom row): I'd write "fifty" (or even "about fifty", if appropriate). And I'd like the template to assume that the zero in "50" is significant, for this reason. I once read about an editor converting numbers such as 187, 190, 191, and 194 and being surprised that the second one was converted with less precision. --<span style="background: white; color: blue; font-family: monospace">] di&nbsp;M.</span> 13:12, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
:Just noticed a bug: <code><nowiki>{{convert|470.00|mi2|km2}}</nowiki></code> gives {{convert|470.00|mi2|km2}}, with one 0 after the point instead of two. --<span style="background: white; color: blue; font-family: monospace">] di&nbsp;M.</span> 13:25, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
::I might say 4.7 thousand square metres too, though many don't, and the template has the capacity for a number of such constructions. However, if you see "4,700", the safest assumption is that it's precise to the nearest 100. As for the bug mentioned above, it should be fixed as soon as an admin puts in the new code. ]<sub>&nbsp;]·]</sub> 17:48, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
:::Hum... maybe for 4,700 I agree, but in cases such as 5,000 I think that assuming that none of the zeroes is significant is excessive. When giving numbers with two sigfigs, there is a 1-in-10 chance that the second one is 0. So I'd assume that numbers such as 500,000 have two significant digits. What do you others think? --<span style="background: white; color: blue; font-family: monospace">] di&nbsp;M.</span> 22:15, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
::::Which should generally boil down to giving an output of at least two significant figures which is just what the template does. So, yeah, I think that's just about right. ]<sub>&nbsp;]·]</sub> 00:32, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::No, it should assume at least two significant digits in the ''input'', not in the output. {{convert|14|km|mi}} is excess precision. --] 23:48, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
I think a template that automatically treats a zero as not a significant figure is a bit of a worry. Take the areas of the states of the United States. it would be bizarre to think that the areas of the states of Washington and North Dakota were less accurately surveyed than the other 48 states simply because the areas in square miles happened to end in two zeros . ] (]) 13:02, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
:So, your first step is to compare these with the areas of other states and base your rounding on that. Without this comparison how else could you justify assuming the zeros were significant? Zeros may or may not be significant whether you use the template, a calculator or do the conversion in your head, you have to deal with this. With nothing else to go on standard practice is to regard the zeros as not significant (and generally they aren't). ]<sub>&nbsp;]·]</sub> 13:42, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
::My 2003 ] (Table No. 359) converts North Dakota's 70,700 sq. mi. ''(yes MOSNUM fanatics: sq. mi. is their official U.S. Government statistical abbreviation, periods and all, not some archaic idiosyncrasy of mine)'' to 183,112 sq. km. ''(their usage again)'' and Washington's 71,300 as 184,665. (I might be able to dig out the actual acreage, square feet or square meters from somewhere in my desktop's archives.) Just as in the debate over what to introduce between quotation marks, sometimes there's no substitute for checking the source, nor for making your degree of precision clear to the ordinary, non-technical reader. ] (]) 21:05, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
Treating a number ending in a zero as being automatically less accurate than a number ending in any other numeral strikes me as some kind of magical thinking. Obviously there are times when the zero is not significant, but by taking it for granted that it is always non-significant is like some kind of superstition, where inaccuracies come in even tens and hundreds just as bad luck is supposed to come in threes. These things need to be judged on a case by case basis. ] (]) 14:00, 12 August 2009 (UTC)
:It may seem like magic but it's a pretty standard approach which in the vast majority of cases gives appropriate results. Of course there will be cases where the zero is significant but the template makes allowance for that. If you prefer the calculator, there's nothing wrong with that but you'll still have to know what you're doing. ]<sub>&nbsp;]·]</sub> 15:30, 12 August 2009 (UTC)
:: I agree with Jimp. There is a clear difference in implied precision between using 4000 and 4000.0 when specifying a measurement. The default should be to use standard scientific convention for specification of precision. Any "anomalous behavior" can be corrected on a case-by-case basis. Often this is caused by the choice of units, e.g. 4 km vs. 4000 m. However, there are some cases where uniformity in units is desired and there can be unintended results. (For example, the areadisp in {{tl|infobox settlement}}) ] (]) 16:36, 12 August 2009 (UTC)
:It's not magical thinking, it's user friendliness. The only reasonable alternative would be for the template ''not'' to guess a precision and simply print a red error message when no precision is provided explicitly. That wouldn't exactly encourage editors to use it.
:A better example of magical thinking in this context is nonsense such as the claim in the article ] that the city had 1,680,266 inhabitants in the 1st quarter of 2009. I hope that's not true, because a completely constant number of inhabitants over 3 months can only be achieved with very rigorous methods that I would probably suffer from when I move there. The same editors who insist on writing out even the last digit in such a case (it happens in all the best encyclopedias, not just Misplaced Pages) would shy away in horror from the claim that when computed using a certain well-defined algorithm based on well-defined official data, the average population of a certain village in 2008 was "1680.266 inhabitants". ] ] 20:40, 12 August 2009 (UTC)


Are any of these formats correct?
== WP:OTHERDATE ==
* a 10-cm blade
* a 10 cm blade
* a 10-cm-long blade
* a 10 cm-long blade
* a ten-cm blade
* a ten-cm long blade


And why numbers are not spelled out before unit symbols, and why unit symbols are used more with metric than imperial units, where unit names are typically written in full? --] (]) 13:56, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
There is something flawed in the statement of this section. On one hand, "In the main text of articles, the form 1996– ... is preferred in infoboxes", and yet "The form since 1996 should be used in ... article text and infoboxes". Which is it? And also, I don't see ''anything'' wrong with using "xxxx-present" in an infobox or a list. It doesn't flow well in prose which is where I support "since xxxx", but otherwise it need not be so awkward-looking. The section argues against it because "'the present' is a constantly moving target", but using "since xxxx" uses "the present" as a reference point. ] 00:52, 12 August 2009 (UTC)


:In answer to your first question I suggest choosing between "a 10 cm blade" and "a ten-centimetre blade".
:here's the text of ] as it now stands - i agree that it is weirdly unclear, as well as pretty unreasonable:
:To the second, there is no internationally accepted standard describing symbols for the imperial unit system. Perhaps that is the reason. ] (]) 14:05, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
::Dates that are given as ranges should follow the same patterns as given above for birth and death dates. Ranges that come up to the present (as of the time that the information was added to the article) should generally be given in ways that prevent their becoming counterfactually obsolete, e.g. ''from 1996 onward (as of October 2007)'', not ''from 1996 to the present''; "the present" is a constantly moving target. In the main text of articles, the form ''1996&ndash;'' (with no date after the en-dash) should not be used, though it is preferred in infoboxes and other crowded templates or lists, with the caveat that they may need to be examined by editors more frequently to see if they need to be updated; it is helpful to other editors to add an HTML comment immediately after such constructions, giving the as-of date, e.g.: <code><nowiki><!--as of 10 October 2007--></nowiki></code>. The form ''since 1996'' should be used in favor of ''1996&ndash;present'' in article text and infoboxes.
:You can also consult our {{tlx|convert}} template which deals with all these edge cases: {{tlx|convert|10|cm|adj{{=}}on|abbr{{=}}on}} produces {{convert|10|cm|adj=on|abbr=on}}, per ].
:i understand that there are situations in which "to the present" can become obsolete faster than anyone will catch & update it, especially if it's buried somewhere in a text. but the prohibition of "YYYY-the present" in info boxes seems pretty outlandish, especially since that exact form is very widely used in infoboxes.
:Also, is there a reason you're not just consulting the MOS directly? It more or less covers your questions so far. <span style="border-radius:2px;padding:3px;background:#1E816F">]<span style="color:#fff">&nbsp;‥&nbsp;</span>]</span> 15:07, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:can we alter that bit to leave the phrasing of info boxes up to the relevant projects or template pages? and then can we try rephrasing this section so that it's comprehensible? ] (]) 20:35, 12 August 2009 (UTC)
::This is possible to output: {{tlx|convert|10|cm|adj{{=}}on|abbr{{=}}on|spell=in}}, and it produces: {{convert|10|cm|adj=on|abbr=on|spell=in}}. So, why it is not used? And a sixth question, why fractions are not usually used with metric units? Fractions would be useful indicating repeating decimals, such as one-seventh of a meter, as things like "0.142857142857... m" or "0,{{overbar|142857}} m" would look ugly, so {{frac|7}} m would be only option. --] (]) 23:13, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:::Do you have a real world example illustrating your concern? ] (]) 23:22, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:::How would {{frac|1|7}} be the "only option"? You yourself just used the obvious other one: simply writing "one-seventh", which isn't broken in any way, and is probbaly easier to read for most people, than {{frac|1|7}}, which can mess with line height. It actually copy-pastes as <code>1⁄7</code>, with inconsistent display on various systems. The use of the Unicode fraction-slash character is interpreted by some OSes, including my Win11 box (but not my Mac, or any Linux I can remember using), as an instruction to superscript the 1 in nearly unreadably tiny font and do the same to 7 but as a subscript. (Win11 even does this to me in a {{tag|code}} block!) I'm not convinced we should have that template at all, since the Internet has done just fine with <code>1/7</code> for decades. Regarding the other material, Remsense is correct that there's a standard way of abbreviating metric units (and there's also a lot of systemic enforcement of that), but there isn't an entirely standardized approach to other units (perhaps better called "American traditional" at this point), and they are often unabbreviated in the real world. So, despite MoS providing a standard way of abbreviating them (based on ANSI or whatever, I don't remember), there's less editorial habit and desire to bother with it, while editors steeped in metric (everyone but Americans) are habituated to the short symbols. Nothing's really harmful about any of this, with regard to reader comprehension, so we have no need to firmly impose a rigid rule to do it this way or that. (We do have such a rationale for settling on particular American/"Imperial" unit abbreviations, though, since use of conflicting ones from article to article would be confusing for readers and editors alike, and some of them found "in the wild" are ambiguous and conflict with actual standards (e.g. using "m" to mean 'miles' instead of 'metres/meters'). As for the original question, yes it's "a 10 cm blade", and the output of {{tnull|convert}} is MOS:NUM-compliant. A construction like this is taken as an strongly conventionalized exception to the ] rule of hyphenating compound modifiers (writing "a 10 cm-blade" or "a 10-cm-blade" isn't really any clearer, and probably less so). In long form it would be "a ten-centimetre-long blade" and Dondervogel is correct that "-long" would usually be omitted for concision, unless it was necessary to indicate length versus width of something (which isn't the case with a knife or sword or whatnot, but would be with a shipping box). <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] 😼 </span> 07:12, 23 December 2024 (UTC)


== Mixed spelled/figure format ==
::I think it can simply be solved if "and infoboxes" is dropped from the last sentence. ] 12:39, 13 August 2009 (UTC)


How did we come to this guidance?
{{Editprotected}}
:Comparable values near one another should be all spelled out or all in figures, even if one of the numbers would normally be written differently: {{xt|patients' ages were five, seven, and thirty-two}} or {{xt|ages were{{nbsp}}5, 7, and{{nbsp}}32}}, but not {{!xt|ages were {{nobr|five, seven, and 32}}}}.
Please change in the "Other date ranges" the sentence
This goes against the that pretty firmly enforce that the numbers nine and below should be spelled out, while figures should be used for 10 and above. I’m not as aware as other style guides, is this a case of AP being the odd one out… or is Misplaced Pages style the odd one? -- ] (]) 04:14, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
:"The form ''since 1996'' should be used in favor of ''1996&ndash;present'' in article text and infoboxes."
to the sentence
:"The form ''since 1996'' should be used in article text while the form ''1996&ndash;present'' is prefered in infoboxes." ]] ] 15:22, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
::Note to editing admin: even though MOSNUM is unprotected, the section to which the edit is requested is protected. The subpage can be found at ]. ] (]) 15:43, 18 August 2009 (UTC)


:The example shows it very well. Mixing both types in one sentence like {{!xt|ages were {{nobr|five, seven, and 32}}}} looks very amateurish. <span style="border:1px solid blue;border-radius:4px;color:blue;box-shadow: 3px 3px 4px grey;">]&nbsp;<span style="font-size:xx-small; vertical-align:top">]&nbsp;</span></span> 05:43, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
== Unknown birth year for living persons ==
::I agree, but as the MoS is the only style guide I've perused at length, I'd naturally be inclined to. I wonder what the provenance of this guideline is also—and that of other guidelines of note as well if anyone knows and cares to waste time telling me. <span style="border-radius:2px;padding:3px;background:#1E816F">]<span style="color:#fff">&nbsp;‥&nbsp;</span>]</span> 05:54, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
:::Saying it “looks very amateurish” is very much a subjective opinion.
:::But to focus this on my more real-world concerns, this question was prompted by in connection to coverage of the jet crash in Kazakhstan. So in keeping with that, I present how the New York Times handles three such sentences on : {{xt| Kazakhstan’s Emergency Situations Ministry said that at least 29 people had survived, including two children}} … {{xt|Kazakhstan’s transportation ministry said that the flight’s passengers included 37 Azerbaijani nationals, 16 Russians, six Kazakh citizens and three Kyrgyz nationals.}} … {{xt|The airline’s last major episode was in 2005, when an An-140 plane crashed shortly after takeoff, killing 18 passengers and five crew members.}}
:::Because of editors closely following our current MOS, our introduction on this same topic reads: {{xt|On 25 December 2024, the Embraer 190AR operating the route crashed near Aktau International Airport, Kazakhstan, with sixty-two passengers and five crew on board. Of the sixty-seven people on board, thirty-eight died in the crash, including both of the pilots and one flight attendant, while twenty-nine people survived with injuries.}}
:::If we adopted AP style it would read: {{xt|On 25 December 2024, the Embraer 190AR operating the route crashed near Aktau International Airport, Kazakhstan, with 62 passengers and five crew on board. Of the 67 people on board, 38 died in the crash, including both of the pilots and one flight attendant, while 29 people survived with injuries.}}
:::In my opinion, the AP style is vastly superior to what is suggested by our current MOS. ] (]) 07:29, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
::::The present guidance not to mix forms has consensus here. If you want that to change you'll need to propose a change to the wording, and explain why it is better. Saying "AP does it that way" seems unlikely to change the consensus. ] (]) 07:40, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::Long time editor, but this is definitely the first time I’ve encountered a MOS rule that I found so out of line with how I am used to writing (as you can probably surmise, I use AP in my day job). Frankly, I was just trying to get insight into ''why'' this was the consensus. I’m happy to propose something, is this the correct venue? Does it need to be in a formal format? ] (]) 08:17, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::Go ahead and suggest an improvement. This is the right place for it. Indeed it is the raison d'etre of this talk page. There is no formal format. Just make sure the proposed change is clear, and explain how it results in an improvement. ] (]) 08:21, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::It's pretty clear they're suggesting the AP style, right? I don't think it'll catch on here, though. However, one point in its favor one could argue is it doesn't depend at all on the surrounding context. <span style="border-radius:2px;padding:3px;background:#1E816F">]<span style="color:#fff">&nbsp;‥&nbsp;</span>]</span> 08:24, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::::I agree the verbatim AP wording, including “You should use figures for 10 or above and whenever preceding a unit of measure or referring to ages of people, animals, events or things”, would be unlikely to gain acceptance here, mainly because of its far-reaching consequences for other parts of MOSNUM. Let’s judge the proposal when it comes. ] (]) 08:50, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::No one has yet replied to the "why?" question. One would need to check the archives to be sure, but I imagine one reason is to avoid bizarre combinations like "the sum of 11 and two is 13". ] (]) 09:18, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::I suspect a significant part of the answer to “why?” is that, unlike other publications that set down a preferred style which they then use universally, Misplaced Pages explicitly tolerates a ''variety'' of styles across its ‘publications’ - most obviously for the national varieties of English, and date formats, but also in many other respects (‘AD’ or ‘CE’ being just one example) - with the MoS itself being guidelines that are widely respected, but not policy that can be rigidly enforced. This is a pragmatic compromise, given our global reach and multitude of editors of all ages and nationalities, and the practical impossibility of enforcing any single way of writing. But it does make '''consistency''' a policy issue for WP, which it simply isn’t for any other publisher (since by definition their style guides ensure that everything is consistent). Thus WP guidelines put a lot of emphasis on style choices being internally consistent within articles, because they aren’t between articles. When it comes to number format this means using either words or figures, but not a confusing jumble of both. Personally, I think this is a sensible guideline and would expect to oppose any proposed change, unless the argumentation is exceptionally convincing. ] (]) 14:08, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
::::I'd say that {{xt|Of the 67 people on board, 38 died in the crash, including both of the pilots and one flight attendant, while 29 people survived with injuries}} is absolutely fine and in agreement with our guidelines. The numbers {{xt|one}} and {{xt|29}} are so far from each other that there's just no reason to consider them "comparable" (except in the trivial sense that you can compare anything with anything, but that's certainly not the intended one here). I'd also consider {{xt|with 62 passengers and five crew on board}} as fine since crew members and passenger numbers aren't really comparable either – there'll likely to be an order of magnitude or more away from each other, as in this case. That's very different from people's ages (the example given), which all come from a population's age distribution and rarely exceed 100. ] (]) 08:49, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::I would argue the present guidance should result in "62 passengers and 5 crew", not "62 passengers and five crew". I have the impression {{u|RickyCourtney}} would like to change the guidance to reverse that preference. ] (]) 08:58, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::{{xt|62 passengers and 5 crew}} is certainly possible if we consider this as falling under the guideline. However, {{xt|Of the 67 people on board, 38 died in the crash, including both of the pilots and 1 flight attendant, while 29 people survived with injuries}} is certainly too odd to consider! My point, of course, was that these sentences don't fall under the guideline anyway, due to these numbers not really being "comparable". ] (]) 09:39, 28 December 2024 (UTC)


:::::::Re: 'Saying it “looks very amateurish” is very much a subjective opinion.' Sure. But your follow up of "in my opinion" is also subjective. There are no objective measurements here. The alternatives are:
The formats listed under ] don't seem to include anything that would look good or make sense in the lead for a living person for whom the year of birth is in doubt. "Circa" and "floruit" are for ancient Athenians, and "before" is silly, especially when the day is known. The project page entry should allow the use of question marks in such cases, e.g., "'''Joanne Whalley''' (born 25 August 19?? in ], ]) is an ] ]." --] (]) 11:59, 12 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::::*Existing MOS: "with 62 passengers and 5 crew on board" or the equally allowed "with sixty two passengers and five crew on board". Both are consistent and do not require me to do a mental switch between styles. I like the all numbers version and hate the all words version - subjectively of course ;) The disadvantage is that it disagrees with a couple of major US style guides - which WP is not required to match anyway.
:Indeed. One thing that is very common is that you can find out the age of a person at a given date. But if you don't know the birthday, that only gives the birth year up to a choice of two years. (The year gotten by subtraction and the previous year.) Came here for some guidance. Was trying to figure out ]'s year of birth; as a December 17, 1998 news story mentions he was 57, he was born between mid-December 1940 and mid-December, 1941 so it almost certainly is 1941. My solution was to say ca. 1941 in the body and put him in ]. Looking at other pages there, there doesn't seem to be a precise standard, but ? marks, ca. , and "year1 or year2" are used frequently enough.] (]) 01:33, 16 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::::*AP/Times style: "with 62 passengers and five crew on board" Advantage is that it is the same as a couple of major style guides used in the US. Do British style guides agree? Disadvantage is it requires that mental switch halfway through the sentence.
:::::::It is entirely subjective whether the mental switch or matching an outside style guide is more important to you. If you like consistency (like me) then consistency is more important. And naturally, if you grew up in the US then matching major US style guides is possibly important.
:::::::Re: 'The numbers one and 29 are so far from each other that there's just no reason to consider them "comparable"'. They are in the same sentence and are comparing similar things (people). Why would you consider crew and passengers as different when listing fatalities?


:::::::Re: '{{xt|Of the 67 people on board, 38 died in the crash, including both of the pilots and 1 flight attendant, while 29 people survived with injuries}} certainly too odd to consider.' Why too odd? Its the form that I personally prefer and allowed by the current MOS. <span style="border:1px solid blue;border-radius:4px;color:blue;box-shadow: 3px 3px 4px grey;">]&nbsp;<span style="font-size:xx-small; vertical-align:top">]&nbsp;</span></span> 13:09, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
== Birthplace in opening ==
::::::::29 only has meaning to me in that it is comparable to 1. <span style="border-radius:2px;padding:3px;background:#1E816F">]<span style="color:#fff">&nbsp;‥&nbsp;</span>]</span> 13:15, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::::This isn’t just “US style.” AP is US-based, but they serve news organizations across the world. Reuters, which is UK-based, uses the same style . As does . As does the . ] (]) 15:40, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::Fair enough - not just US. But still an external style that is just one among many and one that we are not necessarily compelled to match. <span style="border:1px solid blue;border-radius:4px;color:blue;box-shadow: 3px 3px 4px grey;">]&nbsp;<span style="font-size:xx-small; vertical-align:top">]&nbsp;</span></span> 22:44, 28 December 2024 (UTC)


:::::@] this is an ''extremely'' helpful interpretation. Thank you. I wonder if you and others would weigh in on another sentence in the ] article: {{tq|The aircraft was carrying sixty-two passengers. Of those, thirty-seven people were citizens of Azerbaijan, sixteen of Russia, six of Kazakhstan, and three of Kyrgyzstan. Four minors were on board.}} My preferred way to rewrite this would be: {{tq|The aircraft was carrying 62 passengers. Of those, 37 people were citizens of Azerbaijan, 16 of Russia, six of Kazakhstan, and three of Kyrgyzstan. Four minors were on board.}} That would be in alignment with how it’s been written in the , and the . -- ] (]) 15:58, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
I have a question about the statement "Locations of birth and death are given subsequently rather than being entangled with the dates" in the "Dates of Birth and Death" section. I have deleted some instances of the birthplace when it is included in the opening parentheses alongside the birthdate, e.g. (born September 4, 1972 in Chicago, Illinois) becomes (born September 4, 1972). To me, this is what the indicated statement means. In some instances (primarily in shorter articles that don't have an "Early Life" section or somesuch), the birthplace information is subsequently only given in an infobox. I never delete the birthplace entirely from the article–only in the opening parentheses and only when the information is included elsewhere (including the infobox as "elsewhere"). I have had a disagreement with a couple people who state that the infobox doesn't count in this regard–that "subsequently" doesn't include the infobox. To me, the infobox is part of the article, and hence does count. Am I wrong on this? If so, I suggest that the statement be amended to include "(not including an infobox)" after "subsequently", because if that's the intended interpretation then right now it's misleading. ] (]) 19:32, 12 August 2009 (UTC)
::::::But is more readable as it was. ] (]) 18:01, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::My choice would be all numeric: {{tq|The aircraft was carrying 62 passengers. Of those, 37 people were citizens of Azerbaijan, 16 of Russia, six of Kazakhstan, and 3 of Kyrgyzstan. 4 minors were on board.}} No mental context switch required between numeric and spelt out words within closely related sentences — which could easily be a combined: {{tq|The aircraft was carrying 62 passengers. Of those, 37 people were citizens of Azerbaijan, 16 of Russia, six of Kazakhstan, and 3 of Kyrgyzstan — 4 minors were on board.}} <span style="border:1px solid blue;border-radius:4px;color:blue;box-shadow: 3px 3px 4px grey;">]&nbsp;<span style="font-size:xx-small; vertical-align:top">]&nbsp;</span></span> 22:44, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::{{+1}} to this, though I admit my preference is biased because I've been taught in business correspondence to write related numbers either in words or figures, with figures taking precedence if the largest number is at least 10. —]&nbsp;(&nbsp;]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]&nbsp;) 04:20, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
Okay, so I did some more research this morning and found the answer I was looking for. This is a case of journalists adopting a style different from academics, and the MOS adopting the academic style. The APA has strict rules about consistency within categories, requiring numerals for all items in a list if any number is 10 or above. But it appears our MOS most closely matches the Chicago Manual of Style, which requires consistency, but allows for context-specific judgment if numerals or spelled-out numbers are used. -- ] (]) 20:46, 28 December 2024 (UTC)


== Acceptable Date Format: Month Year ==
:I think the infobox does not count, but I do think your interpretation of the rule is right otherwise. The user of Misplaced Pages shouldn't have to cast about poking into boxes for the information. Luckily, elegant writing is not mandatory here; you can always just add a sentence to the lead, like, "Doe was born in Farquardt, Indiana, and died in Blisterfoot, Arizona." --] (]) 22:44, 12 August 2009 (UTC)


Right now, "Month Year" is listed as an acceptable format, with an example of September 2001, but this is *bad grammar*, violating the basic rules of English. There are two acceptable ways to convey this, grammatically:
::For the full discussion in which three of us have taken the position (same as the fourth editor, Milkbreath, immediately above), contrary to GreenLocust's viewpoint, that he should not be deleting mention of birthplace from the text of dozens of articles on the basis that "it is already in the infobox", please see .--] (]) 22:34, 12 August 2009 (UTC)


# Month of Year (September of 2001), which is listed as unacceptable but is correct grammar in the form Noun of Noun, e.g. Juan Esposito of Peru.
::: For the hundredth time, the basis is what the style is as given in the MOS, not that "it is already in the infobox". I really wish you would stop misrepresenting my stated reason for the deletions. And I don't think you pulling in selected WikiBuddies counts as a "full discussion", which is why I brought it up here. ] (]) 23:47, 12 August 2009 (UTC)
# Month, Year (September, 2001), also listed as unacceptable, but again, correct grammar, of the same shape as general dates (September 1, 2001), which *is* listed as acceptable, which is correct but inconsistent, because September, 2001 and September 1, 2001 are two uses of the *same format and grammar*.


"September 2001" is bad grammar and an unacceptable format and should be labeled as such. ] (]) 15:48, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
::::Let me put it this way: each of the deletions by GreenLocust of birthplace info from 60-odd bios, which were not accompanied by placement of the birthplace info elsewhere in the text of the article, bore the following explanatory edit summary: "('''no birthplace in opening per MOS - already in infobox''').--] (]) 00:42, 14 August 2009 (UTC)


*It’s common English usage, both in the UK and US, so on what authority are you suggesting it is bad grammar? ] (]) 15:51, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
:I'm about to propose a change to the project page (which is edit-protected and requires the approval of an admin): Pursuant to discussions ] and ], I'd like to change ], the last bullet point, "Locations of birth and death are given subsequently rather than being entangled with the dates." I would like it to read thus: "Locations of birth and death should appear in the text of the article rather than being entangled with the dates." What do you think? Will that do it? --] (]) 23:07, 12 August 2009 (UTC)
*Agree with MapReader, this is standard. ]] 15:55, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
*Agree with MapReader. ''Chicago Manual of Style'' 18th ed. ¶ 6.41 states "Commas are also unnecessary where only a month and year are given...." and gives the example "Her license expires sometime in April 2027." ] (]) 16:30, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
*There ain't nothin' wrong with September 2001. ] (]) 20:07, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
*:To be clear, that particular month was not one of unalloyed pleasantness, but the ''formatting'' has nothing wrong, anyway. ]] 21:51, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
*{{replyto|Quindraco}} You're about {{diff|Misplaced Pages:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers|prev|5087496|twenty years too late}} to change the guideline. --] &#x1F98C; (]) 21:25, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
*:Ah, yes. The very well-respected defense of "we've been doing it the wrong way for so long, lord knows we mustn't stop ''now''." ] (]) 05:27, 7 January 2025 (UTC)
*::Except you haven't shown it to be wrong in the first place. "Month Year" dates have always been taught to be correct in my experience. If you think about it, requiring "July, 1776" would also require "4 July, 1776". I have noticed that my computer's available date formats include a few oddities that I was always taught were flat out wrong. Is that where you are getting this idea?--] (]) (]) 00:28, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
*:::Yep. Just checked. Windows has "Wednesday, 5 April, 2017" and "5 April, 2017" listed as date formats. Commas should only be used within the date when it is not in either "day-month-year" or "year-month-day" order. I've sent feedback about this, but I doubt that anything will be done about it.--] (]) (]) 16:55, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
*The OP's complaint is, I regret to say, just so much ]ism. ]] 21:52, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
*Agree with MapReader. "September 2001" is perfectly acceptable in formal written English and was acceptable long before I was born. --] (]) 06:38, 7 January 2025 (UTC)
*It's recognised to be . —]&nbsp;(&nbsp;]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]&nbsp;) 16:12, 7 January 2025 (UTC)
*"January 2018" is the official usage in Australia: https://www.stylemanual.gov.au/grammar-punctuation-and-conventions/numbers-and-measurements/dates-and-time ("Incomplete dates" section). <span style="border:1px solid blue;border-radius:4px;color:blue;box-shadow: 3px 3px 4px grey;">]&nbsp;<span style="font-size:xx-small; vertical-align:top">]&nbsp;</span></span> 00:50, 9 January 2025 (UTC)
*Agree with those above; "September 2001" is perfectly acceptable. ] (]) 15:02, 9 January 2025 (UTC)


== ] appears to be incorrect ==
:::I favor tweaking it to "in the body of the article rather than being entangled with the dates in the opening." ] (]) 00:20, 13 August 2009 (UTC)


I'm surprised that this hasn't been fixed already but ] currently incorrectly claims that "the 17th century as 1601–1700", for example. I was about to fix the ] article which incorrectly claims that the 21st century started in 2001, not 2000, but then noticed that it's only like that thanks to this MoS guideline!
::This discussion should be taking place on ]. Although this guideline (WP:DATE) asks editors to avoid entangling the locations of birth and death with the dates, its concern is with the dates, not with the eventual fate of the locations. WP:MOSBIO lays out what should be included in the opening; locations are not specified. I think that guideline should be changed to specify where the locations should appear. ] (]) 00:17, 13 August 2009 (UTC)


There have been quite a few news articles analysing the 21st century recently, many of them because the first quarter of the century (2000-2024) is now over: , , , , .
:I see a circle forming. Over at ] it says nothing about where the birth and death locations should go. It says only "Dates of birth and death, if known (see Misplaced Pages:Manual of Style (dates and numbers)#Dates of birth and death)", sending us right back here, which is right because an editor will look here to find out how to format the dates, and he will never look there for that. The locations should be in the lead if the article is short, and in the body in sensible chronological position otherwise. This should not be prescribed. The problem that I'm trying to solve is that it is possible to interpret "subsequently" in the guideline as it stands to mean "in the infobox or in the body of the article", leaving the information out of the article proper sometimes, which I and some others agree is undesirable. I don't want to use MOS Dates to prescribe a place for the locations to appear, but it seems that it will be an unavoidable by-product of clarifying the point in question. I'm fine with "body" if everyone thinks that the word will help the inquiring editor to not consider the infobox included better than "text" does. --] (]) 00:33, 13 August 2009 (UTC)


I can only assume the current MOS wording came out of the mistaken assumption/hypercorrection that a century must begin in a year ending in "1" thanks to the lack of a year zero in the calendar system, but that is of course not how the term is actually used in any sources. Thoughts on the best way of fixing this? I imagine quite a few articles will be affected by this error given it's somehow ended up in the MOS. ] <sup>(], ])</sup> 13:29, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
::*Hi. I see a couple of issues (and defer to you as to where best to address (if at all).
*If it ain't broke, don't fix it. ] is correct. Ask yourself when the 1st century CE (using the ]) began and then work your way forward. -- ] (]) 15:22, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
*:But there wasn’t such. The dating system was invented many years later (and incorrectly, as it turned out) and applied retrospectively. Such that it doesn’t matter whether there was a year zero, or not. Centuries nowadays are commonly recognised as 1900-1999, 2000-2099, and it’s only the WP pedants that hold out for 1901-2000. ] (]) 17:55, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
*::Where did you hear that. I was taught for 60 years it was 1901-2000. Did schools change their courses recently? I guess it wouldn't be the first time, but this sounds like since so many get it wrong we should make sure that Misplaced Pages follows that same wrong thinking. Like people following a printing error on the term "Blue Moon" so they think it's the second full moon of a month. ] (]) 09:38, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
*:::That sounds like a case of ]. (I'm not saying it's actually a lie, but it's a lie that that's the ''only'' way in which centuries can be spliced.) ] (]) 11:01, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
*Chessrat didn't explain where they looked for sources to justify the assertion "but that is of course not how the term is actually used in any sources." Misplaced Pages guidelines do not need to cite sources, since they announce the community's consensus on various matters. It is articles that must cite sources. A number of sources are cited at "]" including
::{{Cite web| title = century | work = Oxford Dictionaries| access-date = 20 January 2021| url = https://www.lexico.com/definition/century| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20191230065254/https://www.lexico.com/definition/century| url-status = dead| archive-date = December 30, 2019}}
:] (]) 15:43, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
*“Incorrect” is not the way I would put it. Either you treat it as a style decision, with both systems being valid ways to designate the years (using either 1–99 or 1–100 for the first century) or you treat it as a logical / mathematical system, ending at 100 because you want every century to actually be 100 years, and the first year wasn’t 0. I could see it either way, but I don’t see a lot of sense trying to change it now.
:What might be more sensible to pursue is a footnote that acknowledges and explains the two common ways of counting. <span style="font-family:Avenir, sans-serif">—&nbsp;<span style="border-radius:5px;padding:.1em .4em;background:#faeded">]</span>&nbsp;(])</span> 03:28, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
::+1 ]] 04:27, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
::I don't think there's any evidence that there are two different common ways of counting? As far as I can tell from looking into this, use of the term for the period beginning in a year ending in "1" is very rare, and the only sources that mention the "ending in 1" definition (such as the Oxford dictionary entry mentioned by {{ping|Jc3s5h}} mention that it is a technical definition only and not used that way in practice. It is not the case that there were widespread celebrations of the new millennium both on 1 January 2000 and also 1 January 2001!
::If there were two equally-used systems then I would agree with your comment, but that isn't the case; Misplaced Pages has a duty to provide accurate information even if it does take a significant amount of work fixing this across various articles. ] <sup>(], ])</sup> 16:15, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
:::How many years were there in the 1st ]? ] (]) 18:27, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
::::100, obvs. 1 AD to 100 AD. Next question please? --] &#x1F98C; (]) 21:12, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::My question was in response to {{u|Chessrat}}'s post claiming that centuries start in 00, in which case they must end in 99. If the 1st century had 100 years, its first year would therefore have been 1 BC (and the 1st century BC would have ended in 2 BC). Alternatively, if the first year of the first century was 1 AD, it would have been a century with 99 years. Just trying to understand how it works (I don't know which of the two is more bizarre). ] (]) 21:44, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
::::::It is a matter of personal preference. I find it logical and satisfying that the 19th century ended with 1900 and the 20th century ended with 2000. There are many people, though, who are more comfortable with the 19th century consisting only of the years that began with 18-- and the 20th century consisting only of the years that began with 19--. I remember that ], someone I have long admired for his adherence to logic, stated that he was willing to accept that the First century consisted of only 99 years (although I think he was wrong). We do need to be consistent in Misplaced Pages, however, and if anyone feels strongly enough about the current guidance being wrong, RfC is thataway. ] 22:10, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
::::::Again, the numbering of years AD/BC wasnt actually devised until over five centuries after the purported BC to AD break point, and such numbering was not widely used until over eight hundred years afterwards. And it was then applied retrospectively to historical events (with, historians now believe, an error of four years in terms of when they were trying to pitch the start), relatively few of which during that period can be fixed to a particular year in any case (not insignificantly because when these events were recorded, the AD/BC calendar system didn’t exist). So it’s an artificial construct and it doesn’t really matter what the first year was purported to have been. ] (]) 22:24, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
::::::Sources are fairly clear that in common usage, a century starts with a year ending in –00, so yes, by implication that means that the 1st century had 99 years (albeit of course the Gregorian calendar did not enter use until far later so this is purely retroactive)
::::::I didn't really expect that there would be any disagreement with this– will probably start an RfC to gain wider input as it seems like this will be a matter which there is somehow internal disagreement on. ] <sup>(], ])</sup> 22:38, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
::::Why should all centuries have the same length? Years haven't always the same length, so why should centuries be any different? ] (]) 08:08, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::{{replyto|Chessrat|Gawaon}} A century doesn't have to be 100 years, but it must be 100 ''somethings'', for example 100 runs in a cricket innings, or a military unit comprising 100 Roman legionaries. This is because the word "century" is derived from "]", which is Latin for "hundred". If you had a span of 99 years, it couldn't be called a century. Also from "centum" we get words like "cent" for the hundredth part of a dollar. If I gave you 99 cents, you probably wouldn't give me a dollar in exchange. By contrast, the word "year" doesn't have a comparable derivation from 365 (or 366). --] &#x1F98C; (]) 22:24, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
::::::Common usage having the 21st century starting in 2000 is utterly irrelevant to the Latin etymology of the word "century". The calendar system came into use long after 1 CE so analysis of the durations of past centuries is purely retroactive and simply a case of how society largely agrees to define it.
::::::If one were to strictly assume Latin etymology is always fully indicative of how a word is used, then the article on ] would say that it is the seventh, not the ninth, month of the year. ] <sup>(], ])</sup> 07:40, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
::::::Yes, the argument by name origin is fairly weak, since actual meanings don't always live up to their origins – or certainly not exactly. ] say: "The size of the century changed over time; from the 1st century BC through most of the imperial era it was reduced to 80 men." So if a century can have just 80 men, surely it can have just 99 years too! ] (]) 15:06, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::::I agree the etymology argument is weak, but a century has 100 years, regardless of etymology. That's what we were all taught at school and that's what all credible sources say. Misplaced Pages should not take it upon itself to make up an exception. ] (]) 19:11, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
:::@]:
:::1) I actually don’t hate the idea of doing it your way, I just don’t see the need or the community interest. As you point out, socially and culturally we {{em|do}} treat it this way; we did have a special party on 31 Dec 1999, and not so much 31 Dec 2000. But the effort to shuffle it all around still comes with the need for a footnote explainer for our choice of convention and that now the ] is just the “first century” in name, and covers only 99 years. Honestly this is (imo) not a big deal, just not a hill I’d be looking to die on, and such a change will need a whole bunch of annoying cleanup. As everyone else has said, the old way has the seductive logic that 100=100. This area of Misplaced Pages especially was built early and therefore done so by those net-denizens more inclined towards “logic” than social convention.
:::2) As far as I know, articles on the subject of centuries are either covering the entire period broadly, or just giving a timeline of events that occurred in such years (or really, both). Presumably there’s not much worry whether we start with 1900 or 1901 when the topic is “world war, atomic energy, the end of empire, mass telecommunication and the beginnings of the internet” (etc). Alternatively, the specific events occurring on those crossover years is just arbitrarily dumped into whichever list-like article we like, and if it has carry-over effects on future events, that should get a mention either way. I guess this point (2) actually cuts both ways though, in the sense of “both work fine”. <span style="font-family:Avenir, sans-serif">—&nbsp;<span style="border-radius:5px;padding:.1em .4em;background:#faeded">]</span>&nbsp;(])</span> 06:50, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::I assume by "we" you mean you personally. I also had a 31 Dec 1999 "2000" party, but my big millennium party for the century change came on Dec 31 2000. And my tickets to the event are on that date. ] (]) 09:49, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
::::::That’s honestly surprising to me. Whereabouts were you? I was in New Zealand, but my impression was that the big deal end-of-millenium in “Western” (global “North”? Anglosphere?) popular culture was 1999 to 2000. <span style="font-family:Avenir, sans-serif">—&nbsp;<span style="border-radius:5px;padding:.1em .4em;background:#faeded">]</span>&nbsp;(])</span> 08:23, 4 January 2025 (UTC)


::::Yes, it would be a significant amount of work, but retaining an incorrect status quo is not desirable. If Misplaced Pages lasts to reach 2100, there would be the ludicrous scenario where it's impossible to cite the large number of sources stating the arrival of the 22nd century because Misplaced Pages policy defines the word "century" differently to the rest of the world.
::1) Mr. Green believes that the current MOS language impels him to ensure that the place of birth reflected in the infobox ''only''. With this belief as his guiding light, he has just deleted the textual references to individuals' places of birth from 60-odd articles.
::::You're probably right that regardless, a hatnote/explanatory note of some nature is needed. For instance, a lot of sources such as , , , , report that ] (1899–2017) was the last surviving person born in the 19th century. However, there are also a few sources such as , , and which report that ] (1900–2018) was the last surviving person born in the 19th century, using the ending-in-1 definition.
::::At the moment, the implication of Misplaced Pages policy is that Tajima is described as having been the last person born in the 19th century on her article section, but Morano is ''not'' described as having been the last person born in the 19th century despite the numerous reliable sources stating that she was. The current policy effectively overrides any amount of sourcing of facts like that- every article treats the uncommon ending-in-1 definition as not only being a common definition but as the ''only'' definition. I don't see how a policy which arbitrarily overrides established facts and sources like that can possibly be justifiable. ] <sup>(], ])</sup> 09:03, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::So your suggested change would also affect many other articles such as our own sourced ] article. ] (]) 10:08, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:Usage such as 20th century for 1900 - 1999 simply reveals the source as being unable to perform basic counting. Any such source is immediately rendered unreliable. --] (]) (]) 13:06, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
:I'm usually one to say that we should accept that language changes and that we in the language police should go along with it, but in this case, many, especially the mainstream press, looking for headlines, are wrong. Saying the first century has 99 years, is like saying 99 cents is sometimes a dollar. Sometimes a misused word becomes acceptable, but not in this case.&nbsp;]&#124;] 14:42, 8 January 2025 (UTC)


{{outdent}}
::]: He has not moved the references to a later sentence withing the body of the article; rather, he has deleted the only reference to the person's place of birth in the text of each article.
As per ] (with the emphasis on ''reliable''), I asked Mr Google <code>when does the new century start</code>, then looked at any hit that seemed reliable (typically government or scientific time orientated organisations) and ignored anything like quora, mass media (I gave Scientific American a pass as they are scientific) and forums. The first 3 pages gave me the following list, plus I added the Greenwich observatory. Note, I choose them based on the sources ''before'' looking at what they said.


{| class="wikitable"
::He believes this is mandated by the MOS language that says: "Locations of birth and death are given subsequently rather than being entangled with the dates." He asserts that "subsequently" does not mean "subsequently within the text of the article," but rather in essence that it means "subsequently within the text of the article ''or alternatively'' in the infobox." As he puts it at , "''The infobox is, in fact, part of the article''." (emphasis added)
::Everyone but Mr. Green who has commented on this point reads the MOS as meaning in effect: "subsequently within the text of the article -- but that ''doesn't'' refer to the summary infobox."


! Organisation !! URL !! 00 or 01
::I fear that the change proposed above would not help Mr. Green and his ilk, because they would simply say that "the text of the article" includes the infobox.
|-
| Hong Kong Observatory || https://www.hko.gov.hk/en/gts/time/centy-21-e.htm#:~:text=The%20second%20century%20started%20with,continue%20through%2031%20December%202100. || 01
|-
| timeanddate.com || https://www.timeanddate.com/counters/mil2000.html || 01
|-
| Scientific American || https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/when-is-the-beginning-of/ || 01
|-
| US Navy Astronomical Applications Department || https://aa.usno.navy.mil/faq/millennium || 01
|-
| US Library of Congress || https://ask.loc.gov/science/faq/399936 <br> https://www.loc.gov/rr//scitech/battle.html (Battle of the Centuries) || 01
|-
| Merriam Webster || https://www.merriam-webster.com/grammar/centuries-and-how-to-refer-to-them || says it used to be 01 but that public opinion is swinging
|-
| Greenwich Observatory || http://www.thegreenwichmeridian.org/tgm/articles.php?article=12 || 01


|}
::I find the explanantion to be somewhat fatuous, because carried out to its logical lengths, one could delete the ballplayer's name, date of birth, and teams played for from the article itself -- as they are all reflected in the infobox as well.

::2) The second issue, which is secondary, is whether the rule itself makes sense. While this is supposed to be encyclopaedic, Brittanica and other well-thought-of encyclopedias list the date and the place of birth together at the outset.

::And logically, the fact that ballplayer A was born on March 2 may be of significantly less interest than the fact that he was born in the Dominican Republic -- the World Baseball Classic, for example, focuses on place of birth but not birthdate. And it is important for Olympic athletes, Davis Cup players, etc. -- much more so than for example the day and month of birth. I really see no overarching policy reason -- even in a non-prescriptive MOS -- to suggest that it is better to put it in the second sentence (or paragraph, or section) than the first. The sentence structure "X was born on Y in Z" is likely the most common you can find in biographies anywhere. Just my two cents, for what they are worth.--] (]) 03:03, 13 August 2009 (UTC)

Again, the purpose of this guideline is "to achieve consistency in the use and formatting of dates and numbers". The location of a person's birth is not a date, and not a number. By keeping the discussion here, you are shutting out editors who watch WP:MOSBIO and who know something about how to write biographical articles. This is completely wrong. ] (]) 03:16, 13 August 2009 (UTC)

:Then why don't we just delete the part of this WP that states: "Locations of birth and death are given subsequently rather than being entangled with the dates." It strikes me that if this issue is not relevant on this talk page, the issue is likewise not relevant to this WP. It is the language that is in this WP that is causing all the ruckus. It is the language in this WP that Mr. Green quoted as impelling him to make the deletions. Likewise (logicially) he started this discussion here.--] (]) 03:30, 13 August 2009 (UTC)

Just adding my two cents, but when I am writing a stub or start class article, especially ones where the birthplace is of key importance (usually athletes that have notability due to national representation), I will always include the birthplace in the opening paragraph, such as ''John Smith (born 26 January , 2000 in Sydney, Australia)''. Also can I add, that just because something is stated in an infobox, does not mean it can't be stated in the main article as the infobox should be a brief summary of the page. I think the deletion of a birthplace in the opening paragraph is stupid as it proves to be a key part (which is what the opening paragraph includes) in many high level amateur athlete articles. <b><font color="darkgreen">]</font>_<font color="gold">]</font><font color="maroon">]</font></b> ''<sup><font color="black">]</font></sup>'' 09:11, 13 August 2009 (UTC)

::::(Indent depth has no meaning, just wanted to follow everything so far.) I've always liked and seen the sense in keeping the dates together and by themselves in parentheses right after the name. I won't go into why because it really doesn't matter as long as we all always do it the same way. Consistency throughout the encyclopedia is the reason for any such guideline, and the present formula is at least tidy and easy to understand and implement. The problems are two: editors often don't see the need to adhere to any formula, and the guideline as it stands is unclear. I don't see why we can't specify that information in an infobox is supplemental to an article and not part of it. I have made that suggestion over at ] and invited them to discuss the point here. MoS Infoboxes is the right place to address the problem at the root, and whatever the guideline becomes there can be incorpoarted here and at MoS Bio (where I see that Sssoul has already invited them to join this discussion). --] (]) 10:29, 13 August 2009 (UTC)

I'm really hoping the issue isn't really associated with infoboxes per se, as with how to present information in general. My participation in the MoS Infoboxes area is mostly due to the way Certain Editors (no one here, as far as I know) feel that infoboxes are a blight on Misplaced Pages and should be eliminated (almost?) everywhere. I fight these people, as I've not seen many articles which wouldn't be improved with an infobox of some sort; everything could use a summary IMHO.

Anyway, while ideally all information in an infobox is present in the article's prose, and not every article, such as the ones I tend to work on, follow that ideal, I suspect biography articles are different from my regular domain of mostly "bridge" (as in crossing valleys/rivers/whatever) articles. Asking general infobox people to come up with a rule which mainly applies to biographies will likely get you a lot of confusion, rather than useful results. I suspect your best bet is to ask people interested in Biography articles specifically, as y'all know more about which makes more sense for such. For all of me, it might be more important for ''some'' bio articles to center around dates, and for others (subset: athletes) to center around places. I dunno. - ] (]) 20:01, 13 August 2009 (UTC)

:The issue arose out of the edits of our friend GreenLocust. If you read his original question above, perhaps you'll agree with my thinking, that the propblem really arises out of the hazily defined role of the infobox in an article. Is it a supplementary summary, a fingertip compendium? Or can it actually be the whole article in and of itself? Or does its role always depend on the context? I think of it as nothing more than a handy way to organize the facts of an article for easy reference by the user, but not as a substitute for the text of the article, which text is the article per se. Me, I like infoboxes. --] (]) 21:20, 13 August 2009 (UTC)

::to me the infobox is clearly a supplement to an article - one that can be skipped without losing any information; articles need to stand on their own, not rely on the infoboxes to fill in blanks. if that's been misunderstood, the guidelines need to be made clearer on that point.

::but (like others have already asked): what is the rationale for the dictum that a biography shouldn't state something as plain and simple as "The subject was born on date in place" - does it mess up some template or something? ] (]) 21:47, 13 August 2009 (UTC)

:::This whole thing started when GreenLocust was going along taking the locations of birth and death out of the parentheses containing the dates of birth and death, in accordance with the MoS. Thing is, he would not restore that information to the text of the article if it was covered in an infobox, following the guideline on this project page that states under ], "Locations of birth and death are given subsequently rather than being entangled with the dates." He interpreted "subsequently" to include "in an infobox". I and others think that that is a misinterpretation that needs clearing up on some project page somewhere, I think on at least three: ], ], and ]. Locations of birth and death should appear in the running text whether they are in an infobox or not. --] (]) 22:22, 13 August 2009 (UTC)
::::Well said. I might add that GreenLocust's interpretation has so far been his alone. All others who have opined on that point here or at the discussion at do not read it the same way that GreenLocust reads it.--] (]) 00:39, 14 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::And might I add that the fact that the people who you invited in (everyone but Milkbreath, Denimadept, and Sssoul), using a misrepresentation while doing so, happen to agree with you is not terribly surprising. You are so disingenuous as to be ridiculous. ] (]) 01:35, 14 August 2009 (UTC)
::::::I see an infobox for biography is likely a summary, but I don't claim to be definitive. An infobox for a bridge or ferry might contain information otherwise not in the article. My area of interest is in the latter, specifically {{tl|infobox bridge}}. Y'all Bio people need to talk this one out. '''GreenLocust''', you could always get people who agree with you to participate here, y'know. - ] (]) 04:38, 14 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::::Green--I don't believe I'm misrepresenting anything. I've pointed people to our discussion at , so that they can see it for themselves rather than rely on my characterization. And I've accurately quoted the edit summary that you used in your 60-odd deletions. To the extent that I've invited people, generally its only because I knew them to be involved in discussion of this issue/formation of the existing policy. Prior to this issue arising, I only had prior contact with one of all these people, and in that case only once, in passing.

:::::::I think that to the extent that people have spoken to the issue, they do not support your deleting the only textual reference to the location of birth from the article, without re-inserting it later into the article, with your edit summary explanation of "('''no birthplace in opening per MOS - already in infobox''')", as amplified by the discussion above and at --] (]) 06:00, 14 August 2009 (UTC)

There is no need for this dispute to become personal. I would agree that while the birthplace and deathplace should not be within the parenthetical that contains the dates, they ''do'' need to be in the article body somewhere. The infobox does not count for this purpose. ] <sup><small><small>]</small></small></sup> 18:02, 14 August 2009 (UTC)

===slight diversion===

¶ This is one of a whole host of areas where I think the Manual could be usefully shortened with little or no loss (perhaps even some gain), and thus able to concentrate on areas where there are genuine sources of possible confusion, error, ambiguity, obscurity or offensiveness (as well as become more likely to be read, remembered and heeded). I know that I'm in a distinct minority here, because most of those who spare the time and thought to contribute to this talk page are more likely to favour uniformity for its own sake.

But I really think that this is the kind of question (like whether one writes "4 April", "4th April", "4th of April", "April 4", "April 4th" or "April the 4th") that's best left to the context of a specific article and to its editors' own style and preferences. That ] was born in ] and died on ], that ] was born in Austria and died in Berlin, that ] was born in Hawai'i, or that ] died in the ] are probably just as important as, or more important than, the exact year of their births or deaths. That a random French writer was born and died in Paris, or a random English thinker in London, is probably less important than the years of his or her life, and could just as well be left to the following text.

Since many biographical articles are inevitably destined to be slightly-expanded stubs, let me note for whatever it's worth that, among my one-volume cyclopedias, ''Le ] Illustré'' (2004) includes places as well as dates of birth & death within the initial parentheses (brackets), but the ''Merriam-Webster Collegiate Encyclopedia'' (2000, based on the ''Britannica'') and the ''Concise ]'' (1983) do not. The ''Cambridge Encyclopedia'' (2nd edition, 1994) gives just the dates within parentheses, but usually immediately followed by a comma and "born in ''''"; however, the place of death is often not mentioned. ] (]) 22:23, 14 August 2009 (UTC)

:Any loosening of the current rule would be beneficial. Again, I favor the deletion of the rule in this specific guidance for the reason raised by the editor above who says that this should be about numbers -- if the talk page discussion should not include a discussion about this issue because it is too far afield, certainly the proscription contained in the rule here should be deleted if for no other reason than it is in the wrong location. I, for one, for the reasons well-put in the above examples of Bonaparte and Hitler, etc., think that that we could do well with the rule being scrapped completely from any other guidance as well.--] (]) 05:03, 15 August 2009 (UTC)

===So now ...===
Given the above ample discussion, and the related discussion at that began eight days ago, unless a consensus is voiced against the following two propositions, I propose that within one week:

a) given that a clear consensus has been voiced of the seven editors who have spoken to the issue other than Green Locust (including me, JRA_WestyQld2, Septentrionalis PMAnderson, SMcCandlish, Milkbreath, Sssoul, and Powers T), Green Locust either: 1) roll back his 60-odd deletions of reference to place of birth, or 2) re-insert that information later in each of those articles; and

b) that we delete from this MOS guidance the following phrase: "Locations of birth and death are given subsequently rather than being entangled with the dates."

This change to this guidance would accord with my view.

It would also accord with the views of JRA_WestyQld2 ("when I am writing a stub or start class article, especially ones where the birthplace is of key importance (usually athletes that have notability due to national representation), I will always include the birthplace in the opening paragraph). It would appear as well to accord with the views of Septentrionalis PMAnderson ("not necessary ''in the first parenthesis'' - although giving them there is probably harmless for living persons").

The same with the comments of Milkbreath that "you can always just add a sentence to the lead, like, 'Doe was born in Farquardt, Indiana, and died in Blisterfoot, Arizona".

This would also comport with the observations of Shakescene: "That Napoléon Bonaparte was born in Corsica and died on Saint Helena, that Adolf Hitler was born in Austria and died in Berlin, that Barack Obama was born in Hawai'i, or that Paul Gauguin died in the Marquesas Islands are probably just as important as, or more important than, the exact year of their births or deaths. That a random French writer was born and died in Paris, or a random English thinker in London, is probably less important than the years of his or her life, and could just as well be left to the following text. Since many biographical articles are inevitably destined to be slightly-expanded stubs, let me note for whatever it's worth that, among my one-volume cyclopedias, Le Petit Larousse Illustré (2004) includes places as well as dates of birth & death within the initial parentheses (brackets), but the Merriam-Webster Collegiate Encyclopedia (2000, based on the Britannica) and the Concise Columbia Encyclopedia (1983) do not. The Cambridge Encyclopedia (2nd edition, 1994) gives just the dates within parentheses, but usually immediately followed by a comma and "born in "; however, the place of death is often not mentioned."

And Denimadept observes, "For all of me, it might be more important for some bio articles to center around dates, and for others (subset: athletes) to center around places. I dunno."

And Ssoul asks: "(like others have already asked): what is the rationale for the dictum that a biography shouldn't state something as plain and simple as "The subject was born on date in place" - does it mess up some template or something?."

Also with the views of SMcCandlish that at least there should not be a blanket rule of this sort ("If there is not enough material in the article for such a section, then it should be left as-is, because the article is a stub.").

It also comports with the views of Chris the Speller that this is the wrong place-- even on the talk page of this guidance--for a discussion of any such rule ("This discussion should be taking place on WT:MOSBIO. Although this guideline (WP:DATE) asks editors to avoid entangling the locations of birth and death with the dates, its concern is with the dates, not with the eventual fate of the locations. WP:MOSBIO lays out what should be included in the opening; locations are not specified."). If this guidance's talk page is not a place to discuss the issue, I would suggest that the guidance is not the place for such a proscription. If such a proscription should appear at all (and most of us it would seem don't believe that one should appear; certainly not a blanket one as exists now), then it should appear in WP:MOSBIO (which does not have such a proscription).

--] (]) 22:59, 16 August 2009 (UTC)

I am now free to speak for myself. My understanding is that we had two reasons for generally supporting (birthdate, deathdate) in parentheses.
*The chief one is that four items ''(December 1, 1804, in Pressburg - June 15, 1848 in Constantinople)'' in a parenthesis is a little overstuffed.
*Secondarily, placenames are ''more likely'' to require some form of context than dates (Pressburg is now ], and no longer in the Austrian Empire; Constantinople is now ]); whereas the difference between Old Style and New Style is smaller, matters less often, and is less controversial when it does.
Both these are minor - and neither should rule out ''(born 1968 in Toronto, Canada)''.

Leave this, as often, to the judgment of the writers of the article; and state our reasons in text so we don't have to go through this ''again''. That's what guidelines are for. ] <small>]</small> 19:37, 17 August 2009 (UTC)

== Non-breaking space for unit names? ==

''Unit symbols'' and preceding numbers are separated by non-breaking spaces. Should the same convention be used for ''unit names?'' (e.g. <code>35&amp;nbsp;meters</code> for "35&nbsp;meters") —&nbsp;]&nbsp;(]|]) 06:55, 13 August 2009 (UTC)
:No. Symbols, being usually short, should kept with their numbers. Whole words should wrap like whole words. ]<sub>&nbsp;]·]</sub> 11:10, 13 August 2009 (UTC)

== "Adopting suggestions from standards bodies" ==

I have put the two paragraphs under this heading in their own subsection. The reasons I did this are as follows:
:*The original placement broke the style of what preceded and followed it.
:*The original placement split two related subsections.
The passage was out of place where I found it. However, someone might be able to find a better place for it than where I have put it. ] (]) 08:03, 15 August 2009 (UTC)

:I made some changes to the tone and phrasing of that paragraph—it was almost aggressive, and belaboured the idea of 'the real world', without adequately referring to the role of ]. I also managed to simplify things a little bit. Do the changes look reasonable? <font style="font-family:Constantia" size="3" color="#0077bb">]</font> 20:42, 15 August 2009 (UTC)

::The "real world" was use to emphasize that the overnight consensus of 20 people should not force an obscure standard into the Manual Of Style. The consensus has to reflect the writing style of the real world not some ideal dream world. It took 3 years to rid Misplaced Pages of the Kibibytes and Mebibytes crusade. -- ] (]) 20:58, 15 August 2009 (UTC)

:The rephrased version was by {{user|Greg_L}}, with the edit summary "No consensus for this change, which was extensively discussed". Since the rephrasing didn't significantly alter the meaning of the paragraphs—though it does adjust the tone—there's no case of violating prior consensus here. (The lengthy prior discussions resulted in consensus leading to the banishment of things like "&emsp;%" and "MiB" from the MOS—these outcomes were not challenged by the revision.) We've had "]", and now "]"; let's have the "]". <font style="font-family:Constantia" size="3" color="#0077bb">]</font> 07:27, 18 August 2009 (UTC)

== Definitions needed? ==

One of the first pieces of advice in the section on units of measurement says:
:*Aim to write so you cannot be misunderstood.

Unfortunately this section undermines this aim by using two terms that may defy understanding. These are
:*region-specific topics, and
:*internationally accepted units.
To clear up confusion we need to define what we mean by ''region-specific topics'' and ''internationally accepted units''.

In plain English, a ''region-specific topic'', for example, may refer to any region and any topic, e.g., the ], the home of the International Bureau of Weights and Measures. But of course it is referring in a roundabout way to US and UK based articles that happen to use Imperial or US Customary units. In this case it may be better to find some other term that won't be so ambiguous or confusing or simply write US-specific articles and some UK-based articles.

''Internationally accepted units'' may need explanaion, perhaps like this:

Internationally accepted units are:
:*SI base and derived units
:*Non-SI units accepted for use with the SI
:*Units based on fundamental constants
:*other non-SI units that are used internationally

What do others think?] (]) 08:48, 15 August 2009 (UTC)

:That all sounds pretty reasonable to me. I certainly agree about region-specific topic. My only minor comment there is that, I imagine, some US-specific articles may also use metric/SI, e.g. those that are writing about science or engineering projects that are based in the US, but use metric/SI units (e.g. NASA projects, and, in theory, all US government projects). So perhaps "most US-specific articles and some UK-specific articles". And why "specifc" for one but "based" for the other?

:Cut "base and derived" - just put "SI units"
:"other non-SI units that are used internationally; I think you could cut "non-SI" here as it is implied (it is more appropriate for the ones "accepted for use with (the?) SI"). Perhaps give examples, e.g. the degree (angle), nauticl mile? And for constants e.g. Planck's constant (physics), Pi (mathematics), etc. For other non-SI units perhaps carat (gemology). No need for an exhaustive list, just a couple of examples for each.

:Since in a sense US Customary/Imperial units are also accepted internationally, perhaps anyway this term is inappropriate. Suggest "widely used worldwide" but that is not brilliant either. ] (]) 21:10, 15 August 2009 (UTC)

::It's intended to refer to the unit in most common use worldwide for the type of measurement being mentioned. For example, the diagonals of cathode-ray tube displays are by far most commonly measured in inches around the world; exceptions are South Africa and Australia where centimetres are used. So, the diagonal of a CRT display should be given in inches and followed by a parenthetical conversion to centimetres; but an article specifically about South African CRTs would use centimetres, with a conversion to inches between parentheses. I'd use "for a given measurement, use the unit which is most commonly used worldwide for that type of measurement", or some less wordy equivalent thereof if anybody can find one. The "for that type of measurement" part is essential, both in non-regional and in regional articles: the unit commonly used for the energy of ] is not the same used for ]s, despite being measurements with the same dimension and roughly the same magnitude; likewise, as Trew said, the units commonly used in US engineering are not the same units commonly used in US household items. (As for "Non-SI units accepted for use with the SI", that's the name the SI uses ''verbatim'', so I'd keep the "non-SI" even if it's redundant. And a list of internationally accepted units including "SI units" and "other non-SI internationally accepted units" looks tautological to me.) As for "region-specific topic", that's as in ]. --<span style="color: #4B61D1; font-family: monospace; border: thin solid">]A.&nbsp;di&nbsp;M.</span> 22:05, 15 August 2009 (UTC)

:::I agree.

:::We clearly need some units that are not accepted by SI at all for use throughout Misplaced Pages per the principle you brought up above. Obviously, we aren't going to do away with the month or the year, even though neither is recognised by SI for the very good reason that neither is of consistent length. There is also clear benefit in using units such as inches, feet and nautical miles in contexts where they are common internationally, even if they are not defined by SI (I think the nautical mile is, but not the other two). On region-specific topics where there are region-specific deviations from these units (and this is not just in the US and UK), we should adopt the region-specific deviations. '']'' <small>'']''</small> 22:51, 15 August 2009 (UTC)

'']'' lists the minute, hour, day, degree of arc, minute of arc, second of arc, hectare, litre and tonne as non-SI units accepted for use with SI. It doesn't seem to mention multiples of the litre (millilitre, kilolitre, megalitre, etc.). It doesn't mention the week, month, year, decade, century, annum, kiloannum, megaannum, etc. It doesn't mention the kilometre per hour, litre per hundred kilometres, etc. These should be allowed without SI coversions.

The electronvolt (kiloelectronvolt, megaelectronvolt, etc.) is not SI nor is it based on fundamental constants but a hybrid of both but these should be allowed and we generally won't need to convert them to SI.

What about the kilowatt-hour, debye, astronomical unit, lightyear and parsec? I'd be inclined to convert them to SI depending on context.

"other non-SI units that are used internationally" is a little vague. Certainly we'd want the nautical mile and knot in certain contexts but a conversion to kilometres and miles (per hour) would be desirable. As noted above, we could agrue that imperial/US units are used internationally but we'd want these converted. Many units (e.g. the carat, calorie, ton of TNT, oil barrel, millimetre of mercury, atmosphere and Troy ounce) are used internationally but should be converted to SI.

We'd be better of ditching the ångström, bar, millibar, etc. entirely but there probably is little hope of that; however, we don't really need to convert these to SI (since it's just a matter of moving the decimal point). ]<sub>&nbsp;]·]</sub> 23:02, 15 August 2009 (UTC)

:Surely millimetre, kilolitre, kilometre per hour etc are SI derived units (or, at least for the latter, a non-SI derived unit accepted within SI, by transitivity)? I suggested butting "base and derived units" but surely e.g. millimetre is a dervied unit and thus SI.

:As for angstrom, you will never get rid of this; in the field I work for (molecular modeling) it is pretty much a standard unit, and to write as tenths (or tenths?) of nanometres would be just odd. By the way my dictionary lists it as "angstrom" with no ring above, though of course its symbol is Å.

:calorie poses a unique problem in that of course it should be kilocalorie, and using calorie in the convert template (for typical values for foods) puts the result in joules, not kilojoules i.e. it takes a calorie to be a calorie, not a kilocalorie. Yet the main text may use calorie and it looks clumsy or unduly pedantic to write kilocalorie. I almost had this problem with ] today; I used the convert template (with kcal) but elsewhere in the text it used "calorie" and it would have seemed pedantic to change it. Fortunately I escaped that one first as it was quoted (aw "zero calorie") and second since zero calories = zero kilocalories I could avoid the issue.

:bar and millibar I would have more support for ditching, although certainly for weather forecasts in the UK the pascal is unheard of, and lines of the same pressure are ''isobars'' not ''isopascals''.

:Gravity is probably another one to add to the list e.g. defining things as zero G, 1 G, etc. Obviously gravity does vary slightly with longitude, latitude, various geophysical effects and altitude, but for all practical purposes 9.81 m/s<sup>2</sup> is good enough, and to again a ''conversion'' is useful but simply to abandon giving it in G at all would be odd. And since, obviously, standard atmospheric pressure has rather a lot to do with gravity then those, by extension, could be argued to come under that wing.

:i've rather rambled off the point. But I suppose what I am arguing is that the list of internationally accepted units in various fields is almost limitless, and really the context of the article should drive what is appropriate, not some more-or-less arbitrary rule. ] (]) 14:36, 16 August 2009 (UTC)

::SimonTrew asked, by way of a question mark, "surely millimetre, kilolitre, kilometre per hour etc are SI derived units (or, at least for the latter, a non-SI derived unit accepted within SI, by transitivity)?" Meter is a base unit; adding an SI prefix does not change the status of a unit among base, derived, or accepted for use with SI. Litre is a special name for cubic decimeter, which is a derived unit. Kilometer per hour is a unit accepted for use with SI. --] (]) 15:38, 16 August 2009 (UTC)
:::Regarding which are base units, which derived, and which non-SI, I suggest a study of on that. See section 2; prefixes (as multipliers) are in section 3; the litre (or liter) is in section 4 being "a non-SI unit accepted for use with the International System of Units".
:::A derived unit is the product of base units: whilst the metre is a base unit, the square metre is a derived unit. Metre per second is a derived unit; but since the hour is "a non-SI unit accepted for use with the International System of Units", the kilometre per hour is also.
:::It's not a good idea to encourage the use of "litre". Whilst the ''literal'' definitions of virtually all SI units have changed over the years, they have all retained their ''practical'' values - except for the litre. The 1901 definition was 'the volume occupied by a mass of 1 kilogram of pure water, at its maximum density and at standard atmospheric pressure'; in 1960 they noted 'the cubic decimetre and the litre are unequal and differ by about 28 parts in 10<sup>6</sup>', whilst in 1964 they declared 'that the word "litre" may be employed as a special name for the cubic decimetre' and recommended that 'the name litre should not be employed to give the results of high-accuracy volume measurements'. See p.141 of the PDF doc linked earlier. According to my physics teacher, they made a mistake when cutting the original prototype kilogramme. --] (]) 17:04, 16 August 2009 (UTC)
::::"It's not a good idea to encourage the use of 'litre'." That's nonsense. This depends entirely on the purpose. Litres (cubic decimetres) and millilitres (cubic centimetres) are absolutely standard units throughout most of the metrised world. I have never heard anyone use "kilolitres", though. It's clear what is meant, but everybody calls it cubic metres. But a 2-litre bottle is a 2-litre bottle, not a 2-cubic-decimetre bottle. Trying to forbid such standard units as the litre looks to me like an attempt to introduce a problem that otherwise exists only in the minds of proponents of pre-metric systems: that the metric system is "unpractical" because it doesn't have all the necessary "natural" units such as the pint. We already have the litre and as the UK is slowly crawling towards full metrication I predict that use of the "metric pint" of 1/2 litre = 0.88 Imperial pt = 1.06 US pt will become standard in the same way that the metric pound of 1/2 kg = 1.1 lbs avdp has been standard in large parts of Europe for a hundred years. It's probably as easy as the pubs beginning to call a pint of beer 1.136 metric pints once they are allowed to do this.
::::In science and technology, cubic centimetres and cubic decimetres are also used under these names. But only very rarely in normal life. ] ] 18:28, 16 August 2009 (UTC)

:::::jch: yes, my bad about the derived units; of course you are right, a prefix does not make it a derived unit. I was just nodding there. Hans: All you say is good and true as always; but I reckon we will get 500&nbsp;ml pints and call them pints. There is no way in this country they would even make it 550, let alone 570 or 600, but yes, we will have a metric measure and it will be called a pint, I reckon. But my bet is on 500&nbsp;ml. And we will bitch about it to our grandchildren. When they changed from {{frac|1|6}} gill measures to 25ml the pubs advertised "NEW LARGER MEASURES; the Imperial measure {{frac|94|2|3}}% the size of the metric one. woop dee doo. (The difference between {{frac|1|4}} gill and 35&nbsp;ml is a little larger, the Imperial measure being 35.5&nbsp;ml and thus slightly larger, which the pubs did not shout about so much). ] (]) 01:22, 19 August 2009 (UTC)

:::::By the way, in ] the chapter where Winston goes into a prole pub, he finds a man complaining about his beer being in litres not like the pints he had in the old days. This of course was written about 1946-1948 (it took him a while) and, if I recall correctly, the complaint is that half a litre is not enough and a litre too much. This always seemed odd to me since half a litre is not far from a pint but a a litre is much much more. I presume Orwell was taking artistic licence here (or trusting on the ignorance in his audience) since, having lived in Paris, he must have been aware on how big a litre was. I always wondered how this was translated for audiences who only ever had metric. ] (]) 01:30, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
::::::I'll buy or borrow the Italian translation of that book sooner or later; BTW, I would have translated it "as is". Even in Italy, most people who have ever drunk in a pub (at least, in a British- or Irish-themed one) know what a pint is, and those who haven't can figure out from the context that it is the traditional unit for beers in pubs and that it is larger than half a litre but smaller than a litre, which is all one needs know to understand Winston's point. --<span style="color: #4B61D1; font-family: monospace; border: thin solid">]A.&nbsp;di&nbsp;M.</span> 01:45, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
::::I can't imagine that we actually ever ''do'' use the litre for high-accuracy volume measurements. And for most applications, an inaccuracy of 28 parts per million is so much smaller than the margin for error inherent in the measurement that it's totally irrelevant. To put it into perspective, that's a difference of nearly 16 litres when measuring the amount of water in Sydney Harbour. I see very little reason to avoid the litre normal (non-scientific) circumstances. '']'' <small>'']''</small> 18:21, 16 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::Besides, it's a problem stemming from an error that was corrected ''more than 40 years ago''. For more than 40 years ''litre'' has been an exact synonym for ''cubic decimetre''. We would only ever have to worry about this problem should we encounter pre-1964 sources with high-precision litre-based measurements. They would have to be converted into modern litres. But exactly the same problem exists with inches and whatnot, since very roughly around the same time the inch was defined as ''precisely'' 2.54 cm, etc., after it was previously slightly different in various parts of the world. ] ] 18:35, 16 August 2009 (UTC)

28 parts in 10<sup>6</sup> ain't that bad for two centuries ago and greater accuracy than you mostly find here. We surely shouldn't discourage the use of the litre and millilitre in cases where they are used in the world out there. Ask for a pint of beer in the pub & you shouldn't expect a 28-parts-per-million accuracy. ]<sub>&nbsp;]·]</sub> 18:32, 16 August 2009 (UTC)
:OK, OK, maybe I overstressed one tiny aspect which doesn't really matter. It began with my possible misreading of what had gone earlier. There ''appeared'' to be disagreement concerning which are base SI units, and which derived SI units, and somebody mentioned litre (or kilolitre, or something like that).
: My ''intended'' point was that the BIPM document has already done all the categorisation, and that based on what it has on page 124 "Table 6. Non-SI units accepted for use with the International System of Units", litres are not SI units (base or derived). --] (]) 20:00, 16 August 2009 (UTC)

::I would argue that there are some units that are not accepted by the BIPM but that we still have to accept, depending on context. The most obvious are the month and year, which are not defined by the BIPM for the very good reasons that they are not of consistent length. In other contexts, there are units that are generally used internationally - the barrel of oil, the inch for measuring the sizes of television screens (as cited above) - that are specifically not accepted by the BIPM.

::We should generally use the most commonly used unit in a given context (and I would suggest that may well include using different units in different regional contexts). '']'' <small>'']''</small> 20:25, 16 August 2009 (UTC)

I don't know why Michael Glass is continuously starting this kind of discussion. The intent of the rules about use of units is absolutely clear: '''Use those units that will be expected in this context by the greatest fraction of the expected readership. If some readers will need a conversion to understand a measurement properly, provide it.'''

The metric system in the sense of SI units + units accepted for use with SI is a useful first approximation for the practical result of this rule. It's not quite correct for a number of reasons
* SI does not give sufficient guidance to choose, e.g., between millilitre and cubiccentimetre.
* In specific contexts, certain units that are explicitly ''not'' approved are dominant and must normally be used, e.g.:
** Years for longer periods of time.
** Light years for distances between stars.
** Inches for TV and computer screens.
** Gallons for raw oil.
** Typographic points in printing.
** Metric carat for jewels.
** Kilometres per hour for car speeds.
** Litres per 100 kilometres for car fuel consumption.
** Nautical miles for distances at sea, especially for the definition of ] etc.
* In some regions – especially, but not only, the not yet fully metric countries – the usage patterns for units diverge from the international ones. This must also be taken into account whenever we have reason to believe that most readers will be from a specific region:
** Inches for TV and computer screens in Australia. (It's hard to see how that might become relevant, though.)
** Miles for road distances in the US and the UK.
** Miles per hour for car speeds in the US and the UK.
** Miles per gallon for car fuel consumption in the US and the UK.
** Kilocalories instead of kilojoules for food energy in some countries.
** Dekagrammes instead of grammes for ]s in Austria. (Again, this is more theoretical. I am sure one can find better examples.)
I see no need to change the current text. ] ] 21:06, 16 August 2009 (UTC)
:In some countries, such as Italy (and, I think, most of the EU), food energy is "officially" measured in kilojoules, but about 99% of people would normally use kilocalories for that (calling them "calories" in casual speech, except when they want to make the quantity sound bigger, as in a TV ad claiming that their product can help you burn "up to 1000 kilocalories"). (And cold cuts are measured in hectograms in Italy.) --<span style="color: #4B61D1; font-family: monospace; border: thin solid">]A.&nbsp;di&nbsp;M.</span> 21:20, 16 August 2009 (UTC)

My aim is the clarify the wording, not change the policy. If the intent of the wording is clear, then it might be possible to have the wording equally clear. For example, 'some regional topics' might be preferable to 'region-specific topics', and I can't see the problem of defining 'internationally accepted units'. For example:

Internationally accepted units are:
:*SI units
:*Non-SI units accepted for use with SI (e.g., the nautical mile)
:*Units based on fundamental constants (e.g. Planck's constant)
:*other units that are widely used internationally.

The basic problem is that we have the metric system that is used in most countries of the world, the US Customary system that is widely used in the US and the Imperial System, parts of which are still used in the UK and to a lesser extent in other English-speaking countries, and also in aviation and some specialised measurements such as computer screens. To cater for the needs of an English-speaking readership we need to provide both metric and traditional measures in a wide range of contexts. I think if we concentrate on the needs of readers we might make more progress. ] (]) 23:39, 16 August 2009 (UTC)

:According to ] the nautical mile is not accepted for use with SI. The phrase "other units that are widely used internationally" is pretty vague, in contrast to the narrowness of the three preceding points. Yes, that some of us use the metric system and others use either the US or imperial system is a problem. How does the change you're suggesting solve this? ]<sub>&nbsp;]·]</sub> 00:29, 17 August 2009 (UTC)

The knot ant the nautical mile are listed here . Table 8 is appended to Chapter 4 of the BIPM brochure which is entitled, "Non-SI units accepted for use with the SI, and units based on fundamental constants". However, I do agree that "other units that are widely used internationally" is too vague. It could be rephrased as "other units that are widely used internationally for specific purposes" but if we tried to be more specific than that, someone is sure to come up with some measure that isn't covered. That said, I would welcome a better phrase, if anyone could come up with it. Finally, Misplaced Pages can't solve the issue of English-speaking people using different weights and measures; what we might be able to do is work out how to cater for these differences and how to express the guidelines in a way that is clear and helpful. Perhaps something like this would be the way to go:

Internationally accepted units are:
:*SI units
:*Non-SI units accepted for use with SI (e.g., the nautical mile)
:*Units based on fundamental constants (e.g. Planck's constant)
:*other units that are widely used internationally for specific purposes.
] (]) 01:40, 17 August 2009 (UTC)

:If we're talking about the introduction of the section (the three-bullet list immediately under the header "Units of measurement"), you might replace "internationally accepted units for the topic at hand" with "the units in most widespread use worldwide for the type of measurement in question". As for the first bullet of "Which units to use", I don't think it's broken and doesn't need fixing. (As for your list, it'd be close to tautological if all SI units were "internationally accepted", and even that isn't the case: the megasecond isn't internationally accepted—and my browser's spell-checker even underlines it in red.) If something should be fixed, I'd replace "region-specific" with "regional and historical" (you might want to use cubits first in ]), and the point about conversion should be added to the general principles (first three bullets), too. --<span style="color: #4B61D1; font-family: monospace; border: thin solid">]A.&nbsp;di&nbsp;M.</span> 10:47, 17 August 2009 (UTC)

::Cubits at Noah's Ark is a good example for a problem I was always sure must exist. For history/archaeology articles historical units are sometimes the best choice. In history because we may know the precise number in an obsolete unit but have no certainty about the conversion factor. In archaeology because measures may be exact integer multiples of a well known obsolete unit. In such situations the obsolete units are internationally the most accepted ones. ] ] 12:42, 17 August 2009 (UTC)

::Yes, and indeed for Goliath's height etc (four cubits and a span wasn't it?) I forget how many spans there are in a cubit but it is well-defined, but nobody really knows how big a span was. A similar problem occurs with Roman stadia and for that matter inches/ounces (uncia); obviously we have a rough idea but not an exact one, which doesn't stop maths working but if quoting Latin mathematics that gives an example in these units, it is pretty pointless to convert them (e.g. one might say &ndash; I make this up &ndash; "if a right triangle has sides by the right angle of three uncia and four uncia, the the third side will be five uncia" and that is good regardless of how big the inch is.) ] (]) 14:51, 17 August 2009 (UTC)

I am pleased to see that the wording of the policy has been revised in the light of this discussion. I think that something could be done about "country-specific" and "region-specific" and I'll come back to this discussion with a further proposal later. ] (]) 11:41, 18 August 2009 (UTC)

== Date template ==

Why is {{tl|date}} not mentioned at ]? Is it deprecated? It would save a lot of the which-order-do-we-put-it-in argument, if the <code><nowiki><date formatting style></nowiki></code> parameter be omitted. Consider: whether I use <code><nowiki>{{date|15 August 2009}}</nowiki></code>, <code><nowiki>{{date|August 15, 2009}}</nowiki></code> or <code><nowiki>{{date|2009-08-15}}</nowiki></code> these are all displayed the same, ie {{date|15 August 2009}}, {{date|August 15, 2009}} or {{date|2009-08-15}} - I ''personally'' see 15 August 2009, but you might not. If every date be wrapped in that template, editors could use any format they liked and users would see whatever format they liked. --] (]) 21:29, 15 August 2009 (UTC)
:Currently the template doesn't work like that (i.e. it doesn't autoformat the date). Furthermore it uses {{]}} and so is limited to what the parser function can handle (e.g. it won't go beyond 100 AD). We'd be relying on having ''every'' date wrapped in it, which is a big ask. It would be a whole lot of work for the benifit of a few, i.e. those logged in users with prefs set. And, worst of all, we'd be ignoring the inherent problems of autoformatting, e.g. "a 15 August 2009 decision" autoformats to "a August 15, 2009 decision" (if your prefs are set to muddled) which is grammatically incorrect. ]<sub>&nbsp;]·]</sub> 22:08, 15 August 2009 (UTC)

:Besides, except for one brief mention ("{{tlx|convert}} can be used"...) there is no mention of that template either, and it is neither recommended nor deprecated, just says it can be used. I presume it is the intention not to link MoS guidelines to specific templates: if I wrote another set of conversion templates to "compete" with {{tlx|convert}}, that also met MOSNUM, they would be equally valid to use; as is doing the conversions longhand. ] (]) 14:41, 16 August 2009 (UTC)

== Is this consistent? ==

It says "5 kg (11 lb) bag of carrots", but it also says "(When they form a compound adjective, values and spelled out units ].)" Which is right? ] (]) 22:04, 16 August 2009 (UTC)
:"kg" and "lb" are not "spelled out" units; "kilogram" and "pound" are. --<span style="color: #4B61D1; font-family: monospace; border: thin solid">]A.&nbsp;di&nbsp;M.</span> 22:42, 16 August 2009 (UTC)
::See ]. ]<sub>&nbsp;]·]</sub> 22:48, 16 August 2009 (UTC)
:::Hyphenation is more frequent in British than American English; the advice in question is misguided anglicization. In the sentence quoted, even the British might not hyphenate, since the grouping is made clear by the parentheses. So the sentence is right. ] <small>]</small> 05:45, 18 August 2009 (UTC)

== Automatic currency converter button idea ==

Wondering if someone's smart enough to write a template to do automatic currency conversions? I'd love to be able to put in something from which Misplaced Pages readers automatically choose what currencies they want the data in. Suppose NZ GDP is $42,052 (NZ$). And I put this in an article. Is there some way a user could click on a button next to the amount to switch the currency? Like, click, and it's $28K USD. Or, click, it's $42K NZD. Or, click some other currency? It would be '''really cool to have'''. Simpler variant: assume no inflation and its easier but less accurate. A simple template that translates NZ$ to US$ or vice versa based on today's exchange rate, and ignores inflation considerations or the passage of time. Complex variant: Suppose a fact about money was added on date X. But today it's date Y. So, information needed would be: money amount in NZ$ on date X; conversion rate NZ$ to US$ on date X; inflation (or deflation) of US currency between date X and date Y; lastly, date Y. Boom -- up-to-date accurate amount information. No way Encyclopedia Brittanica could ever do that. That would be really cool! As far as I can tell, Village Pump doesn't have any converter tools for inflation or currency conversions. ] (]) 01:03, 17 August 2009 (UTC)tomwsulcer

:There are good reasons why not. It depends so much on whether you are quoting an historical price at its historical value or current value: and, if at its current value, how you adjust for inflation (which inflationary index you use, e.g. retail price index, consumer price index, inflation based on the rise in cost of houses or mars bars or bread or any particular item); second, that since most currencies are on floating exchange rates the article will constantly change every time it is accessed, or, in the alternate, will need to state when and where the rate was taken from; third, that it would require use of a currency conversion site, and (assuming permission was granted to do that on a grand scale) which to choose?; fourth, that many currencies are not widely traded and so, for example, to convert danish krone into kenyan shillings is almost entirely meaningless; fifth, that even freely traded currencies such as US dollars have a variety of exchange rates: the spot rate given for today is not what you will get at a bureau de change, so which do you choose?

:It is best to have the editor make those decisions, adding references to where the conversion came from if necessary, rather than make WP do it. In general prices are quoted ether in US dollars or in the prevailing currency of the article's subject (e.g. the local currency or historical currency). If a reader really wants a currency conversion not provided, they can look up a conversion site themselves, surely; and if they can't find it, then an automated tool is not likely to either. ] (]) 14:45, 17 August 2009 (UTC)

::I agree there can be problems with a currency converter template, particularly as time span lengthens from date of entry to date of readership. A time span of twenty to fifty years can seriously begin distorting values as you say, and any calculator would be problematic. But I still think a currency converter toggle switch, next to money figures, is a good idea, particularly for relatively-recent information (ie time between info added and info read), to convert currencies. Then inflation is miniscule. I see it primarily as an aid to readers. Some readers think in terms of US$ or a commonly used currency like the Euro; others will think in terms of their native currency. Why not permit readers the option to choose which figure they'd prefer? (And I don't think anybody would seriously want to convert a rarely-traded currency with another rarely-traded currency -- I doubt readers would expect Misplaced Pages to even try that). Stick to a pure currency converter (forget inflation). For example, in the article on ], there are many references to dollar amounts -- sometimes US$, sometimes NZ$ (technically, the policy is to use native currency like you say, but I bet many New Zealanders think in terms of US dollars, and foreigners won't know which is being referred to -- since NZ calls their money "dollars" too). I think there is consensus about particular exchange rates -- there's some variation, but not much. For example, $1 New Zealand dollar is worth about $.67 US dollars, and there are different rates today which vary only slightly from that amount, and I don't think such variation is a good excuse to ditch a good idea. At first, when I read the New Zealand article, I thought the figure $28,000 average GDP of New Zealanders was in New Zealand dollars -- it happened to be in US dollars so it threw me off -- the actual GDP figure is closer to $42,000 NZD, or about $28K US (numbers slightly off here -- I'm working from memory). But I'm saying that a '''simple toggle button next to money amounts''', letting a reader a choice to switch from a native currency to a commonly traded currency (USD, Euros, pounds, yen perhaps) would be a (1) helpful (2) more accurate than letting readers mentally guess the exchange rate (3) easy to program (4) a nice extra which differentiates Misplaced Pages from book-bound static encyclopedias which has (5) numerous applications.] (]) 04:16, 18 August 2009 (UTC)tomwsulcer

¶ I'm too sleepy to go through all these points ''seriatim'', but (with the blithe obliviousness of the technically-ignorant), I don't see insuperable obstacles on either side:

# After preliminary discussion here, this proposal should probably move over to one section or other of ], or perhaps a template project or talk page. Let us know where to follow the discussion once it's moved.
# What's needed by most readers is something that would convert a cited amount of money of whatever era into the reader's preferred currency '''''now'''''. When the number of ], say, that a Victorian Englishman would exchange in 1850 for a U.S. ] of 1850 is a significant fact in itself, the conversion will usually already be in the text. The average reader would probably want to know the rough value of that 1850 double-eagle in the pounds (or euros or dollars) that he uses today, rather than having to do a second conversion from 1850 pounds to 2009 pounds.
# What's also called for is just a rough indication of a sum's value, not a precise conversion.
# When there's little bilateral exchange of two little-traded currencies, just let the template convert each into some relatively-universal currency, be it euros, US dollars or ], and then calculate a synthetic result that won't differ too much from what happens on those occasions when Kenyan shillings are traded directly for Danish krone. (That's the function of ], to exploit and thus flatten any discrepancies.) This kind of conversion happens all the time in the real world (e.g. translating Afrikaans texts into Catalan via some third language).
# Similarly for converting that 1850 double-eagle. First let the template convert its value then into today's US dollars and then into pounds sterling (etc.) of 2009.
# Because both the ] and the ] have a real value in today's US dollars, even a hypothetical conversion — which may not represent the average of bilateral transactions in an active free market — isn't meaningless for the limited purpose of giving the Danish or Kenyan reader some idea of what a sum of shillings or krone would be worth to her. (What would be meaningless is pricing an 1850 double-eagle in imputed 1850 euros.)
# There are many things that Misplaced Pages changes daily, weekly or monthly. A table of currencies wouldn't be a big challenge so long as someone or some project is prepared to commit to meeting it regularly.
# But, on the other hand, one shouldn't be too sanguine or ''blasé'' about the slowness of inflation or the stability of exchange rates. Not so very long ago, the pound sterling jumped above US $2, and almost achieved parity with the euro, while the Canadian dollar reached near-parity with the U.S. dollar, before they sank back much closer to their historic relative values. And a few successive years of 5-8% inflation, as opposed to 1-3%, can make a great difference in a currency's value, both at home and abroad. So the conversion tables need to be relatively fresh. ] (]) 08:09, 18 August 2009 (UTC)

:::Shakescene, thanks for your comments. User Ohconfucius found a template which does currency conversions. But you have to be in edit mode to see it working: As of this week (data updated weekly), the exchange rate between the New Zealand and United States dollars is '''{{User:7/Template:fx|1|NZD|2}}.'''

:::I only gave the NZD amount; I didn't write the US$ value -- the template fished it from somewhere. The template is ] It converts a number of different currencies into US dollars. And it seems to work; it picks off an exchange rate which seems right. And there's no button for users to click. Plus, there may still be bugs in it (if a space follows the second closing parenthesis, weird stuff seems to happen). Rather, it just converts currencies (doesn't account for inflation etc). And it's on a user talk page as opposed to an official Misplaced Pages page; so I had problems convincing other editors to use it. User Gadfium thinks the community needs to come to consensus before it can be widely used; Gadfium was skeptical that the conversion rates weren't being updated enough (last update = May; I'm writing this in August). Last, instead of asking a Misplaced Pages community member to constantly update tables, why can't we fish off currency conversion rates from an established non-Misplaced Pages site, and quote the site as the source? ] (]) 19:25, 18 August 2009 (UTC)Tomwsulcer

::::Shakescene, thank you also for your comments. I am glad that maybe enumerating some of the problems let you, perhaps, come up with answers to them... that is called being productive! Thank you! As a small qualification, I was not suggesting the danish Krone was not widely traded, only that it is not traded much with the Kenyan shilling (and I better make sure I got the right spelling of Krone there since pre-euro all the Scandinavian countries had krona/krone etc but were spelt differently &ndash; of course it means crown &ndash; but let's correct it here before we move it to wherever you think it should go.

::::Yes, getting a currency feed each day (or hour, whatever) technically is no problem of course, it is what obligations does that place upon Wikimedia to get that feed? Or is the feed done client-side? Does the reader get a choice of where he gets the feed from (xe.com, msn money, etc)? Which rate to choose do you take the spot rate? I guess so, probably, since articles are likely to be talking about reasonably large amounts of money (in the thousands or tens of thousands of dollars, at the very least) not holiday cash.

::::My concern with it changing all the time is for those taking printouts etc. The printout will almost inevitably differ from that of some other's printout, i.e. the article is not stable. Now of course, articles are edited all the time and so any printout is no more than a snapshot of what it was at a particular time, but it seems this adds a new level of instability that, as far as I can tell, does not exist elsewhere on WP. So not only are we making a new little app, but I think fundamentally changing the expectatins of wikipedia: although we expect pages to change, we don't expect the same version of the same page to produce different results each time we look at it.

::::Tomwsulcer well, it seems I am the gainsayer and perhaps it has legs. I still think it is too complicated to do, but it might be worth a try if some developer wants to take it. I am quite willing to try (I am a software developer but have not developed for WP before and would not know where to start.)

::::Best wishes to you both ] (]) 01:49, 19 August 2009 (UTC)

== Querying "nineteenth-century painting" ==

The guideline for naming centuries (here and at ]) has been hotly contested, and I do not think we are ready to go back to that topic yet. But I am interested in just one provision:

<blockquote>Centuries are named in figures: (''the 5th century CE''; ''19th-century painting''); when the adjective is hyphenated, consider ''nineteenth-century painting'', but not when contrasted with ''painting in the 20th century''.</blockquote>

I would like to change the provision to this, to remove what I regard as an unsourced and probably unprecedented invitation to inconsistency:

<blockquote>Centuries are named in figures: {{xt|the 5th century CE}}; {{xt|19th-century painting}}.</blockquote>

Can anyone cite a reputable guide that allows for ''nineteenth-century painting'' even in the same ''text'' (let alone ''contrasted with'') as ''painting in the 20th century''? If no one does, I will proceed with the change. (Even if someone does, I would invoke more major guides that do not support such an inconsistency.)

–<font color="blue"><sub>''']'''</sub><sup>¡ɐɔıʇǝo</sup><big>N</big><small>oetica!</small></font><sup>]</sup>– 06:19, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
:I would have thought, even when it is to be read by the Masters of MoS, that "but {{xt|do}} not {{xt|consider ''nineteenth-century painting''}} when contrasted with ''painting in the 20th century''", which is the plain meaning of the key clause, would have been condescending and verbose. Guess not. I will amend accordingly. ] <small>]</small> 06:29, 18 August 2009 (UTC)

*In the process, I settled on "but do not consider it when..."; the referent of ''it'' '''ought''' to be plain. ] <small>]</small> 06:36, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
::PMAnderson, the matter has been raised for discussion, and a specific question was put forward for editors to respond to. Please do not pre-empt such discussion; and please focus on the question that I have raised. While the matter is under focused discussion, it is not appropriate to shift or dissipate the focus. For that reason I am reverting your edit, and I await your response to the clear point that I raise in this section.
::–<font color="blue"><sub>''']'''</sub><sup>¡ɐɔıʇǝo</sup><big>N</big><small>oetica!</small></font><sup>]</sup>– 07:34, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
:::I must say that your original question is not at all clear to me. Can you check it for typos (e.g., did you make the shift from "19th" to "nineteenth" because it's your main point or is it accidental???) and clarity? ] ] 07:57, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
::::Well, I must allow that the question ''may'' not have been clear. It is free of typos, though, and I cannot see how it can be construed in any way other than what I intended. Hans, I can only think that the confusion arises because the guideline as presently worded is really strange!
::::Let me put it this way:
::::The guideline in its present form (correctly cited above) suggests that ''nineteenth-century painting'' is acceptable instead of ''19th-century painting''. It only excludes ''nineteenth-century painting'' when this would be "contrasted with ''painting in the 20th century''" (to quote verbatim). What I ask is this: why should we ''ever'' want ''nineteenth-century painting'' in an article? The central point of our guideline proposes these forms: ''the 5th century CE'' and ''19th-century painting''. Should an article have ''nineteenth-century painting'' at all, then? That would be inconsistent with other usages in the same text that ''do'' follow our guideline, perhaps like ''painting in the 20th century'' at several paragraphs distance from the spelled-out form we are talking about.
::::I asked, and still ask, is there any reputable style that permits ''nineteenth-century painting'' as well as, somewhere far from that phrase, something like ''painting in the 20th century and 21st-century computer art''? In the same text? (Never mind "when contrasted with"!) I suspect there is no such style guide, but I am waiting for an answer.
::::–<font color="blue"><sub>''']'''</sub><sup>¡ɐɔıʇǝo</sup><big>N</big><small>oetica!</small></font><sup>]</sup>– 08:26, 18 August 2009 (UTC)



:::::You are right. You were clear and I simply wasn't sufficiently concentrated. Sorry! And yes, I support making it completely uniform for simplicity. ] ] 08:40, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
::::::Noetica is clear, and clearly mistaken. The guideline, as it stands, means:
:::::::Centuries are named in figures: (''the 5th century CE''; ''19th-century painting''); when the adjective is hyphenated, consider ''nineteenth-century painting'', but '''do''' not '''consider it''' when contrasted with ''painting in the 20th century''.
::::::I am perfectly willing to add the bolded words, since "but not when..." seems to be confusing; indeed I did, and Noetica reverted me. But, short or long, this advises ''against'' using {{xt|nineteenth-century painting}} and {{xt|painting in the 20th century}} in the same context.

::::::Noetica's question therefore is like "when did you stop beating your wife?": tendentious, inflammmatory, and irrelevant to the issue at hand. ] <small>]</small> 12:35, 18 August 2009 (UTC)

(outdent) i support changing the provision to just "Centuries are named in figures: {{xt|the 5th century CE}}; {{xt|19th-century painting}}." it's simple, clear and consistent. ] (]) 08:36, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
*'''Strongly oppose''', also wrong. This is the besetting problem of MoS; the declaration that "I don't happen to write this way, therefore let's make a rule that nobody else can". ] <small>]</small> 12:35, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
::'''PMAnderson:'''
:::I have now twice clearly asked my question. Because of the confusing way the guideline is worded (with an addition that ''you'' are responsible for some time ago, as I recall), the guideline itself is hard to make sense of. For everyone's benefit, and especially for you, I will make the point another way, and pose two distinct questions, with some preliminaries:
:::The guideline certainly allows that ''the 5th century CE'' and ''19th-century painting'' may occur in the same article. Call these ''standard forms'', for our convenience here, OK? Now, the guideline also seems to allow that the spelt-out form ''nineteenth-century painting'' may occur in the same article as those standard forms, provided only that ''nineteenth-century painting'' is not ''near'' those standard forms. That is the best sense I can make of the current wording: "but not when contrasted with ''painting in the 20th century''". If another sense is intended, it is utterly obscure; and your recent suggestion merely confirms that this is the sense of the current guideline. Now, here are two good questions:
:::#Why should ''nineteenth-century painting'' be allowed anywhere in the same article as the standards forms? That is plain inconsistency, and therefore against one of our major principles. What style guide recommends such an inconsistent practice? I have not seen one, and I would like someone to produce evidence of such a guide.
:::#Beyond the matter of consistency within an article, why should the form ''nineteenth-century painting'' be allowed at all, anywhere in any article? Most of us want consistent, simple guidelines to settle needless disputes, and to guide editors. Look at the many fine articles in , where editors strive for elegant and efficient uniformity in these matters. Why undo that effort?
:::If you can't provide precedent from ''any'' reputable style guide for your complex old wording (or your complex proposed new wording, which has the same meaning), and if others prefer a plain simple guideline, we should change the wording to this:
:::<blockquote>Centuries are named in figures: {{xt|the 5th century CE}}; {{xt|19th-century painting}}.</blockquote>
:::–<font color="blue"><sub>''']'''</sub><sup>¡ɐɔıʇǝo</sup><big>N</big><small>oetica!</small></font><sup>]</sup>– 14:01, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
::::I have just responded to both those points, but let me try recasting - especially since there is a third red herring, . I will await a little more evidence before resorting to dispute resolution on this confused and obnoxious thread.

::::*The present wording says nothing, for or against, on using ''painting of the 20th century'' at one end of an article and ''nineteenth-century painting'' at the other. Why does Noetica assume it does? Whether those are a clash depends on the taste of the individual editor. Why do we need to rule on it, except to satisfy a will to power? That's the red herring.
::::*Does Noetica deny that ''nineteenth-century painting'' is English usage, which a literate editor e may well write, and a literate reader see, without complaint? If xe does not, then we have no reason to prevent it, save the base satisfaction of compelling all Misplaced Pages to follow the tastes of a handful of meddlers here.
::::*Since the present text advises against what everybody agrees is undesirable - a meaningless failure of parallellism - what's the problem with it? I have no objection to striking the whole clause, if it confuses people. ] <small>]</small> 14:18, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
::::::What or who exactly is "obnoxious" here? No one has rushed to ''edit'', apart from you! Three times I ask my questions, and three times you refuse to answer&nbsp;– or cannot answer. What reputable guide supports anything like the inconsistency you suggested when you tampered non-consensually with this guideline in the first place, some months ago?
::::::To answer ''your'' question, even if you ignore mine:
::::::<blockquote>'''PMA's question:''' The present wording says nothing, for or against, on using ''painting of the 20th century'' at one end of an article and ''nineteenth-century painting'' at the other. Why does Noetica assume it does?<br>'''Noetica's answer:''' I ''don't'' assume that it does that! I think it ''should'' make it clear that the two quite different forms are not to be used in one article; but it ''suggests'' that it might be all right, by saying in effect only that the two forms should not be in close proximity. That's what "contrasted with" must involve, if it means anything at all.</blockquote>
::::::–<font color="blue"><sub>''']'''</sub><sup>¡ɐɔıʇǝo</sup><big>N</big><small>oetica!</small></font><sup>]</sup>– 14:41, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::::You have received three paragraphs of answer (which are themselves not new); you acknowledge this by responding to them; you then complain that you have gotten none. What you have failed to get is ''agreement'' - but this is because you are insisting on two (inconsistent) useless and meddlesome conventions, which many competent writers will simply ignore, as most of MOS's half-educated wikicreep should be ignored.
:::::::*That Misplaced Pages should '''never''' use ''nineteenth-century painting''. Why not? It's perfectly good and natural English.
:::::::*That Misplaced Pages shouldn't use ''nineteenth-century painting'', if ''painting in the 20th century'' happens to occur in the same article. Arguable but silly.
:::::::Make up your mind which you support, or -better- abandon both, and let editors write any respectable variant of English. ] <small>]</small> 14:57, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::::My two cents: 1) It's not like style guides must explicitly permit some constructions for them to be valid English; you just need that they don't forbid them. I'm quite sure there's no style guide stating that "the pronouns ''somebody'' and ''someone'' may be used in the same article", or even that "the number of items in a bulleted list may be a multiple of six", but this is no good reason to forbid using "somebody" and "someone" in the same article (or even banning "somebody" altogether), nor to forbid six-, twelve- and eighteen-item bulleted lists. 2) At least to me, all other things being equal, very small numbers look better when spelled out: e.g. "third century" rather than "3rd century". (But I would still be consistent with numbers of the same type, avoiding e.g. "third century" and "17th century", in the same section.) Anyway, beauty is in the eye of the beholder, and if all beholders around here believe otherwise, I'll follow suit and always use "3rd century", should I ever have to mention that period of time in an article. --<span style="color: #4B61D1; font-family: monospace; border: thin solid">]A.&nbsp;di&nbsp;M.</span> 19:50, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
: I concur with Hans, Sssoul, and Noetica that the new suggestion is ideal. We should change the text. --] ] 15:42, 18 August 2009 (UTC)

: I also concur. One of the main point of a manual of style is to select among all the plausible variants a standardized one, to allow for greater consistency across articles. It seems that PMA is arguing that any form of standard English is acceptable here and that we ought not further constrain the variants to be used. I disagree; while I have no particular preference vis-a-vis "19th" versus "nineteenth", I think that the consistency of picking one and sticking to it in well-edited articles enhances the encyclopedia. Editors of course remain free to not follow the MOS in their submissions; and other editors will come along and make the important articles MOS-compliant. ] (]) 19:34, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
::Adding my "concur" to Noetica, Hans, Sssoul, Andy Walsh, and Studerby. ] (]) 20:19, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
:::Adding my "concur" to Noetica, Hans, Sssoul, Andy Walsh, Studerby, and Goodmorningworld. ] 22:30, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
::::However, per A. di M.'s edit above (giving "third century" as an example) I can see leaving wiggle room for the occasional exception. Does it need to be made explicit? I think not: overdrafting makes a guideline harder to absorb. Remember the caveat at the top of the MOS page, that should be sufficient. ] (]) 22:45, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
PMAnderson writes above: "You have received three paragraphs of answer&nbsp;...". Whether those many paragraphs of prevarication qualify as "answers" is a matter for semantic analysis. One thing is clear: they are not answers to my ''questions''.

I thank other editors for their clear responses. My comment on them: simple consistency is usually the best policy, and all the most influential style guides aim for that. But yes: there is always the provision for exceptions in practice, stated at the top of our MOS pages. Editors at an article can negotiate such things on their merits, aided by clear consensual guidelines from their Misplaced Pages Manual of Style. Outside of Misplaced Pages I myself prefer to use the fully worded forms like ''in the nineteenth century'' and ''twelfth-century French kings''. But at Misplaced Pages, I adapt. So do we all. ''Almost'' all, I mean.

If there is no substantial support for the present unprecedented and obscure guideline, we should amend the text to the simpler form in a couple of days.

–<font color="blue"><sub>''']'''</sub><sup>¡ɐɔıʇǝo</sup><big>N</big><small>oetica!</small></font><sup>]</sup>– 23:05, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
:Any answer to my question: "what's wrong with ''nineteenth-century''?". ] <small>]</small> 23:47, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
:::Sure PMAnderson. If you will look ''immediately above'' what you just wrote, you will see that I have no objection to ''nineteenth-century paintings''. In fact, I prefer it! I use that style, outside of Misplaced Pages. '''I have just said so.''' But the firmly established style at Misplaced Pages is otherwise. I say once more: look at the articles listed in . Some of us adapt; nearly all of us do. A day might dawn when you understand the virtues of joining in this cooperative endeavour.
:::–<font color="blue"><sub>''']'''</sub><sup>¡ɐɔıʇǝo</sup><big>N</big><small>oetica!</small></font><sup>]</sup>– 01:29, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
::::Thank you. But I am still discussing the adjective, with which we began, as in ''nineteenth-century painting''; those are substantives. ] <small>]</small> 02:02, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
::"''wrong''" is a pejorative way of looking at the issue. A Manual of Style provides guidelines for how editors ''prefer'' to see text in a publication. You should be asking the question: "why is consensus forming that prefers '19th' over 'nineteenth'?". Because one method is preferred doesn't make the other method "''wrong''". Cheers. ] 00:09, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
:::No, there isn't. This page is too obscure and too ill-frequented to have any such consensus. But in fact, the real question is "what do we do when someone doesn't like what some small pool of editors like?" (in this case. ''19th-century''). Some people say "away with it: the six of us don't like it; you must use what we like," but the useful parts of MOS say what GregL says below: "don't use it then." That way we will find out those few cases in which Misplaced Pages as a whole has consensus; when article-space as whole (unmeddled by bots) overwhelmingly does something one way or the other. (We can then say "almost all Wikipedians do X," which is valuable information for editors, while it remains true.) ] <small>]</small> 00:31, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
::::Dictionaries might work the way that PMA wants (descriptionist instead of prescriptivist) but no Manual of Style ever has. ] (]) 00:55, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::Then Manuals of Style are ]. GMW might also try consulting ]'s ''A Modern English Grammar on Historical Principles''. But first he might try the paragraph I just wrote, which does not say "why be prescriptivist?", it offers two alternatives when - as will happen with advice (like this proposal) not supported by English usage, but by the prejudices of six editors- other editors disagree. ] <small>]</small> 01:07, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
::::::Please assume good faith. You use the word "''prejudice''" when you should use "point of view". (For the record, I guess I can assume that your "point of view" is not prejudiced?) ] 01:16, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::::No. A prejudice is a judgment reached before reasoning and evidence - I will modify the word to the extent that a preference for ''19th-century'' is supported by either. So far it has not been. ] <small>]</small> 01:31, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
::::::::I'm all for giving this issue time (in order to see which format prevails). Personally, I prefer "19th" to "nineteenth". The reason being that if you prefer "nineteenth", then I guess you also have to prefer "twenty-first", and I simply find the brevity of "21st" preferable. Nothing sinister or prejudiced about it. ] 01:49, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
::::The expected response. You persist with your pejorative view of the "world". The ''real'' point being (apart from what I raised above is) that the MOS is a style'''guide'''. It allows editors to check what is the established way of constructing something on WP. Of course, if an exception is needed (that is supported by local consensus), then so be it. Regarding, "''This page is too obscure and too ill-frequented to have any such consensus''"—that is a personal view (and of course anyone is welcome at MOS to add to the debate). Regarding "''you must use what we like''"—that isn't correct (rather that is what you believe will happen). In actuality, if there is a localised dispute, there are two practical options: start a discussion on the MOS to allow an exception, and/or start a local debate in order to enforce the exception to the guideline. ''Assume good faith'' is the key to this issue. ] 01:12, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::Nonsense. I would be happy to see this page '''guide'''; what HWV258 wishes is to have it '''command'''. In English, at least, these are not synonymous terms. The claim that atarting a discussion on MOS is a practical solution is denied by experience; discussion elsewhere has been generally foiled by disruptive bots. ] <small>]</small> 01:31, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
::::::"Enjoyable" to get to the stage in the debate where PMa's pronouncements begin with an imperative (Latin can't be far away now). A simple response: I don't wish the MOS to be a "command" (and have never stated that opinion). I think we're done (now that PMa's prejudices have once again risen to the surface). What a pity (especially in the light of calm discussion by everyone else). ] 01:54, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::::Noted. To HWV258, "Nonsense" is an ]. ] <small>]</small> 01:57, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
::::The expected response. You persist with your pejorative view of the "world". The ''real'' point being (apart from what I raised above is) that the MOS is a style'''guide'''. It allows editors to check what is the established way of constructing something on WP. Of course, if an exception is needed (that is supported by local consensus), then so be it. Regarding, "''This page is too obscure and too ill-frequented to have any such consensus''"—that is a personal view (and of course anyone is welcome at MOS to add to the debate). Regarding "''you must use what we like''"—that isn't correct (rather that is what you believe will happen). In actuality, if there is a localised dispute, there are two practical options: start a discussion on the MOS to allow an exception, and/or start a local debate in order to enforce the exception to the guideline. ''Assume good faith'' is the key to this issue. ] 01:12, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
:: PMAnderson, I suspect you disagree with this concept, but I think most of us believe the Misplaced Pages editors form a community of practice (or discourse community, in Foucault's language) that will decide what is "right" and "wrong" by consensus. What emerges is the MoS. If we simply leave it wagging in the wind for every individual to decide, we ''have'' no community. --] ] 01:18, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
:::A point well worth considering; give me a minute. I doubt that these six "usual suspects" form a community of practice; I believe I agree with the rest of the first sentence. ] <small>]</small> 01:34, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
::*I do not believe that this decision, or most decisions at MOS, are reached by consensus; indeed, this section, and the claims made in the past few hours, are characteristic ] violations. "A handful of editors agreeing on something does not constitute a consensus, except in the thinnest sense. Consensus is a broader process where specific points of article content are considered in terms of the article as a whole, and in terms of the article's place in the encyclopedia, in the hope that editors will negotiate a reasonable balance between competing views."
::*If Andy Walsh's last sentence were true, then we would not have a community; that is the process by which we write article text, to which this page - and all of WP space - is auxiliary. I do not think it is true, and it is one of the reasons why Foucault is a dangerous guide to praxis; but politics are off topic. ] <small>]</small> 01:54, 19 August 2009 (UTC)

== Markup for examples and mentions: italics, quotes, and the xt template ==

Markup for examples and mentions at ] remains inconsistent, even more than at ]. I have done a little housekeeping editing just now, but I did very little with such markup.

Some points are clear: for good reasons we generally use italics for a mention (see ] for discussion of the use–mention distinction) as opposed to an example, so we should be consistent with that:
<blockquote>The word ''approximately'' is preferred to ''approx''.</blockquote>
Not:
<blockquote>The word "approximately" is preferred to "approx".</blockquote>
But also, I should say, not this:
<blockquote>The word {{xt|approximately}} is preferred to {{xt|approx}}.</blockquote>
I don't say that exactly these cases turn up; I merely illustrate. Sometime we will need to discuss more subtle cases, and then go through these pages making all such markup rational and consistent. I propose that the topic be dealt with at ], rather than here, for three reasons:
#The development of ] was managed there more than here.
#The implementation of that template is more advanced at ] than here at ].
#] is the central page for the whole Manual of Style, and the decisions made there can reasonably be applied to all the other affected pages.
Do editors agree to centralising the discussion there?

–<font color="blue"><sub>''']'''</sub><sup>¡ɐɔıʇǝo</sup><big>N</big><small>oetica!</small></font><sup>]</sup>– 07:26, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
:I'd agree to discuss it there. Anyway, since no thread about this was created there yet (move/copy this when you do):
:According to that, we would write that the symbol of the metre is ''m'', but that would be a false statement; italic ''m'' is the symbol of mass. The symbol of the metre is a ''roman'' small em. (This was the reason why I created {{tl|xt}} in the first place.) So I'd prefer the use of quotation marks for mentions. (I don't think this could cause problems, because I can't see a situation where you'd mention a string containing quotation marks itself other than as an example, in which case {{tl|xt}} is appropriate, or as computer code, in which case <code>&lt;code&gt;</code> is appropriate.) --<span style="color: #4B61D1; font-family: monospace; border: thin solid">]A.&nbsp;di&nbsp;M.</span> 08:56, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
::Thanks, A di M. I am well aware of the protracted difficulties we had concerning these symbols and italics. That gives yet another reason for centralising the discussion and dealing with all such issues together in orderly fashion. It will not be easy; but with goodwill, flexibility, and rational analysis we ''can'' sort it out. I propose that we postpone it for about a week, now that we have signalled the discussion here.
::Are there any more broad procedural points from editors?
::–<font color="blue"><sub>''']'''</sub><sup>¡ɐɔıʇǝo</sup><big>N</big><small>oetica!</small></font><sup>]</sup>– 09:13, 18 August 2009 (UTC)

== "Large numbers" section ==

What do you think about ? The text before this edit was discussed in ]; that version was essentially the one by TheFeds, who had bothered the gargantuan nasty task of wading through all the archived discussions about this. The edit removed, among other things, the permission to use commas in numbers {{nowrap|1000 ≤ <var>x</var> &lt; 10,000}} which are not years or page numbers, which is the current behaviour of {{tl|convert}} and some other templates I can't remember right now. --<span style="color: #4B61D1; font-family: monospace; border: thin solid">]A.&nbsp;di&nbsp;M.</span> 10:33, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
:Unwise. It should at least be tweaked to ''permit'' such forms when an author wishes to discuss 1,944 guns and would like to be clear that he does not mean military production in the year of Normandy. ] <small>]</small> 12:43, 18 August 2009 (UTC)

:I (obviously) prefer the version prior to the change. I've left some comments in the "Flurry of edits" section below. <font style="font-family:Constantia" size="3" color="#0077bb">]</font> 17:43, 18 August 2009 (UTC)

== Defining 'internationally accepted units' and getting rid of the phrase 'region-specific' ==

I propose that the following wording be considered for the policy:

In place of this:

===Current wording===
;Which units to use
* In articles which are not region-specific, prefer internationally accepted units. Usually, they are the units of the ] (SI) and ]; but there are ] for particular classes of measurements. However, on region-specific topics, use the units used in the place the article is about, for example ] for US-related articles.
** When different parts of the English-speaking world use different units for the same type of measurements, add a conversion so that all English-speaking readers will be able to understand one of the units. For example, {{xt|the Mississippi River has a length of {{convert|2320|mi|km|0}}}}; {{xt|the Murray River has a length of {{convert|2375|km}}}}. (See {{sectionlink|Unit conversions}} below.)

I propose considering this wording:

===Michael Glass's proposal===
;Which units to use
* Apart from US and some UK-related articles where US or Imperial measures are used, prefer internationally accepted units. These are units of the ] (SI), ], units based on fundamental constants (e.g. Planck's constant), and other units that are widely used internationally for specific purposes.
** In general, add a conversion so that all English-speaking readers will be able to understand one of the units. For example, {{xt|the Mississippi River has a length of {{convert|2320|mi|km|0}}}}; {{xt|the Murray River has a length of {{convert|2375|km}}}}. (See {{sectionlink|Unit conversions}} below.)

My intention is not to change the policy but to express it more clearly and concisely. Any comments? ] (]) 12:34, 18 August 2009 (UTC)

===Pmanderson's proposal===
I would split the difference:

;Which units to use
* Apart from US and some UK-related articles where US or Imperial measures are used, prefer internationally accepted units. These are units of the ] (SI), ], units based on fundamental constants (e.g. Planck's constant), and other units that are widely used internationally for specific purposes.
** When English-speakers use more than one unit for a given type of measurement, it is generally advisable to add a conversion so that all English-speaking readers will be able to understand one of the units. For example, {{xt|the Mississippi River has a length of {{convert|2320|mi|km|0}}}}; {{xt|the Murray River has a length of {{convert|2375|km}}}}. (See {{sectionlink|Unit conversions}} below.)

This provides a rationale for the ruling, and allows for exceptions; there aren't many, but I foresee MGlass's text being used to demand conversions between calendar and tropical years, and other totally silly demands. ] <small>]</small> 12:51, 18 August 2009 (UTC)

:I don't want to go round the houses, but I don't like "Apart from US and some UK-related"... many US articles use metric units, and using exceptio probat regulam this could suggest that SI is actively discouraged in US and some (unspecified) UK articles. This just does not cut the mustard; you can't get rid of the "regional" bit altogether, ugly though it be. For a start, write "Apart from most US-related" (since some use SI etc); and indeed since it simply says "prefer" why not cut that qualifying clause and put elsewhere? Below is not perfect but an attempt to show what I mean:

:''Which units to use''
:* Prefer internationally accepted units. These are units of the ] (SI), ], units based on fundamental constants (e.g. Planck's constant), and other units that are widely used internationally for specific purposes.
:** In general, add a conversion so that all English-speaking readers will be able to understand one of the units. For example, {{xt|the Mississippi River has a length of {{convert|2320|mi|km|0}}}}; {{xt|the Murray River has a length of {{convert|2375|km}}}}. (See {{sectionlink|Unit conversions}} below.)
:* Articles about US or UK subjects should use US or Imperial measures when appropriate, with conversions to SI unless the context makes that ridiculous.
:** Take care to consider Canada and Ireland, which although largely metricated still use US or Imperial measures in some parts of daily life.

] (]) 12:56, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
::Certainly an improvement. I would make the first sentence ''Misplaced Pages generally prefers internationally accepted units'' - although the phrase ''internationally accepted'' is both tendentious and incorrect; units accepted by the US and Canada, or Britain and Canada, are internationally accepted. If it is left as it is, some good soul will go through and switch ] to kilometers, quoting the first sentence in isolation. ] <small>]</small> 13:17, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
:::Yes, I did consider hoisting the "Articles about US... to the top of the example (even before "prefer internationally...", possibly). I agree about "internationally" and said so in the earlier discussion, but perhaps not as clearly. I think we can cut "internationally accepted units" completely since we immediately give its definition. For the other uses of "internationally" we can say simply "worldwide" (or is that equally contentious? Surely nobody will expect penguins in Antarctica to be getting out their slide rules?)

:::How about this? (Again, not intended as a final suggestion more something to bite on.)

:::''Which units to use''
:::* Articles about people or places strongly associated with one place or time should use the units appropriate to that place or time. For the US this will generally mean US units, for the UK, sometimes Imperial units.
:::** Take care to consider Canada and Ireland, which although largely metricated still use US or Imperial measures in some parts of daily life, and used non-SI units for much of their past.
:::* With that considered, Misplaced Pages prefers units of the ] (SI), ], units based on fundamental constants (e.g. Planck's constant), and other units that are widely used worldwide for specific purposes.
:::** In general, add a conversion so that all English-speaking readers will be able to understand one of the units. For example, {{xt|the Mississippi River has a length of {{convert|2320|mi|km|0}}}}; {{xt|the Murray River has a length of {{convert|2375|km}}}}. (See {{sectionlink|Unit conversions}} below.)

] (]) 14:06, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
::::How about
::::*For articles ''not'' associated with a place or time, especially scientific articles, Misplaced Pages normally uses units of the ] (SI), ], units based on fundamental constants (e.g. Planck's constant), and other units that are widely used worldwide for some specific purpose.
::::which is self-contained. ] <small>]</small> 14:28, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
:::{{ec}} I hadn't thought about the possibility of misunderstanding the phrase "internationally accepted" that way ''''. I still find it's unlikely that a ''reasonable'' person could ''accidentally'' misunderstand it, but we'd better prevent ''unreasonable'' wiki-lawyers from ''purposefully'' misunderstand it. I still don't like the "shopping list"-like explanation, which suggests that ''all'' SI units, ''all'' units based on fundamental constants, etc. are accepted (while the megasecond isn't accepted, and the Planck mass is only accepted in advanced theoretical physics contexts). Also, I'd rather go with "parts of the English-speaking world" than with "English speakers": no conversion could make all English speakers understand a measure such as "4.7 microfarads", for there are many who don't know what electric capacitance is; but anyone who knows what it is would measure it in submultiples of the farad, regardless of where they're from; so a conversion for that measure is unnecessary and useless. Let me give a try:
:::----
:::;Which units to use
:::*Except in the cases mentioned below, prefer the units in most widespread use worldwide. Usually, they are the units of the ] (SI) and ]; but there are ] for some measurements, such as inches for display sizes and years for long periods of time.
:::**When discussing topics strongly associated with one place or time, use the units appropriate to that place or time. In articles about the present, for the US this will usually mean ], and for the UK this generally means ] for some classes of measurements and metric units for others (see, for example, under "Metric").
:::*When some parts of the English-speaking world would use a different unit than the one used in the article, generally add parenthetical conversions so that readers from those regions can understand the measurement: for example, {{xt|the Mississippi River has a length of {{convert|2320|mi|km|0}}}}; {{xt|the Murray River has a length of {{convert|2375|km}}}}. (See {{sectionlink|Unit conversions}} below.)
:::----
:::<s>I'm not sure about "general articles"; I think clearer alternative could be found.</s> As for cases such as kilojoules v kilocalories in Italy (and I suppose Canadians and Irishmen can find other examples of that), it says "locally used", not "locally recommended". Per ], let's wait until some editor cites this guideline and some obscure law requiring in to replace with in an -related article ''before'' we explicitly make that point. --<span style="color: #4B61D1; font-family: monospace; border: thin solid">]A.&nbsp;di&nbsp;M.</span> 14:47, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
::::I like the general principle Simon put forth: ''Articles about people or places strongly associated with one place or time should use the units appropriate to that place or time.'' Arago used toises, and we should describe in toises - translating into meters ''and'' yards. ] <small>]</small> 15:31, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::Emended to incorporate that point. BTW, I think that "people or places" is too restrictive, as ] is neither a person nor a place (not in the obvious sense of "place", at least); also "articles" should be toned down, because an article discussing several topics can use different units for each one of them, as in the Irish road speed limits example (mph for historical limits, km/h for modern ones). --<span style="color: #4B61D1; font-family: monospace; border: thin solid">]A.&nbsp;di&nbsp;M.</span>

===General comments on region vs. internationally accepted ===
All these wordings are confusing in that they say "use", but in most cases, what is really meant is "list first", because conversions are usually provided. It would be nice to think that editors would read the manual from end to end and remember everything, but that just isn't going to happen, so wording that does not require the editor to read a different part of the manual to understand that "use" usually means "list first" would be better. --] (]) 14:34, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
:That's why I added a sub-bullet about unit conversions to the first bullet in the "Which units to use" subsection , where there was none. --<span style="color: #4B61D1; font-family: monospace; border: thin solid">]A.&nbsp;di&nbsp;M.</span> 15:06, 18 August 2009 (UTC)

== Flurry of edits ==

There seems to have been a flurry of edits over the last day or so from A di M (5) Noetica (9) and GregL (6). While I know these are all good faith edits from good faith editors, it suggests to me that this has not properly achieved the consensus we should expect before changing WP:MOSNUM, where stability is incredibly important. May I suggest we hold off and perhaps use the talk page more rather than the guide itself, since a guide that is constantly changing is no use to anyone. ] (]) 12:46, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
:SimonTrew, at you say that I have "jumped the gun" with my editing. On the contrary: my recent edits are all , the most minor uncontroversial tidying. The only ones that go beyond such housekeeping are to revert PMAnderson's premature editing in response to my raising a point for discussion (see above), and a conservative clarifying response to a point raised by A di M.
:Please refrain from incautious accusations. I am not disrupting anything at all, and I have explicitly called for discussion rather than hasty editing.
:–<font color="blue"><sub>''']'''</sub><sup>¡ɐɔıʇǝo</sup><big>N</big><small>oetica!</small></font><sup>]</sup>– 14:16, 18 August 2009 (UTC)

::I did not accuse you of anything. I stated my own opinion, and said as such. It is not a question of how minor the edits are: ''any'' edit to the MOS impacts, in theory, on ''every'' article in the encyclopaedia, if only in so much as now the article has to be checked again against the MOS to see if it still conforms. When I have had even a minor "housekeeping" edit (change of wording etc) I have taken it to discussion; and most of the edits are not marked as minor (so, are they minor as you claim, in which case mark them minor, or not, in which case discuss them)? I am not prepared to enter into discussion of personalities here; I am also trying to make the MOS better, because I edit articles and try to make them conforming, or at least more conforming, and ''continual changes to the MOS, however small, are counterproductive to that aim''. Since there have been (using my above figures which are a little dated) 20 edits to MOSNUM in the last day or so, in fact more now, that averages a little under 1 change an hour. How is a poor article editor like me supposed to keep up with that? Better to get consensus for one big change, and this goes against my usual reasoning at WP:OWNFEET, because here we are not talking about an end article but something that affects ''millions'' of articles.

::To repeat: I stated that I thought you had jumped the gun; I think you did. I stated it on a user's talk page which, while not private, does not oblige me to have NPOV. That is not an accusation of anything, it is my opinion. ] (]) 15:45, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
:::You do not say which edit of mine "jumps the gun". Surely not the ones in which I change the dashes and quotation marks so that they conform to MOS styling! Don't make scattershot assertions. I have responded to your comment at my talkpage. If you raise an issue, expect it to be discussed till all is clarified.
:::–<font color="blue"><sub>''']'''</sub><sup>¡ɐɔıʇǝo</sup><big>N</big><small>oetica!</small></font><sup>]</sup>– 22:45, 18 August 2009 (UTC)

::* I had been away from MOSNUM for a while. While gone, there were several edits made that seemed to take MOSNUM away from the long-standing ways things have always been done on Misplaced Pages with regard to numbers. For the most part, these changes seem to have been the product of a tag-teaming by two like-minded editors over a period of one week. A consensus of two editors does not a consensus make. What I’ve now restored (and better organized) reflects widely observed, common practices on Misplaced Pages that have long enjoyed a true consensus. These time-tested practices, which were the product of much discussion over the years, are intended to yield the most important thing on Misplaced Pages: result in the least confusion for the greatest portion of our readership. Sometimes, editors come here to MOSNUM to change things in order to lend legitimacy to their particular way of doing things in articles they’re working. However, this is often done with an insufficient understanding of the ramifications. ] (]) 16:45, 18 August 2009 (UTC)

:::*I don't object to the ''reorganization''—I have no issue with moving things to different subsections for clarity. It's the reversions that I don't particularly understand<p>(In the interests of disclosure, with regard to the following, it looks like Greg_L worked on the current version, and I worked on the versions that were recently reverted. It's not personal, but I ''do'' think that my edits were better.)<p>It's pretty clear that the consensus (which extends far beyond MOSNUM) with respect to things like regional usage variations is to allow them in context (and the text I proposed and eventually inserted into MOSNUM on digit grouping upholds that). Furthermore, the section clearly articulates that there are two methods of digit grouping in standard English usage (and that neither is to be mandated exclusively), noting some contexts in which it is common to find one or the other. The previous version of that text is also clearer, because it organizes these things into bullets and uses more precision in explaining the technical details.<p>With regard to another recent change—that of the reworded adoption of international standards section—I still object to the aggressiveness and essay-like qualities of the current () version. My version retains the core message that certain things (i.e. "&emsp;%", "MiB") are not valid on Misplaced Pages despite the existence of various international standards, but avoids the repetition of "real-world" and removes the commentary about the objectives of Misplaced Pages. (Those things are rightly found in the policy documents and user essays, but don't need to be reinterpreted here, especially not in the context of two long-running editing disputes.)<p>Besides, the consensus on Misplaced Pages is ''not'' that real-world usage always prevails—though it often does, justifiably—just look at the citation system for evidence of consensus in favour of an invented system not found externally. The point is that Misplaced Pages can choose to follow whatever the community wants, and isn't necessarily bound to the real-world norm as a matter of policy. If doing something differently makes the encylopedia better, then it's a valid course of action. But if following someone else's lead (be it BIPM or traditional American usage) leads to a better encyclopedia, then that's appropriate as well. If we want to decide what Misplaced Pages's broad objectives ought to be, we should discuss that at ]. <font style="font-family:Constantia" size="3" color="#0077bb">]</font> 17:38, 18 August 2009 (UTC)

::::* TheFeds, I think my edit regarding the percent sign and MiB, etc., was in haste. I misunderstood the impact of your change when I was looking at the edit-diff. Looking at the actual text, I think your version was an improvement and have no objection at all if you change that section back. I would offer to do it myself, but I will give you the liberty of changing it so it is sure to meet with your satisfaction. ] (]) 17:42, 18 August 2009 (UTC)

::::* '''P.S.''' That was easy enough. I restored it to the version you made. Sorry for the inconvenience. ] (]) 17:54, 18 August 2009 (UTC)

:::::*Thanks, Greg. I'm glad that the misunderstanding is behind us. Looks like you beat me to the change, and that section is definitely alright now. <font style="font-family:Constantia" size="3" color="#0077bb">]</font> 17:57, 18 August 2009 (UTC)

I actually end up back where I started. I asked for a stand off of edits and to take it to talk page rather than continually change the policy article itself. I am sorry Greg L that you are offended that a mere article editor like me might have an interest in the guidelines under which he is supposed to edit articles, and impinging on your space by it not going the right way to discuss changes while you were away (and frankly it was going quite nicely, with very few edits and plenty of discussion before changes were made). As for history etc etc, well, who cares? I look at the article and see the problems NOW, not as they were seven years ago. Since 85% of my edits are in article space not WP space or template space or whatever, I just want to come here, note a problem, get consensus, etc. While it is useful (sincerely) that other kinds of WP editors take time to make sure MOS etc are correct, I simply am not going to get bound up in this, but it annoys me that it smacks of WP:OWNERSHIP almost. The veiled thing about "New editors" I assume refers to me. If it does, just say so, I can take it. I didn't realise longevity was a criterion ("take MOSNUM away from the long-standing ways things have always been done" &ndash; excuse me while I bring the boy down the chimney and teach him to type a response to that).

MOSNUM actually had a period of stability where I could actually rely on it for a bit. I think now I give up and will just stick to, say, the convert template talk where, if there are problems or additions needed for articles, ] and many other helpful folk there actually sort it out and, if us poor article editors are mistaken, kindly and politely tell us so. What is the problem here? Have I hit the nail on the head? It seems to me, right now, that there is a kinda warring faction with <strike>Greg L, Noetica and PMA</strike> some long-standing editors that none of us mere mortals are privy to, and only they have the right of an opinion on MOSNUM? Can you point me to maybe a meta-policy that says so?

Perhaps I am not in the best of moods, so for that I apologise in advance. But MOSNUM is supposed to be here to HELP PEOPLE WRITE ARTICLES, not as some navel-gazing activity. It does not help me write articles if it is constantly changing under my feet, and what in other contexts would be characterised as an edit war has taken place in the last couple of days. C'mon, folks, you are supposed to be the best of the best to edit something as crucial as this. Live up to that responsibility.

Best wishes. ] (]) 00:47, 19 August 2009 (UTC)

== Please abide by consensus ==

Jc3s5h, your edits were contrary to the results of the RfC ''you yourself'' conducted ]. The {val} template was the result of very lenghty, months-long discussions by very many editors on both WT:MOS and WT:MOSNUM.

{Val} (originally known as “Delimitnum”) had its functionality described ]…

…it was extensively discussed and voted upon ]…


Seems like the scientific community has a solid consensus on new centuries starting in the year xx01. The "Battle of the Centuries" is a good read. To be fair, does anybody have any authoritative sources backing the xx00 change date?
…and was well received ]…


This is, of course, counter-intuitive to the layman who just sees 1999 tick over to 2000 and therefore assumes that change in the 3rd digit means a new century. But as we all know, intuition and truth do not always agree.
…where its functionality was tweaked to achieve a compromise solution that made everyone happy on an issue regarding the look of scientific notation.


So why did the world celebrate the new century on 1 Jan 2000 ? I'm going to digress into armchair philosophising but bear with me. Image that you are a major newspaper, news channel, magazine, etc and you want readers to buy/subscribe. You can research it, find out that 1 Jan 2001 is the correct date and make a big thing on that date. But your competitors celebrated way back on 1 Jan 2000 and the public goes "meh, we did all that last year - get with the times you out of date moron!" The big news companies know this, so they all go with the earlier date to avoid their competitors getting the jump on them. Never let the truth get in the way of profit! Joe public naturally follows the mass media and ignores the nerds saying "2001" - why listen to boring nerds when you can party now! Party, party, party!
Then a number of developers and template authors worked on it.


So, here we are, arguing whether to follow the truth or to follow Joe Public with both of his brain cells following news companies who are chasing the almighty dollar. <span style="border:1px solid blue;border-radius:4px;color:blue;box-shadow: 3px 3px 4px grey;">]&nbsp;<span style="font-size:xx-small; vertical-align:top">]&nbsp;</span></span> 11:44, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
Please don’t presume that you can come along and change it without a proper consensus. ] (]) 17:17, 18 August 2009 (UTC)


*There are some known inconsistencies/anomalies in our treatment of centuries, including categories or articles covering decades. For example, ] is a subcategory of ], but includes 1900 which the MOS puts in the 19th century. If we were starting again, I think it would have been better to avoid using century in categories or articles, e.g. use "1900–1999" instead of "20th century", but we are where we are. ] (]) 12:36, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:Greg L misinterprets the results of the RFC. While the Val template is generally acceptable in that it can be altered to accommodate almost any format for which there is consensus, Greg L is the only one who considers the commas-left, thin-spaces-right format to be the best choice. A few others considered it acceptable but not superior to other choices. The outcome of the discussion was to avoid the commas-left, thin-spaces-right format. Val should be modified accordingly.


:I'm not sure why you're focusing only on the specific niche of science-related sources? If the scientific community chooses to adopt an unorthodox definition of the duration of the centuries, but most other sources follow the common definition, obviously the latter is more accurate. ] <sup>(], ])</sup> 13:45, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:I also call upon Greg L to abide by the argument he has often made with respect to binary prefixes (that is, follow external consensus rather than advocate formats that have not achieved external acceptance, and choose a format that has at least limited acceptance outside of Misplaced Pages to a format that has no acceptance at all outside Misplaced Pages. --] (]) 18:34, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
::{{ping|Chessrat}} the century beginning in XX01 is not {{tq|unorthodox}}, quite the reverse. As people above have said, it's the definition that has been taught for years, but one that I agree is increasingly being replaced by the century beginning in XX00 definition. {{tq|Obviously the latter is more accurate}}, well, no – as pointed out above, this definition leads to the first century having only 99 years, so can hardly be called more accurate. Orthodoxy and accuracy are not the important issues in my view; the most important issue is what most readers now think 'century' means, which does appear to be the XX00–XX99 definition. ] (]) 14:21, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:::Back in 2000 it was suggested that a year zero be created with (since years have variable numbers of days anyway) zero days. That way the first century would have 100 years in it. ] ] 22:06, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
::::At least we can all agree that that would be the ugliest possible solution. <span style="font-family:Avenir, sans-serif">—&nbsp;<span style="border-radius:5px;padding:.1em .4em;background:#faeded">]</span>&nbsp;(])</span> 08:26, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
::{{replyto|Chessrat}} Scientists put much thought into the matters that they comment upon, it's a poor scientist who states something as fact when they have no demonstrable evidence. So I would take a scientist's view over a newspaper's view any day. --] &#x1F98C; (]) 22:52, 3 January 2025 (UTC)


== RfC on the wording of ] ==
::* You must not have read the links I provided, above; they show widespread, overwhelming support for {val}. The consensus (not just me) on Misplaced Pages is that the techniques {val} uses for scientific notation and long strings is a good one that causes zero confusion. If you don’t like it, don’t use it. But please stop trying to delete mention of it or discourage its use. It serves a valuable purpose in technical articles. ] (]) 18:44, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
<!-- ] 15:01, 7 February 2025 (UTC) -->{{User:ClueBot III/DoNotArchiveUntil|1738940465}}
{{rfc|hist|lang|rfcid=6F3124E}}
Should ] specify the start of a century or millennium as a year ending in 1 (e.g. the 20th century as 1901–2000), as a year ending in 0 (e.g. the 20th century as 1900–1999), or treat both as acceptable options with the use of hatnotes for clarity in the case of ambiguity in articles? See the discussion above. ] <sup>(], ])</sup> 14:57, 3 January 2025 (UTC)


*The year ending in zero, which is nowadays the most common understanding. Whether or not there was ever a year zero is irrelevant, given that AD year numbering wasn’t invented until the 500s and wasn’t widely used until the 800s. ] (]) 21:21, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
===Delimiting numbers===
*As the 1st century is 1–100, the ] is 1901–2000, as its article says. Let us not turn this into another thing (like "billions") where English becomes inconsistent with other languages. —] (]) 22:22, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
* (no longer beating around the bush here): One source of periodic friction on MOSNUM is the delimiting of numbers. There are four or even ''five'' different ways of doing so. In Sweden, they teach school children ''three different methods'' (and two of them are “Swedish 1” and “Swedish 2”). To make a long story short: Misplaced Pages allows both British and American-dialect English (spelling) in its articles, so long as they are consistent within an article. However…<p>This practice of “your way / my way… it’s all just six of one / half a dozen of the other” doesn’t apply to numbers. Why? Misplaced Pages has gone through all this before many times, and new editors who come here don’t have the benefit of all that history and discussion. But it comes down to this: English-speaking Europeans are familiar and comfortable with a many different ways of delimiting numbers and the American style causes them no confusion whatsoever. Comma-delimiting might not be ''the most common practice'' for English-speaking Europeans, but they recognize what it means and fully understand the numbers. However, Americans are familiar with one and only one method; as a group, they have had no exposure whatsoever to other ways of delimiting numbers. So, ''especially'' for general-interest articles, in order to cause the least confusion, the American method of using commas to the left of the decimal point is to be used on Misplaced Pages. Scientific articles; particularly ones directed to a professional readership, are the only exception.<p>The argument that “Well, Misplaced Pages will just start using the Euro/BIPM method and dumb-ass Americans will simply learn” just doesn’t fly and it never will. Misplaced Pages doesn’t have that kind of influence; all that sort of attitude does is produce confusion. Our aborted attempt to push the world into the adoption of the IEC prefixes (kibibytes and KiB) amply demonstrated that. After three long years, the practice was no more well adopted throughout the world than before. All Misplaced Pages accomplished by letting itself by hijacked by a handful of editors who wanted to push the world into ''a new and brighter future with warp drive and membership in the United Federation of Planets™®©'' was to make our computer-related articles needlessly confusing. We ''follow'' the way the world works and can not presume to lead by example.<p>We can’t have MOSNUM subtly edited in a fashion that tacitly allows numbers in articles, other than science-related ones, to be delimited with thinspaces in place of commas to the left of the decimal point; it is unnecessarily confusing to too many readers. This is the way it has long been done and there has been no decision to change the practice.<p>As for delimiting with gaps to the ''right'' of the decimal point using {val} on high-precision numbers, particularly in engineering and scientific-related contexts where the distinction between numbers is important and the values actually have to be parsed and understood, that confuses ''absolutely no one''—even “sheltered Americans”. A value like {{val|1.6162523625|e=-35|u=]}} is no more confusing than the decidedly non-SI-compliant, five-digit delimiting used for mathematical constants (particularly in tables of constants), such as {{xt|{{gaps|3.14159|26535|89793|23846|26433|83279|...}}}}; everyone instantly “gets” it. It is a much-appreciated and much-needed touch that makes long strings of digits much easier to parse. Moreover, its technique of using thinspaces to the right is the only possible method that could be employed to solve the problem of long strings without upsetting the apple cart; it was either do nothing (and have absurdly long strings that can’t easily be parsed) or utilize the only logical available technique. ] (]) 18:28, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
*:Also, I do not understand what "hatnotes in case of ambiguity in articles" should mean: whenever any article uses the word "20th century", it should have a hatnote explaining whether it follows the centuries-old convention of numbering centuries or the "starts with 19 is 20th century" approximation? Perhaps it would be easier to outlaw the word "century". —] (]) 22:26, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
*:In short, '''oppose change'''. —] (]) 17:46, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
*First year of a century ends in 01, last year of a century ends in 00. This has been extensively discussed above. --] &#x1F98C; (]) 22:52, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
*The RfC does not make clear what specific change is being proposed to MOSNUM wording, and I fear will lead only to a continuation ''ad nauseum'' of the preceding discussion. For what it's worth, I '''oppose''' any change resulting in a century of 99 years. ] (]) 23:06, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
*'''Oppose change''' Century and Millennia begin in 01 and ends Dec 31, 00, like it always has and per the discussion above. Just because people make errors, like with Blue Moon, doesn't mean an encyclopedia has to. Why would we change from long-standing consensus? ] (]) 09:28, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
* '''Treat both as acceptable options.''' ] already explains both viewpoints, without describing one of them as "correct". Generally our business it not to arbiter truth (which in this case doesn't exist anyway, as either viewpoint is just a convention), but to describe common understandings of the world, including disputes and disagreements where they exist. ] doesn't privilege a particular POV here, and neither should ]. ] (]) 16:31, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
*:All of our articles on individual centuries mention only the traditional point of view where the first century starts in year 1 and each century has 100 years. There is no need for ] to do anything else. —] (]) 17:46, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
* '''Oppose.''' If this matters to you, convince the academic sources to adopt the change, then Misplaced Pages can follow. ] (]) 18:14, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
* '''Oppose change''' I prefer centuries to begin with --01 and end with --00. I'll not bother with any arguments, since I think this boils down to personal preference. I do oppose allowing both options, as that leads to confusion and edit wars. ] 18:20, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
*:Why is it personal preference to favour 1-100 AD over 1 BC-99 AD? The latter choice leads to the first century BC running from 101 to 2 BC. I find the asymmetry highly unorthodox (and hence hard to justify). ] (]) 12:37, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
*::You wouldn’t start at 1BC for the first century AD in either case though. You would just treat “century” as the name for the period, and ignore that it only has 99 years. <span style="font-family:Avenir, sans-serif">—&nbsp;<span style="border-radius:5px;padding:.1em .4em;background:#faeded">]</span>&nbsp;(])</span> 19:22, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
*:::You seem to be saying the choice between a century (the first, whether ] or ]) of 99 or 100 years amounts to personal preference. Do you have credible sources showing they are equally valid? ] (]) 19:23, 7 January 2025 (UTC)
*'''Oppose treating both as acceptable''' This would lead to endless confusion. ] (]) 22:02, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''' change; century starts at ###1 and ends ###0 <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 23:18, 5 January 2025 (UTC)</small>
* '''Strongly oppose''' any change resulting in more than one definition of a century. The reasons seem self-evident, and others have spelt them out above. In a nutshell, such a change would be a retrograde step, against the spirit of the MOS. ] (]) 23:21, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
*'''Just use '00s.''' Why on Earth should MoS <em>ever</em> encourage using wording that will be misunderstood by many or most people? To most people, "20th century" means 1900-1999. To pedants of history, it means 1901-2000. Cool. We should try to not confuse either of those groups. If I had to pick one, I'd say confuse the pedants, but fortunately we don't have to pick, because a third option exists: "1900s" (etc.). That's the phrasing I've always used on Misplaced Pages, for this exact reason. It's consistent with how we refer to decades (see vs. ). It's universally understood. It avoids silly arguments like this one. Let's just do that. <span style="font-family:courier"> -- ]</span><sup class="nowrap">&#91;]]</sup> <small>(])</small> 23:36, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
*:And to put this in terms of what the wording should be, I would suggest something like {{tq2|Because phrases like {{!xt|the 18th century}} are ambiguous (sometimes used to mean 1700–1799, sometimes 1701–1800), phrases like {{xt|the 1700s}} are preferable. If the former is be used—for instance, when quoting a source—an explanatory note should be included if the two definitions of ''n''th century would lead to different meanings.}} <span style="font-family:courier"> -- ]</span><sup class="nowrap">&#91;]]</sup> <small>(])</small> 23:52, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
*::Is this a joke? <small>Sorry if I ruined it by asking.</small> <span style="font-family:Avenir, sans-serif">—&nbsp;<span style="border-radius:5px;padding:.1em .4em;background:#faeded">]</span>&nbsp;(])</span> 23:56, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
*:::No? From any descriptive point of view, there is no widely-accepted definition of "''n''th century". Some Wikipedians thinking there <em>should</em> be a widely-accepted definition doesn't make it so. And MoS should not be in the business of encouraging ambiguous wording. Instead we should encourage solutions that avoid ambiguity, ]. <span style="font-family:courier"> -- ]</span><sup class="nowrap">&#91;]]</sup> <small>(])</small> 00:05, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
*::::Ah, sorry. This is all just not the question at hand though, and it directly contradicts current (well-positioned) guidance.
*::::In any case, I’m sure we’re better off with the ambiguity between 1900–1999 and 1901–2000, which, in most cases, is not really a problem. Your idea introduces an ambiguity between 1900–1910 and 1900–. This is explicitly called out by ], of course. And does “1700s” even solve the issue of which year to start or end with? It {{em|implies}} that the century starts with 1700, but not explicitly. <span style="font-family:Avenir, sans-serif">—&nbsp;<span style="border-radius:5px;padding:.1em .4em;background:#faeded">]</span>&nbsp;(])</span> 03:05, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
*:We should avoid use of "1900s" to mean anything other than 1900-1909. ] (]) 12:29, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
*::What's funny is I have never heard people talk about the 1500s, 1600s, 1700s, 1800s or 1900s, as anything except Jan 1 00 to Dec 31 99. Always 100 years. I checked and I'm shocked our wikipedia article only covers 1900-1910. The only time it gets used as a decade is when the parameters are specifically talking about the 1930s, 1920s, 1910s, and 1900s. Without that fine tuning it's always 100 year period. It would be used , or . Usually I would say the "first decade of the 1900s" with no other context. I would amend your comment to say we should never leave 1900s dangling without context. And that's only for 1900s, not anything else.] (]) 19:36, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
*'''Oppose treating both as acceptable'''; otherwise indifferent to 31 Dec 1999 vs 31 Dec 2000. This is a style decision, but one that affects a lot of content. To use both would be a terrible solution. <span style="font-family:Avenir, sans-serif">—&nbsp;<span style="border-radius:5px;padding:.1em .4em;background:#faeded">]</span>&nbsp;(])</span> 23:52, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
*'''Oppose change'''; continue using "20th century" for 1901–2000 and "1900s" for 1900–1999. ] (]) 03:48, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
*:Bad solution. How will readers know which system we are using when we say 1900s? Will they presume that the period ends with 1999 or 2000, or even 1909? <span style="font-family:Avenir, sans-serif">—&nbsp;<span style="border-radius:5px;padding:.1em .4em;background:#faeded">]</span>&nbsp;(])</span> 23:16, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
*'''Oppose change''' - The ''n''{{sup|th}} century is 01-00, you can feel free to use "the xx00s" for 00-99. Neither is prefered to the other, but the meaning is determined by which you use. ] (]) 04:53, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
*:Per the MOS, and as Dondervogel 2 most succinctly puts it above: {{tq|We should avoid use of "1900s" to mean anything other than 1900-1909.}} <span style="font-family:Avenir, sans-serif">—&nbsp;<span style="border-radius:5px;padding:.1em .4em;background:#faeded">]</span>&nbsp;(])</span> 19:25, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
*::I somewhat disagree. It is a very ambiguous term so we should avoid use of 1900s at all without context, because obviously readers will be confused. I sure would since I would immediately think a 100 year period just like 1800s , 1700s, and 2000s (25+ years thus far). ] (]) 07:16, 7 January 2025 (UTC)
*:::You mean 24 years so far, right?
*:::And yes, “avoiding 1900s at all” also jives with what I said. <span style="font-family:Avenir, sans-serif">—&nbsp;<span style="border-radius:5px;padding:.1em .4em;background:#faeded">]</span>&nbsp;(])</span> 23:14, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''' treating them both as acceptable. I imagine this could lead to headaches concerning inclusion in categories, list articles, timelines, templates, etc. ] (]) 01:23, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
*'''Oppose change''' People have been getting it wrong for centuries (pun not intended) and will probably continue doing so for centuries. Intuition says that the year 2000 was the start of the new century but intuition is wrong. Just like people believing that light-years and parsecs are a measure of time (doing the Kessel run or otherwise) or trying to learn relativity, intuition is simply wrong. <u>All</u> authoritative sources for measuring time say that the new century starts in the year xx01. WP is only suppose to report on this. If we try to say that the year 2000 is the first year of the new century then we are actively entering the battle and are try to ]. <span style="border:1px solid blue;border-radius:4px;color:blue;box-shadow: 3px 3px 4px grey;">]&nbsp;<span style="font-size:xx-small; vertical-align:top">]&nbsp;</span></span> 04:12, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
*'''Keep XX1 as the start of a decade, century, or any other unit of year.''' It sounds ridiculous to have only the first CE century be 99 years long while everything before and after it remains at 100. —]&nbsp;(&nbsp;]&nbsp;•&nbsp;]&nbsp;) 18:34, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
*:I think they consider the ] to also have 99 years. ] (]) 19:15, 10 January 2025 (UTC)


It is high time to end this :
:*My position is that using thin spaces to both the left and right of the decimal when an article contains one or more numbers with 5 digits to the right of the decimal is preferable to Misplaced Pages making up its own format. It also my position that the practice of using thin spaces to the right and commas to the left looks especially asinine in the case of a number like {{gaps|4,046.856|4224}}. I will not change my position unless a reputable external source, such as a major style guide, which supports the {{gaps|4,046.856|4224}} format, is cited. --] (]) 21:22, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
:{{tq|When the encyclopedia of human folly comes to be written, a page must be reserved for the '''minor imbecility''' of the battle of the centuries--the clamorous dispute as to when a century ends. The present bibliography documents the controversy as it has arisen at the end of the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries, as well as a few skirmishes in the quarrel that has begun to develop with the approach of the third millennium.}}
:{{tq|The source of the confusion is easy to discern; ever since learning how to write, we have dated our documents with year designations beginning with the digits 19. Obviously, when we must begin to date them starting with 20, we have embarked on a new century! Haven't we? The answer is no, we have not; we have merely arrived at the last year of the 20th century. As historians and others involved in measuring time continue to remind us, there was no year 0. In fact, there has never been a system of recording reigns, dynasties, or eras that did not designate its first year as the year 1. To complete a century, one must complete 100 years; the first century of our era ran from the beginning of A.D. 1 to the end of A.D. 100; the second century began with the year A.D. 101.}}
:{{tq|While the period 1900-1999 is of course a century, as is any period of 100 years, it is incorrect to label it the 20th century, which began January 1, 1901, and will end on December 31, 2000. Only then will the third millennium of our era begin.}}
:{{tq|Those who are unwilling to accept the clarity of simple arithmetic in this matter and who feel strongly that there is something amiss with the result have developed some impressively convoluted arguments to promote their point of view. Baron Hobhouse, studying some of these arguments as set forth in letters published in the Times of London during the first few days of January 1900, found "that many of the reasons assigned are irrelevant, many are destructive of the conclusion in support of which they are advanced, and that such as would be relevant and logical have no basis whatever to maintain them in point of fact." He was one of several observers of the fray at the end of the 19th century who predicted that the foolishness would recur with the advent of the year 2000, as people began to look for ways of demonstrating "that 1999 years make up 20 centuries."}}
:{{tq|As a writer stated in the January 13, 1900, Scientific American, "It is a venerable error, long-lived and perhaps immortal." The shortness of human life is also a factor; as a century approaches its end, hardly anyone who experienced the previous conflict is still living, so we are doomed to undergo another round.}}
:{{tq|Astronomers have been blamed for some of the confusion by their adoption of a chronology that designates the year 1 B.C. as 0 and gives the preceding years negative numbers, e.g., 2 B.C. becomes -1, 3 B.C. becomes -2, etc. This system permits them to simplify calculations of recurring astronomical events that cross the starting point of our era, such as series of solar eclipses and the apparitions of periodic comets. However, this scheme affects only the years preceding A.D. 1 and cannot be used as a justification for ending subsequent centuries with the 99th year.}}
:{{tq|Some argue that Dionysius Exiguus made a mistake in his determination of the year of Christ's birth when he devised our present chronology in the sixth century, and that the discrepancy allows us to celebrate the end of a century a year early. However, even though the starting point of our era may not correspond to the chronologist's intention, it is still the point from which we count our centuries--each of which still requires 100 years for completion.}}
:{{tq|Nevertheless, as many of the entries in this list (from p. 45 on) will indicate, plans to celebrate the opening of the 21st century and the third millennium at midnight on December 31, 1999, have become so widespread that anyone who tries to call attention to the error is disparaged as a pedant and ignored. Perhaps the only consolation for those intending to observe the correct date is that hotels, cruise ships, supersonic aircraft, and other facilities may be less crowded at the end of the year 2000.}}
] (]) 18:04, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
*'''Oppose change.''' ] ] 11:46, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
*'''Don't break the calendar for exactly zero benefit'''{{snd}}There's no need to stage a revolt against the counting numbers and anyone who wants to extend discussions back to the epoch or beyond. There is one system that is consistent, and it is the one we use and should continue using. There's not even a problem that needs to be addressed. Aren't we on Misplaced Pages? This is the place where many often learn that a thing is a certain way and why, and I am not sure why that didn't happen here. <span style="border-radius:2px;padding:3px;background:#1E816F">]<span style="color:#fff">&nbsp;‥&nbsp;</span>]</span> 12:00, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
*'''To get literal''', the current calendar under discussion pertains to the life of Jesus. Ideally it starts when Jesus was born, 00:00, and he turned one-year-old on January 1, 1. Now, say he lived a long life and made it to 100. He would have been 100 on January 1, 100. At that point, the second his ] turned over on January 1, 100, his new century would begin. The first century was literally over on January 1, 100, and a new one started immediately and ran from 100-200. etc. Saying the first century was 99 years is incorrect, it was 100, but then the second century started immediately. I'd have to go with a split-second past midnight on January 1, 2000, as the start of the 21st century, per logic and common sense. ] (]) 13:30, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
*:Nice theory, except for the minor detail that there was no year zero, meaning that on 1 January 1, your hypothetical Jesus would have been 1 day (not 1 year) old. ] (]) 13:42, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
*::That's one way of looking at it, and the other is that Jesus's birth started the clock rolling towards his turning 1-year-old on 1-1-1. ] (]) 14:42, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
*:::So by your "other way" he was 1 year old throughout 1 CE. So in what year was he six months old? It would have to be 0 CE, but there isn't one. It simply doesn't work. ] (]) 16:38, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
*::::Unless our baby Jesus was born on 1 Jan of 1 BC (we have invented a fictitious baby so we can assign him any date of birth we want). Then we have a first century running from 1 BC to 99 AD. While highly unconventional, it could be entertained until you realise the 1st century BC would have to run from 101 BC to 2 BC. It works but it's silly, and (more to the point) lacks RS to support it. ] (]) 17:23, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
*:::::Insofar a he is likely to have existed, anyway, he was most probably born in 4 BC, since the calculations used five hundred years later to fix the BC/AD break point contained an error. So this is all nonsense, anyway; the first century was itself centuries in the past - probably eight or nine - before people started calling it that. And most people will continue to see 1900 as the start of the 20th C and 2000 as the start of the current one, whatever. ] (]) 18:29, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
*::::::The bible is very clear on this point: he was born ''after'' the Roman census in 6 AD (Luke 2:1-4) and ''before'' the death of King Herod in 6 BC (Matthew 2) ] ] 06:06, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
*:::::::I think you mean the ] in 6 BC, while ] gives Herod's death as c. 4 BC. ] 14:56, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
*::::::::That would make for a more consistent timeline. Forgetting our fictional baby, are you saying the Real McCoy was born between 6 and 4 BC? ] (]) 15:21, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
*:::::::::That's what many sources I've seen say. See ]. ] 15:50, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
*:::::::::That make a lot more sense than being born before –6 {{em|and}} after +6. Although, if anyone could, surely it’s the son of God. <span style="font-family:Avenir, sans-serif">—&nbsp;<span style="border-radius:5px;padding:.1em .4em;background:#faeded">]</span>&nbsp;(])</span> 23:39, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
*::::Why would Jesus be one year old throughout 1 AD? The year 1 means Jesus was 1-year-old, Happy Birthday on 1-1-1, one candle on the cake. When Jesus was six months old he was 1/2 AD. The point of using BC and AD, ] and ], logically informs that the time before Jesus's birth, counting backwards, was "before Christ" (six months before his birth was 1/2 BC, etc.) The birth starts the count on both BC and AD. The "year" he was born would not matter, only the counting forwards and backwards. 1/2 AD when he was six months old, 3/4 AD at nine months old, etc., until reaching 1 AD and then beyond. Another point, since the 21st century was celebrated by the entire population of the Earth on January 1, 2000 - even most of the 2001 holdouts, never ones to pass up a good party, still celebrated on 1-1-2000 - ] for the start of the century and, ], and in all the reputable sources that recognized the date that the human race partied, Misplaced Pages probably should as well. But, then again, and '''Oppose''', the scientific community differs and happily celebrated on January 1, 2001, ordaining that Misplaced Pages should keep the academic calendar as well and forego the obvious. ] (]) 02:47, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
*:::::You can keep discussing this forever. Come 2100, when almost all of us will no longer be editing on here, the large majority of people will be marking the turn of the century. ] (]) 15:09, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
*::::::Nice crystal ball you have there. ] 15:52, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
*:::::{{re|Randy Kryn}} For the sake of argument, if Jesus was born on 25 December 1 BC, he would have been six days old on 1 January AD 1, and one year old on 25 December AD 1. That would place the 100th anniversary of his birth on 25 December AD 100. ] 15:15, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
*::::::But 25 December is irrelevant, and is hence ignored by those faiths, such as Islam, that recognise Jesus as an earlier prophet. December 25 is an entirely fabricated date, chosen to override the pre-existing pagan midwinter festivals widely observed in Europe during the early Christian era. If early historians were four to six years out on the year Jesus was purportedly born, they are hardly likely to have any information whatsoever as to the date. ] (]) 15:21, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
*:::::December 25 has nothing to do with this. The people who created this BC-AD concept were going by the moment that Jesus was born (or conceived, whatever they decided was the starting point), never mind the "correct date", in essence calling that Day One. Then, 365 days later, year 1 ended and year 2 immediately began. The same with BC, from the moment of Jesus' birth to everything that came before was BC, and one year previously was automatically 1 BC, ten years was 10 BC, etc. By calculating that the day of Jesus' birth was the start of the calendar, logic dictates that the first year ended on his first birthday. 1 A.D. Nothing is broken here, except that they made a guess at Jesus's birthday when they made the calendar. The first century of 100 years ends on the 100th anniversary of Jesus' birth, 1-1-100, and the second century began immediately. There is no "year 0", a year 0 isn't needed, when Jesus was six months old it was 1/2 A.D. The absence of a year 0 is incorrect, the creator of the calendar took it as a moment in time (a birth, then start the clock). ] (]) 10:28, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
*:::::"he turned one-year-old on January 1, 1".. No, that's not how that works. The year 1 AD is the equivalent of the first year of his life. He would not be 1 year old until it ended. ] (]) (]) 14:17, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
*'''Oppose'''. Only ignorant people think the century begins with the 0 year. Is it that difficult to appreciate that there was no year 0! -- ] (]) 11:44, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
*:However, few people will doubt that there was a year 2000. So the question of when the 21st century began it still unresolved. ] (]) 04:25, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
*:::If the 1st century began in AD 1, then the 2nd century began in AD 101, the 3rd century in AD 201, etc, etc, the 20th century in 1901 and the 21st century in 2001! People a century ago were fully aware that the 20th century began in 1901. It's only in recent years that people have seemingly become unable to grasp the system. I should also point out that we naturally count in multiples of 10: 1 to 10, 11 to 20 and 21 to 30, not 10 to 19 and 20 to 29. -- ] (]) 11:16, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
*::Looks resolved by consensus to me. ] (]) 06:59, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
*:::Yes, this has consensus, but nobody has actually refuted my discussion points above. There is no need for a year 0, the "point of zero" was when Jesus was born (which started the clock). He was 1 year old on 1-1-1. And so on. {{u|Necrothesp}} calls me ignorant, so I'd like them to comment if they would on the analysis of why year 1 started exactly a year after the birth of Jesus. Thanks. ] (]) 11:08, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
*::::You presumably do know that the year before AD 1 was 1 BC? We're talking history here, not religion. Basing the calendar on the supposed year of Jesus's birth is pure convention. But the facts are that in the modern dating system 1 BC was followed by AD 1 with no weird gap. Therefore, the 1st century AD began on 1 January AD 1, and the new century has begun on 1 January AD X(X)01 ever since. -- ] (]) 11:16, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
*::::::BC literally means "before Christ". Year 1 B.C. would be a year before Christ. Year 1 AD would fall on his first birthday. There is no weird gap. BC was created without regard to previous calendars, it just shifted all of the years before Jesus' birth and after Jesus' birth to a new counting system. This has nothing to do with religion or the exact year or date that is now believed to be Jesus's true birthday, it was just how the people who created this system decided to place their 0: the moment Jesus was born. As I say above, I agree with the consensus here, mainly because science has, for some reason, gone along with 2001 etc. being the start of a new century. It wasn't, but that counting system has enough support to continue to represent this mistake in scientific and encyclopedic literature. ] (]) 11:36, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
*:::::::There is I believe no year zero because the Roman's (whose numerals we used) had no concept of Zero, there was no zero year, it was 1&nbsp;BC then 1&nbsp;AD. ] (]) 12:54, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
*::::::::But whether or not there was a year zero is pretty much irrelevant, except to the pedants overrepresented amongst our editor base. People are quite happy that the ‘1930s’ refers to 1930-39 and the ‘1630s’ to 1630-39, yet if you follow that right back the first decade only had nine years. So what? Stuff that happened, or works that were produced, in 2000 are widely referred to - including in WP articles - as being of the 21st century, because that’s the way most people see it. ] (]) 13:58, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
*:::::::::You are confusing 2 different systems. Decades are named cardinally, centuries are named ordinally. The 1930s refers to 1930-39 for the simple reason those are the only years of the format 193X. However, the "first decade" refers to the first ten years of the system. Thus it means the years 1-10, just as the first century means the years 1-100. Decades and centuries are handled differently and do not line up. The 1900s decade was the years 1900-1909, and included one year from the 19th century and 9 years from the 20th. The first decade of the 20th century was the years 1901-10. ] (]) (]) 14:22, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
*::::::::::Yet, back here in the real world, nobody cares, and everybody ignores stuff like that. ] (]) 14:26, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
*:::::::::::The "real world" in your view presumably refers to "what ''I'' say" rather than "what is correct"! In ''my'' real world, the 21st century began in 2001! That's not being pedantic; that's being correct. In this fabled "real world", most people seem to get their "facts" from some nobody on TikTok; that does not make them right. -- ] (]) 15:44, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
*:::::::::::In the real world people also talk about things happening on "Friday night" when they actually occur in the early hours of Saturday. The encyclopedia still goes with the facts, though. --] (]) (]) 16:29, 14 January 2025 (UTC)


== mdy on pages that have nothing to do with america ==
::* That’s perfectly fine, Jc3s5h. Don’t write it that way then. A number like {{xt|{{val|4046.8564224}}}} is rare anyway. With that much precision, such numbers will often be in scientific articles where scientific notation might be more appropriate. Amongst all the above-cited discussions in the archives, there was another editor who felt as you do. We go with the consensus here on Misplaced Pages and the approval of {val} was (very) lopsided. The guideline advising editors that numbers like '''{{nowrap|1.6162523625&thinsp;×&thinsp;10<sup>−35</sup> meters}}''' are hard to parse and they should consider using '''{{val|1.6162523625|e=-35|u=meters}}''' is a sound one because it makes Misplaced Pages easier to read and understand. ] (]) 21:44, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
::**Thank you; as long as this is phrased so as to be clear that the answer to "I don't like {{gaps|4,046.856|4224}}" is "Don't use it then", not "MOS breach! MOS breach! shun this start-class article", a ''recommendation'' backed by a lopsided majority should be fine, and harmless. The present use of ''may be'' seems to achieve that, but I would value Jc3s5h's opinion. ] <small>]</small> 00:09, 19 August 2009 (UTC)


ive been seeing lots of mdy on pages that have nothing to do with the usa, like on media that was only released in japan, like the fds and lots of japanese exclusive video games
(unindent) When Pmanderson asks whether the present use of ''may be'', I surmise he is asking about this section:
<blockquote>
* Numbers with more than four digits to the right of the decimal point, particularly those in engineering and science where distinctions between different values are important, may be separated (delimited) into groups using the {{tl|val}} template, which uses character-positioning techniques rather than distinct characters to form groups. Per ] convention (observed by the ] and the ]), it is customary to not leave a single digit at the end, thus the last group comprises two, three, or four digits. Accordingly, the recommended progression on Misplaced Pages is as follows: {{xt|{{val|1.123}}}}, {{xt|{{val|1.1234}}}}, {{xt|{{val|1.12345}}}}, {{xt|{{val|1.123456}}}}, {{xt|{{val|1.1234567}}}}, {{xt|{{val|1.12345678}}}}, {{xt|{{val|1.123456789}}}}, etc. Note that <nowiki>{{val}}</nowiki> handles these grouping details automatically; e.g. <code><nowiki>{{val|1.1234567}}</nowiki></code> generates {{xt|{{val|1.1234567}}}} (with a four-digit group at the end). The <nowiki>{{val}}</nowiki> template can parse no more than a total of 15 significant digits in the ]. For significands longer than this, editors should delimit high-precision values using the {{tl|gaps}} template; e.g. <code><nowiki>{{gaps|1.234|567|890|123|45}}</nowiki></code> → {{xt|{{gaps|1.234|567|890|123|4567}}}}.</blockquote>


i just want the mdy stuff to be ONLY on usa related pages...
Let us set aside my objection to the {{xt|{{val|4046.8564224}}}} format for the moment; whether my interpretation or Greg L's interpretation of consensus prevails will become apparent in due course. The present version of the guideline states, or at least strongly implies, that the Val template conforms to "ISO convention (observed by the NIST and the BIPM)", but the template at present does not conform to the ISO convention. Furthermore, every example in this section has exactly one digit to the left of the decimal, so the non-conformance is concealed.


idk why we have to use multiple date formats here anyway... its just stupid
This is a falsehood. I don't think it has been pointed out until now, so it is an innocent falsehood. But over time, as the falsehood becomes better understood among editors of this guideline, it could ripen into a lie. --] (]) 00:28, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
:If there is a question of fact (assertions of fact are generally undesirable on guideline pages, because it provokes exactly this sort of discussion), would both of you provide citations? ] <small>]</small> 00:34, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
*Alternatively, can Jc3c5h propose a text which supports the use of {{tl|val}} - commonly but not without exception - but does not make those claims of fact?
*Is GregL willing to consider such a text? ] <small>]</small> 00:37, 19 August 2009 (UTC)


why cant we use just one... dmy for long form and iso 8601 for short form
:*In response to Pmanderson's request for a citation, states "for numbers with many digits the digits may be divided into groups of three by a thin space, in order to facilitate reading. Neither dots nor commas are inserted in the spaces between groups of three."


japanese date format looks similar to iso 8601 if youve seen it ] (]) 08:13, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
::As for proposing a text supporting the use of {{tl|val}}, I don't support that template at all until it is modified to not allow commas and thin spaces in the same number. (I have no objection to a version that provides a parameter to choose between the BIPM format and the customary American format.) --] (]) 00:50, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
:::I see that citation does address how to handle 4 digits (make a single group of 4); but one issue between you is how to handle 8 digits. {{tl|Val}} divides them IIUC 3, 3, and 2; what would you do, and can you cite it as ISO? ] <small>]</small> 01:14, 19 August 2009 (UTC)


:i did change a couple, like on the pcfx and .lb pages but im backing out of others because i dont want to be involved in edit wars or be accused of vandalism ] (]) 08:15, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::Septentrionalis, I suspect you are missing the point. Looking at 8 digit numbers, 1234.678 is fine. The format {{Val|12345678}} is fine if the article does not contain any numbers with 5 or more digits to the right of the decimal. The formats {{Val|12345678}} and {{Val|0.12345768}} should not appear in the same article. The formats {{gaps|12|345|678}} and {{Val|0.12345768}} in the same article are fine. --] (]) 01:29, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
::The relevant guideline has a shortcut, ]. People who's main editing activity was to go around imposing their favorite date format have been indefinitely blocked. ] (]) 15:46, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
::::Let me get this straight. That still leaves several possibilities to object to. Do you object to
::::*The use of gaps and commas in the same article?
::::*The use of gaps and spaces in the same number?
::::*The claim that (which of the above?) is ISO?
::::*All three?
::::Are you willing to let Greg use his preferred format, if you can use yours? ] <small>]</small> 01:41, 19 August 2009 (UTC)


* I believe this is covered at ]. ] (]) 10:14, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
== Arbitration-related comments ==
*:This issue is covered in the Manual of Style which stipulates what countries have which date styles. Here is what it says: A''rticles on topics with strong ties to a particular English-speaking country should generally use the more common date format for that country (month-first for the US, except in military usage; day-first for most others; articles related to Canada may use either consistently). Otherwise, do not change an article from one date format to the other without good reason''. Because English is not a legal language in Japan, you might find the Japanese use American date formats when writing English. Look for an English language Japanese newspaper and see what they use. ] (]) 12:46, 14 January 2025 (UTC)


:::It's because in English prose there are 2 dominant date formats: MDY used mostly by Americans and DMY used by most of the British Commonwealth. Both sides think that their version is the only correct and reasonable way and that anything else is stupid and wrong. So an article created by a Brit with DMY dates gets "corrected" by an American to MDY. And then "corrected" by an Australian to DMY. And then "corrected" by another American to DMY. And so on until all parties have a deeply embedded hatred for each other.
For everyone's information, I have initiated a discussion about behavior I have witnessed since editing restrictions were lifted for parties to the delinking case. --] ] 19:08, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
:::] was created so that once an article gets a format then it generally stays in that form and we avoid ]s (mostly - there are always die hard "do it my way" people out there).
:::We don't use Japanese YMD dates because no native English speaking country uses YMD in prose. Which is a shame because I love YMD after living in China. <span style="border:1px solid blue;border-radius:4px;color:blue;box-shadow: 3px 3px 4px grey;">]&nbsp;<span style="font-size:xx-small; vertical-align:top">]&nbsp;</span></span> 12:56, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
:::Previous discussions on this talk page have made it clear that if a country isn't a predominantly English-speaking country, either MDY or DMY may be used. It just doesn't matter what the English-speaking minority within the country under discussion usually uses as their date format. ] (]) 15:50, 14 January 2025 (UTC)

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Numerals in a sequence

'Phase 1' or Phase one'? This appears to be a case that's not explicitly covered.

The AP Stylebook recommends using figures for sequences in its section on "Numbers": "Also use figures in all tabular matter, and in statistical and sequential forms", from which I infer that for sequences, such as 'phase 1', figures should be used for clarity and consistency.

Similarly, chapter 9 of The Chicago Manual of Style advises using figures when referring to a sequence.

I propose adding similar explicit advice to this section of the MOS.

-- Jmc (talk) 20:10, 19 October 2024 (UTC)

  • As usual, what's needed before something's added to MOS is examples of this being an issue on multiple articles -- see WP:MOSBLOAT. Are editors not able to work this out for themselves on individual articles? Anyway, why does the word "Phase" need this in particular? Why not "Section" and "Part" and any other words like that? The advice from APA and CMS are great if you're making up a new sequence for your thesis, but that's not us. It's hard to imagine an article using a phrase like "Phase 1" or "Phase One" on its own -- that is, other than in imitation of the phrasing of sources. So follow the sources; for example, Economic Stabilization Act of 1970 refers to Phase I and Phase II and Phase III., because that's the form the Act uses. We're not going to override that in the name of consistency with other, unrelated articles. EEng 22:00, 19 October 2024 (UTC)
    To clarify: I'm using 'Phase' purely as an example. The issue of using figures for sequences applies to any sequence. including 'Section' and 'Part' - and other examples: "Game 3", of a sequence of nine; 'Chapter 9' of a sequence of 24; 'Week 4' of a limitless sequence.
    I raise this issue in the context of differing editorial practices in the British Post Office scandal article, where both figures and words have been used to reference the same phases and weeks of the inquiry. I sought guidance from the MOS and found none.
    I'd be content to follow the sources, without adding bloat to the MOS, if I could be confident that that's an accepted stylistic convention in this instance. -- Jmc (talk) 22:27, 19 October 2024 (UTC)
    Such names are very often established by authoritative sources and constitute proper names; we should follow the sources rather than renaming them. Per EEng, we only need a MOS guideline if our sources don't provide clear names and either there is dissent among editors or consistency across articles would be of significant benefit. In the Post Office case, I see the phases have been titled Phase 1, Phase 2 etc by the inquiry so unless the inquiry's inconsistent, we can follow that source. Still, I see that this is a live issue at that British Post Office scandal article, so it would be wrong to establish a new guideline or issue some sort of MOS talk-page ruling without the knowledge of the other editor; pinging MapReader. NebY (talk) 14:56, 20 October 2024 (UTC)
    Between May 1966 and December 1989, multi-episode Doctor Who stories could have titles in any of the four combinations of (i) "Episode ..." or "Part ..."; (ii) numbers as figures or as words. The decision as to which format to use was probably in the hands of the series producer, but in our articles about each story, we give the actual title shown on screen - except that where the on-screen title is all-capitals, we reduce it to title case. Certain Doctor Who reference books do the same, so we're following the sources. --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 18:18, 20 October 2024 (UTC)
    The question raised was "differing editorial practices in the British Post Office scandal article". Sounds like a matter of internal consistency, which is different. For all manner of things -- this being one IMO -- we might not need consistency among articles, but it does look bad within articles. Surely we already have a rule addressing that general issue tho? Herostratus (talk) 13:24, 21 October 2024 (UTC)
    I think we don't. In articles on TV series it's common to have expressions like "season 3" and "episode 7", which seem to go against our current wording (use words for numbers below 10). Gawaon (talk) 16:37, 21 October 2024 (UTC)
    It is indeed a matter of internal consistency and it does look bad, as Herostratus says. Within the one article (British Post Office scandal), we have (e.g.) both "Phase 3 hearings" and "Phases five and six". Is there in fact a rule addressing this general issue? -- Jmc (talk) 18:47, 21 October 2024 (UTC)
    From Misplaced Pages:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers#Numbers as figures or words: "Comparable values nearby one another should be all spelled out or all in figures, even if one of the numbers would normally be written differently." Unless you are dealing only with series with fewer than 10 seasons each with fewer than 10 episodes, it is more in line with MOS to give all season and episode numbers in digits rather than words. --User:Khajidha (talk) (contributions) 13:15, 22 October 2024 (UTC)
    True, but series with less than ten seasons aren't all that rare, and there are also miniseries with less than ten episodes. Gawaon (talk) 16:39, 22 October 2024 (UTC)
    Whether or not it's in line with MOSNUM, we frequently – I suspect in the vast majority of cases – give series/season and episode numbers in digits. I've been dipping into Misplaced Pages:Good articles/Media and drama#Television. Articles on individual episodes do routinely begin e.g. " the ninth and final episode of the first season" but with digits in the infobox. Articles on a season/series list episodes using digits, and articles on a show list series/seasons and episodes with digits, regardless of whether there are more or less than ten, in keeping with the examples in Misplaced Pages:Manual of Style/Television#Episode listing. Articles are often titled <show> season <n> where n is a digit, never a word, in accordance with Misplaced Pages:Naming conventions (television)#Season articles. Sampling our WP:Featured articles#Media, I see the same treatment in titles, infoboxes, and listings.I very much doubt that editors would accept changes to those FAs and GAs to bring them into line with MOS:NUMERAL, that FA and GA assessors will start to apply MOS:NUMERAL in such cases, that any move requests would succeed, or that MOS:TV and WP:TVSEASON will be brought into line with the current MOS:NUMERAL. Changing MOS:NUMERAL might be easier. NebY (talk) 08:20, 23 October 2024 (UTC)
    I agree, a small addition to MOS:NUMERAL might be a good thing. Gawaon (talk) 17:00, 23 October 2024 (UTC)
    Your final sentence doesn't follow from your statement. It would be more in keeping with the MOS to give all in words. MapReader (talk) 11:16, 23 October 2024 (UTC)
  • Generally concur with EEng and NebY. It's clear that certain conventions adhere strongly to certain things, and these conventions will be readily apparent from the source material about those things. WP is not in a position to impose an artificial WP-invented consistency on them that makes no sense for those familiar with the subject (e.g. referring to "issue number seven" of a comic book or "the three ball" in a game of pool). Where nothing like a consistent convention can be observed for the topic at hand, then MOSNUM already provides us with a default to fall back to: use "one" through "nine", then "10" onward. This is the case with centuries, for example. There is no overwhelming source preference for either "third century BC" or "3rd century BC" in reliable sources. (Books tend to prefer the former, journals use the latter more than books do because journal publishers are more interested in compression/expediency. Scroll through first 10 pages of GScholar resuls here and see how much variance there is, and how frequent the numeral style is compared to "traditional" spelling-out. That said, GScholar searches do include some books as well as journals.) Following our default system, we naturally end up with "third century BC" and "12th century BC". (Of course, our material doesn't perfectly follow this; our editors are human, not robots. Well, mostly.)  — SMcCandlish ¢ 😼  15:04, 24 November 2024 (UTC)

μs vs us

Which style I should use for micro seconds? Does μs relative to "Do not use precomposed unit symbol characters"? DungeonLords (talk) 04:44, 30 October 2024 (UTC)

The 2 characters "μ" and "s" are just fine. The precomposed symbols advice is to guard against particular fonts that combine them into a single character because many software readers for the sight impaired do not know all of these symbols.  Stepho  talk  04:53, 30 October 2024 (UTC)
But do use μ, not "u". The latter was something of an early-Internet halfassed approach, but we have Unicode now.  — SMcCandlish ¢ 😼  15:09, 24 November 2024 (UTC)

Day, date month format

Greetings and felicitations. I assume that such constructions as "Wednesday, 24 February" are discouraged, but I can't find it in the text or the this page's archives. (The comma seems unnecessary to me.) May I please get confirmation or refutation? —DocWatson42 (talk) 04:28, 4 November 2024 (UTC)

  • MOS:DATEFORMAT and MOS:BADDATE cover the allowed and disallowed formats. Unless the day of the week is vitally important then we leave it out.  Stepho  talk  06:16, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
    This specifically regards the "Hadaka Matsuri" article, and its Konomiya Hadaka Matsuri infobox, which includes the days of the week. —DocWatson42 (talk) 07:40, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
    Ah, the mysterious East. EEng 08:06, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
  • Salutations and hugs and kisses to you too.
    • If your question is whether day-of-week should be gratuitously included with dates for no particular reason, the answer is No. That is, if the day-of-week is somehow relevant to the narrative, sure, include it, but otherwise no.
    • Assuming we're in some situation where (per the preceding) inclusion of day-of-week is indeed justified, maybe your question is how to append the D.O.W.
      • If the date is February 24 or February 24, 2024, then without doubt the right format is Wednesday, February 24 or Wednesday, February 24, 2024.
      • According to "Elite editing" (whoever they may be -- search the text "inverted style" on that page), the corresponding answers for 24 February and 24 February 2024 are Wednesday, 24 February and Wednesday, 24 February 2024. To me that does seem right -- Wednesday 24 February 2024 (all run together, no commas at all) seems intolerable.
The question naturally arises as to whether MOS should offer advice on all the above. My answer, as usual, is provisionally No, per WP:MOSBLOAT. EEng 08:02, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
Looking at the article, the date is the 12th day of the Chinese year and the day of the week has no significance. I would remove the day of the week from all those dates in the infobox. For what it's worth, I spent most of the 1990s in Hong Kong/China. Major holidays based on the Chinese calendar treat the day of the week in the same way that we treat the day that Christmas falls on.  Stepho  talk  09:18, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
Okay—will do. Thank you both. ^_^ —DocWatson42 (talk) 09:21, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
The new 18th edition of The Chicago Manual of Style gives advice about commas in dates in ¶ 6.14. When giving examples they mostly give examples with words after the end of the date so the punctuation at the end of the date is illustrated. Some examples:
  • The hearing was scheduled for 2:30 p.m. on Friday, August 9, 2024.
  • Monday, May 5, was a holiday; Tuesday the 6th was not.
Jc3s5h (talk) 16:56, 4 November 2024 (UTC)
Concur with EEng on avoiding adding a rule about this, as more WP:MOSBLOAT. It's just a matter of basic writing sense, basic comma usage in competent English. Our MoS's purpose is not that of CMoS or Fowler's, trying to answer every imaginable usage question. Just those that have an impact on reader comprehensibility and/or recurrent editorial strife.  — SMcCandlish ¢ 😼  15:18, 24 November 2024 (UTC)

Spacing with percentage points

A question regarding spacing of percentage point (pp) usage. I have always assumed there is no space between the number and pp (e.g. 5.5pp not 5.5 pp), on the basis that you wouldn't put a space between a number and a percentage sign (5% not 5 %). There is no reference to this in the MOS, but the percentage point article uses it unspaced. It might be good to have it clarified in the MOS as I see regular changes adding spacing, which I am not sure is correct. Cheers, Number 57 23:49, 5 November 2024 (UTC)

  • MOS:PERCENT says "omit space".  Stepho  talk  23:54, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
    Perhaps I am missing something, but as far as I can see, it says to omit space when using the percentage symbol (%) but nothing about when using pp? Number 57 00:21, 6 November 2024 (UTC)
    Apologies, I missed the "point" word in your question.  Stepho  talk  01:49, 6 November 2024 (UTC)
  • % is essentially a constant factor (.01), but pp is more like a unit so my intuition says it should be spaced. I note that the basis point article uses a space before bp (mostly, anyway). I'll be interested to hear what others think. EEng 18:23, 6 November 2024 (UTC)
    You've got this back to front. Percent (%) is a standard unit symbol and should be spaced, whereas pp is a made up abbreviation, meaning you can put it anywhere you want, space or unspaced. I know MOSNUM says otherwise, which is WP's prerogative. In other words, if we need a rule, let's make one up and apply it, but there's no logic involved. Dondervogel 2 (talk) 21:06, 6 November 2024 (UTC)
  • Dondervogel, "Percent (%) is a standard unit symbol and should be spaced". Huh? It's not an ISO unit symbol, is it. No spacing in English, unlike French. On pp, I agree with EEng: space it. Tony (talk) 11:10, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
    Absolutely. When it comes to peepee, always space it . EEng 21:36, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
    Yes, "%" is an ISO standard unit symbol. Dondervogel 2 (talk) 12:45, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
    What is it the unit of? Gawaon (talk) 13:14, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
    Nothing. It's a dimensionless quantity. To the original q: I don't see "pp" used often, in fact rarely. It's probably better written out in full on first use, and if there are subsequent uses, follow the guidance at MOS:ACRO1STUSE. --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 19:58, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
    It's used widely in election infoboxes where there isn't space to write it out. Number 57 22:25, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
    I will answer Gawaon's valid question in two parts. The first part is a quotation from ISO 80000-1:2009 (emphasis added)
    • In some cases, per cent, symbol %, where 1 % := 0,01, is used as a submultiple of the coherent unit one.
    • EXAMPLE 4
    • reflection factor, r = 83 % = 0,83
    • Also, per mil (or per mille), symbol ‰, where 1 ‰ := 0,001, is used as a submultiple of the coherent unit one.Since the units “per cent” and “per mil” are numbers, it is meaningless to speak about, for example, percentage by mass or percentage by volume. Additional information, such as % (m/m) or % (V/V) shall therefore not be attached to the unit symbol %. See also 7.2. The preferred way of expressing, for example, a mass fraction is “the mass fraction of B is w B = 0,78” or “the mass fraction of B is wB = 78 %”. Furthermore, the term “percentage” shall not be used in a quantity name, because it is misleading. If a mass fraction is 0,78 = 78 %, is the percentage then 78 or 78 % = 0,78? Instead, the unambiguous term “fraction” shall be used. Mass and volume fractions can also be expressed in units such as µg/g = 10-6 or ml/m3 = 10-9.
    Notice the deliberate space between numerical value (e.g., 83) and unit symbol (%). Dondervogel 2 (talk) 22:10, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
    The second part is a partial retraction, quoting from ISO 80000-1:2022, which supersedes the 2009 document:
    • If the quantity to be expressed is a sum or a difference of quantities, then either parentheses shall be used to combine the numerical values, placing the common unit symbol after the complete numerical value, or the expression shall be written as the sum or difference of expressions for the quantities.
    • EXAMPLE 1
    • l = 12 m - 7 m = (12 - 7) m = 5 m, not 12 - 7 m
    • U = 230 ⋅ (1 + 5 %) V = 230 ⋅ 1,05 V ≈ 242 V, not U = 230 V + 5 %
    The space is still there between numerical value (5) and percentage symbol (%), but I could not find an explicit reference to "%" as a unit symbol. I'm unsure how to interpret that change, but I'll report back here if I find further clarification. Dondervogel 2 (talk) 22:16, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
    I found this in NIST Special Publication 811
    • In keeping with Ref. , this Guide takes the position that it is acceptable to use the internationally recognized symbol % (percent) for the number 0.01 with the SI and thus to express the values of quantities of dimension one (see Sec. 7.14) with its aid. When it is used, a space is left between the symbol % and the number by which it is multiplied . Further, in keeping with Sec. 7.6, the symbol % should be used, not the name "percent."
    • Example: xB = 0.0025 = 0.25 % but not: xB = 0.0025 = 0.25% or xB = 0.25 percent
    • Note: xB is the quantity symbol for amount-of-substance fraction of B (see Sec. 8.6.2).
    • Because the symbol % represents simply a number, it is not meaningful to attach information to it (see Sec. 7.4). One must therefore avoid using phrases such as "percentage by weight," "percentage by mass," "percentage by volume," or "percentage by amount of substance." Similarly, one must avoid writing, for example, "% (m/m)," "% (by weight)," "% (V/V)," "% (by volume)," or "% (mol/mol)." The preferred forms are "the mass fraction is 0.10," or "the mass fraction is 10 %," or "wB = 0.10," or "wB =10 %" (wB is the quantity symbol for mass fraction of B—see Sec. 8.6.10); "the volume fraction is 0.35," or "the volume fraction is 35 %," or " φB = 0.35," or "φB = 35 %" (φB is the quantity symbol for volume fraction of B—see Sec. 8.6.6); and "the amount-of-substance fraction is 0.15," or "the amount-of-substance fraction is 15 %," or "xB = 0.15," or "xB = 15 %." Mass fraction, volume fraction, and amount-of-substance fraction of B may also be expressed as in the following examples: wB = 3 g/kg; φB = 6.7 mL/L; xB = 185 mmol/mol. Such forms are highly recommended (see also Sec. 7.10.3).
    • In the same vein, because the symbol % represents simply the number 0.01, it is incorrect to write, for example, "where the resistances R1 and R2 differ by 0.05 %," or "where the resistance R1 exceeds the resistance R2 by 0.05 %." Instead, one should write, for example, "where R1 = R2 (1 + 0.05 %)," or define a quantity Δ via the relation Δ = (R1 - R2) / R2 and write "where Δ = 0.05 %." Alternatively, in certain cases,the word "fractional" or "relative" can be used. For example, it would be acceptable to write "the fractional increase in the resistance of the 10 kΩ reference standard in 2006 was 0.002 %."
    As with ISO 80000-1:2022, there is always a space between numerical value (e.g., 35) and the percentage symbol (%), but no mention of % as a unit symbol. Dondervogel 2 (talk) 22:38, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
    there is always a space between numerical value (e.g., 35) and the percentage symbol (%) – Maybe in NIST-world, but not here on Misplaced Pages (see MOS:PERCENT), so I don't see how any of that helps us with the issue at hand. EEng 23:29, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
    I was correcting a misconception that % is not a unit symbol when it is. At least it was until 2022. I find it best not to leave incorrect statements unchallenged or they take on a life of their own. Dondervogel 2 (talk) 00:24, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
    Um, OK, but you do realize that WP does not follow NIST's advice about spacing it, yes? EEng 00:44, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
    Yep, and I wasn't trying to change that. My contributions have been to
    • correct a factual error (yours)
    • respond to questions from Tony and Gawaon
    I have not weighed in on the main thread regarding percentage points because I don't expect my opinion (based not on NIST's utterings but on the ISO standards on which they are based) to be taken seriously, so why would I waste my e-breath? Dondervogel 2 (talk) 09:41, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
  • It is not conventional to space "%" in English. Nearly no publishers do this, and our MoS doesn't say to do this or incidentally illustrating doing this, so don't do this. "pp" here is a unit abbreviation for percentage point ("the unit for the arithmetic difference between two percentages)", so space it. % is not a unit abbreviation/symbol, but a quantity symbol, so it's in a different class. It's more like the ~ in "~5 ml". That the spelled-out equivalent "approximately", like the spelled out "percent", is spaced apart from the numeral is irrelevant.  — SMcCandlish ¢ 😼  15:24, 24 November 2024 (UTC)

Do we have to convert inches for wheels?

I see people adding conversions to mentions of screen sizes and wheel dimensions - is this really necessary? Even in Germany or New Zealand, automobile and bike wheels are universally referred to by inches; rim diameters are expressly defined in inches in the EU regulations. To me, adding conversions for these types of dimensions adds unnecessary clutter, harming readability for no return whatsoever. I haven't read the entire MOS today, apologies if I missed a mention of these situations.  Mr.choppers | ✎  17:24, 13 November 2024 (UTC)

It looks like sizing bike wheels in inches is not universal. I see many charts in the I-net such as this that use both metric and imperial/American units for bike wheels and tires. Whether the convert template handles them correctly is another issue. Donald Albury 17:43, 13 November 2024 (UTC)
On the matter of wheel sizes, not all are inches. See this post and my reply. Even for a conventional non-Denovo wheel, the dimensions are a bastard mixture: "195/65 R 15" means a tyre that is 195 mm wide on a 15-inch rim. --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 19:10, 13 November 2024 (UTC)
Yes, there is the Michelin TRX and the Denovo. Just as we wouldn't convert the "195" when we write 195/60 R15, I don't think we ought to convert the diameter either. I would treat all of these tire dimensions as one would nominal measurements, rather than inserting unnecessary templates. Bicycle tires, meanwhile, proved more varied than I was aware of.  Mr.choppers | ✎  04:33, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
I agree with Mr.Choppers on this subject. I think wheels sizes on cars are a compromise between the USA and the rest of the world. There are metric rims on older vehicles but pretty rare on new vehicles. Avi8tor (talk) 11:40, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
@Avi8tor: - I was actually triggered by you converting screen dimensions, but five minutes online showed me that the modern world has indeed begun dropping the use of inches for screens. My gut was wrong.  Mr.choppers | ✎  13:36, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
Many people around the planet know only millimetres, so it makes sense to have both. I notice in France the data information on television screen size have it in both inches and millimetres. Avi8tor (talk) 17:57, 16 November 2024 (UTC)

RfC Indian numbering conventions

There is consensus to continue using crore and lakhs when appropriate.

Most participants also generally agreed with SchreiberBike's conditions (or a variant) - Always 1) link it on first use, 2) include what it is a measure of (rupees can not be assumed), 3) also include conventional numbering, and 4) allow it only in articles about the subcontinent.

However, this RFC suffered from structural issues that a precise wording isn't agreed on yet. Any changes from status quo should go through a clearer future discussion or RFC on just that.

(non-admin closure) Soni (talk) 22:02, 24 December 2024 (UTC)

The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.


I am revisiting an issue that was last brought up 6 years ago here and settled without a strong consensus.

I think we should avoid using Indian numbering conventions unless it is needed for context. For instance, if we want to list the box office take of an Indian movie, don't use "crore", use "millions". This isn't about disrespecting a culture, it's about using internationally favored notation and unit conventions. We should use "millions" instead of "crore" for the same reason we favor meters over feet. There is no reason that India-related articles should be an enclave of Indian conventions. People who are not Indian will struggle with these things, it will weaken Misplaced Pages's role as an information tool for everyone.

This is not the same thing as currency. It is appropriate to list an Indian movie's box office take in rupees. Providing a US$ conversion is optional, but a good idea since the US dollar is widely used around the world as a reserve currency. But write it as "millions of rupees", not "crores of rupees". Kurzon (talk) 16:38, 16 November 2024 (UTC)

What's the common usage in english? GoodDay (talk) 16:45, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
I don't think most people in the US understand what "crore" is, and would not recognize it as part of the English language. The online Merriam-Webster dictionary says it means ten million, specifically, a unit of value equal to ten million rupees or 100 lakhs. I think most people in the US would not even understand that a currency is being mentioned.
--Jc3s5h (talk) 17:00, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
Not just people in the US. Nobody outside of India can be expected to know what a crore is. Kurzon (talk) 17:15, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
We use meters over feet? Where?

In non-scientific articles with strong ties to the United States, the primary units are US customary (pounds, miles, feet, inches, etc.)

Aaron Liu (talk) 17:50, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
You get extra points for saying "US customary" and not "Imperial". 😉 Isaac Rabinovitch (talk) 18:20, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
imperial :3 Aaron Liu (talk) 18:30, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
I agree with Kurzon, do not use "crore", use "millions". Misplaced Pages is for a worldwide audience. Avi8tor (talk) 18:03, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
Kinda like how US units are used for US articles, I don't see the harm in using "crore", and it's way more work to manually convert to millions every time a member of India's vast diaspora in the Global North adds "crore" to an article, not knowing our ManualOfStyle. Aaron Liu (talk) 18:19, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
Except we don't favor meters over feet — we use both. That's what the Convert template is for.
Speaking as a non-Indian, who can never remember what how many is a "crore": I'm fine with it, as long as the international unit is also used. Isaac Rabinovitch (talk) 18:18, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
We already make an exception for feet. I see no good reason for barring a second exception. State in crore and convert to a unit non-Indians can understand (millions of rupees?). Dondervogel 2 (talk) 20:48, 16 November 2024 (UTC)

The article for the French movie Les Visiteurs lists the budget as "9.5 million", using a point as a decimal separator. In France they use commas for this, ie "9,5 million". We don't use the French notation convention for France-related articles. Kurzon (talk) 17:14, 16 November 2024 (UTC)

Is it the French style to use that notation in English? A different unit elicits way less confusion than a reversed decimal separator meaning anyways. Aaron Liu (talk) 17:50, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
This RfC is clearly improperly formatted, Kurzon; thank you to our unregistered friend for pointing this out.
Oh come now. It seems to be developing nicely, I doubt that any editors are swayed by the wording. it's not perfect but perfect is the enemy of good and its good enough. Herostratus (talk) 04:47, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
That reply was before the appropriate discussion centers were notified and before discussion started to develop. It's not just formatting; it's that there was no prior discussion. Now we're effectively having both at the same time, especially when an informal discussion could've resulted in consensus without a time-consuming process. Aaron Liu (talk) 16:08, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
Consistency and clarity to our international readership are valid arguments in favor of prohibiting "crore" and "lakh". However, Aaron Liu makes good points about the fact that we allow local variation in articles with local ties, e.g. all of ENGVAR. I am unsure where I sit on this issue. I would like to see some Indian editors weigh in on this. Toadspike 19:58, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
I also agree that crores are too obscure (as are lakhs), with use limited to South Asia. Feet and inches, while retrograde and infinitely useless, were used across most of the world not many generations ago. The major unit in Japanese is 万 (man), which is 10,000, but we do not use that because most people wouldn't know it. Engvar is somewhat different: we cannot avoid choosing between "colour" and "color", for instance, whereas we can easily write the globally recognized "millions" rather than crores. As for User:Aaron Liu's comment: if someone adds crore, it will be there until fixed – it's not pressing enough of a problem to hunt down every instance.  Mr.choppers | ✎  20:03, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
Good point about 万 – I completely forgot that Chinese has similarly different units. I think that settles it – either we allow crore and lakh alongside the East Asian 万 and 亿 (which I think is ridiculous) and an infinite variety of customary units, or we allow none.
(Two counterarguments: 1. This is a slippery slope argument, which is a logical fallacy. To which I say no, we can't give only one country special treatment, we ought to be fair. 2. The East Asian units are non-Latin characters and thus more impractical than "crore". This is true.) Toadspike 20:15, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
On the subject of the myriad, I agree with Toads's second counterargument: there is no widely-recognized English translation for the unit in some "East Asian variant" of English; they just convert it to short scale in translations.

we cannot avoid choosing between "colour" and "color", for instance, whereas we can easily write the globally recognized "millions" rather than crores.

Part of my argument is that "crore" vs long scale is basically the same thing as "colour" vs "color": anonymous editors are going to add them. A ton. Expecting people to not use crore is like expecting people to not spell "colour". It's not pressing enough to hunt down, sure, but you're going to see sweet summer children adding crore into crore-free articles again and again and again. Aaron Liu (talk) 01:14, 17 November 2024 (UTC)
By the way, I've left a (neutrally-worded) note about this discussion at the Talk page of WikiProject India. Toadspike 20:16, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
Notified: Misplaced Pages talk:Manual of Style/India-related articles. jlwoodwa (talk) 01:04, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
  • Allow, but always ... exactly as Mathglot laid out above (other than, per Stepho-wrs and Redrose64, {{convert}} isn't actually the right template, or at least isn't presently). I would add a further caveat that these traditional Indic units (technically, multipliers) should be given secondarily not primarily, but I could live without that.  — SMcCandlish ¢ 😼  11:55, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
  • Allow when appropriate, under conditions set out by ScreiberBike. Also, this RfC does not meet WP:RFCNEUTRAL. ThatIPEditor 02:18, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
  • Do not allow crore et al. It's not only native English-speakers who haven't a clue what it means when reading India-related articles; it's non-natives too. Tony (talk) 07:32, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
    I don't get what native/non-native speakers have to do with the issue. Aaron Liu (talk) 12:21, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
  • Allow per ScreiberBike for South Asian articles. Johnbod (talk) 17:29, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
  • Allow All Indian academic/professional textbooks and all Indian reliable sources, with few exceptions for specific conditions, use lakhs/crores when denoting INR and millions/billions when denoting foreign currencies. Not allowing is not an option, unless editors want to disregard Indian readers. Using X million rupees is almost as uncommon in India as using Y lakh dollars. My suggestion -- for articles that use {{Use Indian English}} force editors to 1) link it on first use, 2) include what it is a measure of (rupees can not be assumed) with Indian comma separator at 00 after thousands and for articles that don't use that template force editors to always use millions/billions with 000 comma separator. — hako9 (talk) 03:01, 23 November 2024 (UTC)
    Strongly disallow use of Indian comma separator. That would only serve to confuse. We don't permit a French comma separator on English Misplaced Pages. The Indian comma would be much worse. Dondervogel 2 (talk) 09:11, 23 November 2024 (UTC)
    I concur entirely with Dongervogel_2 on this side-point; we cannot mix-and-match numeric separator styles. We've repeatedly had debates in the past about permitting "," instead of "." as a decimal point to suit the preference of some subset of readers, and the answer is always firmly "no", so this isn't going to be any different. I'm not a professional researcher in this area, but I have looked into the matter in the course of various style debates, and the evidence clearly shows Indian publications using "Western" number formatting systems (or whatever you want to call them) on a regular basis, though often alongside the Indic krore, etc., system. That is, it's just not plausible that English-using readers in/from India have any difficulty understanding our numeric material, especially after the rise of the Internet has exposed them to content from all over the world since the mid-1990s and pretty much ubiquitously since the early 2010 with the rise of mobile data.  — SMcCandlish ¢ 😼  14:49, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
    “it's just not plausible that English-using readers in/from India have any difficulty understanding our numeric material …” Of course the same could be said of American readers and the spelling of ‘colour’. — HTGS (talk) 17:41, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
    What isn't the same is how many editors will add "colour" into articles while most wouldn't add numbers in the Indian system. Aaron Liu (talk) 18:30, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
    I’m genuinely not sure what your point is? Editors are more likely to (erroneously) change spelling to ‘colour’, so that gives them more grounds for the MOS giving them parity with American English? I know we should be realistic about what we can control, but I don’t love that logic. — HTGS (talk) 03:18, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
    Yes, that or add spelling that says "colour" is what I'm saying. Aaron Liu (talk) 04:03, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
    Like I would campaign for navboxes to be placed in the "see also" section if it weren't so widespread and unduly investative to correct. The corrections for disallowing crore are the same thing to me. Aaron Liu (talk) 04:11, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
    On this attempt at a color false analogy: "What isn't the same" even more pertinently is that the cases aren't parallel in any way. Crore and lakh are not barely noticeable spelling differences of an everyday word used the same way in every single dialect of English; they're a radically different system of approaching large-ish numbers. There is no audience capable of reading en.wikipedia for whom either colour or color is impenetrable. If HTGS's pseudo-analogy is intended to suggest that ENGVAR should be undone on the same basis that we would rejecte or further restrain use of crore and lakh, that doesn't work since they're not actually analogous at all, plus the fact that not a single element of MoS is more dear to the community than ENGVAR; it is never, ever going away. If HTGS isn't actually suggesting we get rid of ENGVAR but is instead trying to suggest that opposition to crore is pretty much the same as advocating the death of ENGVAR, that's not cogent either, for the same false-analogy reason plus scoops of slippery slope, overgeneralization, and argument to emotion fallacies plopped on top. Aaron Liu's original "what isn't the same" point is that most editors will use color or colour as contextually appropriate in our content, yet very few will ever add lakh or crore to an Indic-connected article. That could be argued to be suggestive of a de facto community consensus already existing against those units' use at en.wikipedia. While it's worth considering, it's clouded by WP:SYSTEMICBIAS in that a comparatively small percentage of our editors are from India or its immediate environs, so the statistics are probably not usefully comparable even if they could be gathered with certainty. I would suggest that the reasons to rarely use crore/lakh and to always convert when used at all, has to do with end-reader comprehensibility, not with editor preference or usage rates.  — SMcCandlish ¢ 😼  12:54, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
    Because, the fact is, we aren’t using varieties of English solely to ensure accuracy or intelligibility. They are also being used to avoid recreating the Anglo-American hegemony that exists in published English, and to foster a connection in the community with the most interest in the subject. — HTGS (talk) 18:05, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
    This is not MakeLocalsAsHappyAsPossiblePedia or EngageInCrossCulturalFeelGoodBackscratchingPedia or RightGreatWrongsPedia. It may be unfortunate in some sense that a "Western" (now globally internationalized) enumeration system dominates nearly everywhere (with arguably more benefits than costs), but it is a fact. And it has nothing to do with "Anglo-American" anything, being the same system used by the French and the Russians and the Japanese and so on, and predating both America and England and even the English language, going back to ancient Eurasia very broadly, from the Rome to China. (There's an incidental British correlation of course: it was largely the English, along with the Dutch, who pushed this system in India. That makes it socio-politically and emotively connected to India–UK and Indian–Western relations, but it is not an Anglic counting system and we are not to be confused by sentiment.) More to the point, the "job" of this site is to communicate clearly with as many English-competent readers as possible. The simple fact is that virtually no one outside of the Subcontinent and nearby islands (plus first-generation emigrées therefrom), think in or even understand lakh and crore; meanwhile pretty much everyone in India and thereabouts also understands millions, and hundreds of thousands, even if it is not their immediate mental model and they have to convert a bit in their heads, like Americans with metric units. There is no bothsides-ism to be had here; the sides are not equivalent. Finally, it is not the goal of our articles on Indic culture, history, geography, economics, etc., to appeal to and primarily serve the interests of people in South Asia, but everyone. For this reason, I'm supportive of retaining the permissibility of crore and lakh in relevant articles as long as they are always converted into the now globally prevalent enumeration system, and usually with that first unless there's an important contextual reason to use lakh/crore first. Best of both worlds: everyone gets to understand the material, and Indic numbering is not deleted. It's pretty much the same situation as American customary ("imperial") units of measurement: most of the world doesn't use or understand them, but we should not ban them, just always convert them to metric. (The only difference I can see is "wiki-political": our American editorial and read bases are so large that it would be very difficult to get consensus to always put American units second after metric even in articles about American subjects. That really should be the rule, but it'll be hard to get there.)  — SMcCandlish ¢ 😼  12:54, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
  • Do not allow crore - I am not convinced that this word is actually English, and this is the English-language wikipedia. It seems that this is a foreign word that is used alongside English in areas that have ties to the language this word is from. Even in these areas, it seems that English speakers there fully understand what "millions", "thousands", etc mean, and there have been attestations linked above where they use both, presumably to help English speaking people understand what number is being referred to. My perspective here is colored by being an American expat living in Japan... in day-to-day speech, I will sometimes mix the languages and say "Oh, this costs 3 man yen." But I am under no circumstances thinking that "man" meaning "ten thousand" is English. I'm using another language's word. That's what it looks like they are doing here. Fieari (talk) 07:01, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
    As an alternative, I would also accept allowing crore only if the "millions" number is included alongside it. Fieari (talk) 07:28, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
    "Gumption" is borrowed from Scots; it is English. "Chutzpah" is borrowed from Yiddish; it is English. "Powwow" is borrowed from East-American indigenous language; it is English. "Crore" is borrowed from Hindustani; it is Indian English. All of the above are attested by dictionaries, while "man" to mean myriads is not. Aaron Liu (talk) 18:28, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
  • Allow crore - my gut feeling is to disallow it because it is not English as understood by the majority of English readers (including native speakers from UK/US/Australia/etc and second language speakers from China/S.America/Europe/etc). However, crore and lakh are words that Indians practically think in even when speaking English. We have a similar problem where an article is marked as British English and has 99 occurrences of "litre" - an American will still add new stuff with "liter" because it is so naturally to them. In the same way, we will be pushing it up hill trying to get them to stop. So, we should let them use it in articles related to the Indian region but never on anything outside that region. Each first usage should link to crore and lakh so that the few non-Indian region readers have a clue what's going on. I would not bother with conversion to millions - once you learn that they are just putting 0's at the end it becomes easy enough in a short time and conversions just clutter up the article. But do not allow grouping like 1,00,000 under any circumstances. Stepho  talk  02:41, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
  • Don't allow crore. If there are people who don't know what "million" is, well some level of literacy is required here, yes. As to "link on first use", no, links are supposed to be "here's some extra/more detailed info about the subject if you want" not "you need to interrupt the flow of your reading and go off the page to understand this word". Herostratus (talk) 04:57, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
    Actually that's exactly what links are for. Readers who know the general topic well can just read an article straight forwardly. But readers new to the general topic are likely to come across words they don't know yet and can follow the links to learn. Eg, in car articles we often talk about the camshaft. If you are new to the detailed study of cars then you can follow that link and then return later.  Stepho  talk  06:09, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
    And if anybody thinks that a politely worded MOS rule will stop them adding crore and lakh then consider that at https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Nissan&diff=1256595427&oldid=1256557060 somebody added a MDY style date in spite of the article having 186 references in DMY style. I fix these (in both directions) practically daily. People do whatever comes natural and do not consider that any other way even exists.
    But I do feel a little better after my vent :)  Stepho  talk  11:35, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
    +1 and it’s worth reiterating that most advocates here are suggesting that the Indic value should always be “translated” into a Western value in parentheses, so most naïve readers would still be able to parse the article without following the link. — HTGS (talk) 06:21, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
  • Do not allow crore—India-related articles are for international readership. No one outside the subcontinent is familiar with crore. It is a disservice to readers to allow it. Tony (talk) 06:24, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
    If they are not familiar with crore they can read the conversion to millions. And if they also want to learn about crore they can click on the link. I see no disservice. Dondervogel 2 (talk) 12:49, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
    Perhaps some are not aware but English Misplaced Pages is heavily used in India. The Top 50 Report from 2023 had five items about Indian movies and movie stars. The latest week's most viewed Top 25 had 2024 Maharashtra Legislative Assembly election and Kanguva. According to Indian English there are 128 million English speakers there. If we say to basically never use crore and lakh, we are sending a discouraging, even insulting, message to many of our readers and editors. SchreiberBike | ⌨  13:51, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
  • Allow in articles with strong ties to India, provided that the conversion is shown at first use. Hey, we could even write In non-scientific articles with strong ties to the United States India, the primary units are US customary (pounds, miles, feet, inches, etc.) multipliers are Crore and Lakh. See sauce for the goose. Also, it is very relevant that a huge fraction of en.wiki readers are Indian. "ccording to a 2011 census, 10.2% of the Indian population speaks English. This figure includes all Indians who speak English as a first, second, or third language. 10% of India's population is approximately 145 million people." Twice as many as in the UK, half as many as in the US. --𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 11:49, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
  • Allow only with linking and conversion as per Mathglot. The most practical solution for both Indian and non-Indian readers. Chaotic Enby (talk · contribs) 23:41, 8 December 2024 (UTC)

Discussion

Maybe this can be solved technologically so that every user sees numbers in the way they are accustomed to? Alaexis¿question? 20:43, 8 December 2024 (UTC)

This could be done for logged in users, but the vast majority of readers are not logged in with an account. Similar solutions have been proposed for date style and variety of English, but they won't work. SchreiberBike | ⌨  20:50, 8 December 2024 (UTC)
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

Which era?

I'm inviting fellow editors to figure out whether Religious perspectives on Jesus should use BC / AD or BCE / CE. The issue is that the article mixes eras and when I went back to see which was first, I saw it originally used "BC/BCE" and it stayed like that for years. The thread: Talk:Religious perspectives on Jesus#BC BCE AD CE. Thanks! — Preceding unsigned comment added by Masterhatch (talkcontribs)

MOS:ERA applies so status quo ante should apply. (FWIW, Judaism and Islam have religious perspectives on Jesus of Nazareth, so the neutral style seems entirely appropriate.). --𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 00:18, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
Agreed on the last part. As for the procedural matters, all of our MOS:VAR principles ultimately default/fallback to the style used in the first non-stub version that used one of the competing styles, if consensus fails. MOS:STYLEVAR is the general principle, the root rule: Don't change from one acceptable style without a very good reason. If there is or you expect resistance, discuss to establish consensus. If you don't get consensus for your change (i.e., there is consensus against you), it stays the status quo ante. If there's no consensus on which would be better (which is often the case and likely the one in this case), then use the version established earliest. For particular things covered by MOS:DATEVAR, MOS:ERA, MOS:ENGVAR, WP:CITEVAR, we simply reiterate this principle and process more topically, and these ones also basically resolve to an additional rule: don't change that particular kind of style without establishing consensus first even if you're sure you've got a good reason and don't think there should be resistance.

The STYLEVAR process actually sometimes (namely when there's clearly no firm consensus in favor of the status quo ante, either) overrides the usual Misplaced Pages status quo ante principle, which in practice amounts to "fall back to whatever the discussion closer thinks is more or less a pretty long-term status quo". That usually works for a lot of things, but for these "I will win my Holy Style War or die trying" tedious cyclic bikeshedding typographic disputes, it has proven unworkable, because the dispute lives on and on, simply shifting in stages to: what constitutes a status quo; how long is long enough; whether interruptions in the use of the alleged status quo have reset its tenure; whether this *VAR-imposed consensus discussion was followed when the alleged status quo was imposed; if not, then whether that imposition pre-dated STYLEVAR requiring it; and yadda yadda yadda. There's just no end to it, because it's too often a super-trivial but deeply obsessive PoV-pushing exercise grounded in prescriptivist emotions (mixed sometimes with nationalist, or socio-politically activistic, or my-profession-vs.-yours, etc.). The style-war-ending default of falling back to the first major edit that established one of the competing styles is arbitrary (in both senses), but it is the end of it, and we move on to something more productive.

For this particular article: If "it originally used 'BC/BCE'" in the original post isn't a typo, and really does mean that the style was mixed from day one, then that's a rare edge case, and JMF's "status quo ante should apply" is probably the only reasonable approach. (Even from an excessively proceduralist viewpoint: If STYLEVAR and its application ERAVAR impose an overriding principle that in this case cannot actually be applied, then the default necessarily must be the normal Wikipedian status quo ante principle, even if for matters like this it tends to lead to re-ignition of the dispute again in short order. Not every solution is perfection.)  — SMcCandlish ¢ 😼  12:02, 23 December 2024 (UTC)

But what would be the status quo ante in this case? Surely you can't mean the mixed BC/BCE style? Gawaon (talk) 08:56, 24 December 2024 (UTC)

Four questions

  1. Can 24-hour clock be used in articles with strong ties to United States (I have seen no US-related articles with 24-hour clock) such as: "The Super Bowl begins at 18:40 ET?
  2. Can 12-hour clock be used with UTC time?
  3. How are primary units of an article determined if the article has strong ties to both US and Canada, as Canada-related articles always use metric units first? For example, Great Lakes is such an article, and it currently uses imperial units first, but it would be more logical to use metric units first as a Canada-related article.
  4. Why mixed units are not used with metric units? Why it is either 1.33 m or 133 cm, but never 1 m 33 cm? --40bus (talk) 23:04, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
    I'd add a fifth question: why does Misplaced Pages not use ISO dates, i.e. yyyy/mm/dd? They are becoming more common internationally. Skeptic2 (talk) 00:02, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
    1. I wouldn't recommend it.
    2. Probably?
    3. That should be decided on a case-by-case basis.
    4. No benefit for the additional visual or semantic complexity; that's part of the appeal of the metric system, right?
    5. English-language sources never use this format, and the English Misplaced Pages bases its style on that of other English-language media.
    Remsense ‥  00:58, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
    You write "English-language sources never use this format", but this is untrue. ISO date format is widely used in scientific publishing and it is standard in aviation and for machine processing. Have a look at the Misplaced Pages entry List of date formats by country. You might be surprised.Skeptic2 (talk) 23:35, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
    I personally use ISO format on my devices; if it helps, you can replace "never" with "almost never". Remsense ‥  23:36, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
  1. MOS:TIME says 12 and 24 clocks are equally valid. It's just that the majority of native English speakers use 12 hour clocks, so they choose to use 12 hour clocks. If you create an article (or are the first to mention times within an existing article) then you can choose. Don't change an existing article from one to the other. With the possible exception of US Army articles, you may get kick-back from readers not familiar with the MOS. See the WP:JUSTDONTLIKEIT essay.
  2. UTC is an offset. It is a separate question from how you format that time. UTC can be used with either 12 or 24 hour clocks. See MOS:TIMEZONE but it doesn't actually say much.
  3. Primary units are based on strong ties to a country. If you have multiple countries with a mix of units then you have multiple weak ties and no strong ties. Therefore we default to metric first, as per WP:UNITS. Only articles with strong ties to the US and UK get to use imperial units first.
  4. A major benefit of metric is that we can change from m to cm to mm to km just by shifting the decimal point. Splitting it into 1 m 33 cm makes that harder and is now rarely used in metric countries. It was more common in my country of Australia during the first 20 years after metrication when we copied our old imperial habits but it fell out of favour and we now universally say 133 cm, 1.33 m or 1330 mm as appropriate. Countries using imperial units tend to use split units because it is so hard to convert miles to feet, gallons to ounces, etc in your head.
  5. ISO 8601 dates are allowed in limited cases (mostly references and tables where space is limited). It is not used in prose because it is not yet common for native English speakers to use this in their day-to-day lives. Note that any other purely numeric format is strictly disallowed. See WP:DATEFORMAT  Stepho  talk  01:09, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
    (In terms of accuracy in my own answers, 2 out of 5 ain't bad right?) Remsense ‥  01:11, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
Being OCD helps 😉  Stepho  talk  01:58, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
I'm unsure how to medicalize it, but I'm certainly obsessive and compulsive, and it only helps somewhat! Remsense ‥  02:00, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
Answering #2 and #4 only
  • 2. No. The clarity of UTC is obtained only with a 24-hour clock.
  • 4. You could write 1 m + 33 cm if you want, but why make life so complicated? The plus sign is needed because without it a multiplication is implied (1 m 33 cm = 0.33 m).
Dondervogel 2 (talk) 07:43, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
The answer to Q2 will depend at least in part on whether UTC was chosen because it's local time or because it's the international time standard. It would make no sense to allow the 12-hour clock for events in London between March and October, but ban it for events between October and March. Kahastok talk 14:56, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
@Kahastok: I don't get this reply. The time of an events in London is given according to BST (= UTC+01:00) in summer and according to GMT (= UTC+00:00) in winter – normally without either qualification stated unless it is the weekend when the time changes. It the time zone matters (for an internationally televised live event, for example), the time is normally given both ways: in the local and in the international notations. (Or did you not realise that GMT is just another timezone, not a synonym for UTC though often used that way, especially by seafarers.) 𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 15:58, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
I don't accept that UTC is always distinct from GMT. Usually there is not enough information about the reasons a particular author used one or the other abbreviation to tell if the author intended a distinction or not. Jc3s5h (talk) 17:15, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
Well OK, if we're going to insist that the sub-second formal discrepancy between GMT and UTC is somehow vitally important (despite all evidence to the contrary) the split hairs do not count in the case of Lisbon, where the local time in the winter is defined as UTC, rather than just being UTC in practice. Why would we say that a winter event in Lisbon has to use the 24-hour clock, but a summer event does not?
For the record, I don't think I have ever seen a time recorded at 17:00 GMT (17:00 UTC) and I would like to see examples of that usage. Kahastok talk 19:48, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
and you never will, because it would be pedantic in the extreme. In fact most timestamps you see anywhere will be just one of (a) not stated, because it is for local use; (b) the local timezone (notation adjusted according to whether or not DST is in operation); (c) a poor third at "front of house" (excepting worldwide online systems like Misplaced Pages), UTC time. Use of both (b)&(c) at once is very rare, vanishingly so if b=GMT or even BST.
Jc3s5h is certainly correct for use of GMT in almost all sources pre this century and still quite a few recently – it will take 50 years to fall out of use as a world standard, I suspect. Perhaps more ... who would think that there are still people who insist on chain (unit)s?
Just to be clear, I am not proposing that we introduce an MOS rule mandating any notation. Just clarifying that GMT is not a synonym for UTC. 𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 20:25, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
If you weren't aiming to be pedantic in the extreme, why bring it up? And in particular, why claim - specifically in the context of GMT vs UTC - that the time is normally given both ways: in the local and in the international notations in situations where time zone matters? 'Kahastok' talk 21:22, 22 December 2024 (UTC) s
My 2c:
  1. Not just English speakers, anybody with an analogue wristwatch display does so. BUT (in the UK at least), train, bus and plane timetables are invariably shown using 24 hour clock notation. Basically, anywhere that it matters, where ambiguity might arise.
    1. The application of am and pm to 12:00 noon and midnight seems to be a perennial source of dispute, see 12-hour clock#Confusion at noon and midnight. Good luck with writing an MOS guidance that avoids that minefield.
  2. I was about to declare that UTC offsets never exceeds 12:00 so crisis, what crisis? But I think there is a UTC+13:00 on one of the Pacific islands near the date line?
  3. Stepho, the use of imperial units in the UK is dying out, literally as well as metaphorically since they are preferred by the older generation. Don't be fooled by the rail-fans insistence on chains – all UK railway engineering has been done in metric since 1975. So no, MOS:RETAIN applies to UK articles too. Except articles under the aegis of Misplaced Pages:WikiProject UK Railways, of course. --𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 15:43, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
  4. I concur with Stepho's reply.
  5. Anybody who puts their boiled egg upside down should be taken out and beheaded immediately! (aka, ask us again in a 100 years time but it is a non-starter right now.)
Here endeth the lesson. 𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 15:40, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
You say, the use of imperial units in the UK is dying out. Is it therefore your contention that the British (or even just younger British people) all use kilometres really and just put miles on all the road signs to confuse foreigners? Kahastok talk 19:48, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
Because of the multitude of road signs and therefore the huge cost of moving from miles, that one will likely never change. In most other fields, however, there has been a progressive move toward using metric measurements in the UK over recent decades. MapReader (talk) 04:05, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
Never mind that other countries that went metric changed our road signs just fine.  Stepho  talk  05:09, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
Dondervogel 2@, why must UTC be 24 hours? UTC is just a timezone. Technically it is no different any other timezone and the other time zones can use either 12 or 24 hour times as they wish. Of course, UTC is a little special in that it gets used as the "universal" timezone. And when somebody wants to be unambiguous they tend to use 24 hour time. And when they want to be really unambiguous they write it as UTC rather than local. But a lot of that is just convention. They could equally well say 4:00 pm UTC and still be very precise and unambiguous.
Also, why do you need the "+". In the 1970s in Australia (just after metrication) we used to see "1 m 33 cm" a lot. I've never seen anyone think that it was multiplication. It was more likely from the habit of doing "4 ft 7 in". Once we learnt that writing it as 1.33 m or 133 cm made conversion between them trivial (just shift the little dot), we dropped the complication of mixed units.  Stepho  talk  05:09, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
  • UTC is not a time zone. It's a time standard, and it uses a 24-hour clock.
  • In the language of the SI, symbols have special meanings. If you mean addition (as here) you need a "+" sign. In the absence of any other symbol, a space denotes multiplication. Outside the SI you can invent any conventions you want, and Misplaced Pages sometimes chooses to depart from the SI, via MOSNUM. I don't believe MOSNUM permits this particular departure.
Dondervogel 2 (talk) 08:30, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
Remsense, one reason Misplaced Pages can't rely on ISO 8601 throughout is that some articles express dates in the Julian calendar, or even the Roman calendar, and ISO 8601 only allows the Gregorian calendar. ISO 8601 is fine for airline schedules and hotel reservations, but it truly sucks for history. Jc3s5h (talk) 15:13, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
If we can't get Americans to switch to DMY, or Brits to switch to MDY, what hope do we have of getting both groups to switch to YMD? --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 00:03, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
I think the biggest problem with YMD, besides unfamiliarity, is that you frequently want to suppress the Y part when it's understood, and that's harder to do when it's at the start. --Trovatore (talk) 00:14, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
I think the UN should enforce use of DMY worldwide on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, MDY on Tuesdays and Thursdays, and of course dedicate the weekends to YMD. Remsense ‥  00:20, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
Whaaaaat? Why would we want the least fun format on the weekend?  — SMcCandlish ¢ 😼  09:02, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
Year-first encourages us to meditate on the long term while many are less occupied at work. Remsense ‥  08:59, 24 December 2024 (UTC)
My responses to these questions would be:
  1. There is no strong tie of "18:40" format to the US, or the UK, or whatever. It's a format used in a variety of military, otherwise-governmental (e.g. transport/transit scheduling), and sometimes scientific and a few other contexts, and that's true inside and outside the US. It's a completely abnormal format outside of those kinds of contexts, and people don't use it on an everyday basis (that I know of; maybe there is some English-using country in which it has been so aggressively imposed that it's become an everyday norm there and people don't know what "3 pm" means any more, but I'm not aware of such a place). MOS:NUM grudgingly permits its use, but 24-hour format verges on "user-hateful" and should be avoided in most circumstances (i.e. where it's not an established norm for the subject in question).
    • On JMF's side point about "12:00 pm", MoS could easily have a rule about this, just to settle the confusion, which is common among the general populace, but not among reliable sources on time and writing, in which it virtually always corresponds to "12:00" in 24-hour time, with "12:00 am" being "00:00". MoS saying something about it, though, should be to avoid it in favor of "midnight" and "noon", because confusion among everyday people persists. (My city is gradually changing all of its "No Parking 12 AM – 6 AM, Street Cleaning, Tu, Th" signs to "No Parking 12:01 AM – 6:01 AM, Street Cleaning, Tu, Th" because of this factor).
  2. Meaningless, confused question. As Stepho-wrs explained, UTC is an offset, not a format. There's a standardized way of writing the name of a UTC time-zone offset, e.g. as "UTC+05:00", but that's not relevant to how times are used or referred to (in various styles) for typical human consumption. Likewise, the Unicode name of "@" is "U+0040 @ COMMERCIAL AT", but this has no implications for use of the symbol or for plain-English references to it; writing "the at-sign" is not an error. When WP puts "3:05 pm, February 3, 2002 (UTC)" in someone's sig to conform to their date settings in the WP "Preferences" panes, that is also not an error.
    • Stepho-wrs (which surprises me, given the above) wondered why UTC offset names use a +. It's because the offsets run both directions, e.g. "UTC−05:00" is US and Canadian eastern standard time, and rendering the positive ones as "UTC 05:00" or "UTC05:00" would be problematic for humans and automation alike in various ways. The + isn't any more superfluous than the leading 0 on 00–09.
  3. A Canada–US squabble over ordering: A) Who cares? We have {{convert}} for a reason. B) This is a pretty good argument (from Stepho-wrs): "If you have multiple countries with a mix of units then you have multiple weak ties and no strong ties. Therefore we default to metric first, as per WP:UNITS." B) If that argument were not persuasive, then MOS:STYLEVAR still already covers this: When there are two competing acceptable styles, do not change from one to the other without an objectively defensible reason. Try to establish consensus on the article's talk page about which should be preferred, if you are convinced a change should happen. Iff such a consensus cannot be reached, then default to whatever was used in the first post-stub version of the article (same as with ENGVAR disputes, and CITEVAR ones). So, we are not missing any rules.
  4. It's "1.33 m" (not "1 m 33 cm") primarily because that is how the metric system is internationally standardized and how it is used in the real world, rather consistently. The two-units version is also less concise, and annoyingly repetitive because of how the units are named. And the system is designed to be decimal from the ground up. Thus Steoph-wrs observation: "Once we learnt that writing it as 1.33 m or 133 cm made conversion between them trivial (just shift the little dot), we dropped the complication of mixed units." It's not WP's role to treat occasionally-attestable but very disused variants away from a near universal system as if they had become norms and must at all costs be permitted. (Much of MoS's role is eliminating unhelpful variation that is confusion or which causes cyclic dispute, even if we settle on something arbitrary; but most of MOS:NUM is not arbitrary but standards-based.) As for US customary (or "imperial" units, never mind the British empire doesn't exist any longer and what's left of it metricated a long time ago), you can find decimal uses of it for various purposes in real-world publications (e.g. "0.35 in"), but it tends to be for special purposes, like establishing margin widths when printing on non-metric paper, and in electronic media when calculation or sorting might be needed. But the typical use of such units is in "3 ft 7 in" form because they are unrelated units, and because the two-unit split format is deeply conventionalized, including in various industries like construction. That's not true of "3 m 7 cm".
    • I don't buy Dondervogel_2's "multiplication implied" argument. Virtually no one outside of some particular ivory towers (and even then only in specialist material that was explicit about it) would ever interpret any "# unit1 # unit2" construction, in any context, as a multiplication operation. The real world routinely uses formats like this and never means multiplication by it. E.g. look at the fine print on any laptop's or other device's power-brick; you'll likely see back-to-back, undivided measurement-and-unit-symbol pairs, like "12 W  3.7 A".
  5. Skeptic2's add-on ISO-dates question: WP doesn't use 2024-12-23 format (except for special purposes) because it is not a norm, anywhere (as an ENGVAR or other geographical or dialect consideration). It's only standardized within specific industries, systems, processes, organizations, and other specialized usage spheres. (I use it very, very frequently in web development and other coding. But it's not something I'd use in a letter or a novel or an op-ed, because it's a format for computers, and for precision and cross-language exchange among engineers and scientists, not a format for everyday communication.) I've never seen one iota of evidence of broad and increasing acceptance of ISO among the general public for daily use, in regular writing (though ability to parse it has likely increased in the last 30 years because of the Internet and the amount of people's exposure to code that uses it). But it does not match anyone but maybe an ultra-nerd's English-language parsing. If you're American, probably (unless you are older and rural) what you think and say aloud to express today's date is "December 23, 2024" or perhaps "December 23rd, 2024". If you're not American, you probably (some Canadians are an exception too) would express it as some variant of "23 December 2024", "23rd December, 2024", or "the 23rd of December, 2024", depending on your age, social background, country of origin, etc. (American yokels often use the last of those; I have relatives in the Deep South who do it habitually.) These correspond closely (between exactly and too-close-to-matter) to MOS:DATE's two "M D, YYYY and "D M YYYY" formats. An ISO date does not. It's very unnatural. It requires the reader (most readers, anyway) to stop and "translate" it in their heads, thinking about which block of numbers means what, and so on. (I've been using ISO dates on a daily basis since around 1990, and I still have to think about it a little, and once in a while get it wrong, especially shortly after transferring from narrative work to coding work.) Worse, many people do not know at all whether that represents YYYY-MM-DD or YYYY-DD-MM; lots of non-geeky non-Americans mistakenly think it's the latter because they are used to D M YYYY order otherwise, and the idea of the month coming before the day is foreign to them, an annoying Americanism. I run into this problem in a great deal of online content.
 — SMcCandlish ¢ 😼  09:02, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
Official documents in South Africa are YYYY-MM-DD, I personally use it to name bank statements etc. on my computer because they are easier to find. It depends on what you are used to. Avi8tor (talk) 12:56, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
It isn’t however very readable, on articles of prose. MapReader (talk) 18:20, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
To reiterate a distinction that's not potentially reducible to cultural acclimation, it's clear that purely numerical formats are less natural in prose. Remsense ‥  18:23, 29 December 2024 (UTC)

Unit formatting

Are any of these formats correct?

  • a 10-cm blade
  • a 10 cm blade
  • a 10-cm-long blade
  • a 10 cm-long blade
  • a ten-cm blade
  • a ten-cm long blade

And why numbers are not spelled out before unit symbols, and why unit symbols are used more with metric than imperial units, where unit names are typically written in full? --40bus (talk) 13:56, 22 December 2024 (UTC)

In answer to your first question I suggest choosing between "a 10 cm blade" and "a ten-centimetre blade".
To the second, there is no internationally accepted standard describing symbols for the imperial unit system. Perhaps that is the reason. Dondervogel 2 (talk) 14:05, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
You can also consult our {{convert}} template which deals with all these edge cases: {{convert|10|cm|adj=on|abbr=on}} produces 10 cm (3.9 in), per MOS:UNITSYMBOLS.
Also, is there a reason you're not just consulting the MOS directly? It more or less covers your questions so far. Remsense ‥  15:07, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
This is possible to output: {{convert|10|cm|adj=on|abbr=on}}, and it produces: ten cm (3.9 in). So, why it is not used? And a sixth question, why fractions are not usually used with metric units? Fractions would be useful indicating repeating decimals, such as one-seventh of a meter, as things like "0.142857142857... m" or "0,142857 m" would look ugly, so 1⁄7 m would be only option. --40bus (talk) 23:13, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
Do you have a real world example illustrating your concern? Dondervogel 2 (talk) 23:22, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
How would 1⁄7 be the "only option"? You yourself just used the obvious other one: simply writing "one-seventh", which isn't broken in any way, and is probbaly easier to read for most people, than 1⁄7, which can mess with line height. It actually copy-pastes as 1⁄7, with inconsistent display on various systems. The use of the Unicode fraction-slash character is interpreted by some OSes, including my Win11 box (but not my Mac, or any Linux I can remember using), as an instruction to superscript the 1 in nearly unreadably tiny font and do the same to 7 but as a subscript. (Win11 even does this to me in a <code>...</code> block!) I'm not convinced we should have that template at all, since the Internet has done just fine with 1/7 for decades. Regarding the other material, Remsense is correct that there's a standard way of abbreviating metric units (and there's also a lot of systemic enforcement of that), but there isn't an entirely standardized approach to other units (perhaps better called "American traditional" at this point), and they are often unabbreviated in the real world. So, despite MoS providing a standard way of abbreviating them (based on ANSI or whatever, I don't remember), there's less editorial habit and desire to bother with it, while editors steeped in metric (everyone but Americans) are habituated to the short symbols. Nothing's really harmful about any of this, with regard to reader comprehension, so we have no need to firmly impose a rigid rule to do it this way or that. (We do have such a rationale for settling on particular American/"Imperial" unit abbreviations, though, since use of conflicting ones from article to article would be confusing for readers and editors alike, and some of them found "in the wild" are ambiguous and conflict with actual standards (e.g. using "m" to mean 'miles' instead of 'metres/meters'). As for the original question, yes it's "a 10 cm blade", and the output of {{convert}} is MOS:NUM-compliant. A construction like this is taken as an strongly conventionalized exception to the MOS:HYPHEN rule of hyphenating compound modifiers (writing "a 10 cm-blade" or "a 10-cm-blade" isn't really any clearer, and probably less so). In long form it would be "a ten-centimetre-long blade" and Dondervogel is correct that "-long" would usually be omitted for concision, unless it was necessary to indicate length versus width of something (which isn't the case with a knife or sword or whatnot, but would be with a shipping box).  — SMcCandlish ¢ 😼  07:12, 23 December 2024 (UTC)

Mixed spelled/figure format

How did we come to this guidance?

Comparable values near one another should be all spelled out or all in figures, even if one of the numbers would normally be written differently: patients' ages were five, seven, and thirty-two or ages were 5, 7, and 32, but not ages were five, seven, and 32.

This goes against the AP Stylebook that pretty firmly enforce that the numbers nine and below should be spelled out, while figures should be used for 10 and above. I’m not as aware as other style guides, is this a case of AP being the odd one out… or is Misplaced Pages style the odd one? -- RickyCourtney (talk) 04:14, 28 December 2024 (UTC)

The example shows it very well. Mixing both types in one sentence like ages were five, seven, and 32 looks very amateurish.  Stepho  talk  05:43, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
I agree, but as the MoS is the only style guide I've perused at length, I'd naturally be inclined to. I wonder what the provenance of this guideline is also—and that of other guidelines of note as well if anyone knows and cares to waste time telling me. Remsense ‥  05:54, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
Saying it “looks very amateurish” is very much a subjective opinion.
But to focus this on my more real-world concerns, this question was prompted by in connection to coverage of the jet crash in Kazakhstan. So in keeping with that, I present how the New York Times handles three such sentences on one article on the topic: Kazakhstan’s Emergency Situations Ministry said that at least 29 people had survived, including two children … Kazakhstan’s transportation ministry said that the flight’s passengers included 37 Azerbaijani nationals, 16 Russians, six Kazakh citizens and three Kyrgyz nationals. … The airline’s last major episode was in 2005, when an An-140 plane crashed shortly after takeoff, killing 18 passengers and five crew members.
Because of editors closely following our current MOS, our introduction on this same topic reads: On 25 December 2024, the Embraer 190AR operating the route crashed near Aktau International Airport, Kazakhstan, with sixty-two passengers and five crew on board. Of the sixty-seven people on board, thirty-eight died in the crash, including both of the pilots and one flight attendant, while twenty-nine people survived with injuries.
If we adopted AP style it would read: On 25 December 2024, the Embraer 190AR operating the route crashed near Aktau International Airport, Kazakhstan, with 62 passengers and five crew on board. Of the 67 people on board, 38 died in the crash, including both of the pilots and one flight attendant, while 29 people survived with injuries.
In my opinion, the AP style is vastly superior to what is suggested by our current MOS. RickyCourtney (talk) 07:29, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
The present guidance not to mix forms has consensus here. If you want that to change you'll need to propose a change to the wording, and explain why it is better. Saying "AP does it that way" seems unlikely to change the consensus. Dondervogel 2 (talk) 07:40, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
Long time editor, but this is definitely the first time I’ve encountered a MOS rule that I found so out of line with how I am used to writing (as you can probably surmise, I use AP in my day job). Frankly, I was just trying to get insight into why this was the consensus. I’m happy to propose something, is this the correct venue? Does it need to be in a formal format? RickyCourtney (talk) 08:17, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
Go ahead and suggest an improvement. This is the right place for it. Indeed it is the raison d'etre of this talk page. There is no formal format. Just make sure the proposed change is clear, and explain how it results in an improvement. Dondervogel 2 (talk) 08:21, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
It's pretty clear they're suggesting the AP style, right? I don't think it'll catch on here, though. However, one point in its favor one could argue is it doesn't depend at all on the surrounding context. Remsense ‥  08:24, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
I agree the verbatim AP wording, including “You should use figures for 10 or above and whenever preceding a unit of measure or referring to ages of people, animals, events or things”, would be unlikely to gain acceptance here, mainly because of its far-reaching consequences for other parts of MOSNUM. Let’s judge the proposal when it comes. Dondervogel 2 (talk) 08:50, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
No one has yet replied to the "why?" question. One would need to check the archives to be sure, but I imagine one reason is to avoid bizarre combinations like "the sum of 11 and two is 13". Dondervogel 2 (talk) 09:18, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
I suspect a significant part of the answer to “why?” is that, unlike other publications that set down a preferred style which they then use universally, Misplaced Pages explicitly tolerates a variety of styles across its ‘publications’ - most obviously for the national varieties of English, and date formats, but also in many other respects (‘AD’ or ‘CE’ being just one example) - with the MoS itself being guidelines that are widely respected, but not policy that can be rigidly enforced. This is a pragmatic compromise, given our global reach and multitude of editors of all ages and nationalities, and the practical impossibility of enforcing any single way of writing. But it does make consistency a policy issue for WP, which it simply isn’t for any other publisher (since by definition their style guides ensure that everything is consistent). Thus WP guidelines put a lot of emphasis on style choices being internally consistent within articles, because they aren’t between articles. When it comes to number format this means using either words or figures, but not a confusing jumble of both. Personally, I think this is a sensible guideline and would expect to oppose any proposed change, unless the argumentation is exceptionally convincing. MapReader (talk) 14:08, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
I'd say that Of the 67 people on board, 38 died in the crash, including both of the pilots and one flight attendant, while 29 people survived with injuries is absolutely fine and in agreement with our guidelines. The numbers one and 29 are so far from each other that there's just no reason to consider them "comparable" (except in the trivial sense that you can compare anything with anything, but that's certainly not the intended one here). I'd also consider with 62 passengers and five crew on board as fine since crew members and passenger numbers aren't really comparable either – there'll likely to be an order of magnitude or more away from each other, as in this case. That's very different from people's ages (the example given), which all come from a population's age distribution and rarely exceed 100. Gawaon (talk) 08:49, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
I would argue the present guidance should result in "62 passengers and 5 crew", not "62 passengers and five crew". I have the impression RickyCourtney would like to change the guidance to reverse that preference. Dondervogel 2 (talk) 08:58, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
62 passengers and 5 crew is certainly possible if we consider this as falling under the guideline. However, Of the 67 people on board, 38 died in the crash, including both of the pilots and 1 flight attendant, while 29 people survived with injuries is certainly too odd to consider! My point, of course, was that these sentences don't fall under the guideline anyway, due to these numbers not really being "comparable". Gawaon (talk) 09:39, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
Re: 'Saying it “looks very amateurish” is very much a subjective opinion.' Sure. But your follow up of "in my opinion" is also subjective. There are no objective measurements here. The alternatives are:
  • Existing MOS: "with 62 passengers and 5 crew on board" or the equally allowed "with sixty two passengers and five crew on board". Both are consistent and do not require me to do a mental switch between styles. I like the all numbers version and hate the all words version - subjectively of course ;) The disadvantage is that it disagrees with a couple of major US style guides - which WP is not required to match anyway.
  • AP/Times style: "with 62 passengers and five crew on board" Advantage is that it is the same as a couple of major style guides used in the US. Do British style guides agree? Disadvantage is it requires that mental switch halfway through the sentence.
It is entirely subjective whether the mental switch or matching an outside style guide is more important to you. If you like consistency (like me) then consistency is more important. And naturally, if you grew up in the US then matching major US style guides is possibly important.
Re: 'The numbers one and 29 are so far from each other that there's just no reason to consider them "comparable"'. They are in the same sentence and are comparing similar things (people). Why would you consider crew and passengers as different when listing fatalities?
Re: 'Of the 67 people on board, 38 died in the crash, including both of the pilots and 1 flight attendant, while 29 people survived with injuries certainly too odd to consider.' Why too odd? Its the form that I personally prefer and allowed by the current MOS.  Stepho  talk  13:09, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
29 only has meaning to me in that it is comparable to 1. Remsense ‥  13:15, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
This isn’t just “US style.” AP is US-based, but they serve news organizations across the world. Reuters, which is UK-based, uses the same style in this article. As does Euronews. As does the Irish Mirror. RickyCourtney (talk) 15:40, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
Fair enough - not just US. But still an external style that is just one among many and one that we are not necessarily compelled to match.  Stepho  talk  22:44, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
@Gawaon this is an extremely helpful interpretation. Thank you. I wonder if you and others would weigh in on another sentence in the Azerbaijan Airlines Flight 8243 article: The aircraft was carrying sixty-two passengers. Of those, thirty-seven people were citizens of Azerbaijan, sixteen of Russia, six of Kazakhstan, and three of Kyrgyzstan. Four minors were on board. My preferred way to rewrite this would be: The aircraft was carrying 62 passengers. Of those, 37 people were citizens of Azerbaijan, 16 of Russia, six of Kazakhstan, and three of Kyrgyzstan. Four minors were on board. That would be in alignment with how it’s been written in the New York Times, Euronews and the Irish Mirror. -- RickyCourtney (talk) 15:58, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
But is more readable as it was. MapReader (talk) 18:01, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
My choice would be all numeric: The aircraft was carrying 62 passengers. Of those, 37 people were citizens of Azerbaijan, 16 of Russia, six of Kazakhstan, and 3 of Kyrgyzstan. 4 minors were on board. No mental context switch required between numeric and spelt out words within closely related sentences — which could easily be a combined: The aircraft was carrying 62 passengers. Of those, 37 people were citizens of Azerbaijan, 16 of Russia, six of Kazakhstan, and 3 of Kyrgyzstan — 4 minors were on board.  Stepho  talk  22:44, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
+1 to this, though I admit my preference is biased because I've been taught in business correspondence to write related numbers either in words or figures, with figures taking precedence if the largest number is at least 10. —Tenryuu 🐲 ( 💬 • 📝 ) 04:20, 2 January 2025 (UTC)

Okay, so I did some more research this morning and found the answer I was looking for. This is a case of journalists adopting a style different from academics, and the MOS adopting the academic style. The APA has strict rules about consistency within categories, requiring numerals for all items in a list if any number is 10 or above. But it appears our MOS most closely matches the Chicago Manual of Style, which requires consistency, but allows for context-specific judgment if numerals or spelled-out numbers are used. -- RickyCourtney (talk) 20:46, 28 December 2024 (UTC)

Acceptable Date Format: Month Year

Right now, "Month Year" is listed as an acceptable format, with an example of September 2001, but this is *bad grammar*, violating the basic rules of English. There are two acceptable ways to convey this, grammatically:

  1. Month of Year (September of 2001), which is listed as unacceptable but is correct grammar in the form Noun of Noun, e.g. Juan Esposito of Peru.
  2. Month, Year (September, 2001), also listed as unacceptable, but again, correct grammar, of the same shape as general dates (September 1, 2001), which *is* listed as acceptable, which is correct but inconsistent, because September, 2001 and September 1, 2001 are two uses of the *same format and grammar*.

"September 2001" is bad grammar and an unacceptable format and should be labeled as such. Quindraco (talk) 15:48, 30 December 2024 (UTC)

MOS:CENTURY appears to be incorrect

I'm surprised that this hasn't been fixed already but MOS:CENTURY currently incorrectly claims that "the 17th century as 1601–1700", for example. I was about to fix the 21st century article which incorrectly claims that the 21st century started in 2001, not 2000, but then noticed that it's only like that thanks to this MoS guideline!

There have been quite a few news articles analysing the 21st century recently, many of them because the first quarter of the century (2000-2024) is now over: Guardian, Bloomberg, Billboard, IFIMES, New York Times.

I can only assume the current MOS wording came out of the mistaken assumption/hypercorrection that a century must begin in a year ending in "1" thanks to the lack of a year zero in the calendar system, but that is of course not how the term is actually used in any sources. Thoughts on the best way of fixing this? I imagine quite a few articles will be affected by this error given it's somehow ended up in the MOS. Chessrat 13:29, 1 January 2025 (UTC)

  • If it ain't broke, don't fix it. MOS:CENTURY is correct. Ask yourself when the 1st century CE (using the proleptic Gregorian calendar ) began and then work your way forward. -- Shmuel (Seymour J.) Metz Username:Chatul (talk) 15:22, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
    But there wasn’t such. The dating system was invented many years later (and incorrectly, as it turned out) and applied retrospectively. Such that it doesn’t matter whether there was a year zero, or not. Centuries nowadays are commonly recognised as 1900-1999, 2000-2099, and it’s only the WP pedants that hold out for 1901-2000. MapReader (talk) 17:55, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
    Where did you hear that. I was taught for 60 years it was 1901-2000. Did schools change their courses recently? I guess it wouldn't be the first time, but this sounds like since so many get it wrong we should make sure that Misplaced Pages follows that same wrong thinking. Like people following a printing error on the term "Blue Moon" so they think it's the second full moon of a month. Fyunck(click) (talk) 09:38, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
    That sounds like a case of Lies Miss Snodgrass told you. (I'm not saying it's actually a lie, but it's a lie that that's the only way in which centuries can be spliced.) Gawaon (talk) 11:01, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
  • Chessrat didn't explain where they looked for sources to justify the assertion "but that is of course not how the term is actually used in any sources." Misplaced Pages guidelines do not need to cite sources, since they announce the community's consensus on various matters. It is articles that must cite sources. A number of sources are cited at "Century" including
"century". Oxford Dictionaries. Archived from the original on December 30, 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2021.
Jc3s5h (talk) 15:43, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
  • “Incorrect” is not the way I would put it. Either you treat it as a style decision, with both systems being valid ways to designate the years (using either 1–99 or 1–100 for the first century) or you treat it as a logical / mathematical system, ending at 100 because you want every century to actually be 100 years, and the first year wasn’t 0. I could see it either way, but I don’t see a lot of sense trying to change it now.
What might be more sensible to pursue is a footnote that acknowledges and explains the two common ways of counting. — HTGS (talk) 03:28, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
+1 EEng 04:27, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
I don't think there's any evidence that there are two different common ways of counting? As far as I can tell from looking into this, use of the term for the period beginning in a year ending in "1" is very rare, and the only sources that mention the "ending in 1" definition (such as the Oxford dictionary entry mentioned by @Jc3s5h: mention that it is a technical definition only and not used that way in practice. It is not the case that there were widespread celebrations of the new millennium both on 1 January 2000 and also 1 January 2001!
If there were two equally-used systems then I would agree with your comment, but that isn't the case; Misplaced Pages has a duty to provide accurate information even if it does take a significant amount of work fixing this across various articles. Chessrat 16:15, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
How many years were there in the 1st century? Dondervogel 2 (talk) 18:27, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
100, obvs. 1 AD to 100 AD. Next question please? --Redrose64 🦌 (talk) 21:12, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
My question was in response to Chessrat's post claiming that centuries start in 00, in which case they must end in 99. If the 1st century had 100 years, its first year would therefore have been 1 BC (and the 1st century BC would have ended in 2 BC). Alternatively, if the first year of the first century was 1 AD, it would have been a century with 99 years. Just trying to understand how it works (I don't know which of the two is more bizarre). Dondervogel 2 (talk) 21:44, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
It is a matter of personal preference. I find it logical and satisfying that the 19th century ended with 1900 and the 20th century ended with 2000. There are many people, though, who are more comfortable with the 19th century consisting only of the years that began with 18-- and the 20th century consisting only of the years that began with 19--. I remember that Stephen Jay Gould, someone I have long admired for his adherence to logic, stated that he was willing to accept that the First century consisted of only 99 years (although I think he was wrong). We do need to be consistent in Misplaced Pages, however, and if anyone feels strongly enough about the current guidance being wrong, RfC is thataway. Donald Albury 22:10, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
Again, the numbering of years AD/BC wasnt actually devised until over five centuries after the purported BC to AD break point, and such numbering was not widely used until over eight hundred years afterwards. And it was then applied retrospectively to historical events (with, historians now believe, an error of four years in terms of when they were trying to pitch the start), relatively few of which during that period can be fixed to a particular year in any case (not insignificantly because when these events were recorded, the AD/BC calendar system didn’t exist). So it’s an artificial construct and it doesn’t really matter what the first year was purported to have been. MapReader (talk) 22:24, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
Sources are fairly clear that in common usage, a century starts with a year ending in –00, so yes, by implication that means that the 1st century had 99 years (albeit of course the Gregorian calendar did not enter use until far later so this is purely retroactive)
I didn't really expect that there would be any disagreement with this– will probably start an RfC to gain wider input as it seems like this will be a matter which there is somehow internal disagreement on. Chessrat 22:38, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
Why should all centuries have the same length? Years haven't always the same length, so why should centuries be any different? Gawaon (talk) 08:08, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
@Chessrat and Gawaon: A century doesn't have to be 100 years, but it must be 100 somethings, for example 100 runs in a cricket innings, or a military unit comprising 100 Roman legionaries. This is because the word "century" is derived from "centum", which is Latin for "hundred". If you had a span of 99 years, it couldn't be called a century. Also from "centum" we get words like "cent" for the hundredth part of a dollar. If I gave you 99 cents, you probably wouldn't give me a dollar in exchange. By contrast, the word "year" doesn't have a comparable derivation from 365 (or 366). --Redrose64 🦌 (talk) 22:24, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
Common usage having the 21st century starting in 2000 is utterly irrelevant to the Latin etymology of the word "century". The calendar system came into use long after 1 CE so analysis of the durations of past centuries is purely retroactive and simply a case of how society largely agrees to define it.
If one were to strictly assume Latin etymology is always fully indicative of how a word is used, then the article on September would say that it is the seventh, not the ninth, month of the year. Chessrat 07:40, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
Yes, the argument by name origin is fairly weak, since actual meanings don't always live up to their origins – or certainly not exactly. Centurion say: "The size of the century changed over time; from the 1st century BC through most of the imperial era it was reduced to 80 men." So if a century can have just 80 men, surely it can have just 99 years too! Gawaon (talk) 15:06, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
I agree the etymology argument is weak, but a century has 100 years, regardless of etymology. That's what we were all taught at school and that's what all credible sources say. Misplaced Pages should not take it upon itself to make up an exception. Dondervogel 2 (talk) 19:11, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
@Chessrat:
1) I actually don’t hate the idea of doing it your way, I just don’t see the need or the community interest. As you point out, socially and culturally we do treat it this way; we did have a special party on 31 Dec 1999, and not so much 31 Dec 2000. But the effort to shuffle it all around still comes with the need for a footnote explainer for our choice of convention and that now the 1st century is just the “first century” in name, and covers only 99 years. Honestly this is (imo) not a big deal, just not a hill I’d be looking to die on, and such a change will need a whole bunch of annoying cleanup. As everyone else has said, the old way has the seductive logic that 100=100. This area of Misplaced Pages especially was built early and therefore done so by those net-denizens more inclined towards “logic” than social convention.
2) As far as I know, articles on the subject of centuries are either covering the entire period broadly, or just giving a timeline of events that occurred in such years (or really, both). Presumably there’s not much worry whether we start with 1900 or 1901 when the topic is “world war, atomic energy, the end of empire, mass telecommunication and the beginnings of the internet” (etc). Alternatively, the specific events occurring on those crossover years is just arbitrarily dumped into whichever list-like article we like, and if it has carry-over effects on future events, that should get a mention either way. I guess this point (2) actually cuts both ways though, in the sense of “both work fine”. — HTGS (talk) 06:50, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
I assume by "we" you mean you personally. I also had a 31 Dec 1999 "2000" party, but my big millennium party for the century change came on Dec 31 2000. And my tickets to the event are on that date. Fyunck(click) (talk) 09:49, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
That’s honestly surprising to me. Whereabouts were you? I was in New Zealand, but my impression was that the big deal end-of-millenium in “Western” (global “North”? Anglosphere?) popular culture was 1999 to 2000. — HTGS (talk) 08:23, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
Yes, it would be a significant amount of work, but retaining an incorrect status quo is not desirable. If Misplaced Pages lasts to reach 2100, there would be the ludicrous scenario where it's impossible to cite the large number of sources stating the arrival of the 22nd century because Misplaced Pages policy defines the word "century" differently to the rest of the world.
You're probably right that regardless, a hatnote/explanatory note of some nature is needed. For instance, a lot of sources such as Reuters, The Telegraph, The Atlantic, The Guardian France 24, Times of Israel report that Emma Morano (1899–2017) was the last surviving person born in the 19th century. However, there are also a few sources such as Slate, the Washington Post, and Sky News which report that Nabi Tajima (1900–2018) was the last surviving person born in the 19th century, using the ending-in-1 definition.
At the moment, the implication of Misplaced Pages policy is that Tajima is described as having been the last person born in the 19th century on her article section, but Morano is not described as having been the last person born in the 19th century despite the numerous reliable sources stating that she was. The current policy effectively overrides any amount of sourcing of facts like that- every article treats the uncommon ending-in-1 definition as not only being a common definition but as the only definition. I don't see how a policy which arbitrarily overrides established facts and sources like that can possibly be justifiable. Chessrat 09:03, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
So your suggested change would also affect many other articles such as our own sourced 19th century article. Fyunck(click) (talk) 10:08, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
Usage such as 20th century for 1900 - 1999 simply reveals the source as being unable to perform basic counting. Any such source is immediately rendered unreliable. --User:Khajidha (talk) (contributions) 13:06, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
I'm usually one to say that we should accept that language changes and that we in the language police should go along with it, but in this case, many, especially the mainstream press, looking for headlines, are wrong. Saying the first century has 99 years, is like saying 99 cents is sometimes a dollar. Sometimes a misused word becomes acceptable, but not in this case. SchreiberBike | ⌨  14:42, 8 January 2025 (UTC)

As per WP:RS (with the emphasis on reliable), I asked Mr Google when does the new century start, then looked at any hit that seemed reliable (typically government or scientific time orientated organisations) and ignored anything like quora, mass media (I gave Scientific American a pass as they are scientific) and forums. The first 3 pages gave me the following list, plus I added the Greenwich observatory. Note, I choose them based on the sources before looking at what they said.

Organisation URL 00 or 01
Hong Kong Observatory https://www.hko.gov.hk/en/gts/time/centy-21-e.htm#:~:text=The%20second%20century%20started%20with,continue%20through%2031%20December%202100. 01
timeanddate.com https://www.timeanddate.com/counters/mil2000.html 01
Scientific American https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/when-is-the-beginning-of/ 01
US Navy Astronomical Applications Department https://aa.usno.navy.mil/faq/millennium 01
US Library of Congress https://ask.loc.gov/science/faq/399936
https://www.loc.gov/rr//scitech/battle.html (Battle of the Centuries)
01
Merriam Webster https://www.merriam-webster.com/grammar/centuries-and-how-to-refer-to-them says it used to be 01 but that public opinion is swinging
Greenwich Observatory http://www.thegreenwichmeridian.org/tgm/articles.php?article=12 01

Seems like the scientific community has a solid consensus on new centuries starting in the year xx01. The "Battle of the Centuries" is a good read. To be fair, does anybody have any authoritative sources backing the xx00 change date?

This is, of course, counter-intuitive to the layman who just sees 1999 tick over to 2000 and therefore assumes that change in the 3rd digit means a new century. But as we all know, intuition and truth do not always agree.

So why did the world celebrate the new century on 1 Jan 2000 ? I'm going to digress into armchair philosophising but bear with me. Image that you are a major newspaper, news channel, magazine, etc and you want readers to buy/subscribe. You can research it, find out that 1 Jan 2001 is the correct date and make a big thing on that date. But your competitors celebrated way back on 1 Jan 2000 and the public goes "meh, we did all that last year - get with the times you out of date moron!" The big news companies know this, so they all go with the earlier date to avoid their competitors getting the jump on them. Never let the truth get in the way of profit! Joe public naturally follows the mass media and ignores the nerds saying "2001" - why listen to boring nerds when you can party now! Party, party, party!

So, here we are, arguing whether to follow the truth or to follow Joe Public with both of his brain cells following news companies who are chasing the almighty dollar.  Stepho  talk  11:44, 3 January 2025 (UTC)

  • There are some known inconsistencies/anomalies in our treatment of centuries, including categories or articles covering decades. For example, Category:1900s in biology is a subcategory of Category:20th century in biology, but includes 1900 which the MOS puts in the 19th century. If we were starting again, I think it would have been better to avoid using century in categories or articles, e.g. use "1900–1999" instead of "20th century", but we are where we are. Peter coxhead (talk) 12:36, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
I'm not sure why you're focusing only on the specific niche of science-related sources? If the scientific community chooses to adopt an unorthodox definition of the duration of the centuries, but most other sources follow the common definition, obviously the latter is more accurate. Chessrat 13:45, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
@Chessrat: the century beginning in XX01 is not unorthodox, quite the reverse. As people above have said, it's the definition that has been taught for years, but one that I agree is increasingly being replaced by the century beginning in XX00 definition. Obviously the latter is more accurate, well, no – as pointed out above, this definition leads to the first century having only 99 years, so can hardly be called more accurate. Orthodoxy and accuracy are not the important issues in my view; the most important issue is what most readers now think 'century' means, which does appear to be the XX00–XX99 definition. Peter coxhead (talk) 14:21, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
Back in 2000 it was suggested that a year zero be created with (since years have variable numbers of days anyway) zero days. That way the first century would have 100 years in it. Hawkeye7 (discuss) 22:06, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
At least we can all agree that that would be the ugliest possible solution. — HTGS (talk) 08:26, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
@Chessrat: Scientists put much thought into the matters that they comment upon, it's a poor scientist who states something as fact when they have no demonstrable evidence. So I would take a scientist's view over a newspaper's view any day. --Redrose64 🦌 (talk) 22:52, 3 January 2025 (UTC)

RfC on the wording of MOS:CENTURY

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Should MOS:CENTURY specify the start of a century or millennium as a year ending in 1 (e.g. the 20th century as 1901–2000), as a year ending in 0 (e.g. the 20th century as 1900–1999), or treat both as acceptable options with the use of hatnotes for clarity in the case of ambiguity in articles? See the discussion above. Chessrat 14:57, 3 January 2025 (UTC)

  • The year ending in zero, which is nowadays the most common understanding. Whether or not there was ever a year zero is irrelevant, given that AD year numbering wasn’t invented until the 500s and wasn’t widely used until the 800s. MapReader (talk) 21:21, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
  • As the 1st century is 1–100, the 20th century is 1901–2000, as its article says. Let us not turn this into another thing (like "billions") where English becomes inconsistent with other languages. —Kusma (talk) 22:22, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
    Also, I do not understand what "hatnotes in case of ambiguity in articles" should mean: whenever any article uses the word "20th century", it should have a hatnote explaining whether it follows the centuries-old convention of numbering centuries or the "starts with 19 is 20th century" approximation? Perhaps it would be easier to outlaw the word "century". —Kusma (talk) 22:26, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
    In short, oppose change. —Kusma (talk) 17:46, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
  • First year of a century ends in 01, last year of a century ends in 00. This has been extensively discussed above. --Redrose64 🦌 (talk) 22:52, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
  • The RfC does not make clear what specific change is being proposed to MOSNUM wording, and I fear will lead only to a continuation ad nauseum of the preceding discussion. For what it's worth, I oppose any change resulting in a century of 99 years. Dondervogel 2 (talk) 23:06, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
  • Oppose change Century and Millennia begin in 01 and ends Dec 31, 00, like it always has and per the discussion above. Just because people make errors, like with Blue Moon, doesn't mean an encyclopedia has to. Why would we change from long-standing consensus? Fyunck(click) (talk) 09:28, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
  • Treat both as acceptable options. Century already explains both viewpoints, without describing one of them as "correct". Generally our business it not to arbiter truth (which in this case doesn't exist anyway, as either viewpoint is just a convention), but to describe common understandings of the world, including disputes and disagreements where they exist. Century doesn't privilege a particular POV here, and neither should MOS:CENTURY. Gawaon (talk) 16:31, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
    All of our articles on individual centuries mention only the traditional point of view where the first century starts in year 1 and each century has 100 years. There is no need for MOS:CENTURY to do anything else. —Kusma (talk) 17:46, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
  • Oppose. If this matters to you, convince the academic sources to adopt the change, then Misplaced Pages can follow. Jc3s5h (talk) 18:14, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
  • Oppose change I prefer centuries to begin with --01 and end with --00. I'll not bother with any arguments, since I think this boils down to personal preference. I do oppose allowing both options, as that leads to confusion and edit wars. Donald Albury 18:20, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
    Why is it personal preference to favour 1-100 AD over 1 BC-99 AD? The latter choice leads to the first century BC running from 101 to 2 BC. I find the asymmetry highly unorthodox (and hence hard to justify). Dondervogel 2 (talk) 12:37, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
    You wouldn’t start at 1BC for the first century AD in either case though. You would just treat “century” as the name for the period, and ignore that it only has 99 years. — HTGS (talk) 19:22, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
    You seem to be saying the choice between a century (the first, whether AD or BC) of 99 or 100 years amounts to personal preference. Do you have credible sources showing they are equally valid? Dondervogel 2 (talk) 19:23, 7 January 2025 (UTC)
  • Oppose treating both as acceptable This would lead to endless confusion. Peter coxhead (talk) 22:02, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
  • Oppose change; century starts at ###1 and ends ###0 — Preceding unsigned comment added by Mr Serjeant Buzfuz (talkcontribs) 23:18, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
  • Strongly oppose any change resulting in more than one definition of a century. The reasons seem self-evident, and others have spelt them out above. In a nutshell, such a change would be a retrograde step, against the spirit of the MOS. Dondervogel 2 (talk) 23:21, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
  • Just use '00s. Why on Earth should MoS ever encourage using wording that will be misunderstood by many or most people? To most people, "20th century" means 1900-1999. To pedants of history, it means 1901-2000. Cool. We should try to not confuse either of those groups. If I had to pick one, I'd say confuse the pedants, but fortunately we don't have to pick, because a third option exists: "1900s" (etc.). That's the phrasing I've always used on Misplaced Pages, for this exact reason. It's consistent with how we refer to decades (see vs. ). It's universally understood. It avoids silly arguments like this one. Let's just do that. -- Tamzin (they|xe|🤷) 23:36, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
    And to put this in terms of what the wording should be, I would suggest something like

    Because phrases like the 18th century are ambiguous (sometimes used to mean 1700–1799, sometimes 1701–1800), phrases like the 1700s are preferable. If the former is be used—for instance, when quoting a source—an explanatory note should be included if the two definitions of nth century would lead to different meanings.

    -- Tamzin (they|xe|🤷) 23:52, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
    Is this a joke? Sorry if I ruined it by asking. — HTGS (talk) 23:56, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
    No? From any descriptive point of view, there is no widely-accepted definition of "nth century". Some Wikipedians thinking there should be a widely-accepted definition doesn't make it so. And MoS should not be in the business of encouraging ambiguous wording. Instead we should encourage solutions that avoid ambiguity, much as we do with ENGVAR. -- Tamzin (they|xe|🤷) 00:05, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
    Ah, sorry. This is all just not the question at hand though, and it directly contradicts current (well-positioned) guidance.
    In any case, I’m sure we’re better off with the ambiguity between 1900–1999 and 1901–2000, which, in most cases, is not really a problem. Your idea introduces an ambiguity between 1900–1910 and 1900–. This is explicitly called out by MOS:CENTURY, of course. And does “1700s” even solve the issue of which year to start or end with? It implies that the century starts with 1700, but not explicitly. — HTGS (talk) 03:05, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
    We should avoid use of "1900s" to mean anything other than 1900-1909. Dondervogel 2 (talk) 12:29, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
    What's funny is I have never heard people talk about the 1500s, 1600s, 1700s, 1800s or 1900s, as anything except Jan 1 00 to Dec 31 99. Always 100 years. I checked and I'm shocked our wikipedia article only covers 1900-1910. The only time it gets used as a decade is when the parameters are specifically talking about the 1930s, 1920s, 1910s, and 1900s. Without that fine tuning it's always 100 year period. It would be used like the Library of Congress does, or US history lesson plans. Usually I would say the "first decade of the 1900s" with no other context. I would amend your comment to say we should never leave 1900s dangling without context. And that's only for 1900s, not anything else.Fyunck(click) (talk) 19:36, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
  • Oppose treating both as acceptable; otherwise indifferent to 31 Dec 1999 vs 31 Dec 2000. This is a style decision, but one that affects a lot of content. To use both would be a terrible solution. — HTGS (talk) 23:52, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
  • Oppose change; continue using "20th century" for 1901–2000 and "1900s" for 1900–1999. Doremo (talk) 03:48, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
    Bad solution. How will readers know which system we are using when we say 1900s? Will they presume that the period ends with 1999 or 2000, or even 1909? — HTGS (talk) 23:16, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
  • Oppose change - The n century is 01-00, you can feel free to use "the xx00s" for 00-99. Neither is prefered to the other, but the meaning is determined by which you use. Fieari (talk) 04:53, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
    Per the MOS, and as Dondervogel 2 most succinctly puts it above: We should avoid use of "1900s" to mean anything other than 1900-1909. — HTGS (talk) 19:25, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
    I somewhat disagree. It is a very ambiguous term so we should avoid use of 1900s at all without context, because obviously readers will be confused. I sure would since I would immediately think a 100 year period just like 1800s , 1700s, and 2000s (25+ years thus far). Fyunck(click) (talk) 07:16, 7 January 2025 (UTC)
    You mean 24 years so far, right?
    And yes, “avoiding 1900s at all” also jives with what I said. — HTGS (talk) 23:14, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
  • Oppose treating them both as acceptable. I imagine this could lead to headaches concerning inclusion in categories, list articles, timelines, templates, etc. Photos of Japan (talk) 01:23, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
  • Oppose change People have been getting it wrong for centuries (pun not intended) and will probably continue doing so for centuries. Intuition says that the year 2000 was the start of the new century but intuition is wrong. Just like people believing that light-years and parsecs are a measure of time (doing the Kessel run or otherwise) or trying to learn relativity, intuition is simply wrong. All authoritative sources for measuring time say that the new century starts in the year xx01. WP is only suppose to report on this. If we try to say that the year 2000 is the first year of the new century then we are actively entering the battle and are try to WP:RIGHTGREATWRONGS.  Stepho  talk  04:12, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
  • Keep XX1 as the start of a decade, century, or any other unit of year. It sounds ridiculous to have only the first CE century be 99 years long while everything before and after it remains at 100. —Tenryuu 🐲 ( 💬 • 📝 ) 18:34, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
    I think they consider the 1st century BC to also have 99 years. Dondervogel 2 (talk) 19:15, 10 January 2025 (UTC)

It is high time to end this "minor imbecility":

When the encyclopedia of human folly comes to be written, a page must be reserved for the minor imbecility of the battle of the centuries--the clamorous dispute as to when a century ends. The present bibliography documents the controversy as it has arisen at the end of the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries, as well as a few skirmishes in the quarrel that has begun to develop with the approach of the third millennium.
The source of the confusion is easy to discern; ever since learning how to write, we have dated our documents with year designations beginning with the digits 19. Obviously, when we must begin to date them starting with 20, we have embarked on a new century! Haven't we? The answer is no, we have not; we have merely arrived at the last year of the 20th century. As historians and others involved in measuring time continue to remind us, there was no year 0. In fact, there has never been a system of recording reigns, dynasties, or eras that did not designate its first year as the year 1. To complete a century, one must complete 100 years; the first century of our era ran from the beginning of A.D. 1 to the end of A.D. 100; the second century began with the year A.D. 101.
While the period 1900-1999 is of course a century, as is any period of 100 years, it is incorrect to label it the 20th century, which began January 1, 1901, and will end on December 31, 2000. Only then will the third millennium of our era begin.
Those who are unwilling to accept the clarity of simple arithmetic in this matter and who feel strongly that there is something amiss with the result have developed some impressively convoluted arguments to promote their point of view. Baron Hobhouse, studying some of these arguments as set forth in letters published in the Times of London during the first few days of January 1900, found "that many of the reasons assigned are irrelevant, many are destructive of the conclusion in support of which they are advanced, and that such as would be relevant and logical have no basis whatever to maintain them in point of fact." He was one of several observers of the fray at the end of the 19th century who predicted that the foolishness would recur with the advent of the year 2000, as people began to look for ways of demonstrating "that 1999 years make up 20 centuries."
As a writer stated in the January 13, 1900, Scientific American, "It is a venerable error, long-lived and perhaps immortal." The shortness of human life is also a factor; as a century approaches its end, hardly anyone who experienced the previous conflict is still living, so we are doomed to undergo another round.
Astronomers have been blamed for some of the confusion by their adoption of a chronology that designates the year 1 B.C. as 0 and gives the preceding years negative numbers, e.g., 2 B.C. becomes -1, 3 B.C. becomes -2, etc. This system permits them to simplify calculations of recurring astronomical events that cross the starting point of our era, such as series of solar eclipses and the apparitions of periodic comets. However, this scheme affects only the years preceding A.D. 1 and cannot be used as a justification for ending subsequent centuries with the 99th year.
Some argue that Dionysius Exiguus made a mistake in his determination of the year of Christ's birth when he devised our present chronology in the sixth century, and that the discrepancy allows us to celebrate the end of a century a year early. However, even though the starting point of our era may not correspond to the chronologist's intention, it is still the point from which we count our centuries--each of which still requires 100 years for completion.
Nevertheless, as many of the entries in this list (from p. 45 on) will indicate, plans to celebrate the opening of the 21st century and the third millennium at midnight on December 31, 1999, have become so widespread that anyone who tries to call attention to the error is disparaged as a pedant and ignored. Perhaps the only consolation for those intending to observe the correct date is that hotels, cruise ships, supersonic aircraft, and other facilities may be less crowded at the end of the year 2000.

Dondervogel 2 (talk) 18:04, 10 January 2025 (UTC)

  • Oppose change. Tony (talk) 11:46, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
  • Don't break the calendar for exactly zero benefit – There's no need to stage a revolt against the counting numbers and anyone who wants to extend discussions back to the epoch or beyond. There is one system that is consistent, and it is the one we use and should continue using. There's not even a problem that needs to be addressed. Aren't we on Misplaced Pages? This is the place where many often learn that a thing is a certain way and why, and I am not sure why that didn't happen here. Remsense ‥  12:00, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
  • To get literal, the current calendar under discussion pertains to the life of Jesus. Ideally it starts when Jesus was born, 00:00, and he turned one-year-old on January 1, 1. Now, say he lived a long life and made it to 100. He would have been 100 on January 1, 100. At that point, the second his clock turned over on January 1, 100, his new century would begin. The first century was literally over on January 1, 100, and a new one started immediately and ran from 100-200. etc. Saying the first century was 99 years is incorrect, it was 100, but then the second century started immediately. I'd have to go with a split-second past midnight on January 1, 2000, as the start of the 21st century, per logic and common sense. Randy Kryn (talk) 13:30, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
    Nice theory, except for the minor detail that there was no year zero, meaning that on 1 January 1, your hypothetical Jesus would have been 1 day (not 1 year) old. Dondervogel 2 (talk) 13:42, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
    That's one way of looking at it, and the other is that Jesus's birth started the clock rolling towards his turning 1-year-old on 1-1-1. Randy Kryn (talk) 14:42, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
    So by your "other way" he was 1 year old throughout 1 CE. So in what year was he six months old? It would have to be 0 CE, but there isn't one. It simply doesn't work. Peter coxhead (talk) 16:38, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
    Unless our baby Jesus was born on 1 Jan of 1 BC (we have invented a fictitious baby so we can assign him any date of birth we want). Then we have a first century running from 1 BC to 99 AD. While highly unconventional, it could be entertained until you realise the 1st century BC would have to run from 101 BC to 2 BC. It works but it's silly, and (more to the point) lacks RS to support it. Dondervogel 2 (talk) 17:23, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
    Insofar a he is likely to have existed, anyway, he was most probably born in 4 BC, since the calculations used five hundred years later to fix the BC/AD break point contained an error. So this is all nonsense, anyway; the first century was itself centuries in the past - probably eight or nine - before people started calling it that. And most people will continue to see 1900 as the start of the 20th C and 2000 as the start of the current one, whatever. MapReader (talk) 18:29, 11 January 2025 (UTC)
    The bible is very clear on this point: he was born after the Roman census in 6 AD (Luke 2:1-4) and before the death of King Herod in 6 BC (Matthew 2) Hawkeye7 (discuss) 06:06, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
    I think you mean the Census of Quirinius in 6 BC, while Herod the Great gives Herod's death as c. 4 BC. Donald Albury 14:56, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
    That would make for a more consistent timeline. Forgetting our fictional baby, are you saying the Real McCoy was born between 6 and 4 BC? Dondervogel 2 (talk) 15:21, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
    That's what many sources I've seen say. See Date of the birth of Jesus. Donald Albury 15:50, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
    That make a lot more sense than being born before –6 and after +6. Although, if anyone could, surely it’s the son of God. — HTGS (talk) 23:39, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
    Why would Jesus be one year old throughout 1 AD? The year 1 means Jesus was 1-year-old, Happy Birthday on 1-1-1, one candle on the cake. When Jesus was six months old he was 1/2 AD. The point of using BC and AD, before Christ and Anno Domini, logically informs that the time before Jesus's birth, counting backwards, was "before Christ" (six months before his birth was 1/2 BC, etc.) The birth starts the count on both BC and AD. The "year" he was born would not matter, only the counting forwards and backwards. 1/2 AD when he was six months old, 3/4 AD at nine months old, etc., until reaching 1 AD and then beyond. Another point, since the 21st century was celebrated by the entire population of the Earth on January 1, 2000 - even most of the 2001 holdouts, never ones to pass up a good party, still celebrated on 1-1-2000 - that date is the "common name" for the start of the century and, per many of the reputable sources mentioned in the discussion preceding this RfC, and in all the reputable sources that recognized the date that the human race partied, Misplaced Pages probably should as well. But, then again, and Oppose, the scientific community differs and happily celebrated on January 1, 2001, ordaining that Misplaced Pages should keep the academic calendar as well and forego the obvious. Randy Kryn (talk) 02:47, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
    You can keep discussing this forever. Come 2100, when almost all of us will no longer be editing on here, the large majority of people will be marking the turn of the century. MapReader (talk) 15:09, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
    Nice crystal ball you have there. Donald Albury 15:52, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
    @Randy Kryn: For the sake of argument, if Jesus was born on 25 December 1 BC, he would have been six days old on 1 January AD 1, and one year old on 25 December AD 1. That would place the 100th anniversary of his birth on 25 December AD 100. Donald Albury 15:15, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
    But 25 December is irrelevant, and is hence ignored by those faiths, such as Islam, that recognise Jesus as an earlier prophet. December 25 is an entirely fabricated date, chosen to override the pre-existing pagan midwinter festivals widely observed in Europe during the early Christian era. If early historians were four to six years out on the year Jesus was purportedly born, they are hardly likely to have any information whatsoever as to the date. MapReader (talk) 15:21, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
    December 25 has nothing to do with this. The people who created this BC-AD concept were going by the moment that Jesus was born (or conceived, whatever they decided was the starting point), never mind the "correct date", in essence calling that Day One. Then, 365 days later, year 1 ended and year 2 immediately began. The same with BC, from the moment of Jesus' birth to everything that came before was BC, and one year previously was automatically 1 BC, ten years was 10 BC, etc. By calculating that the day of Jesus' birth was the start of the calendar, logic dictates that the first year ended on his first birthday. 1 A.D. Nothing is broken here, except that they made a guess at Jesus's birthday when they made the calendar. The first century of 100 years ends on the 100th anniversary of Jesus' birth, 1-1-100, and the second century began immediately. There is no "year 0", a year 0 isn't needed, when Jesus was six months old it was 1/2 A.D. The absence of a year 0 is incorrect, the creator of the calendar took it as a moment in time (a birth, then start the clock). Randy Kryn (talk) 10:28, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
    "he turned one-year-old on January 1, 1".. No, that's not how that works. The year 1 AD is the equivalent of the first year of his life. He would not be 1 year old until it ended. User:Khajidha (talk) (contributions) 14:17, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
  • Oppose. Only ignorant people think the century begins with the 0 year. Is it that difficult to appreciate that there was no year 0! -- Necrothesp (talk) 11:44, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
    However, few people will doubt that there was a year 2000. So the question of when the 21st century began it still unresolved. Gawaon (talk) 04:25, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
    If the 1st century began in AD 1, then the 2nd century began in AD 101, the 3rd century in AD 201, etc, etc, the 20th century in 1901 and the 21st century in 2001! People a century ago were fully aware that the 20th century began in 1901. It's only in recent years that people have seemingly become unable to grasp the system. I should also point out that we naturally count in multiples of 10: 1 to 10, 11 to 20 and 21 to 30, not 10 to 19 and 20 to 29. -- Necrothesp (talk) 11:16, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
    Looks resolved by consensus to me. Fyunck(click) (talk) 06:59, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
    Yes, this has consensus, but nobody has actually refuted my discussion points above. There is no need for a year 0, the "point of zero" was when Jesus was born (which started the clock). He was 1 year old on 1-1-1. And so on. Necrothesp calls me ignorant, so I'd like them to comment if they would on the analysis of why year 1 started exactly a year after the birth of Jesus. Thanks. Randy Kryn (talk) 11:08, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
    You presumably do know that the year before AD 1 was 1 BC? We're talking history here, not religion. Basing the calendar on the supposed year of Jesus's birth is pure convention. But the facts are that in the modern dating system 1 BC was followed by AD 1 with no weird gap. Therefore, the 1st century AD began on 1 January AD 1, and the new century has begun on 1 January AD X(X)01 ever since. -- Necrothesp (talk) 11:16, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
    BC literally means "before Christ". Year 1 B.C. would be a year before Christ. Year 1 AD would fall on his first birthday. There is no weird gap. BC was created without regard to previous calendars, it just shifted all of the years before Jesus' birth and after Jesus' birth to a new counting system. This has nothing to do with religion or the exact year or date that is now believed to be Jesus's true birthday, it was just how the people who created this system decided to place their 0: the moment Jesus was born. As I say above, I agree with the consensus here, mainly because science has, for some reason, gone along with 2001 etc. being the start of a new century. It wasn't, but that counting system has enough support to continue to represent this mistake in scientific and encyclopedic literature. Randy Kryn (talk) 11:36, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
    There is I believe no year zero because the Roman's (whose numerals we used) had no concept of Zero, there was no zero year, it was 1 BC then 1 AD. Avi8tor (talk) 12:54, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
    But whether or not there was a year zero is pretty much irrelevant, except to the pedants overrepresented amongst our editor base. People are quite happy that the ‘1930s’ refers to 1930-39 and the ‘1630s’ to 1630-39, yet if you follow that right back the first decade only had nine years. So what? Stuff that happened, or works that were produced, in 2000 are widely referred to - including in WP articles - as being of the 21st century, because that’s the way most people see it. MapReader (talk) 13:58, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
    You are confusing 2 different systems. Decades are named cardinally, centuries are named ordinally. The 1930s refers to 1930-39 for the simple reason those are the only years of the format 193X. However, the "first decade" refers to the first ten years of the system. Thus it means the years 1-10, just as the first century means the years 1-100. Decades and centuries are handled differently and do not line up. The 1900s decade was the years 1900-1909, and included one year from the 19th century and 9 years from the 20th. The first decade of the 20th century was the years 1901-10. User:Khajidha (talk) (contributions) 14:22, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
    Yet, back here in the real world, nobody cares, and everybody ignores stuff like that. MapReader (talk) 14:26, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
    The "real world" in your view presumably refers to "what I say" rather than "what is correct"! In my real world, the 21st century began in 2001! That's not being pedantic; that's being correct. In this fabled "real world", most people seem to get their "facts" from some nobody on TikTok; that does not make them right. -- Necrothesp (talk) 15:44, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
    In the real world people also talk about things happening on "Friday night" when they actually occur in the early hours of Saturday. The encyclopedia still goes with the facts, though. --User:Khajidha (talk) (contributions) 16:29, 14 January 2025 (UTC)

mdy on pages that have nothing to do with america

ive been seeing lots of mdy on pages that have nothing to do with the usa, like on media that was only released in japan, like the fds and lots of japanese exclusive video games

i just want the mdy stuff to be ONLY on usa related pages...

idk why we have to use multiple date formats here anyway... its just stupid

why cant we use just one... dmy for long form and iso 8601 for short form

japanese date format looks similar to iso 8601 if youve seen it ZacharyFDS (talk) 08:13, 14 January 2025 (UTC)

i did change a couple, like on the pcfx and .lb pages but im backing out of others because i dont want to be involved in edit wars or be accused of vandalism ZacharyFDS (talk) 08:15, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
The relevant guideline has a shortcut, MOS:DATEVAR. People who's main editing activity was to go around imposing their favorite date format have been indefinitely blocked. Jc3s5h (talk) 15:46, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
  • I believe this is covered at WP:JDLI. Doremo (talk) 10:14, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
    This issue is covered in the Manual of Style which stipulates what countries have which date styles. Here is what it says: Articles on topics with strong ties to a particular English-speaking country should generally use the more common date format for that country (month-first for the US, except in military usage; day-first for most others; articles related to Canada may use either consistently). Otherwise, do not change an article from one date format to the other without good reason. Because English is not a legal language in Japan, you might find the Japanese use American date formats when writing English. Look for an English language Japanese newspaper and see what they use. Avi8tor (talk) 12:46, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
It's because in English prose there are 2 dominant date formats: MDY used mostly by Americans and DMY used by most of the British Commonwealth. Both sides think that their version is the only correct and reasonable way and that anything else is stupid and wrong. So an article created by a Brit with DMY dates gets "corrected" by an American to MDY. And then "corrected" by an Australian to DMY. And then "corrected" by another American to DMY. And so on until all parties have a deeply embedded hatred for each other.
WP:DATERET was created so that once an article gets a format then it generally stays in that form and we avoid WP:EDITWARs (mostly - there are always die hard "do it my way" people out there).
We don't use Japanese YMD dates because no native English speaking country uses YMD in prose. Which is a shame because I love YMD after living in China.  Stepho  talk  12:56, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
Previous discussions on this talk page have made it clear that if a country isn't a predominantly English-speaking country, either MDY or DMY may be used. It just doesn't matter what the English-speaking minority within the country under discussion usually uses as their date format. Jc3s5h (talk) 15:50, 14 January 2025 (UTC)
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