Revision as of 08:49, 4 May 2012 editThe Rambling Man (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Page movers, IP block exemptions, New page reviewers, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers, Template editors286,429 edits →List of Friends episodes: +← Previous edit | Revision as of 10:40, 4 May 2012 edit undoAussieLegend (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, File movers, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers173,395 edits →List of Friends episodes: repliesNext edit → | ||
Line 179: | Line 179: | ||
:::Well I suppose the way it is right now is alright (transclusion is another discussion), except that the episode titles need quote marks around them per ], ], ] and ]. Using AltTitle= instead of RefTitle= would achieve this, or manually inputting the quotemarks around the titles. But if the latter is done, when the episode list template is changed someone would have to go around deleting them all and changing RefTitle= to Title=, as opposed to half the work of changing AltTitle= to Title=. <small><span style="border:1px solid #0000ff;padding:1px;">] : ] </span></small> 04:39, 4 May 2012 (UTC) | :::Well I suppose the way it is right now is alright (transclusion is another discussion), except that the episode titles need quote marks around them per ], ], ] and ]. Using AltTitle= instead of RefTitle= would achieve this, or manually inputting the quotemarks around the titles. But if the latter is done, when the episode list template is changed someone would have to go around deleting them all and changing RefTitle= to Title=, as opposed to half the work of changing AltTitle= to Title=. <small><span style="border:1px solid #0000ff;padding:1px;">] : ] </span></small> 04:39, 4 May 2012 (UTC) | ||
:::BTW, how do you know there are 16 more articles using it, and which ones are they? <small><span style="border:1px solid #0000ff;padding:1px;">] : ] </span></small> 04:46, 4 May 2012 (UTC) | :::BTW, how do you know there are 16 more articles using it, and which ones are they? <small><span style="border:1px solid #0000ff;padding:1px;">] : ] </span></small> 04:46, 4 May 2012 (UTC) | ||
::::Neither the or of the article by Lemonade51 included quotation marks. Since those versions were acceptable here I decided to mimic them. That's why I used RTitle instead of AltTitle. When I checked the transclusion count 4 days ago, 5,068 articles use the template. Today when I checked it was 5,084. Now it's 5,085. I have no idea what the new articles are. The toolserver doesn't tell you that. --] (]) 10:40, 4 May 2012 (UTC) | |||
For what it's worth, the use of this Episode template to keep episode summaries consistent seems reasonable. But the use of the template here is not to provide episode summaries at all, simply to provide the episode title. That should be stable and therefore there's no need for any transclusions. Using the hand-crafted table for this kind of "summary" list is perfectly acceptable, and avoids the nonsense lose-lose argument being propounded by the TV project collective. Incidentally, a good reason '''not''' to transclude these episodes is demonstrated by which, to anyone watching the potentially featured list (and not all the sub-articles transcluded) would miss. This has removed an episode and associated production code information etc. This would have been correctly preserved if we didn't use this transclusion. Similarly, has, via transclusion, now introduced an non-MOS-compliant number range (see ]) to the article. Same with and etc etc. It's also resulted in the columns being different widths from season to season which is also undesirable. Oh, and the formatting of grey/non-grey backgrounds has gone awry in seasons 4 and 5 as well. We can't rely on people editing the transclusions to realise the content is potentially part of featured material and therefore all edits must comply with MOS and ]. ] (]) 08:29, 4 May 2012 (UTC) | For what it's worth, the use of this Episode template to keep episode summaries consistent seems reasonable. But the use of the template here is not to provide episode summaries at all, simply to provide the episode title. That should be stable and therefore there's no need for any transclusions. Using the hand-crafted table for this kind of "summary" list is perfectly acceptable, and avoids the nonsense lose-lose argument being propounded by the TV project collective. Incidentally, a good reason '''not''' to transclude these episodes is demonstrated by which, to anyone watching the potentially featured list (and not all the sub-articles transcluded) would miss. This has removed an episode and associated production code information etc. This would have been correctly preserved if we didn't use this transclusion. Similarly, has, via transclusion, now introduced an non-MOS-compliant number range (see ]) to the article. Same with and etc etc. It's also resulted in the columns being different widths from season to season which is also undesirable. Oh, and the formatting of grey/non-grey backgrounds has gone awry in seasons 4 and 5 as well. We can't rely on people editing the transclusions to realise the content is potentially part of featured material and therefore all edits must comply with MOS and ]. ] (]) 08:29, 4 May 2012 (UTC) | ||
:The template doesn't just provide the episode title. It also provides writers, directors, air dates, production codes and two episode numbers for each episode. While one who isn't experienced with TV articles may think they should be stable, they aren't, as yesterday's edits showed. The content that removed was incorrectly restored by the custom table. That episode aired as a single back to back episode, not as two separate episodes. As I've said on my talk page, I really don't see the point of nominating just the overall episode article on its own when it has been split out to season articles. All of the articles are intimately related and nominating the episode list is like nominating only the lede of any other article. All of the articles need to be featured, or none at all. --] (]) 10:40, 4 May 2012 (UTC) |
Revision as of 10:40, 4 May 2012
List of Friends episodes
List of Friends episodes (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views)
Toolbox |
---|
- Nominator(s): Lemonade51 (talk) 23:44, 10 March 2012 (UTC)
I am nominating this for featured list because I believe this meets the WP:FLC criteria. Apart from prose, my main concern is does the list violate 3b in that season synopses have by and large been obtained from the main article. This was a suggestion from the peer reviewer because articles for many episodes have hardly been created so synopses would be understandable for the reader. The list's overview section and ratings mirror that of List of The Simpsons episodes and List of Family Guy episodes so the requirements might have changed from that of a year or so ago. I welcome any comments, suggestions, criticism, feedback, et al, cheers -- Lemonade51 (talk) 23:44, 10 March 2012 (UTC)
Resolved comments from Matthewedwards : Chat 15:16, 6 April 2012 (UTC) |
---|
Comments
|
- Support Everythink looks alright from here. Matthewedwards : Chat 15:16, 6 April 2012 (UTC)
Resolved comments from Giants2008 (Talk) 11:17, 23 March 2012 (UTC) |
---|
Oppose – Lack of reliability in the source department is my biggest concern.
|
Resolved comments from NapHit (talk) 22:18, 15 April 2012 (UTC) |
---|
Comment
|
- Support NapHit (talk) 22:18, 15 April 2012 (UTC)
Resolved comments from The Rambling Man (talk) 12:32, 15 April 2012 (UTC) |
---|
Comments
The Rambling Man (talk) 07:31, 11 April 2012 (UTC)
|
- Image review:
Nothing to review. No images used.Goodraise 11:02, 27 March 2012 (UTC) - The one image used depicts a logo that may be copyrighted, but probably isn't. See File:Hercules 1998 Intertitle.png for an example of how to deal with such cases. Goodraise 12:30, 20 April 2012 (UTC)
- Have added 'PD-textlogo' license. Would that be sufficient on its own? – Lemonade51 (talk) 12:49, 20 April 2012 (UTC)
Comment: Remove link of "The One with the Sonogram at the End", as it only redirects to Friends (season 1). Also, what is "Friends: The Stuff You've Never Seen"? I assume it's a behind-the-scenes show, but a summary would help. It is included in Friends (season 7), but as it's not a regular episode a description in this list would be helpful. Glimmer721 01:29, 22 April 2012 (UTC)
- Have removed link. A summary of 'Friends: The Stuff You've Never Seen' is in the final paragraph of the lead. Unless you want it in the list itself? -- Lemonade51 (talk) 14:57, 22 April 2012 (UTC)
Comment: I'm posting the following because Lemonade51 asked me to post my 2 cents here. Changes made to List of Friends episodes since it was nominated go against standard practices with TV articles and against common sense. {{Episode list}} makes it easy for editors not versed in table construction to easily add content to list articles. ] articles are normally created using {{Episode list}} and built upon. List of Castle episodes is one such article out of many. Once large enough, or when there is extra content beyond just tables listing the episodes, these articles are split in accordance with WP:SPLIT and Template:Episode list#Sublists. The episode lists in the individual season articles are transcluded into the main episode list article, as was the case with List of Friends episodes before it was nominated. Removing transclusion and building tables that duplicate what is already in the season articles will (I've seen it too many times) result in duplication errors. The coding used in the edits since 1 March 2012 has blown the article out from 14,184 to 82,569 bytes with this edit, and that's without any episode summaries for the 236 episodes and 3 specials. This is a phenomenal amount of code compared to other similar articles. Lemonade51 claims that transclusion has been discouraged here. If transclusion is not used, in order to eliminate duplication errors, episode tables will need to be removed from the season articles. This doesn't make sense though. With transclusion, all content related to each season is within the season article. Without transclusion, content is in two places, which doesn't help our readers. Additionally, episode summaries will need to be moved to the list article, blowing it out to an enormous size which will justify a WP:SPLIT. But if we don't transclude, how does that happen? If "Lemonade51's version" of this article reaches FA status there is precedent to make articles for other series' follow suit. Some season articles contain little more and will really not need to exist. Instead, we'll just end up with bloated episode lists. The present system of transcluding the sesson articles seems to work just fine. --AussieLegend (talk) 15:04, 28 April 2012 (UTC)
- Well, if someone can make the template meet the requirements of WP:ACCESS & WP:MOSBOLD then we could reconsider its use. While the code size has increased, I'd be interested to know if the load time has increased because there are significantly fewer templates to load (which are notoriously slow to load). Addition of other episodes is moot here because the series has finished. And as for the complexity of code, I think that's in the eye of the beholder, I personally find intricately coded templates a bind compared with plain table coding. It's a personal thing. The Rambling Man (talk) 08:17, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- There's nothing to reconsider. The template is used in 5,068 articles. It's standard practice to use it in TV lists. Changing an article to introduce coding that isn't understood by most editors (that's why we have templates) and duplication errors is not the way to fix a problem. Nor is it appropriate to introduce such a problem under the guise of making a list, which is intricately linked to several other articles, a featured list. The correct, and most appropriate, process is to change the template if it's deemed necessary. While addition of new episodes is moot, duplication errors are not. People will edit the episode list and not the season article, or vice versa. If a side effect of making an article featured is causing errors, then not being featured is preferable. --AussieLegend (talk) 13:37, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- Well just because it's used in a large number of articles, it doesn't make it right, does it? Templates aren't used because coding isn't understood by most editors, where's the evidence supporting that? Templates are convenient, sure, but their overuse can result in very slow page load times. In any case, as I said, we need our featured lists to meet the manual of style with regard to both visual and non-visual appearance. What goes on behind the scenes is irrelevant to whether this list should be featured; if it meets WP:WIAFL then it should be featured. If someone would fix the template (our resident expert in ACCESS matters, User:RexxS should be able to assist with exactly what needs to be fixed) then there'd be no need for the discussion. As it stands, this list now meets the requirements mandated by the MOS, which is correct for Misplaced Pages's finest work. Just because 5,068 other articles don't comply with MOS, I don't see why this one shouldn't. The Rambling Man (talk) 14:29, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- (Edit Conflict) It was standard practice to send Jews to concentration camps. Didn't make it right, even though some people believed it was at the time. Are you seriously saying that the majority of editors don't know how to construct tables? Well if they don't, we have plenty of help pages guiding editors on how to build them. We shouldn't find a workaround for them so that they continue to stay in the dark about it. You keep talking about duplication errors, don't you mean non-duplication errors, because surely the error will only be duplicated when it is transcluded? If there is no transclusion there can be no duplication, so one page will be correct, which is better for readers than having two pages with incorrect information. If you're worried about it, include notes to editors at the top of each editable section in hidden tags <!-- like these --> that ask editors to make changes at the 'other' page. Matthewedwards : Chat 14:36, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- Templates are certainly convenient, and we use them for because of that, but it doesn't take a rocket scientist to see that most people seem to have difficulty with coding tables. People screw tables up all the time. Most of the table damage I see just happens to be in TV articles. There may be help pages for tables but they're clearly not understood based on the number of basic errors that I've had to fix. Templates simplify table coding enormously. Unless you're Superman, or Mr Data trying to stop a core breach on the USS Enterprise, slow page load times really don't affect most articles. A few milliseconds here or there just isn't noticed by the average human. What goes on behind the scenes is very relevant to featured list discussions. If an article can't be promoted to featured status because it uses standard templates, then there's something wrong with the system. Instead of sticking heads in the sand and altering the article almost completely so that it does comply, the issues with the templates should be addressed so that the article doesn't need a complete rewrite.
- "You keep talking about duplication errors, don't you mean non-duplication errors" - If the same information is included in two different pages the content should be duplicated exactly on both pages, so the content isn't contradictory. Inevitably though, the information will become out of sync and the information will not be duplicated exactly on both pages. This is what the changes to List of Friends episodes will cause. There is no proposal to remove the episode lists from the individual season pages. That's not part of this nomination.
- "If you're worried about it, include notes to editors at the top of each editable section in hidden tags" - OK, I haven't looked at your profile but I assume from that suggestion that you live in Utopia where nothing ever goes wrong. People ignore hidden comments all the time. Sometimes it's a never-ending battle trying to stop people from ignoring notes. Have a look at the notes in the "
|starring=
" field of the infobox at The Big Bang Theory. They're always being ignored. Articles on TV programs that have ended constantly have "<foo> is a" changed to "<foo> was a", even when the note is right next to is. "International broadcast" tables that have a note at the beginning of the section saying "please add countries to this list in alphabetical order" are often re-ordered, or added to by somebody to whom the alphabet apparently starts with "azfkewpb". - "It was standard practice to send Jews to concentration camps" - Now this is getting silly. It was standard practice in Nazi Germany only. It was a practice rejected by the rest of the world. Do I need to invoke Godwin's law here? --AussieLegend (talk) 16:30, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- It was just Data, not Mr Data as far as I recall. And your comments are very interesting reading, but seem to ignore one key issue. The templates don't comply with WP:MOS. Make them comply and we'll be happy to use them. While they don't comply, we shouldn't use them. If fixing them would improve over 5,000 articles, why not just do it and then we can move on? But before that, can you tell me where you get the misguided idea that "What goes on behind the scenes is very relevant to featured list discussions." is true? Can you show me a discussion that consensually backs up your opinion? Ooh, and finally, overuse templates certainly does result in problems and load times. Just look at List of temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.... zOMG. The Rambling Man (talk) 16:34, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- I know it was Data, but I was trying to cater for people who have a life outside Star Trek, if there are any here. (BTW, Picard and Riker often called him Mr Data, but it doesn't really matter.) Your response ignores the fact that bolding is not an issue if you use "
|RTitle=
" instead of "|Title=
". Stating "Make them comply and we'll be happy to use them" ignores the fact that the template is used in over 5,000 articles, or over 100,000 times, since it's used multiple times in each article. Not using it in List of Friends episodes won't stop it being used. In any case, it's not actually used in the article at all. The template is used in 10 other articles and the content of those articles is only transcluded. It's pretty arrogant for a handful of editors to say that they won't use the template when it clearly has wide consensus for use, even "if" it doesn't comply with the MOS. "What goes on behind the scenes is very relevant to featured list discussions" is not misguided at all. Cause and effect. By demanding changes to an article that has been built in compliance with a significant Wikiproject you're affecting that project and the work of hundreds or thousands of other editors. It's not just one article being affected here, it's 11 directly, 10 of which aren't even nominated and the changes have a carry-on to any other TV list. Instead of changing the article and expecting other editors to work out why, you should be going to WP:TV and saying "Hey, we can't promote TV lists to featured status if you continue to use a template that doesn't comply with the MOS" and then work with the people who look after {{Episode list}} to fix it so you can promote lists without completely rewriting them. If you want to force people to use raw code, rewrite WP:DTT in a way that most editors can understand. --AussieLegend (talk) 18:12, 30 April 2012 (UTC)- No, you entirely misunderstand. This article meets our criteria. It doesn't matter that it doesn't use a foul template that isn't correctly coded. That's your issue. The fact you can't understand MOS:DTT is your issue, hundreds of lists recently promoted proves that people who bother to care about it do understand it. You have raised an issue but seem unwilling to do anything about it. The community here is content that this is a very good piece of work and uses coding to help those who need a little bit of extra thought. Rattling out the mantra that something used 5,000 times makes it right is nonsense. We have nearly 4 million articles. Who cares if these 5,000 articles don't give a damn about those readers who aren't just looking at pretty templates? I will never go to a project and say we can't promote a list if it meets WP:WIAFL. How ridiculous. You need to re-read the criteria and tell me where it says we need to use the templates you prefer. It's more than arrogant for you tell me it's arrogant for us to refuse to use a shoddy template that doesn't meet MOS. Classic lemming. You've made the fuss about this approach, you deal with the fallout. And I look forward to the day when I can encourage our editors to use a decent template that actually cares about all of our readers, not just the ones you think need to read Misplaced Pages. The Rambling Man (talk) 18:20, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- You entirely misunderstand that every TV episode list could meet your criteria if they were built the way you want them but that virtually none of them are. Friends certainly wasn't before Lemonade51 started playing. They're nearly all built the way that Friends was because that's the standard way that episode lists are built. You might care to read what I wrote again. All I suggested, since it is a problem that you seem to completely understand, is that you go to WP:TV and explain that {{Episode list}} has certain problems that need to be fixed so that articles using it can comply with your requirements. There's no point me doing it. I've already identified that there is a problem but I don't know how to fix the template. I don't understand why it doesn't comply. It looks fine to me based on what I can understand of the source.
- "It's more than arrogant for you tell me it's arrogant for us to refuse to use a shoddy template that doesn't meet MOS" - LOL. It's arrogant for you to expect me to fix a template that I can't because I don't know the specific problems, but you do. Next. --AussieLegend (talk) 18:49, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- It's WP:MOSBOLD and MOS:DTT. How many more times? You shouldn't bold text unnecessarily, you need to use row and col scopes, and you need to gain an appreciation of what it's like to browse Misplaced Pages's finest articles when you can't necessarily see each and every detail. The Rambling Man (talk) 19:59, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- How many more times does someone have to say that if you use RTitle instead of Title, bolding isn't an issue? --AussieLegend (talk) 21:05, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- How many more times do I have to say MOS:DTT to you? If you can't be bothered to read it, and understand it, that's one thing. Hundreds of lists have proved that's not beyond the wit of man. But if you can't be bothered, that's your problem, not mine. The Rambling Man (talk) 21:12, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- You only needed to say it once. I've read it and understood it. Your assumptions are incorrect. --AussieLegend (talk) 21:39, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- How many more times do I have to say MOS:DTT to you? If you can't be bothered to read it, and understand it, that's one thing. Hundreds of lists have proved that's not beyond the wit of man. But if you can't be bothered, that's your problem, not mine. The Rambling Man (talk) 21:12, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- How many more times does someone have to say that if you use RTitle instead of Title, bolding isn't an issue? --AussieLegend (talk) 21:05, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- It's WP:MOSBOLD and MOS:DTT. How many more times? You shouldn't bold text unnecessarily, you need to use row and col scopes, and you need to gain an appreciation of what it's like to browse Misplaced Pages's finest articles when you can't necessarily see each and every detail. The Rambling Man (talk) 19:59, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- No, you entirely misunderstand. This article meets our criteria. It doesn't matter that it doesn't use a foul template that isn't correctly coded. That's your issue. The fact you can't understand MOS:DTT is your issue, hundreds of lists recently promoted proves that people who bother to care about it do understand it. You have raised an issue but seem unwilling to do anything about it. The community here is content that this is a very good piece of work and uses coding to help those who need a little bit of extra thought. Rattling out the mantra that something used 5,000 times makes it right is nonsense. We have nearly 4 million articles. Who cares if these 5,000 articles don't give a damn about those readers who aren't just looking at pretty templates? I will never go to a project and say we can't promote a list if it meets WP:WIAFL. How ridiculous. You need to re-read the criteria and tell me where it says we need to use the templates you prefer. It's more than arrogant for you tell me it's arrogant for us to refuse to use a shoddy template that doesn't meet MOS. Classic lemming. You've made the fuss about this approach, you deal with the fallout. And I look forward to the day when I can encourage our editors to use a decent template that actually cares about all of our readers, not just the ones you think need to read Misplaced Pages. The Rambling Man (talk) 18:20, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- I know it was Data, but I was trying to cater for people who have a life outside Star Trek, if there are any here. (BTW, Picard and Riker often called him Mr Data, but it doesn't really matter.) Your response ignores the fact that bolding is not an issue if you use "
- It was just Data, not Mr Data as far as I recall. And your comments are very interesting reading, but seem to ignore one key issue. The templates don't comply with WP:MOS. Make them comply and we'll be happy to use them. While they don't comply, we shouldn't use them. If fixing them would improve over 5,000 articles, why not just do it and then we can move on? But before that, can you tell me where you get the misguided idea that "What goes on behind the scenes is very relevant to featured list discussions." is true? Can you show me a discussion that consensually backs up your opinion? Ooh, and finally, overuse templates certainly does result in problems and load times. Just look at List of temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.... zOMG. The Rambling Man (talk) 16:34, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- There's nothing to reconsider. The template is used in 5,068 articles. It's standard practice to use it in TV lists. Changing an article to introduce coding that isn't understood by most editors (that's why we have templates) and duplication errors is not the way to fix a problem. Nor is it appropriate to introduce such a problem under the guise of making a list, which is intricately linked to several other articles, a featured list. The correct, and most appropriate, process is to change the template if it's deemed necessary. While addition of new episodes is moot, duplication errors are not. People will edit the episode list and not the season article, or vice versa. If a side effect of making an article featured is causing errors, then not being featured is preferable. --AussieLegend (talk) 13:37, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- "Without transclusion, content is in two places, which doesn't help our readers" Readers don't care that content is in two articles. Lazy editors might, though. Next you'll be saying that we should transclude article content into the lede section (or vica verca) so people don't have to type repeated stuff there too.
- "Removing transclusion and building tables that duplicate what is already in the season articles will (I've seen it too many times) result in duplication errors." Transcluding from many articles means that when those articles are edited incorrectly or vandalised, both pages display errors. (I've seen it too many times.) I'd rather have one page display an error and another page display the right thing.
- Why do the summaries need to be moved to the list just because there's no transcluding? I don't get that. About 4 years ago none of the featured episode lists transcluded from the season pages, and they didn't have the summaries. Matthewedwards : Chat 14:36, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- "Readers don't care that content is in two articles. Lazy editors might, though" - Lazy editors have nothing to do with it. Readers shouldn't have to look in multiple articles to find content that is intimately related. It makes absolutely no sense to include everything about a season except for the episode list in one article, and the episode list in another. That's why, when TV list articles are split we include everything in the season article and transclude only the actual episode list, with no summaries, back to the main list.
- "Next you'll be saying that we should transclude article content into the lede section...." - Well, at least you didn't mention the Nazis, but it's almost as silly. The content in the lede is a summary of the entire article. The episode lists are one section and it makes no sense to include them anywhere other than the season article. It makes perfect sense to transclude the content, rather than duplicate it, because then only one article needs to be edited and you don't end up with two articles that contradict each other because somebody edited one article and not the other.
- "I'd rather have one page display an error and another page display the right thing." - If you have one page correct, and another that's wrong, how do you know which one is right? Sometimes the incorrect information goes undetected for months, even years. I've had to go through the process of repairing a TV series where errors existed in the episode list article as well as the season articles and it was hell trying to fix it all. With transclusion, the error can only occur in one article because the information only actually exists in one article.
- "Why do the summaries need to be moved to the list just because there's no transcluding" - It's a fairly basic principle that content only exists in one article. (We regularly delete articles that duplicate existing articles under WP:CSD#A10) If we already have an article on one subject we don't create another article with the same content. We link to it, with {{tl|see also||, {{main}} or some other similar link, and include the basics from the other article. For example, the "Political divisions" section of United States doesn't duplicate U.S. state. It uses {{main}} to link to U.S. state and sumamrises points from U.S. state. The tables that were created at List of Friends episodes substantially duplicate the tables that are in each of the season articles. Only the episode summaries are excluded. For reasons that I've explained at length, identical, or almost identical content shouldn't exist in two places. Because the episode numbers exist in the main list, they shouldn't also exist in the season articles. That leaves the episode summaries orphaned, so they should be moved from the season articles to the main list.
- "About 4 years ago none of the featured episode lists transcluded from the season pages, and they didn't have the summaries." - That was then, this is now. {{Episode list}} wasn't in as wide a use as it is now. It was only created in 2006 and by the time it became widely used, lots of TV lists already existed using custom tables. Now, most, if not almost all, TV lists are created using
{{Episode list}}
and we have to adapt. If the table is flawed, it needs to be fixed. The only dicussion about bolding seems to question whether MOS:BOLD actually applies to tables. In any case, this is not a real issue. Using "|RTitle=
" instead of "|Title=
" avoids the bolding issue. --AussieLegend (talk) 17:39, 30 April 2012 (UTC)- Fix the template so it meets WP:MOSBOLD (we do apply it tables, it's an accessibility issue, not a prose vs table issue) and MOS:DTT (for screen readers, predominantly to tell a blind or partially sighted reader where rows and columns start and aid them in understanding the content) and it fixes the issue. You're the one making the fuss about it, so suggest you fix the template and then we'll be happy to use it. In the meantime, hand-crafted tables (which are used in 100s of 1000s of articles, not just 5,068 articles which fail to comply with our MOS and prejudice those who need WP:ACCESS to be applied correctly) which comply with our requirements for FL will be the way ahead. It could be that you simply aren't interested in making sure the readers of Misplaced Pages with limited sight or visual perception shouldn't enjoy the site, but I doubt that. That's why we insist on these things. I hope you understand. The Rambling Man (talk) 17:52, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- Unlike others here, I've posted at both WT:TV and Template talk:Episode list regarding this matter There's little more that I can do. I don't have any control over {{Episode list}}. I can't edit it because I'm not an administrator. Perhaps you know one? --AussieLegend (talk) 18:18, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- Pardon? What has being an admin got to do with getting a community consensus to make a crappy template meet our own MOS? Nothing. I look encourage your efforts in resolving this issue with the poor template and look forward to seeing a great outcome where we can improve 5,000 articles rather than trying to force more and more articles to use rot-laiden templates which prejudice against those with limited or no vision. And from the looks of things, your request has (per normal for these niche issues) fallen on dead ears (we, i.e. WP:FLC have tried this discussion before you know....) ... (by the way, the second link doesn't work).... The Rambling Man (talk) 18:31, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- You keep telling me to fix it. How can I do that if you can't? You can gain consensus just as well as I can and since you seem to know specifically what's wrong with it, you have a better chance than I do. However, I've made the best request that I can. I can do no more. --AussieLegend (talk) 19:09, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- If you claim that we must use this god-awful template ("because everyone else does" ) then you need to get a consensus to do that. There's no rule anywhere that says that using a poorly formatted template is better than using correct markup. If you keep insisting on the use of code that prejudices others then that's one thing. If you can go off and solve your own problem, that's another. I've told you, WP:MOSBOLD and MOS:DTT are the issues. Hundreds of FLC editors can deal with it. I see no reason to compromise just to use something that "because everyone else does" ().... The Rambling Man (talk) 19:59, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- You've misread what I said, which was that rather than completely rewrite articles so that they comply, it's far better to fix the template so that completely rewriting articles is unnecessary. Fixing one template makes a lot more sense than rewriting 5,000 articles. --AussieLegend (talk) 21:05, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- So help fix it. I see that you've put a few messages out there. What's important to know is that we've tried this sort of thing before and because no-one cares about ACCESS details, especially those who craft these intricate and delicate (and MOS-failing) templates. We seem to be getting somewhere, thanks to Matthewedwards, but in any case, there's no reason for us to compromise here just because you want to use templates, and we all want to use MOS-compliant coding. (By the way, those 5,000 articles probably aren't featured, so no-one cares about them, unlike this list....) The Rambling Man (talk) 21:09, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- I have been helping. As you've noticed, and as I've pointed out here, I've made several posts at relevant WT:TV and Template talk:Episode list, including an edit request that has prompted some action. You may have "we've tried this sort of thing before" somewhere, but you don't appear to have done so at
{{Episode list}}
, which is why I was asking you to do so there, since you seemed to know what the problems were. You can't expect others to help you if you aren't willing to take some action yourself. Nobody is asking you to compromise; it just makes a lot more sense to fix one template than have to rewrite every TV list that is nominated. As for no-one caring about those 5,000 articles, that's not the case at all. You may not care but you aren't everyone. If you did care, you could use the fact that those 5,000+ articles will never reach FA/FL status with the template in its current form to force WP:ACCESS changes to the template and save a lot of work in the future, when some do come up for nomination. You need to look at the bigger picture. --AussieLegend (talk) 21:39, 30 April 2012 (UTC)- Heh, as I said before, fix the template and we'll use it. That is the bigger picture! In the meantime, we'll just stick to compliance with MOS. Cheers! The Rambling Man (talk) 06:49, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- I have been helping. As you've noticed, and as I've pointed out here, I've made several posts at relevant WT:TV and Template talk:Episode list, including an edit request that has prompted some action. You may have "we've tried this sort of thing before" somewhere, but you don't appear to have done so at
- So help fix it. I see that you've put a few messages out there. What's important to know is that we've tried this sort of thing before and because no-one cares about ACCESS details, especially those who craft these intricate and delicate (and MOS-failing) templates. We seem to be getting somewhere, thanks to Matthewedwards, but in any case, there's no reason for us to compromise here just because you want to use templates, and we all want to use MOS-compliant coding. (By the way, those 5,000 articles probably aren't featured, so no-one cares about them, unlike this list....) The Rambling Man (talk) 21:09, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- You've misread what I said, which was that rather than completely rewrite articles so that they comply, it's far better to fix the template so that completely rewriting articles is unnecessary. Fixing one template makes a lot more sense than rewriting 5,000 articles. --AussieLegend (talk) 21:05, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- If you claim that we must use this god-awful template ("because everyone else does" ) then you need to get a consensus to do that. There's no rule anywhere that says that using a poorly formatted template is better than using correct markup. If you keep insisting on the use of code that prejudices others then that's one thing. If you can go off and solve your own problem, that's another. I've told you, WP:MOSBOLD and MOS:DTT are the issues. Hundreds of FLC editors can deal with it. I see no reason to compromise just to use something that "because everyone else does" ().... The Rambling Man (talk) 19:59, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- You keep telling me to fix it. How can I do that if you can't? You can gain consensus just as well as I can and since you seem to know specifically what's wrong with it, you have a better chance than I do. However, I've made the best request that I can. I can do no more. --AussieLegend (talk) 19:09, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- Pardon? What has being an admin got to do with getting a community consensus to make a crappy template meet our own MOS? Nothing. I look encourage your efforts in resolving this issue with the poor template and look forward to seeing a great outcome where we can improve 5,000 articles rather than trying to force more and more articles to use rot-laiden templates which prejudice against those with limited or no vision. And from the looks of things, your request has (per normal for these niche issues) fallen on dead ears (we, i.e. WP:FLC have tried this discussion before you know....) ... (by the way, the second link doesn't work).... The Rambling Man (talk) 18:31, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- Unlike others here, I've posted at both WT:TV and Template talk:Episode list regarding this matter There's little more that I can do. I don't have any control over {{Episode list}}. I can't edit it because I'm not an administrator. Perhaps you know one? --AussieLegend (talk) 18:18, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
- Fix the template so it meets WP:MOSBOLD (we do apply it tables, it's an accessibility issue, not a prose vs table issue) and MOS:DTT (for screen readers, predominantly to tell a blind or partially sighted reader where rows and columns start and aid them in understanding the content) and it fixes the issue. You're the one making the fuss about it, so suggest you fix the template and then we'll be happy to use it. In the meantime, hand-crafted tables (which are used in 100s of 1000s of articles, not just 5,068 articles which fail to comply with our MOS and prejudice those who need WP:ACCESS to be applied correctly) which comply with our requirements for FL will be the way ahead. It could be that you simply aren't interested in making sure the readers of Misplaced Pages with limited sight or visual perception shouldn't enjoy the site, but I doubt that. That's why we insist on these things. I hope you understand. The Rambling Man (talk) 17:52, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
Comment only just noticed all the edits made despite ongoing discussion as to the way ahead. How disappointing. Well, for now it's an oppose based on the use of the template which fails MOS in its current form. Sorry about that. The Rambling Man (talk) 13:21, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- Would your decision change if it was reverted (I had intended to do so when the edits were made)? -- Lemonade51 (talk) 13:35, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- I certainly wouldn't oppose any longer it as it would meet MOS. But I won't encourage edit wars either... perhaps we need to ensure that, at the very least, the transcluded information complies with MOS, so change all the season templates to unbolded text and ensure they have row scopes implemented.... The Rambling Man (talk) 13:54, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- Since multiple editors reverted your changes, it would be unwise to revert as the changes are clearly contested. Before any reversions, you need to discuss on the article's talk page. Remember, in any content dispute you should follow WP:BRD and the status quo prevails. There's now some discussion at {{Episode list}} and the template will probably be changed, so any changes made at season articles should be limited to edits that won't need to be reverted when the template is "fixed". Misplaced Pages is not working to a deadline so there's no urgency to "pre-fix" things. --AussieLegend (talk) 14:11, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- Hence why I haven't reverted in the first place. Heck, I'll be happy to withdraw the nomination until the problem has been fully resolved. But I assume this could be sorted out in weeks, not months. BTW, I know the WP:MOSBOLD can be resolved; has it been possible to correct the row scopes? -- Lemonade51 (talk) 14:24, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- Yeah, I agree. And you're being very reasonable about all this reverting after all the work you put into it, so I'm grateful for that. I think we may have a solution for the row scopes, but regarding the unbolding, you'd need to be sure that the various other places where the episode lists are transcluded are happy having their version unbolded. That could start its own edit war (predominantly because some people seem to prefer ignoring the MOS rather than complying with it). The Rambling Man (talk) 14:30, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
- Hmm, as I feared, the discussion over removing the bold text looks likely to last a while... The Rambling Man (talk) 08:03, 2 May 2012 (UTC)
- Hey Lemonade51, having done plenty (read: too much pointless) discussion into this issue, and noting that the TV project people are basically playing these lists into a corner (i.e. you must use the template, and you can't change the template, simultaneously), my advice now is to skip the use of the Episode list template and revert to the hand-crafted table which is just fine per WP:FLC. The only data that is transcluded is the episode name in this instance and I can't see a good argument that it will suddenly be out of synch with other uses of the title. Unbold that (per the Simpsons etc) and we've got a winner! The Rambling Man (talk) 17:21, 3 May 2012 (UTC)
- Absolutely. There's nothing at MOS:TV that says that episode lists must use the template and that they must be transcluded. In fact, if you look through the talk page archive of the template, it says repeatedly that no one is forced to use it, and that it just facilitates easier data entry for those who can't read tables. Since the series is over, there won't be any new episodes listed, and any edits that do arise will be purely maintenance. Matthewedwards : Chat 18:52, 3 May 2012 (UTC)
- Thank you both for your patience and persistence on the episode list matter. Have reverted the tables, is there anything more to be done? -- Lemonade51 (talk) 19:14, 3 May 2012 (UTC)
- Absolutely. There's nothing at MOS:TV that says that episode lists must use the template and that they must be transcluded. In fact, if you look through the talk page archive of the template, it says repeatedly that no one is forced to use it, and that it just facilitates easier data entry for those who can't read tables. Since the series is over, there won't be any new episodes listed, and any edits that do arise will be purely maintenance. Matthewedwards : Chat 18:52, 3 May 2012 (UTC)
- Hey Lemonade51, having done plenty (read: too much pointless) discussion into this issue, and noting that the TV project people are basically playing these lists into a corner (i.e. you must use the template, and you can't change the template, simultaneously), my advice now is to skip the use of the Episode list template and revert to the hand-crafted table which is just fine per WP:FLC. The only data that is transcluded is the episode name in this instance and I can't see a good argument that it will suddenly be out of synch with other uses of the title. Unbold that (per the Simpsons etc) and we've got a winner! The Rambling Man (talk) 17:21, 3 May 2012 (UTC)
- Hence why I haven't reverted in the first place. Heck, I'll be happy to withdraw the nomination until the problem has been fully resolved. But I assume this could be sorted out in weeks, not months. BTW, I know the WP:MOSBOLD can be resolved; has it been possible to correct the row scopes? -- Lemonade51 (talk) 14:24, 1 May 2012 (UTC)
Comment. I have substitued the Season article by this: {{subst::Friends (season 1)}}
. What do you think? --George Ho (talk) 20:35, 3 May 2012 (UTC)
- Doesn't solve MOS:BOLD and MOS:DTT concerns. Think the wikitables are perfectly fine at this moment in time. -- Lemonade51 (talk) 21:22, 3 May 2012 (UTC)
To be honest, I'm quite disgusted by what has gone on in the past few hours. Attempts to remove bolding from {{Episode list}} are underway at the template talk page, and scopes are also being addressed. Despite this, two editors who have been involved in the discussions and template modifications, have now decided to bypass these attempts and encourage another editor to edit a page where the changes are clearly contested, instead of further discussing those changes at the article's talk page (as I earlier suggested here) or waiting for the template to be changed. That editor has, quite inappropriately, reverted the changes as vandalism, when they clearly were not. Discussions here have no authority to override anything else that is going on at Misplaced Pages. They are only about whether the article should be promoted to featured status. The one good thing that has come about from the recent activities is that it has shown how transclusion is clearly necessary. Yesterday, changes were made to 9 of the 10 season articles. These seem to be reasonable changes and were immediately visible in List of Friends episodes when it was transcluded. However, Lemonade51's changes immediately made the article inconsistent with those 9 articles, which is unnaceptable. --AussieLegend (talk) 01:00, 4 May 2012 (UTC)
- I don't see any mention or accusation of "vandalism" in the edit summary. You're insisting on using the template and there is nothing, anywhere, that says the template has to be used. MOS:TV only says that the tables should appear consistent but it doesn't say how to do that. Talk page archives of the template say that if you want to use regular table coding, well then that is fine. The only thing that is being bypassed is the fact that the template doesn't conform to WP:MOS. Those who want to see this pass FLC want it to conform to MOS because WP:FL? says it has to follow MOS in order to pass. Since the template doesn't, the only way around that is to not use the template. As long as the facts are all correct in the season articles and the list of episodes page, that's okay. Nothing in MOS:TV or anywhere else says that they have to be identically formatted or transcluded or anything else. There was nothing unacceptable about it. Matthewedwards : Chat 01:41, 4 May 2012 (UTC)
- Each of the edit summaries starts with "rvv" which represents "ReVerting Vandalism". "Revert" is simply "rv". You're insisting on using complex custom tables that facilitate the introduction of inconsistencies and which in fact did that. There is nothing, anywhere, that says the tables have to be used and transclusion has to be removed. Do you see where we are now? Inconsistencies between related articles is unacceptable when there is absolutely no need for those inconsistencies. Transclusion has been proven (today in fact) to eliminate the inconsistencies. Now to summarise the situation:
- We can use the template unaltered, which doesn't comply and the article won't be promoted - If it doesn't get promoted, what's the effect on Misplaced Pages? Very little I expect.
- We can replace 875 bytes of transclusion code with 57,873 bytes of custom tables and suffer from inconsistencies between articles. Inconsistencies aren't just a threat, they actually happened when Lemonade51 followed your recommendation. OR,
- We can
(a) Add "scope="col" to each of the header rows in the season articles (we don't actually need to do that because I've already taken the initiative and done it since it was required by WP:DTT anyway)
(b) Make 1 small change to {{Episode list}} to unbold episode titles. (Discussion on this is already underway and in the meantime I've unbolded all of the episode titles in all of the season articles while we're waiting for this to happen)
(c) Make 1 change to {{Episode list}} to add row scopes and
(d) wait patiently (like adults) while (b) and (c) happen.
- As of now, only 3(c) needs to be done in order for this article to comply using transclusion. Option 2 makes a single article compliant, while suffering from demonstrated inconsistencies, both with other related articles and most of the article under the WP:TV banner. On the other hand, option 3 will make 5,080+ articles (Use of
{{Episode list}}
has increased by 16 articles in the past 4 days!) have a much easier time complying, which has to be a lot better for Wkipedia. Even option 1 seems a better option than option 2 at this time. --AussieLegend (talk) 03:49, 4 May 2012 (UTC)- Well I suppose the way it is right now is alright (transclusion is another discussion), except that the episode titles need quote marks around them per WP:MOS, MOS:TEXT, MOS:TV and MOS:TITLE. Using AltTitle= instead of RefTitle= would achieve this, or manually inputting the quotemarks around the titles. But if the latter is done, when the episode list template is changed someone would have to go around deleting them all and changing RefTitle= to Title=, as opposed to half the work of changing AltTitle= to Title=. Matthewedwards : Chat 04:39, 4 May 2012 (UTC)
- BTW, how do you know there are 16 more articles using it, and which ones are they? Matthewedwards : Chat 04:46, 4 May 2012 (UTC)
- Neither the 26 April or today's version of the article by Lemonade51 included quotation marks. Since those versions were acceptable here I decided to mimic them. That's why I used RTitle instead of AltTitle. When I checked the transclusion count 4 days ago, 5,068 articles use the template. Today when I checked it was 5,084. Now it's 5,085. I have no idea what the new articles are. The toolserver doesn't tell you that. --AussieLegend (talk) 10:40, 4 May 2012 (UTC)
For what it's worth, the use of this Episode template to keep episode summaries consistent seems reasonable. But the use of the template here is not to provide episode summaries at all, simply to provide the episode title. That should be stable and therefore there's no need for any transclusions. Using the hand-crafted table for this kind of "summary" list is perfectly acceptable, and avoids the nonsense lose-lose argument being propounded by the TV project collective. Incidentally, a good reason not to transclude these episodes is demonstrated by this edit which, to anyone watching the potentially featured list (and not all the sub-articles transcluded) would miss. This has removed an episode and associated production code information etc. This would have been correctly preserved if we didn't use this transclusion. Similarly, this handy edit has, via transclusion, now introduced an non-MOS-compliant number range (see WP:DASH) to the article. Same with this delight and this etc etc. It's also resulted in the columns being different widths from season to season which is also undesirable. Oh, and the formatting of grey/non-grey backgrounds has gone awry in seasons 4 and 5 as well. We can't rely on people editing the transclusions to realise the content is potentially part of featured material and therefore all edits must comply with MOS and WP:WIAFL. The Rambling Man (talk) 08:29, 4 May 2012 (UTC)
- The template doesn't just provide the episode title. It also provides writers, directors, air dates, production codes and two episode numbers for each episode. While one who isn't experienced with TV articles may think they should be stable, they aren't, as yesterday's edits showed. The content that this edit removed was incorrectly restored by the custom table. That episode aired as a single back to back episode, not as two separate episodes. As I've said on my talk page, I really don't see the point of nominating just the overall episode article on its own when it has been split out to season articles. All of the articles are intimately related and nominating the episode list is like nominating only the lede of any other article. All of the articles need to be featured, or none at all. --AussieLegend (talk) 10:40, 4 May 2012 (UTC)