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Hi Mishae, it looks to me as if you just deleted some sections. Although they can always be retrieved from the page history, archiving normally means you put them onto another page. There are two methods: copying and pasting, or moving the page. I use the second method, as you can see in the page history here. The main difference is that the talk page history (of actual contributions) is split up between the different archive pages if you use the "move" method, but kept all on one page if you copy and paste. Also, you can get a bot to do archiving for you, using copy and paste. See Help:Archiving a talk page. – FayenaticLondon17:51, 1 January 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I saw that an editor had made an attempt to improve an almost non-sensical sentence in Marcus Aurelius, but without succeeding. I went back in the Revision History to October 12, 2009, and found that the first part of the sentence had somehow gotten cut off, so I replaced it. Now the sentence makes sense. I tried to put the link to that particular edit in my edit summary. The information is there, starting with http, but it doesn't look like a link that someone can click on. Can you tell me how to do that? I don't know if you can fix this one, but at least I'll know for the next time. Thanks. CorinneSD (talk) 03:03, 2 January 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hi Corinne, a permanent link is in effect an external link rather than an internal link. As far as I know it's not possible to make these clickable in edit summaries. Well done for your detective work, and for including the link in the edit summary anyway.
Fayenatic london, I wish you a Happy New Year, and thank you for the good cooperation in the past as also in the future. Beagel (talk) 12:44, 3 January 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hi again. Happy New Year. Can you offer your opinion on which photo is better for the Infobox here? If you're not able to participate, just disregard this message; you don't have to message me. Thanks. Nightscream (talk) 00:56, 10 January 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I strongly feel that a category needs to be there for this. Why do you not want it there? It is not hurting anything, and there is a section for American female pop singer-songwriters; in fact, rock is one of America's most popular genres. Thebuck093 (talk) 19:19, 18 January 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Good morning, I have been working on Ted Jensen's wiki page and I see that you deleted family info on there. What was written were facts and I believe it was you who found Carl's name in the Yale journal several months ago and cited it, but now you've taken it down. I did a little more research and found Ted's mother's obituary stating that Carl was her husband, and Ted was her son, and a description of her education etc. and how she and his father met, so if this is cited, can the paragraph I wrote be put back up there? It doesn't read very well now and I think it's important for generations to come to know where some of these pioneers came from and briefly how their love of music evolved. This is Ted's mother's obit. http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/nhregister/obituary.aspx?pid=165917127. I used to work for Phil Ramone and have been involved in the music industry since the early 80's and plan on writing more bios on the folks behind the scenes who contributed greatly to the music and technology we hear today who have not yet been written about on Wikipedia. I honestly would appreciate any help you can give me. Thank you Dmileson (talk) 16:05, 29 January 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hi, thanks for your message. I see that I stated in my edit summary,[1]Remove unsourced family info. The citations that were given within that para do not provide evidence that the stated info is connected to Ted Jensen. I haven't looked at the new source but if it makes the connection, your proposal sounds fine.
The normal process for expanding Wikipedia is to work from published reliable sources. If you are instead working from personal knowledge, it is important that you only put in information that is backed up by such sources, and state them. I hope this helps.
I'm going to have less time for checking stuff here in future, but it sounds as if you're getting the hang of contributing well. Keep it up! – FayenaticLondon08:38, 30 January 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you for your help, Fayenatic london! One of my favorite places, by the way! :)
I wonder if you can help me merge those two articles, by moving Laila to Laila Bagge Wahlgren. There is some additional info on her Swedish wiki page.
Also on this Swedish page [2]
This type of work, I'm not so good at. 193.12.5.35 (talk) 01:21, 6 February 2015 (UTC) Creedswede[reply]
Hi Fayenatic london,
I see you were the closing admin for Category:Companies_of_the_United_States_with_untaxed_profits. I believe the parent categories of this deleted categoy were not added to the articles that were its children. Am I correct? Thanks in advance, Ottawahitech (talk) 16:11, 2 March 2015 (UTC)[reply]
If you don't read the Billboard Book and change the official charts, I will sue you and your friends for fraud and libel of music charts of Freddie Aguilar for $ 2 Million Dollars!!!!!!!!! My Father Is A Very Well-Known Attorney In The Philippines so, be prepared!!!!! — Preceding unsigned comment added by JomartheGreat (talk • contribs) 00:43, 9 March 2015 (UTC)[reply]
What are you talking about, JomartheGreat? Something in the page history at Anak? I can't see what I've changed there that you would object to.
Ah, that's music to my ears. I don't have as much time for this as before. Thanks for the ping; I have finished parenting and populating the new postal infrastructure cats. – FayenaticLondon22:57, 15 March 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hi. I don't think your close on the Jewish Olympics (the Maccabiah Games bronze medalists) here was proper. At the very least conversation should be extended. As to the ! votes on the nom, they were 1 in favor of the nom and 1 against; not a consensus to delete. --Epeefleche (talk) 19:49, 19 March 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hi Epeefleche, the !votes were 3:1 which indicated consensus to me.
For: SFB, Marcocapelle and Johnpacklambert. Against: Epeefleche.
There was also the comment from the anon editor, but they did not come back with a formal "oppose".
As for your comment that it should be extended, it had been open for over six weeks. That's plenty. Until your vote last week, the voting was 3:0.
Seeing that there was so little at stake, with only one page to be re-categorised, I went ahead and closed it as having consensus.
Ah. I see that I implemented the result incorrectly, by upmerging the bronze medalist to "Medalists" instead of removing the category from his page per the consensus. Well, I'll leave it there, otherwise I can't see the point of keeping both the "medalists" and "gold medalists" category. Is this any consolation? – FayenaticLondon22:44, 19 March 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Errata. I was (mis)-reading the !votes, in the edit portion where I got lost. As to the !votes, the IP indicated a view. I don't think it is necessary for the formatting to include the word Keep, or for him to come back and re-format his view. Also, Marco - who you counted - didn't express a rationale. And the rationale expressed by nom is questionable by wp standards, which was pointed out. As to the six weeks, you are correct ... but I still question whether there was a consensus here. Given the IP !vote, the zero-rationale Marco !vote, and the substance of the comments (seriously ... the nom is comparing the third-largest international sport events in the world, sanctioned by the US Olympic Committee,[3] with 8,500 participants from 70 countries, to his local event ... there is no requirement that performance be at level x in a sport event ... we would reflect a medal winner at the national sport event of the smallest nation, for example, and this is much larger with much more RS coverage). Epeefleche (talk) 22:57, 19 March 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I have reopened it, solely because JPL was not clear on his reason for considering it non-defining: notability of the event, or notability of winning bronze. @Johnpacklambert: please clarify. I have now voted instead of closing, to merge rather than delete. – FayenaticLondon06:00, 20 March 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks. Can you perhaps ping the IP as well, if you really question whether the IP has voiced a view that can be counted? Thanks for reconsidering. Best. Epeefleche (talk) 06:25, 20 March 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for pinging, I agree with Epeefleche that my vote initially didn't count by lack of rationale and also agree that any objections that people make without formally voting should be taken into consideration while closing a CfD. Number of people shouldn't play a too big role when only a few people react. Marcocapelle (talk) 21:52, 20 March 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I don't know why I still have that page on my watchlist, but I noticed that you outdented my reply to RevelationDirect when adding a comment of your own in this edit. After RGloucester's attacks on me in AN/I, I don't care to edit that section any more, but my non-vote comment should not have its indentation changed except to match that of the comment I was responding to. // coldacid (talk|contrib) 21:46, 28 March 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for uploading File:United House logo.gif. The image description page currently specifies that the image is non-free and may only be used on Wikipedia under a claim of fair use. However, the image is currently not used in any articles on Wikipedia. If the image was previously in an article, please go to the article and see why it was removed. You may add it back if you think that that will be useful. However, please note that images for which a replacement could be created are not acceptable for use on Wikipedia (see our policy for non-free media).
Background: The LMS color space article contained some errors and was a little confusing, so I cleaned it up a bit and thereby added the Hunt color model. All other color models in this article have links (even if no article exists), so I figured this should also be the case for the Hunt color model. Of course, what we could do is link directly to Hunt color model, so that there’s no immediate need for an entry in Hunt.
In any case, it would probably be best to create at least stubs for the various color models and Color Appearance Model, but since I’m not a native English speaker, I hesitate to do much in the English Wikipedia – for now, I just wanted to clean up LMS color space.
@Uli Zappe: Thanks for your work, and this explanation! I mentioned the external link in my edit summary to acknowledge that the Hunt CAM was a real thing.
If the number of notable colour appearance models is limited, I suggest creating a list of them as a new section in the main article, with their date and a few words e.g. what they are used for, specialist field if applicable, extent to which they have been taken up. Then, create a redirect to this list for each CAM that does not yet have an article. – FayenaticLondon07:48, 10 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
By the way, I was surprised that there was no German wiki page linked to color model. I found de:Farberscheinungsmodell and linked that; it was previously incorrectly linked to CIECAM02. I can see that Farberscheinungsmodell means color appearance model, which is more specific than color model, but as we do not have separate articles for the two concepts I think this is the best way to link them for now. – FayenaticLondon07:58, 10 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
The question is, what is the main article? This would be Color Appearance Model, but there is no such article in the English Wikipedia; Color Appearance Model forwards to Color model. However, Color Models and Color Appearance Models are two very different animals: A color model defines a way to describe colors by a specific set of parameters, e.g. RGB, CMYK or XYZ. A color appearance model tries to model psychological effects of human color vision depending on the viewing environment, i.e. the way colors change for the human vision in bright or dim light etc. This has hardly anything to do with each other. About the only point of contact would be the CIELAB color space, which is a color model (components L, a and b) which at the same time tries to model some very basic appearance phenomena (basically lightness (= L), perceived color difference (= delta E) and chromatic adaptation (Lab values are relative to an illuminant white point)).
So it’s quite misleading that Color Appearance Model forwards to Color Model. There should be a separate article for Color Appearance Model. If there was one, I do agree that we could include a list of color appearance models there, and from there link to those which have their own article (like CIECAM02).
Hi, I tried, using a new redirect de:Farbmodell, but it seems that Wikidata no longer allows a redirect to be given as an interwiki link, if the target page already has its own Wikidata item.
Yep, unaware that you already tried, I tried exactly the same, and indeed, it does not work. I have at least removed the incorrect link to Farberscheinungsmodell. Unfortunately, a stub for color appearance model won’t remove this problem, since the issue is that we would need Color model to link to de:Farbraum, which in the German Wikipedia includes a section about color models, whereas Color space also (correctly) links to de:Farbraum. We simply have one German article for two English ones. --Uli Zappe (talk) 16:43, 10 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Well, if you start an article, I will be happy to copy-edit it for good English if necessary. A definition followed by a list (as suggested above) would be a useful start. – FayenaticLondon18:27, 10 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Have a look at User:Uli Zappe/Color Appearance Model. If you consider this a suitable starting point, feel free to correct any English issues. --Uli Zappe (talk) 05:09, 11 April 2015 (UTC) EDIT: Better wait with any English corrections, as I still want to edit some of the content, but I don’t know when I’ll have the time to do so. --Uli Zappe (talk) 12:29, 11 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I didn’t, but these deal with phenomena that are yet another level higher. Basically, we have 3 levels: 1. Light meets the eye, human sensors respond – colorimetry, the most basic, psychophysiological level. 2. The light appears to a human (generally, all human) observer(s) as e.g. a "bright, saturated red" – color appearance/psychology, which is what we deal with here 3. “He found that to men, women dressed in the color red were significantly more likely to attract romantic attention than women in any other color.“– cultural connotations of color. --Uli Zappe (talk) 20:04, 11 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I put a new version of the article draft on User:Uli Zappe/Color Appearance Model. I’m still not completely satisfied with the article, but cannot spend more time on it now. Please correct any English issues; I’ll publish the article after that. --Uli Zappe (talk) 10:26, 13 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
1. Line 2: "Objectively" was meant to be in quotation marks and not as an emphasis (because, as the subject of color shows, the concept of objectivity might be quite naive) – OK to switch back?
OK.
2. Only if all these conditions stay constant will two identical stimuli with identical XYZ tristimulus values – I think a "thereby" is still needed after "with", because otherwise, the sentence could suggest that "identical stimuli without identical XYZ values" could also exist (which they cannot) – OK?
Yes, OK.
3. Line 62: It (the Hunt model) had a very significant impact on CIECAM02, but because of its complexity it is difficult to use. – Maybe I’m thinking too “German” here, but it seems to me something from my version (… is difficult to use itself.) is missing, namely the contrast to CIECAM02. CIECAM02, although it took a lot from the Hunt model, is easy to use, but the Hunt model itself is not. Your version might suggest to some readers that CIECAM02 also inherited the complexity from the Hunt model. If you cannot use "itself" here, any other way to accentuate this nuance in English?
I suggest: "but because of its complexity the Hunt model is difficult to use."
I made it "but because of its complexity the Hunt model itself is difficult to use." for more clarity. If this still doesn’t work in English, remove the "itself".
Excellent! I changed the article name to lower case, and added categories. Please look up, down and around those categories in case you can find more appropriate ones. What about your draft: do you want to redirect it, or shall I delete it? – FayenaticLondon15:03, 13 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Please delete the draft, that spares me to look up how to do this (which I always forget …) – Looking around the categories, I find there is a "Color appearance phenomena" category. I don’t know if the article itself should be added there, but in any case, I will add links to the phenomena with an article of their own. If I find other categories, I’ll come back here. EDIT Since some color appearance phenomena I listed do not have an article of their own, the "Color appearance phenomena" category should probably be added. --Uli Zappe (talk) 15:36, 13 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
OK, done. You probably noticed that I linked other pages to the new page, and added a wikidata link to the German page. That's pretty well integrated now.
Would you like to nominate it for WP:DYK, so that it would be featured for 6 hours on the main page? I haven't done a DYK for some time, but last time I did, the deal was that if you submit one, you have to assess somebody else's. – FayenaticLondon21:18, 13 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Dear Fayenetic, thank you for your excellent closure decisions! Please do not forget executing the second one, i.e. the double upmerge. If you are in the proces or about to start anyway, please disregard my comment! All the best, gidonb (talk) 18:40, 17 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Cheers! The second part is listed for manual processing at WP:CFDWM. Armbrust may do it, as he has a bot which can do double upmerges. If you use WP:AWB, you would be welcome to do it yourself. – FayenaticLondon21:10, 17 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Great, thanks, Armbrust. You may have noticed that I am working manually through the American rock singer-songwriters, as they do not all need to go in all the parents (e.g. if in a gendered sub-cat already). – FayenaticLondon17:43, 18 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hi, thanks for your input re the above very flawed general category ("Oppose, this needs more work than that. For a start, C2C would mean merging the biography articles to the existing Category:American cattlemen. I suggest a full CFD to restructure the contents, with Category:Cowboy culture becoming the head cat of the "Cowboy..." categories. Probably best to propose a split of the nominated category to American cattlemen and Cowboy culture.")
You are of course correct. Can you help me go about this. I am sorry for being a pain but I don't even know how to start that process. Thanks. Yours, Quis separabit?21:51, 18 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
OK, thanks – done. WP:CFD#HOWTO goes into a lot of detail, but the short templates listed under "Edit the category" are usually all that is needed, and easily memorised. Please let me know if you find any of it unclear. – FayenaticLondon06:31, 19 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
In case you were not aware, CydeBot is not removing templates after CfD renames at the moment, but using WP:CFDWR after keep/no consensus results seems to be working fine.
Thanks for letting me know. As that was a nom that was "partially" implemented, I didn't think about the tags on the other part. Nice catch, thank you.
and thanks. On many, I really don't have an opinion, it's more just to help the closer have "something" to implement that follows current consensus/convention/policy/etc. I'm just amazed at the backlog myself. - jc3719:54, 19 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for the heads-up on your nomination of the article for deletion. I appreciate having been given a chance to argue for keeping it. Chuck is quite a remarkable person, extremely well known in some Christian streams, and I think it would be a shame to delete the article. Waitak (talk) 23:41, 21 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
No problem. I thought I'd be bold and close one of the oldest outstanding CfDs, as no-one else seems to bother! Now awaiting someone to tell me not to do closures like that in the future, haha. Happy days. LugnutsDick Laurent is dead17:53, 23 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
To Fayenatic london: Thank you very much for 'Wikifying' a portion of the Mandel page. When I'm back home tomorrow, I'll get busy on continuing that work. Thanks, again. ReidWilliam (talk) 18:22, 24 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
ReidWilliam: I did it in stages to try and make it easy for you to follow. I've just finished number 2 for you. Read the notes I left in the edit summaries (page history) too. – Fayenatic London 22:00, 25 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
By the way, if you don't want your user page to be a red link, but don't want to reveal anything about yourself, you could simply redirect the user page to the user talk page. – FayenaticLondon20:57, 26 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Fayenatic london: Have continued to work on 'wikifying' References section of the Mandel page. (Hope it's looking slightly cleaner.) I apologize that I still haven't figured out how to delete the multiple footnote numbers: [3], [4], [5], [6], [7], [8], that have popped up at the top of References section. ReidWilliam (talk) 22:26, 27 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Fayenatic london I'm continuing to work on 'wikifying' the Mandel page, and am (finally) repairing the footnotes and numbering. (I think I've finally figured that aspect out.) Bear with me, please. ReidWilliam (talk) 20:52, 28 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
ReidWilliam: OK, good, well done! Please don't include external links to the publisher's or retailers' sites for the books; the automatic ISBN links in the bibliography are sufficient. – FayenaticLondon20:56, 28 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
E.M.Gregory and Fayenatic london: Thanks to you both for the editing and formatting help re: the Mandel page, and for your latest round of comments. With regard to notability, I've gone back and done a bit more research. Since it sounds like book reviews in major periodicals, significant awards, and work being anthologized are key, I've found some other relevant citations that I hadn't been aware of. These include several more of the author's books being reviewed in Publishers Weekly, Kirkus and The Horn Book; three journalism awards; and an anthology and edited collection that include the author's work. Am working on double-checking the citations. Please, if you would, give me a few hours on this. Many thanks. ReidWilliam (talk) 18:08, 29 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
To E.M.Gregory and Fayenatic london: More to come, but as noted above, I've done some further research. With regard to the notability question, I've added citations for several more reviews of Mandel's books in major journals (Publishers Weekly, Kirkus). Have put these under 'External Links' so as not to disrupt the formatting. As well, I've added citations, under 'Other Works,' for two edited anthologies that include the author's work. One is an older collection of animal related essays in the "Chicken Soup" series, the other a recent anthology of travel journalism. There's another anthology, and two other journalistic awards that have popped up as well; am currently at work on verifying them. Thanks again for your patience. ReidWilliam (talk) 20:47, 29 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
E.M.Gregory and Fayenatic london: With regard to notability, as mentioned above, I've added citations for two more Lowell Thomas awards from The Society of American Travel Writers. Articles of Mandel's for The Washington Post won bronze Lowell Thomas awards in 2003 and 2006. (Not that you perhaps care, but these are, at least given the evidence I've encountered, the premier national awards for American travel journalism.) Thanks for your patience, and best wishes. ReidWilliam (talk) 05:16, 30 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
@991joseph: please pardon me for not leaving an edit summary. That category is meant to contain subcats only, not pages. Please feel free to add more specific subcategories from that hierarchy instead. – FayenaticLondon08:01, 8 May 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Evidently you closed the discussion while I was writing. I wonder whether my "Show preview" generated some alert. --P64 (talk) 16:36, 8 May 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I didn't get a notice, but the color shading and footer text appeared between one "Show preview" and the next.
By the way, does such renaming create category redirects? If not, does the robot check "What links here?" and fix hard links. (I supposed not, and changed the link in Category:Caldecott Medal winners, among other revisions there. It's a redlink because the decision isn't yet implemented, evidently.) I think you may know, so I ask whether any such attention is a waste of time.
I'm not sure exactly how the bot works. I think it moves the page, which creates a redirect, and then the bot deletes the redirect. However, if it's a name that is liable to be used again, an admin can undelete it, or any other editor can re-create it.
It is part of the admin instructions at WP:CFDAI to check for redlinks and resolve them before taking the item off the bot's task list. It is normally done, but may be overlooked, if busy or if the process is done by new participants at CFD; and there are old redlinks out there that were not checked, from before this was added to the procedure.
The first two "Keep" votes were for specific categories, which I kept. Crisco's procedural objection was answered, I thought satisfactorily. That only left Peterkingiron in general opposition, a clear minority view. – FayenaticLondon14:43, 9 May 2015 (UTC)[reply]
You may prevent the proposed deletion by removing the ((proposed deletion/dated)) notice, but please explain why in your edit summary or on the article's talk page.
@Ww2censor: Will do. Thanks for letting me know it's a problem. ((WP Bio)) works fine with parameters, even though it's a shortcut, so I had no idea that using shortcuts would cause extra work to other WikiProjects.
I really wish you or someone else had added a ((cfdnotice2)) to the talk page of some of the articles before the category had been changed so interested editors in the pages could have commented. --Obsidi (talk) 15:56, 22 May 2015 (UTC)[reply]
If CFD notice templates were not posted, I sympathise, as WP:CFD#HOWTO does suggest and give reasons for using them. This is something to take up primarily with the nominator, jps. You might also suggest to some of the other participants that they could usefully have posted such notices during the discussion. However, the Article alerts service is currently the main way of notifying members of a WikiProject. – FayenaticLondon16:20, 22 May 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I use Twinkle to do all my nominations. It might be worthwhile to have a village pump discussion over whether category nominations are not handled well by Twinkle. jps (talk) 17:05, 22 May 2015 (UTC)[reply]
That sounds like expecting too much of an automated process. In a case where it would be desirable to leave notices, I don't see how you would automate choosing where to post them. – FayenaticLondon17:59, 22 May 2015 (UTC)[reply]
@Marcocapelle: grovelling apologies, I think that was me. I only intended to remove the scheduling category "to be determined", but the line I took out must have been the main line that populated all the scheduling categories. Please do a few null edits on relevant pages, if you can remember any, to repopulate the categories. – FayenaticLondon14:24, 23 May 2015 (UTC)[reply]
No worries! But they aren't the easiest categories and honestly I don't remember any of them by heart. So I opened a considerable amount of random holidays from different subcategories, couldn't find any article with redlinked categories though (with one exception, see next sentence), also tried some null edits with articles that don't have any redlinked categories but that didn't have any impact.
The one article I did find with redlinked categories is Advent which has two redlinked categories, but these are truly deleted categories, so they're not one of the emptied still existing categories. If I remember correctly you were saying that these redlinked categories should disappear after a null edit - well they don't disappear in Advent, so perhaps this gives you a clue for further investigation. I'm afraid I can't be of any further help. Having said that, even if this problem is not solvable at all, I would expect that we still have the biggest part of the relevant category information contained in Category:Moveable holidays. Marcocapelle (talk) 16:36, 23 May 2015 (UTC)[reply]
It turns out that I had misread the conditional logic in the infobox code. It put a conditional link to the category within the article's infobox, but membership of the category was not conditional. In other words, if the category did not exist, there would be no red link in the infobox, but there would be a red link at the foot of the page. Now, I think I have taken away the red linked categories from the foot of the page for duration, but not yet for frequency. – FayenaticLondon22:41, 23 May 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Ah, thank you, delldot! I'm not doing as much as I was around August and Dec 2014, when we were down to a few old hands.[4] I'm much relieved to see that a few new faces have joined in lately. – FayenaticLondon21:36, 23 May 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Category:31st-century BC establishments by country and Category:35th-century establishments
I just deleted the 31st-century ones per G7 (just my editing anyways) and moved the 35th one to 4th-millennium BC before deleting it. Thanks! -- Ricky81682 (talk) 18:25, 26 May 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I was going to say, "enjoy putting creative sort keys in place! Easiest way would be to redirect the category page to one of the parents, then use Hotcat to update that one and add the other." But you make a fair point; I won't challenge that one. The only potential trouble is that is makes a precedent for others. – FayenaticLondon08:09, 31 May 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hello Fayenatic london,
on 19. August 2008 you changed the description of this file from Zechariah the Prophet, old Russian Orthodox icon into Zechariah the priest, father of John the Baptist, with a scroll showing the opening words of the Benedictus. Where did you get this information from? Are you able to read the inscription on the scroll? Obviously, the icon is part of the Kizhi series of prophets, consisting mainly of Old Testament prophets. - Greetings, --Rabanus Flavus (talk) 01:05, 5 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks! I haven't got any own evidence about the identification except the iconographic context. I informed Shakko, who was involved in the file history, about the discussion, and he changed the file name and description. Then he changed the articles that use the picture respectively. So there should be someone in each language to notice the errors... --Rabanus Flavus (talk) 21:10, 6 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
You may prevent the proposed deletion by removing the ((proposed deletion/dated)) notice, but please explain why in your edit summary or on the article's talk page.
Would you mind reading my comment to Sca at User talk:Sca#Russian Winter? Sca agrees that "winter" doesn't need to be capitalized, but since it's an article title, I believe I shouldn't just go ahead and change it. What do you think? CorinneSD (talk) 15:11, 8 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
There is a redirect at Russian winter with more than one version in page history, so I don't think it would have let you move the page. Otherwise, it would be fine to do so... but I have made a counter-proposal now! – FayenaticLondon16:18, 8 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I just checked out about half on the entries in the category, results can be seen at
Songs about prison. If a reader is actually interested in songs about prison, this category is about much use as a chocolate teapot. --Richhoncho (talk) 19:58, 8 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hi, Fayenatic london,
I've been noticing at AN that it's frequently mentioned there is a backlog of cases to close at CFD and I was wondering if I could help. Since I'm not an admin, I could only work on cases that have a consensus to keep. And it might be that these cases that haven't been closed yet involve large groups of categories or are very complicated situations. But, since I know you are a regular at CFD, I thought I'd ask your opinion. I participated in quite a few CFD discussions in 2013-2014 but I haven't been as active this year so I don't think I would qualify as an "involved party". I assume unless it's a Snow keep or Snow delete, an editor doesn't close cases where one has voted. Let me know what you think. LizRead!Talk!22:22, 8 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hi Liz, yes, please feel free to help with non-admin closes. In fact, for the old cases, especially those where I participated, I'd be happy to implement rename/merge/delete decisions if you close any with these results. You could ping me within the close or here, or list it at WP:CFDWM where other admins might pick it up before me.
Where WP:CLOSE says any uninvolved editor may close most discussions, it means involved in that particular discussion. You may see that sometimes I only comment or ask questions rather than !voting, as I then feel OK to close if no-one else does so after a week or more.
WP:CFDAC is the list of overdue closes, and WP:CFDAI has the instructions for closing.
This is just about a perfect response, Fayenatic. I think I will ease into it with the more obvious closes. I really appreciate you being willing to help me carry out decisions and I will ping you if there are particularly difficult closes.
I'll go look at some previous closings to get a sense of past decisions. Right now I'm just wondering about instances when there are just a few votes (say, 1-3). That seems too small to be a consensus unless it seem to be a very obvious resolution.
If it is straightforward and looks like it had no other votes just because it is not interesting, go ahead and close. If it's 2:1, that can still be a consensus if the majority clearly have policy on their side – cite the policy in closing it. Other options are to leave it open longer; close as no consensus; or relist and notify relevant WikiProjects.
BTW, I have just updated WP:CFDAI. Although I didn't write it there, you can now in practice process renames or merges by yourself, simply by leaving a category redirect at the old name, as a bot would then move the contents (although it might take a day or two). Once it is empty, tag the old page with ((db-xfd|votepage=Log/year_month_day)), e.g. ((db-xfd|votepage=Log/2015_May_10)). – FayenaticLondon22:31, 9 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I may well do but didn't want to add complexities at present. Like you I think that the whole category can fit into "Fooian-Barian society" especially things like organizations. History fits well, I think, with "culture". I appreciate your grammar based point and think that you may need to present a reply if you think relevant. Here are some related Ngrams: [6][7][8] with the last one, on a gender/culture basis I think being particularly interesting to me. The main thing though is that I think that any grammar rule regarding hyphenation isn't greatly followed and perhaps especially so in association with topics related to locations such as the U.S. GregKaye07:28, 11 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hello, Fayenatic london, could you take a look at the IFA article postings? There is a commentary that keeps popping up under "qualification" by a couple of editors. If you could give me your view it's okay to leave it in, I'll appreciate it. Thanks! Audit Guy (talk) 13:39, 10 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Audit Guy: Thanks, I agree with you that it should be removed. As for the rest of that section, this body is hardly showing off their members' expertise if they get excited about a Sage certificate. – FayenaticLondon16:15, 10 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I reverted it and asked the registered editor Justgivethetruth (talk·contribs) to observe WP:BRD. The page was then reverted by an anon editor so I have activated a feature called WP:Pending changes, which means that (i) anon edits wait for moderation, (ii) other experienced editors will pick up the work and may start watching this page. – FayenaticLondon17:47, 12 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hi, Fayenatic london,
I'm seeing a mass production of very narrow categories (like Category:1669 disestablishments in the Republic of Venice or Category:1669 disestablishments by continent just to name two) by editor Tim! (see Tim!'s contributions). He is an editor with 300K edits and is just churning out these very, very small categories.
I posted a notice on his talk page asking him to slow down and saw other warning messages and CFD notices, one of which got the response, "you can nominate it at WP:CFD if you think it ought to be deleted.". But when you are talking about hundreds of categories, this is labor-intensive and it is frustrating work to set about cleaning up after another editor. Usually when I've seen this kind of activity from an account, it's a new account and they have received an editing restriction so they can not create new categories. But Tim! has a huge number of edits, has been editing for over 10 years and is an administrator! So I don't know how to address this and thought you might have encountered this before or have some ideas. Cheers, LizRead!Talk!14:22, 12 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Liz it would have been nice if you had given this more detailed rationale on my page, and I could have explained. If you look a bit deeper you would notice I have only been filling in trees which other people have started, there are really very few that I have started myself. Also given time I tend to fill in categories I have created. 17:31, 12 June 2015 (UTC)
Liz, I can see why these sparsely-populated structures look questionable, but they are probably OK as part of a widespread structure. The establishments & disestablishments categories for years BC have recently been amalgamated up to higher levels, but for C17 it's generally fine to have detailed categories by country. – FayenaticLondon17:51, 12 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
@Tim!: I apologize if it seemed like I was going around you. The fact is that I've discussed Wikipedian's categories with Fayanetic in the past and I just wanted to get their advice on how to best address the situation, as I perceived it at the time. I saw all of the warning messages on your talk page and, I'll admit, I didn't think you would be very responsive to my question.
But I can see that my concern was unwarranted and I'd like to thank both you and Fayanetic for clearing this up for me. I hope you have a good weekend. LizRead!Talk!21:56, 12 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hi there, hope you are ok. Thanks for your messages. My entries are accurate, and in that sense I would say constructive. As regards the word "practice", the word was not used as a noun.
As regards a "reliable source" I have been in this business for 35 years. I am a Fellow of the IFA and have been in public practice with my own business for over 27 years, undertaking every kind of task that comes my way. I know therefore that IFA members can do the same work as the majority of Chartered Accountants, as I have actually been doing that for over 27 on my own with my own business.
I trained in Chartered Accounting for a number of years, before setting up on my own. Having done so, I have seen at first hand how things work. My understanding is based on a lifetime of experience, which can hardly be stated to be "unsourced". This is the ultimate source based on real life experience.
Thanks again, and all the best.
Justgivethetruth — Preceding unsigned comment added by Justgivethetruth (talk • contribs) 10:46, 13 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hi, if you were working in public practice to a professional standard in the UK I would expect you to spell it that way as a noun, not "practise" which is a verb.
Writing from personal experience is considered "original research" and is not acceptable on Wikipedia, see WP:NOR.
Most readers of the encyclopaedia will in any case lack a clear understanding of what the majority of Chartered Accountants do. I am acquainted with the subject but still not clear what you meant by that expression, as AFAIK most chartered accountants work in commerce and industry rather than public practice. It would be more informative and encyclopaedic to state in the article the main kinds of work that IFAs do, with a reliable source. – FayenaticLondon11:35, 13 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hi Fayanetic,
Institute of Financial Accountants Wiki
Firstly the most important thing there is. I am a Christian too !
A couple of other points of far less importance:-
I note that the matter of plagiarising has returned, when I understood this to have been reversed. The way things are
this is actually highly defamatory and brings the IFA into disrepute.
The 2nd matter is that I note that the same fact I was stating has been stated on the Association of Accounting Technicians Wiki page, and this has not been challenged. This is the fact that IFA members (and those of the Association of Accounting Technicians) are both able to do the work that the majority of Chartered Accountants do. Like I said, I have actually been
doing this work on my own in business for over 27 years now. This fact has been accepted on the Association of Accounting
Technicians Wiki page, but not the of the IFA's. A fact is a fact, whatever the source.
The statement in the Institute of Financial Accountants article is based on reports in the trade press of a court case where IFA was proved to have plagiarised ACCA's course materials.
If this judgment was appealed and reversed, please provide a link for a report on the matter.
Otherwise, as you say, a fact is a fact, and should not be removed from Wikipedia provided it is given due weight and is verified by citations from reliable sources. It is not defamatory if it is true. It is not Wikipedia but the IFA's conduct that brought it into disrepute.
IFA does not get a lot of press coverage, so I think this matter should be covered in the Wikipedia article; and the existing mention there seems IMHO to give it due weight. If you dispute this, raise it on the article talk page. – FayenaticLondon12:19, 14 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hi Fayenatic,
I have not received a response to my last message to you yet.
Please understand that I am blundering around on this site and have not even started to get the hang of it yet !
Justgivethetruth (Ray Harwood) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Justgivethetruth (talk • contribs) 11:27, 15 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hi Ray, I believe I have answered all your points: (i) not defamatory; (ii) AAT page changed likewise; (iii) ambiguity over work that qualified accountants do; (iv) WP:NOR. – FayenaticLondon18:36, 15 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Institute of Financial Accountants Wiki - Justgivethetruth
Hi there again, firstly please excuse my ignorance ! I am not yet familiar with the working of this site. I also have a lot
to put with as have chronic continual pain in the back of my right shoulder. This is really debilitating and affects my staying power and ability to function.
I have not been looking to produce any bias, but merely been looking for impartiality on the site of the wiki entry for the IFA.
From my page it appears you left a further message, but I did not pick it up. I am not even sure which messages are getting
through, so I will repeat them.
I am myself a Christian and it warms my heart to find a fellow one. We are in very short supply ! This does not affect anything here, but is of course the most important thing there is.
I note that the entry on the Association of Accounting Technicians Wiki page regarding the work they cover has been altered, so obviously assume my previous messages got through.
Everybody in the practices of Chartered (and other accountants) know the way things work. Most of the work done in the larger firms of Chartered (and other accountants) is done by people who are not qualified accountants. These individuals get paid a pittance, but the work they do is charged out at a far higher rate. The difference then is profit for the firm. There is a serious vested interest of course for the qualified individuals who run the firm, who do not like this fact being spread.
I have been in practice myself (along with a number of other IFA members) offering precisely the same services as those of
Chartered Accountants. In fact I have picked up a considerable number of clients from Chartered Accountants, who have moved
over to me.
The "nitty gritty" is providing a source for this fact. In these particular circumstances, I do not know if it would be possible. I don't know if I have the staying power with my chronic pain problem !
The other point is regarding the stated plagiarising of the ACCA syllabus, for exemption from CIMA exams. The ACCA syllabus is somewhat different to that of the CIMA as a matter of interest. As I understand it the decision not to allow exemption was overturned. The whole issue here is that this statement is highly defamatory and brings the IFA into disrepute. I can
see no other point in stating this point but to discredit the IFA.
Thank you for taking the time to read this and hopefully reply.
Justgivethetruth (Ray Harwood) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Justgivethetruth (talk • contribs) 13:00, 16 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hi there, sorry just read your message. Feel so stupid ! Still the last one stands. I feel that the entry on plagiarising is
highly defamatory to be honest, and this seems to the the sole intention of the contributor.
Many thanks for your time.
Justgivethetruth (Ray Harwood) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Justgivethetruth (talk • contribs) 13:04, 16 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Truth is an absolute defence to claims of defamation.
My intention in reinstating the coverage of that legal case in Wikipedia was to give due weight to what little press coverage can be found about the IFA. As I said above, if you dispute the facts or the weight given to them, discuss it on the article talk page. – FayenaticLondon13:32, 16 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hi there, many thanks for your message and useful links. The Christian ones are of most interest. I am only interested in
neutral viewpoints, and you will know from the faith that the truth is the truth whether people believe it or not !
Really good talking to you. All the best, Ray (Justgivethetruth) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Justgivethetruth (talk • contribs) 14:04, 17 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Would you be interested in helping me revert the category moves I did before you let me know that CFD was needed? I tried to move them back but wasn't entirely successful. I also wasn't sure how to search in my contribution history for ones I moved, so may have missed some:
Hi thanks for fixing my errors. I haven't closed a CfD/AfD in many, many years. I'll make sure I'll do everything properly next time. Gizza(t)(c)09:48, 27 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
The use of the name Ceylon during European control and during the post-Colonial period when that was the official name is not implicated by the recent discussion on the issue. You should remove the speedy nominations, and allow a proper, by process discussion of the issue.John Pack Lambert (talk) 18:07, 27 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hello, why have all these categories been reverted? Ceylon during the 1815-1948 time period, the British Ceylon era, was the time in question in the discussion. Why have you reverted back on the result of the discussion?--Blackknight12 (talk) 00:19, 28 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
@Blackknight12: the discussion covered the "Dominion of Ceylon" period up to 1972, with most editors wanting to keep the name Ceylon for 1815–1972. I apologise for using "colonial" in edit summaries after 1948 rather than "Dominion".
I misread the discussion the first time, and had to change my close. Before I closed the discussion, you had emptied some categories out of process; I initially thought your edits should stand, but no longer. Please would you revert your changes for the period 1815 to 1972? – FayenaticLondon07:01, 28 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hi Fayenatic, just replying to your last message. There are facts that can be entered regarding Chartered Accountants (and others) that would have a defamatory effect, but I would not wish to do such a thing.
Neither did I say that just Chartered Accountants mainly employ the services of unqualified accountants, but that all types of accountants do.
Chartered Accountants can sign off Company Audit Reports, whereas member of the IFA cannot. That is why I said that IFA members do the majority of work that Chartered Accountants do, but did not say all of it. Chartered Accountants are auditors, whereas IFA members are not.
With a general practitioners like myself, I have to be able to do the majority of work that whole firms of accountants (Chartered and others) do. That is because I am in public practice in competition with them.
I find it very disconcerting that editors have so little practical knowledge of the subject can wield such great influence.
yours Truly,
Justgivethetruth (Ray Harwood)
Justgivethetruth (talk) 13:09, 28 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hi Ray, please stop replying on various editors' talk pages about discussion in another place. If you want to make a case about improving an article, do it on that article's talk page. In this case that is Talk:Institute of Financial Accountants. As long as you fail to engage with the discussion there, other editors are doubting your good faith. – FayenaticLondon21:40, 28 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
As you are one of the contributors to Tunisian Arabic. You are kindly asked to review the part about Domains of Use and adjust it directly or through comments in the talk page of Tunisian Arabic.
However, if the article suggested that they were not noted for rock songs, and were already categorised as e.g. Category:American country singer-songwriters, then I would omit rock singers or songwriters as seemed appropriate to me.
If that sort of manual labour does not appeal to you, can you just reverse your edits and leave me to work through the last 100? Of course, you may have made other improvements to the categorisation, in which case it will not be as simple as that. – FayenaticLondon19:59, 30 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Well, so long as you don't lose them from the singer-songwriter hierarchy in the end, I don't mind how you do it. I've been taking so long to finish the task that I'm in no position to make demands on others. – FayenaticLondon20:30, 30 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
My word, that was fast! I see those cats have been tagged as non-diffusing since Feb and May 2015, which is after I had started re-categorising the pages, so I think my ignorance was excusable. I suggest we leave things as they are, and assume in good faith that the editors who added the tags dealt with any consequent requirements. – FayenaticLondon21:22, 30 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
OK. I won't do any more gender categorization, then.