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Disambig
Hi. Just a pointer, to WP:PIPING, for the manual of style regarding piping in disambig pages, re: List. Thanks :) -- Quiddity (talk) 19:02, 10 May 2008 (UTC)
Thanks for that, Q. -- Picapica (talk) 18:51, 11 May 2008 (UTC)
Hi, I saw you edited here in 2006, translating from the French. Since then the French article has expanded a lot and I've been translating some of it and some of the stations and lines. You don't have your babel up but my French is mediocre and if you're interested in proofreading any of it that might sound awkward. grenグレン 10:15, 8 July 2008 (UTC)
Hi, Gren. I'm not sure what "you don't have your babel up" means! However, as far as the Bordeaux Tramway articles are concerned, I would be prepared to help but am reluctant to get involved
1) because I would prefer the articles to have proper English-language titles: for example, Les Aubiers tram stop (Bordeaux) rather than the current Station Les Aubiers (Tram de Bordeaux); and
2) there is little likelihood of this proposal even being entertained in the rather inflexible-agressive atmosphere that I've learned prevails in French rail-related-article circles in the English-language Wp.
I feel I can therefore far more usefully spend my time on other areas of the Wp. -- Picapica (talk) 14:35, 6 September 2008 (UTC)
Llumon
Thanks. My source for the meaning of llumon was Geiriadur Prifysgol Cymru, which also records the secondary meaning "ashes, embers" (hence Watson's idea of "beacon" perhaps?). There is a third possible meaning of "bat", or at least some sort of nocturnal creature (only one instance, I think). Enaidmawr (talk) 16:20, 12 July 2008 (UTC)
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Thanks for the invite. I am in the middle of moving home + switching computers at the moment, but will certainly take a look at the project (with a view to joining) as soon as things settle down. -- Picapica (talk) 17:37, 30 September 2008 (UTC)
Sounds good. We can always use more help, hope to see you editing soon! Grk1011/Stephen (talk) 18:31, 30 September 2008 (UTC)
The backlog of assessments in the project is still ongoing, with a large number of articles not being rated or tagged with the project banner. If you see articles without the ((EurovisionNotice)) template on the article's talk page, please add it, or read Wikipedia:Version 1.0 Editorial Team/Assessment if you would like to help assess the articles as well. Only 37.7% of articles have been assessed so far.
Instructions for the use of all Eurovision templates and descriptions for the layouts of pages are still in the works. Please note that ((Esc)) has been developed from an ((Inesc)) and is ready for use. Replace any use of the older template with the new one.
Remember to source all information you add to pages or else it may be removed. ESCToday and Oikotimes are great places to find information.
Eurovision News
The first annual Asiavision Song Contest has been announced and the 2009 contest will take place next summer.
De Toppers were announced as the Dutch entry for the 2009 contest.
Estonia announced its participation in the 2009 contest, despite requests by the Estonian Minister of Culture to withdraw due to the 2008 war in South Ossetia.
Slovakia announced its return to the contest after an 11-year absence.
The Bulgarian national final, "Be A Star", will start October 2 with 45 songs.
Member News
The project currently has 48 members, 22 of which are considered active. This means that 26 of our project's members have not edited a Eurovision article in the past month.
We now have a project invitation. Place our invitation template on the talk page of anyone you would like to invite to our project.
New Members
We would like to welcome the new members who joined in September. (by date joined)
Welcome to the third edition of the WikiProject Eurvision newsletter! This newsletter is surely catching on, and I'm sure that if we continue to rotate the editors' section as much as possible, everyone'll get a chance to contribute and it'll definitely be more diverse.
The project is still in need of re-organising. Nothing has happened in the form of splitting the project between the song and dance contests in over a month, and I feel that we really need to push forward with this. To add your comments just leave a message in the talk page Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision#Project Scope.
Throughout September, a lot of things have happened in relation to the Eurovision Song Contest 2009; the announcement of the return of the jury into the final was the biggest news. However, more news appeared, such as the Dutch representative being announced, as well as more countries announcing their participation at the contest. Before long the national finals around Europe will start, and the countdown will be on to 16 May.
With everything that's been happening, I'd like to encourage everyone to do their best to contribute to all Eurovision-related Wikipedia articles, and welcome our new members to the project.
Is there an article you think we should have? Make a request for it to be made here.
This Newsletter was delivered by Grk1011 (talk). If you are no longer interested in WikiProject Eurovision then please remove your name from this list.
Don't worry, I didn't forget about you joining, you will be on the next newsletter for people who joined in October. Grk1011/Stephen (talk) 15:10, 3 October 2008 (UTC)
Songs should always be in quotes, albums in italics. Grk1011/Stephen (talk) 19:36, 4 October 2008 (UTC)
Sorry, Stephen: is this perchance a reference to Template:Eurovision winning songs? If so, as I understand it, song (title)s should always be in quotes in the body of the articles – but not as an indication of the titles of articles. Templates are not themselves articles but a key to article titles – and no article titles in Wp are embraced by quotes AFAIK. -- Picapica (talk) 20:03, 4 October 2008 (UTC)
Yea that template, the quotes should always be there when referring to a song. Let me explain better: the actual title of the page should not be in quotes, but everything else should be. Grk1011/Stephen (talk) 20:04, 4 October 2008 (UTC)
"Yea" -- that's very old-fashioned of you, Stephen!
If your ultra-ist interpretation is to prevail, however, then I am afraid I am going to have to reply with a "Nay", exercise my right to undo your undoing just once more from within the project, and then resign from it.
It's quite clear to me that not only is this singles/albums rule you invoke supremely daft in the context of the ESC (where albums do not even enter into the question) but its application has nefarious consequences in producing displays which are not only ugly in themselves but "blow" the boxes they appear in. Cf. what happened to Template:The Beatles singles on 23.05.08 when an ultra-ist got his hands on it – just what you want to do here, alas.
I have to admit that I was begining, anyway, to regret my earlier advocacy of adherence to the Wikiproject Songs#Style "rules" in this respect – especially if such adherence is to turn into slavish kowtowing – since double-quotation-mark encapsulation turns out to be visually ugly in practice, particularly when italicization serves well for the citation of all other artistic works in the English-language Wikipedia.
So it's looking like it's going to have to be "Hello and goodbye". Just as well that there's such a myriad of other things needing doing in the Wikipedia... --Picapica (talk) 20:56, 4 October 2008 (UTC)
I was just informing you of the convention, not proposing some "ultra-ist" idea of mine. Consensus within the singles project, which all of the songs fall into, is to use the quotes. I'm not sure if i really get what you are saying. Grk1011/Stephen (talk) 21:10, 4 October 2008 (UTC)
What I am saying is that if being a member of the Eurovision project means that I am bound by a set of discographic rules devised for a "singles project" to which I do not belong then I must leave the Eurovision project. For me the Eurovision project is primarily about a television programme and the live performance of songs thereat, not the recording industry and its products. It is not true, in any case, to say that any recorded singles project can lay claim to all the songs ever sung at the contest since not all of the entries were ever issued as "singles".
I do not claim that you invented the step (in my opinion) too far of wanting to encapsulate within double quotation marks every song title even, absurdly, within information frames headed with the word "songs" (lest someone mistake them for breeds of hunting dog or a list of Austro-Hungarian foreign ministers perhaps?), only that I disagree with your support for extending that project's policy to this one in this regard. It is, in any case, debatable that, even if I were a member of the WikiProject Songs (if that is what you mean by your "singles project"), my interpretation of
Song article titles should be named after the song, without quotation marks
is less correct than yours, since the references in the templates are, as I have already said, to song article titles, not to songs themselves.
To be honest, I really don't know what to say. Many project's overlap on wikipedia. WP Greece looks over Greece's Eurovision articles for example. A Wikiproject is a group of editors with a common goal. Ours is to make, improve, maintain, and make consistent all articles having to do with Eurovision. Wikiproject singles tries to make consistent all articles about songs and singles. Songs in quotes is not just a thing that the singles project decided and is pushing on everyone, it is a convention. Would you argue that the names of books should not be in italics? Or why underline a title in a research paper you are writing? Its the same thing. I urge you to stay within the project there is a lot which you could do. Grk1011/Stephen (talk) 04:01, 5 October 2008 (UTC)
Would you argue that the names of books should not be in italics? Not at all. I am arguing for sensible interpretation of the advisory nature of Wikipedia:Manual of Style (titles), which begins: This guideline is... and goes on to say Editors should follow it [this guideline], except where common sense and the occasional exception will improve an article.
Wikipedia:Policies and guidelines says: Policies are considered a standard that all editors should follow, whereas guidelines are more advisory in nature. Both need to be approached with common sense: adhere to the spirit rather than the letter of the rules. [My emphases]
This format is an unlovely monstrosity in my view when compared with this
and I do not wish to be associated with a project which interprets guidelines so rigidly as not only to fly in the face of common sense but to produce ugly and difficult-to-read pages. -- Picapica (talk) 10:48, 5 October 2008 (UTC)
It's not the project's interpretation, it is a user's. A project is nothing but a way to coordinate editing within a certain topic. Your free to do things however you like, but you are not in the majority on wikipedia and chances are that someone will revert your quotes removal. They don't have to be in a project. You can still fix all of the Eurovision capitalizations without being in the project. Its just a place to share your ideas and meet other users interested in Eurovision, not some ultraist movement. Grk1011/Stephen (talk) 15:11, 5 October 2008 (UTC)