User talk:Zhaladshar/archive 6

Author:Robert Service edit

I'm thinking about revamping the works by Author:Robert Service. I think some mistakes were made by me and others the first time around. The way I want to do it is:

  1. Create a new author page called Author:Robert W. Service. This is, I believe, the name by which he is best know.
  2. Migrate the pages off the old authors page.
    1. When I'm doing this I want to create new pages for the poems that I originally named using a style like Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: Cheer. This new page would be named Cheer (currently a redirect).
    2. During his process I will change all the Template:chap_simple headers to Template:header headers.
    3. I'll check to see if there are any links to the exiting pages and and if there are I'll modify those pages so that they are redirects.
  3. Then I'll give you a list of the links to all pages that become redundant so they can be deleted.

Would this be OK? --Droll 04:43, 19 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

  • OK, its done! Wow, there is a bunch of junk to remove. I checked for talk pages and they are listed below. I also check for links to these pages and (other than links from user talk pages and links between these pages) there are no relevant links. Some of these pages were redirects which are no longer needed. I blanked them to make link checking easier. I'll continue to clean up this collection when I have time. --Droll 02:15, 21 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

#Author:Robert Service (The new page is named "Robert W. Service" Still useful as a redirect

  1. author:robert w. service (notice problem with lower case)
  2. Talk:The Spell of the Yukon: The Cremation of Sam McGee
  3. Talk:The Spell of the Yukon: The Shooting of Dan McGrew
  4. Talk:The Spell of the Yukon: The Shooting of Dan McGrew
  5. Talk:The Spell of the Yukon: The Cremation of Sam McGee
  6. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone/Prelude
  7. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone/A Rolling Stone
  8. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone/The Soldier of Fortune
  9. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone/The Gramaphone At Fond-Du-Lac
  10. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Gramaphone At Fond-Du-Lac
  11. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Land of Beyond
  12. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: Sunshine
  13. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Idealist
  14. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: Athabaska Dick
  15. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: Cheer
  16. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Return
  17. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Junior God
  18. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Nostomaniac
  19. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: Ambition
  20. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: To Sunnydale
  21. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Blind and the Dead
  22. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Atavist
  23. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Sceptic
  24. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Rover
  25. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: Barb-Wire Bill
  26. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: "?"
  27. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: Just Think!
  28. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Lunger
  29. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Mountain and the Lake
  30. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Headliner and the Breadliner
  31. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: Death in the Arctic
  32. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: Dreams Are Best
  33. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Quitter
  34. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Cow-Juice Cure
  35. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: While the Bannock Bakes
  36. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Lost Master
  37. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: Little Moccasins
  38. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Wanderlust
  39. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Trapper's Christmas Eve
  40. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The World's All Right
  41. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Baldness of Chewed-Ear
  42. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Mother
  43. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Dreamer
  44. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: At Thirty-Five
  45. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Squaw Man
  46. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: Home and Love
  47. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: I'm Scared of It All
  48. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: A Song of Success
  49. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Song of the Camp-Fire
  50. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: Her Letter
  51. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Man Who Knew
  52. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Logger
  53. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Passing of the Year
  54. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Ghosts
  55. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: Good-Bye, Little Cabin
  56. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: Heart O' the North
  57. Rhymes of a Rolling Stone: The Scribe's Prayer
  58. The Spell of the Yukon: The Land God Forgot
  59. The Spell of the Yukon: The Spell of the Yukon
  60. The Spell of the Yukon: The Heart of the Sourdough
  61. The Spell of the Yukon: The Three Voices
  62. The Spell of the Yukon: The Law of the Yukon
  63. The Spell of the Yukon: The Parson's Son
  64. The Spell of the Yukon: The Call of the Wild
  65. The Spell of the Yukon: The Lone Trail
  66. The Spell of the Yukon: The Pines
  67. The Spell of the Yukon: The Lure of Little Voices
  68. The Spell of the Yukon: The Song of the Wage-Slave
  69. The Spell of the Yukon: Grin
  70. The Spell of the Yukon: The Shooting of Dan McGrew
  71. The Spell of the Yukon: The Cremation of Sam McGee
  72. The Spell of the Yukon: My Madonna
  73. The Spell of the Yukon: Unforgotten
  74. The Spell of the Yukon: The Reckoning
  75. The Spell of the Yukon: Quatrains
  76. The Spell of the Yukon: The Men That Don't Fit In
  77. The Spell of the Yukon: Music in the Bush
  78. The Spell of the Yukon: The Rhyme of the Remittance Man
  79. The Spell of the Yukon: The Low-Down White
  80. The Spell of the Yukon: The Little Old Log Cabin
  81. The Spell of the Yukon: The Younger Son
  82. The Spell of the Yukon: The March of the Dead
  83. The Spell of the Yukon: A Life Tragedy
  84. The Spell of the Yukon: The Woman and the Angel
  85. The Spell of the Yukon: The Rhyme of the Restless Ones
  86. The Spell of the Yukon: New Year's Eve
  87. The Spell of the Yukon: Comfort
  88. The Spell of the Yukon: The Harpy
  89. The Spell of the Yukon: Premonition
  90. The Spell of the Yukon: The Tramps
  91. The Spell of the Yukon: L'Envoi
  92. Spell of the Yukon
  93. Spell of the Yukon: The Land God Forgot
  94. Spell of the Yukon: The Spell of the Yukon
  95. Spell of the Yukon: The Heart of the Sourdough
  96. Spell of the Yukon: The Three Voices
  97. Spell of the Yukon: The Law of the Yukon
  98. Spell of the Yukon: The Parson's Son
  99. Spell of the Yukon: The Call of the Wild
  100. Spell of the Yukon: The Lone Trail
  101. Spell of the Yukon: The Pines
  102. Spell of the Yukon: The Lure of Little Voices
  103. Spell of the Yukon: The Song of the Wage-Slave
  104. Spell of the Yukon: Grin
  105. Spell of the Yukon: The Shooting of Dan McGrew
  106. Spell of the Yukon: The Cremation of Sam McGee
  107. Spell of the Yukon: My Madonna
  108. Spell of the Yukon: Unforgotten
  109. Spell of the Yukon: The Reckoning
  110. Spell of the Yukon: Quatrains
  111. Spell of the Yukon: The Men That Don't Fit In
  112. Spell of the Yukon: Music in the Bush
  113. Spell of the Yukon: The Rhyme of the Remittance Man
  114. Spell of the Yukon: The Low-Down White
  115. Spell of the Yukon: The Little Old Log Cabin
  116. Spell of the Yukon: The Younger Son
  117. Spell of the Yukon: The March of the Dead
  118. Spell of the Yukon: A Life Tragedy
  119. Spell of the Yukon: The Woman and the Angel
  120. Spell of the Yukon: The Rhyme of the Restless Ones
  121. Spell of the Yukon: New Year's Eve
  122. Spell of the Yukon: Comfort
  123. Spell of the Yukon: The Harpy
  124. Spell of the Yukon: Premonition
  125. Spell of the Yukon: The Tramps
  126. Spell of the Yukon: L'Envoi
  127. Ballads of a Cheechako: To the Man of the High North
  128. Ballads of a Cheechako: Men of the High North
  129. Ballads of a Cheechako: The Ballad of the Northern Lights
  130. Ballads of a Cheechako: The Ballad of the Black Fox Skin
  131. Ballads of a Cheechako: The Ballad of Pious Pete
  132. Ballads of a Cheechako: The Ballad of Blasphemous Bill
  133. Ballads of a Cheechako: The Ballad of One-Eyed Mike
  134. Ballads of a Cheechako: The Ballad of the Brand
  135. Ballads of a Cheechako: The Ballad of Hard-Luck Henry
  136. Ballads of a Cheechako: The Man from Eldorado
  137. Ballads of a Cheechako: My Friends
  138. Ballads of a Cheechako: The Prospector
  139. Ballads of a Cheechako: The Black Sheep
  140. Ballads of a Cheechako: The Telegraph Operator
  141. Ballads of a Cheechako: The Wood-Cutter
  142. Ballads of a Cheechako: The Song of the Mouth-Organ
  143. Ballads of a Cheechako: The Trail of Ninety-Eight
  144. Ballads of a Cheechako: The Ballad of Gum-Boot Ben
  145. Ballads of a Cheechako: Clancy of the Mounted Police
  146. Ballads of a Cheechako: Lost
  147. Ballads of a Cheechako: L'Envoi
  148. Ballads of a Cheechakol:Men of the High North
  149. Ballads of a Cheechakol: Men of the High North
  150. Ballads of a Cheechakol:To the Man of the High North

Donne's Elegies edit

I was basing them off of particular anthologies that availble online(scanned). I was anticipating have the entire anthologies up. I realize the issue here and am conflicted. Take a look at books I am thinking of. 1633 and 1896. The 1633 has a lot of stuff beside the poems that would be great to have. The 1896 is very much edited and the editor preface and such would be good to attach. What do you suggest?--BirgitteSB 03:24, 26 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

I think I understand what you are saying. Leave the current titles as redirects to the stand-alone, and fill the misc pages in the proper spots. We don't really need a disambig page because the 1633 version spells it diferently. I would suggest calling the original simply Elegie I and the other Elegy I(1896). We can use the notes to point the other (i.e. a version with modernized spelling is availbe at Elegy I(1896)). What do you think? I can work on it tommorrow, I have some orf it on my notepad for straightening up the author page. Danny and I were also talking about trying to get the side-by-side texts set-up for this. --BirgitteSB 05:37, 26 March 2006 (UTC)Reply
The side by side version is the goal. ThomasV says it needs to have patch written, but he does not have the time. Hopefully we can interest someone who knows php in this. Let know if you have any suggestions about what I have done so far let me know. It seems every time I look at it I change my mind to set it up differently--BirgitteSB 19:53, 26 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Whittier's Yankee Girl edit

It appears that Yankee Girl and The Yankee Girl are the same poem. Do you know which is the actual title given by Whittier? A redirect from the other would be cool. Thanks! --Kickstart70 20:40, 26 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Whittier formatting edit

About what I added for Whittier...the only things I added were the 'empty' red links, so hopefully there shouldn't be any other dupes :) I've got a book (printed in 1903) with a number of his works...if you find names of poems you don't have elsewhere please let me know and I'll check to see if I have them and will transcribe them in.

Regarding the alphabetizing...It's not 100% yet, as my method didn't handle the links starting with 'The' properly. I'd like to do the same sort of format of the link as I did for 'Angels of Buena Vista, The' to make this easier to find items. Suggestions on simplifying this process would be welcome. Also, as far as style guidelines, should the same happen for "Poem Name, A/An", etc.?

As well, I created Template:CompactTOC from the example on Wikipedia. It's not as clean and obvious looking as I'd like, but it's functional. Feel free to junk it if you've got a better alternative. Thanks, --Kickstart70 00:17, 27 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Walter Scott edit

I've also got a book with Rob Roy, Lochinvar (from Marmion), and 13 various poems. As a multi-genre author, we probably need to split his works between prose and poetry (and then into alphabetized?). I'm willing to transcribe these poems if we can separate the links of what's currently there somehow. --Kickstart70

Thanks edit

Thanks for "showing" me how to use the header template. Is there a repository of useful templates for Wikisource that I can bookmark? ≈ jossi ≈ t@ 22:58, 28 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Small Caps edit

Hi, just wanted to let you know that Pathoschild made a little template that converts to small caps: {{subst:small-caps|Text}}. I added it to EB1911:Abaca as an example. It could be useful for EB1911, as well as for the New Student Reference Work project. Danny 00:22, 2 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

User talk:TheBilly edit

You might want to look at this (or not). --Inge 06:10, 2 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

That mess of pages edit

Thanks for deleting all those redundant files. I'll try not to do that again. --Droll 07:10, 3 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

Template:Chap edit

Please let me fix pages which use this template. It will take a few days. Since I am active here I wish you had let me know about changes to pages I created. I know you have no obligation to do this but it would seem to be a courteous thing. --Droll 21:05, 3 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

I understand your point of view. Thanks for response. --Droll 21:20, 3 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

I'm going to edit Little Women' because the bot did not change the chap template at the bottom of the pages. Also I notice that you added a section= to each page. Since each page already has an <h4> header with that information, it seems that section= info is redundant. I used the <h4> header because that it is the way it appears in a published work. The information belongs to the text. It's not an annotation. Let me know how you feel. --Droll 21:34, 3 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

Little Women edit

The reason I use &larr; and &rarr; is because I cannot cut and paste the arrows into my text editor. I cannot use python to format files that contain them. If this is the standard I think it should be changed and would like to have and open discussion about it before you edit the files I have reformatted. I would also request an open discussion on the Scriptorium page about the other issues. I will not open the discussion till I hear from you. If you decide to act unilaterally I will no longer be interested in contributing to this project. Concerning the "section" parameter, I understood your message to mean that it was Okay to remove the data from this parameter. You said

Okay. I added the "section=" parameter just because it's standard to add what chapter the template's included on, even though it does appear in the work. It just makes the information contained in the template a bit more complete.

I understand the value of standards as I have said before. Good standards are published. I have not seen anywhere on this site where the standards you propose are clearly stated. I'm willing to go through a growth period where standards are worked out and I'm willing participate in the process of formulating those standards. I hurts when there is no attempt to educate and hours of work are reverted. I've been contributing here for a long time now. If I still can not do it right then how do newbies feel.

All that said, I know that you must spend a lot of time volunteering on Wikisource and I do not in any way mean by what I have said to diminish your contribution.

Please do not take this as an attack or a threat. It is not meany that way. It is just a statement about the way I feel and possible choices that I will be forced to make --Droll 04:57, 4 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

Thank you for your thoughtful response. As for the issue concerning the section parameter, if that information is added back it will appear three times on the page. It will appear in the page name, in the text itself and in the header. I think that is unacceptable. I also think that the section parameter creates a typographically unattractive page. That's just my opinion.
Concerning the use of HTML elements for arrows, that should not be an issue at all as the appearance on the page is the same. It seems to me that the use of HTML elements verses wiki markup an ongoing issue on wiki projects. At least that is my impression. I asked Pathoschild why the arrows could not be included in implementation of the template and he responded that it would "require more complex coding, either resource-wasteful conditional programming or the backwards-incompatible hiddenStructure CSS hack." If that is true then why is HideIfEmpty used in the author template. None of his reasons seem acceptable to me. This seems like a case there a standard has been accepted without enough input. If a programmer I supervised said that to me I would respond that complexity at that level is not a problem. Resources are cheep but good products sells. Backward compatibility is not a problem maybe he meant forward compatibility. If forward compatibility is an issue then it might be too late because we already use the author template.
And last, if there is a standard that requires the use of all parameters in the header template that is fine. I think they should be ordered though. For example title, section, author, previous, next and then notes. This is would avoid user errors and be more intuitive.
You are correct in that I have had proprietary feelings about my contributions. Maybe I need to back off on this but I have also felt that my contributions have been singled out. There are thousands of articles on the site that have no headers at all. There are many that need cleanup and reformatting. I am not saying that you have targeted my contributions but I do feel targeted.
I have decided to take some time off and think things through so I will not be contributing here for a while. My recommendations are that standards need to be discussed and published.

Changes needed to your javascript file edit

Hello Zhaladshar. You previously requested that the script InstaView be automatically updated. Please note that the automated update method used by Wikisource's script repository has been extensively revised for simplicity and flexibility. In order to be compatible with the new method, several changes need to be made to your Javascript file. If you consent, I'll willingly make those changes myself.

If you'd prefer to do it yourself, you can read the updated instructions at Wikisource's script repository and update your Javascript file appropriately. Specifically, plaintext formatted needs to be implemented using wikisyntax instead of <pre> HTML tags, the update subscription category tag added, and the script needs to be updated to reflect the new format. // [admin] Pathoschild (talk/map) 16:39, 16 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

EB1911 categorisation edit

Hi, Please look at pp 879-947 of vol 29 in Tim Starling's version. This is EB1911's categorical index. If we placed this on the WS version and hyperlinked the entries we have a ready-made categorical index, designed by the compilers of the encyclopaedia which will be different to the WS categorisation scheme. As an example under engineering you get articles grouped under General, Building, Locomotion, Shipping, Mining & Metallurgy and Biographies. Therefore it gives a good overview of all the major articles on the topic, since each entry can be hyperlinked to the articles concerned.

I put the introductory section on WS a few months back and am aiming to add the classified table of contents in a week or two when I have finished typing it. The detailed classifed tables will take much more work, of course. I suggest this is something we ought to be getting on with now while we are in the early stages of the project.

My question is, since we have this resource written for the EB1911 on publication, to we really need the WS EB1911 categorisation scheme?

A second point, is that I can see no way of WS being able to handle the main index in vol 29, since this is keyed to page numbers in the printed text. Instead I urge we investigate the practicality of having a search engine specifically for the EB1911 project. This will stop references in other WS pages being flagged up by mistake. I've no idea how practical this will be, but I urge we give it serious thought. Kind regards. Apwoolrich 07:22, 17 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

I am glad you agree. Do you want to raise this on Scriptorium, or shall I?/. Apwoolrich 18:32, 17 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

Les Mis edit

I saw that you helped to revise some of the work that I did on the Les Miserables page. Thanks for that. Since you seem to know a lot more about wikisource than I do, I am going to ask you what to do next. Should I cut and paste from Project Gutenberg? TsunamiEssence 21:07, 19 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

I just finished transferring everything from PG to Wikisource. What is there for me to do now?TsunamiEssence 20:24, 23 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

My account: deleted? edit

I just tried to log in and find that there is no user by the name User:Pedant I've not logged in in a while, was working on other projects and reading Das Kapital, I was uploading and proofing Das Kapital and decided I needed to read it in print form before I could accurately proof it, as I had found OCR errors in the text I was working on. Anyway, could you let me know how to restore my account from wherever it went? You could reach me at my user page on en:wikipedia or email me: drglennATdr.com Thanks for any help you can give me. 68.183.79.162 05:13, 24 April 2006 (UTC) (User:Pedant)Reply

Since I don't know where else to reach you, I'll leave my replies here. First off, have you gotten an account on the English subdomain? I looked at your contributions, and they stop after June, which was before Wikisource split, so it's possible you've never registered here (and I hope that's the case, because then something really weird is going on). If you have not registered an account here (regardless of whether you had one on the multilingual Wikisource), you must do so. During the move, no accounts were moved to the subdomains, meaning every user must register an account here as well.—Zhaladshar (Talk) 17:47, 24 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

e (mathematical constant) edit

Alright, thanks for the message. You can speedy the article I created in that case. I'd be interested in hearing why Wikisource doesn't accept mathematical data anymore, though. Cheers, R. Koot 21:54, 30 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

Page Titling edit

Thanks for pointing that out. I had seen it used on the Les Miserables text, but I didn't know what it meant.--Politicaljunkie 20:17, 3 May 2006 (UTC)Reply

EB1911 volume contents edit

Hi, I've just seen your message. I have to make a list of the parts each volume covers and will then post it. One thing you might do, is to check very carefully in the volumes we have already listed against Tim's copy to see if any articles are missing. I have just had a look at what has recently been posted for vol 27 against my paper copy and see a lot of entries are not there. I know there are problems with some of the online scans through grotty OCRing, and that might be the answer if online scans are the origin of the list. I will contact the WS editor who posted it. Kind regards. Apwoolrich 18:30, 4 May 2006 (UTC) (PS I answer to the name of Tony Woolrich!)Reply

Help! Help! I have just posted the volume contents and copied to the appropriate pages the lists we already have for vols 1 and 27. These will need wiki-tweaking to get them to blue link, but I don't know how to do it. Rather than mess with it and probably seriously wreck something I shall welcome guidance on the proper procedure. Each volume will need the article listing template added, of course. Kind regards. Apwoolrich 19:31, 5 May 2006 (UTC)Reply

Very many thanks for sorting this. I really must learn how to do this. I propose adding a temporary header to each volume page where orphan articles can be posted before they are placed in the volume lists proper. Also, please have a look at the EB1911 Ballistics article. An editor has been doing marvellous work on the formulae with TeX, and also sorting out the complicated tables. IMHO the Tex is too big and the wrong typeface. Is there any way of adapting this to match the style for the rest of the text on Mediawiki, please. I raised this on Scriptorium a few months back, as I noted there is a smaller version available on another part of the Wik-empire. Kind regards. Apwoolrich 05:02, 6 May 2006 (UTC)Reply

Purging the database edit

Could you purge the database again. With all of the changes with me and others spliting texts and going through the orphaned pages, both Special:Longpages and Special:Lonelypages are pretty out of date. Thanks. - illy 21:30, 4 May 2006 (UTC)Reply

Thanks. - illy 00:52, 5 May 2006 (UTC)Reply

Unfortunately, all the pages are still showing up as being cached on the 29th of last month. Would you take another look at this? Thanks. - illy 14:02, 8 May 2006 (UTC)Reply
Thanks. I'll check things out with the developers if nothing happens. - illy 18:36, 8 May 2006 (UTC)Reply

The Adventures of Pinocchio edit

Thanks for fixing it up for me :)--Shanel 00:33, 10 May 2006 (UTC)Reply