On 27/02/07, darthvader1219(a)gmail.com <darthvader1219(a)gmail.com> wrote:
On 2/26/07, William Pietri <william(a)scissor.com>
wrote:
Another possibility that occurs to me. Could we
do a little stylesheet
and JavaScript magic to hide the specific warning templates unless
people click on something in the {{notverygood}} box? That would let us
keep them as part of the main article, but make them invisible to casual
readers. Further magic would make them by default available to logged-in
editors.
I really like the idea of hiding the specific warning templates in the
{{notverygood}} box at the top of the article. It could work similarly
to {{Template:WikiProjectBanners}}.
It would have some standard message concerning how the article is not quite
up to par, with all the specifics hidden inside it. It would be far more
visually attractive for those articles that have three or four maintenance
templates at the top, but would still keep those templates on the main
article page.
Hmm. I like it.
"The Wikipedia community has identified issues with the quality of
this article; [click here] to show more specific details or [see the
talk page] for discussion regarding the issue"
First link brings a dropdown as with the banners template; second
takes you to talk. If you were particularly clever, "the quality"
could be changed on the fly to reflect the specific tagging...
--
- Andrew Gray
andrew.gray(a)dunelm.org.uk