It's OK if we have a way to represent the information in another way. Reasonator plays kind of fine with this, it's enough to make him aware of the "official name" to treat it differently. The name to display is a contextful information, and anyway it needs special ways to treat the information and select the context and the data to display, so it''s not really a problem.
2014-03-06 17:21 GMT+01:00 Gerard Meijssen gerard.meijssen@gmail.com:
Hoi, When data is to be shown in the context of history, the appropriate label is to be shown, is to be found. It is as complex as what we do with statements.
The point is very much that when you state that when labels are not intended to convey "complex" information, the intention is debatable. It is arguably wrong. Thanks, GerardM
On 6 March 2014 17:15, Daniel Kinzler daniel.kinzler@wikimedia.de wrote:
Am 06.03.2014 17:12, schrieb Gerard Meijssen:
Hoi, So how do I indicate that up to a particular date Jakarta was called
Batavia ?
Muhammed Ali was called Cassius Clay ? There is no discussion about it.
All
there is an (potentially perceived) inability to use appropriate labels
at will.
Create a property for "official name" and make staements. Labels are there for display and search. They are not intended to convey complex information.
-- daniel
-- Daniel Kinzler Senior Software Developer
Wikimedia Deutschland Gesellschaft zur Förderung Freien Wissens e.V.
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