QuickStatements does fully automated edits, including item creation, when you are absolutely sure that the items you create do not already exist in Wikidata.

Mix'n'match is a hybrid manual/automated process that is used if items might already exist in Wikidata. It is much slower and more manually involved, and doesn't add most metadata, but it helps to avoid duplicate items.

On Fri, May 25, 2018 at 10:33 AM Andreas Dittrich <dittricha@gmail.com> wrote:
@Andra Waagmeester: Thank you for your hint to the wikicite-community: I got some useful answers their.
@Magnus Manske: Is mix'n'match more or less doing the same as the quickstatement-tool? I think, I didn't get it, sorry. (My 'catalog'/bibliography is not yet online.)

Thank you both for your answers!

Am Do., 24. Mai 2018 um 12:20 Uhr schrieb Magnus Manske <magnusmanske@googlemail.com>:
You could make a catalog of all her works in Mix'n'match [1] (import at [2]), to avoid creating duplicate items.

FWIW, this is what we have so far for her:



On Thu, May 24, 2018 at 11:13 AM Andra Waagmeester <andra@micel.io> wrote:
I would recommend posting this also to the Wikicite mailinglist, which is community that discusses this on Wikidata : wikicite-discuss@wikimedia.org 

On Thu, May 24, 2018 at 11:41 AM, Andreas Dittrich <dittricha@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear List,

currently I am working on a digital bibliography of all published texts by the Austrian writer Ilse Aichinger. My intention is to make this list publicly available as a digitally structured database. I found that wikidata could be the right place for this. (Am I right?)

At first I wanted to use the FRBR vocabulary to describe the relations between the texts, but librarians recommended to use BIBFRAME, as this seems to get to be the standard vocabulary – and wikidata also uses this vocabulary, as I learned from the wikidata-project group Wikidata:WikiProject_Books. --- Currently I am recording the bibliographic units locally in BIBTEX format (because I started in this format). Later on I will transform the dataset to BIBFRAME and the wikidata-bibframe-vocabulary so that I can load it to wikidata.

Now I would like to ask you: Are there comparable, perhaps even exemplary projects for bibliographies on wikidata? Which ones? Should I suggest or announce the project somewhere? Do you have recommendations regarding the workflow (e.g. is quickstatements-tool the best way to push my data to wikidata)? Is someone here with experience regarding building a bibliography in wikidata?

With best regards,
 Andrew

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