Hoi,
I understand that it may get both hairy and technical but provide one
example that works and people can modify for the result they want. In the
end it is typically only one maybe two columns that will be local.
Thanks,
GerardM
On 5 September 2016 at 11:40, Jan Dittrich <jan.dittrich(a)wikimedia.de>
wrote:
Hi Gerard,
Have you considered how a list and a local column can go together
Yes. It was not included in the scenarios, since it quickly gets into the
technical terrain of SQL tables, Wikisyntax and different approaches to
combine those. Using Wikidata-data and list/language specific information
together in tables and lists is something we are aware of and which we
consider as important to create great lists.
Jan
2016-09-05 11:14 GMT+02:00 Gerard Meijssen <gerard.meijssen(a)gmail.com>om>:
> Hoi Jan,
> What I find is that I would really love to have a mix of information that
> comes from Wikidata with information that exists on the Wikipedia. A good
> example is the Colorado Women's Hall of Fame. The Wikipedia article has 5
> columns and the area of achievement is language specific. The other
> information can be shared with other websites if they so choose.
> Have you considered how a list and a
local column can go together
> Thanks,
> GerardM
>
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colorado_Women%27s_Hall_of_Fame
>
https://tools.wmflabs.org/reasonator/?q=Q5148987
> On 5 September 2016 at 09:49, Jan Dittrich <jan.dittrich(a)wikimedia.de
> wrote:
>> Hello Scott,
>> Thanks for your input! If I understand this right, your concern is that
>> there might be lists like "list of species" which are impossible (with
>> several million entries) to have as single list?
>
>> There is the splitting lists
scenario,
https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/
>> Wikidata:List_generation_input/Scenario_C_splitting
>> Does this go in the right direction for you (even though with far fewer
>> items)?
>
>> Does
>
>>> cellular (neuronal) and
nano (atomic?)
>
>> refer to something like the
possibility to create lists of lists?
>
>> Kind Regards,
>> Jan
>
>
>
>>
Message: 4
>>> Date: Thu, 1 Sep 2016 14:05:29 -0700
>>> From: Info WorldUniversity <info(a)worlduniversityandschool.org
>>> To: "Discussion list for the
Wikidata project."
>>> <wikidata(a)lists.wikimedia.org
>>> Subject: Re: [Wikidata] List generation input
>>> Message-ID:
>>> <CAEPEA68HBgsYsEeWcV9EoCfFQ-rr2TihNG3LNMhw7TMoGbFBLw(a)mail.gm
>>>
ail.com
>>>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
>>
>>> Hi Léa, Jan, Gerard,
Markus, Wikidatans and All,
>>
>>> I've read at
different times that there are anywhere from 3 to 100
>>> million
>>> species (the latter would be a long list indeed!) and when you get
>>> probably
>>> to different lists at the cellular (neuronal) and nano (atomic?) levels,
>>> for example, the lists will probably get "way" longer :)
>>
>>> Thank you, Scott
>>
>
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>>
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>
>
>
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