On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 6:26 PM, Carcharoth <carcharothwp(a)googlemail.com>wrote;wrote:
Better to say "as of <DATE>, this is
known". That way the reader knows
they are reading something written at a certain date, and editors know
from what point they need to carry on updating. If things change, the
conditional template will be saying the wrong thing. I'm also wary of
having templates spit out article text, as changes to the template
will affect not only current versions of the article, but also the old
versions of the article if you look at them in the page history.
"As of" is great for ongoing concepts which require only occasiona updates,
but that convention doesn't deal at all with the problem that we make dated
statements because we have to, but this leaves the problem that they must
then be manually updated. We don't for example say:
"As of May 2009, the 2009 Wikimania will be held on August 26-28, 2009."
Different concept altogether, though they are indeed both date-related.
Better to do something like:
"Wikimania {{dateswitch|is scheduled to begin on|began on|August 26, 2009}},
and {{dateswitch|will run until|ran until|August 28, 2009}}"
Or (simpler):
"Wikimania {{dateswitch|will run from|ran from|August 26-28, 2009}}.
Producing:
ante) "Wikimania will run from August 26-28, 2009.
post) "Wikimania ran from August 26-28, 2009.
BTW, a bot can cull any templates which have been switched to their post
position, replacing the tag with plain text. And we use in-article templates
all the time now, anyway, so I dunno what your concern was there. The real
concern should be in removing any such outdated phrasing, and making the
usage of tense clauses less of a hassle, and more uniform.
-SV