On Thu, Jul 22, 2010 at 9:04 PM, Neil Harris
<usenet(a)tonal.clara.co.uk> wrote:
On 21/07/10 22:38, Nikola Smolenski wrote:
Дана Monday 19 July 2010 22:20:15 Brian J Mingus
написа:
Feel free to provide your feedback on this idea,
in addition to your own
ideas, in this thread, or to me personally. I am especially interested in
the potential benefits to the WMF projects that you see, and to hear your
thoughts on the potential of this project on its own, as that will feature
prominently in the proposal. Additionally, what do you think WikiCite would
eventually be like, once it is fully matured?
I was thinking about this too. Main advantages that I see are that citations
will become easier to use for editors while more informative for readers. Too
often I just link to something instead of properly filling a cite template
because it's just too bothersome. For example, instead of this crud:
{{cite book|author=Š. Kulišić |coauthors=P. Ž. Petrović, N. Pantelić |
title=Српски митолошки речник |origyear=1970 |publisher=[[Nolit]] |
location=Belgrade |language=Serbian |pages=161 |chapter=Јерисавља}}
we would have just:
{{cite|work=Српски митолошки речник |pages=161 |chapter=Јерисавља}}
Since there might be more than one edition of the same book, you'd still
have to do a unique identifier, and expanding the cite into the text of
the article is still a good idea. I would suggest making the system work
like the current {{cite pmid}}, {{cite isbn}} and {{cite medline}}
templates, where you'd add (say)
{{cite citeid|345343095}}
to the article, and a bot would come round to the article and replace
this with:
{{cite book|author=Š. Kulišić |coauthors=P. Ž. Petrović, N. Pantelić |
title=Српски митолошки речник |origyear=1970 |publisher=[[Nolit]] |
location=Belgrade |language=Serbian |pages=161 |chapter=Јерисавља|citeid=345343095}}
Doing this would combine the advantages of a central database, which has great advantages
for providing authoritative centralized data, with the redundant copying of the same
information into the article, which has great advantages for archival purposes, so that,
were the central database ever to be lost, or access to be unavailable, the information
would remain accessible in the article text itself.
By retaining the link in the expanded template, corrections and improvements to data in
the authoritative database could then, as necessary, be propagated into articles using a
bot. However, if bad data is ever uploaded into the database, the full expansion of the
cite would still be available in the article history, again aiding archival access, and
protecting against data corruption.
Whatever syntax is used, we should absolutely not expect users to
remember it and the unique identifier of the cited work. There should
be a "Cite" button in the toolbar that will allow users to look up
(with search suggestions) the correct work, request any further
information, and add the information into the page. Then we don't need
to get hung up on the syntax, except for readability's sake.
--
Andrew Garrett
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