I agree on 'et', but the 'no' case is different. the codes 'no', 'nb' and 'nn' were present in ISO 639 since the beginning. 'no' is the code that covers both 'nn' and 'nb'. When 'nn' split from 'no' it would have been good, if 'no' had been moved to 'nb' the same time.
The main difference between the cases of Voro/Estonian and Bokmal/Nynorsk is, that Bokmal and Nynorsk speakers would both agree if you ask them "Do you speak Norwegian?" But Voro speakers do not agree when asked "Do you speak Estonian?" They'd say "No, I speak Voro." So, both Nynorsk and Bokmal are contesters to the code 'no', but Voro has few interest to be covered by 'et'. That shouldn't surprise, since Nynorsk and Bokmal are two different standardizations for the same language, when Voro and Estonian are different languages.
Marcus Buck
Lars Aronsson hett schreven:
Gerard Meijssen wrote:
It is nice that you oppose, there are reasons why it might be a bad idea, but the ones that I know are not the ones you put forward. A reason why a change would be good is that it will prevent confusion.
Come on, nobody is confused about what language Estonian is. If giving a language code to a local dialect means we have to rename all URLs for one of the major Wikipedias (Estonian is the 34th biggest, Bokmål is the 13th biggest), this only means we have to oppose all future assignments of new ISO language codes. It is OK to use the standard when naming new Wikipedias, but it's not OK to suddenly change a well-known address.
We're here to spread free knowledge. That is not helped by renaming all of our URLs just because of some random ISO standard change. The no and et Wikipedias should be kept as they are.