Hello Edward, everyone,If there's a volunteer willing to take the lead on Monuments then we can offer a little logistical support. However, the volunteers that delivered it last year said it was an enormous amount of work and don't have the time. If you would like to lead on it then we can help, although time is very short at this point.Thanks and regards,Stevie--On 12 August 2015 at 10:35, Ed Hand <edwardxx@gmail.com> wrote:Edwardbest wsihesAre we taking part in Wiki Loves Monuments this year?No mention of the UK here:
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Wiki_Loves_Monuments_2015/Participating_countriesOn 10 August 2015 at 16:43, WereSpielChequers <werespielchequers@gmail.com> wrote:I have now used the visual editor for more than a hundred edits since the speed up. I agree that the classic editor is generally faster and I suspect that will be especially true for anyone editing large articles as V/E's still lacks section editing.
I like the way V/E supports infobox editing, one of the things I sometimes do is add images to articles and with the classic editor you usually have the pain of having to check the template documentation to find out what the parameters are for image and caption (sadly and for no obvious reason these parameters are unlikely to be "image" and "caption"). V/E is actually quite intuitive here in allowing you to run through the unused parameters of the infobox.
Table editing is more nuanced, on the one hand there are handy looking options that come up inviting you to delete or add columns or rows and I'm sure at some point I will find an opportunity to use them. But editing the contents of a cell in a table is challenging, not a task I would suggest to a newbie and far less intuitive than using the classic editor.
Adding images from commons is really quite impressive in V/E, I haven't yet been in the situation of having to work out which Newcastle V/E is prompting me with and it would be good to know whether V/E is using wiki data links, keywords, geocodes or some combination. But however it does it the images it has prompted me with so far have been pretty good.
Not sure between Joe and Andy's positions re showing diffs. I have had very little to do with the education program, but I appreciate for educators knowing how to look at the contributions of a student is important. I think that V/E would be a better entry point for technophobes whilst clearly the classic editor is better for the technoscenti. How you recruit one or other group for an editathon without stereotyping is an interesting conundrum. If you have access to a large mailing list of people who might be interested then you could do two sorts of sessions, one emphasising that this was Wikipedia editing for anyone, especially people who tried it in the past and found it technically arcane. Another promising a session led by a "power user" showing how to be an effective editor on Wikipedia perhaps billed as "this session is suitable for anyone with any programming experience, however rusty or archaic".
Alternatively if you have a good ratio of experienced editors to newbies you can guard people and show them the editor most suitable for them.
Regards
Jonathan
> On 9 Aug 2015, at 01:03, Richard Farmbrough <richard@farmbrough.co.uk> wrote:
>
> I guess when it is sufficiently fast that I don't have time to hit "edit source" instead before it loads, I will start using it on other projects. Until then, a good character editor beats a good WIMPS editor - pity it's not a good character editor.
>
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