Peter Gervai wrote:
On Wed, Sep 22, 2004 at 06:49:36PM +0200, Yann Forget wrote:
Hi,
Capitalisation is now only an option in the French Wiktionary.
So, f.e., now [[allemand]] and [[Allemand]] are two different articles.
All language names are lower cases in French.
Please enlighten me.
I see why it is good to be able to call an article [[pH]], so that's okay.
However, I fail to see the point why [[ph]] [[pH]] and [[Ph]] have to be different articles. Can someone show an example where different capitalisation result different words which require separate articles?
I'd say if someone links to [[ph]] it should find [[pH]], and editing [[ph]] would open [[pH]] for edit.
thanks peter _______________________________________________ Wikipedia-l mailing list Wikipedia-l@Wikimedia.org http://mail.wikipedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikipedia-l
This is an old argument; particularly for Wiktionary it makes a hell of a lot of difference. It is about different words that should be recognised as such.
allemagne and Allemagne are two different things.
Thanks, GerardM