[Foundation-l] Big problem to solve: good WYSIWYG on WMF wikis
Samuel Klein
meta.sj at gmail.com
Tue Dec 28 22:17:32 UTC 2010
David Gerard writes;
> Our current markup is one of our biggest barriers to participation.
Yes.
> * Starting from a clear field makes it ridiculously easy.
We could start with solutions for first-time posters, new articles,
and new talk-page comments -- any comprehensive solution should be
compatible with short-term solutions that solve this 'ridiculously
easy' part -- which happens to address what many first-time editors
need.
Stephanie Daugherty writes:
> Not only is the current markup a barrier to participation, it's a barrier to
> development. As I argued on Wikien-l, starting over with a markup that can
< be syntacticly validated... would reap huge rewards in the safety
and effectiveness
> of automated tools.
A lack of WYSIWY* is often a barrier to adoption of MediaWiki as
opposed to other wiki platforms, independent of whether or not
potential editors who visit a MW site feel comfortale editing it. I
recall that P2PU for instance wanted to run MW but used pbwiki instead
because of its WYSIWYG editor.
> By aiming for WYSIWYM, some things would render in the editor in a
> way that makes them easier to understand and edit. For example, templates
> could render in the editor as tables or as a block that loads the template
< parameters into a sidebar when clicked... WYSIWYM editors can be friendly
> to both experienced and new users alike - take LyX as a good example
Victor writes;
> I always viewed wikitext vs. WYSIWYG dilemma as similar to LaTeX vs.
> Microsoft Word one.
In this context, LyX is a good example; it sees its WYSIWYM
implementation as halfway between the two.
Stephanie writes:
> Layouts would be a new form of template, designed to apply as a
> block-level outline to an article, providing both a framework to build a
> particular type of article, and defining the formatting for that article in
> a manner that templates and article markup would no longer be permitted to
> do. It's likely that layouts would be treated like highly used templates and
< the interface itself... one to an article, so the interface to
select one would
> probably be just selecting it from a dropdown or typing it's name.
I really like the idea of separating article text, local templates,
and page-wide layout. I don't know if 'three different paresers' are
needed, but just being able to define a stylesheet for a named layout
would save time and frustration.
Brion writes:
> Getting anything done that would work on the huge, well-developed,
> wildly-popular Wikipedia has always been a non-starter because it has to
> deal with 10 years of backwards-compatibility from the get-go. I think it's
> going to be a *lot* easier to get things going on those smaller projects
> which are now so poorly served
How do we make it easier to implement new things for individual
smaller projects?
> For the Wikipedia case, we need to incubate the next generation of templating
Is this a problem space we could tackle in tandem with MindTouch and
others who care about simple interfaces to edit and view complex
information?
Sam.
--
Samuel Klein identi.ca:sj w:user:sj +1 617 529 4266
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