[Wikipedia-l] A vision for wiki syntax, documented
Daniel Mayer
maveric149 at yahoo.com
Thu May 15 23:00:15 UTC 2003
LDC wrote:
>There's no provision for nested tables. I don't think
>there's a good enough case for their necessity. Cell
>backgrounds and borders can be done with styles.
Well I and many other very hard-working Wikipedians
think there is a very real need for nested tables.
They are used in each these converted articles;
organisms (that nested table has a border=0),
countries, heads of state, elements, and sub-national
entities. And this list doesn't include the many other
non-project related nested tables.
>> So if http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beryllium
>>cannot be replicated pretty much as-is in wikicode
>>then I for will have a fit (I'm sure many others
>>will join me).
>
>Yeah, that nested table is a nuisance. I'll have to
>think about that.
There are two nested tables; the obvious one in the
isotopes section and the navigation nested table in
the first cell of the larger table (which in turn has
an image embedded in it). Both are necessary to the
functioning of the table and are not a "nuisance" at
all.
>> An alternative solution is to only allow HTML
>> syntax to be rendered if it is in a table:namespace
>> page.
>
>As I said before, I want to eliminate the complexity,
>not just move it around. I want newbies to have some
>chance of being to edit the table as well as the
>prose around it.
Do you have /any/ idea about how much work would be
undone and have to be redone in a diminished format if
the document as is were implemented? Thousands of
pages will be broken and many users, including me, may
get fed-up with Wikipedia and leave.
A table is going to be dense and intimidating to
nontechnical users no matter what but tables are very
useful when it comes to effectively presenting tabular
data (something we have a lot of). Thus putting this
complexity on a separate page seems to be a good
compromise between preventing newbies from not being
intimidated by hordes of markup and allowing more
seasoned users the ability to present tabular data in
a table.
How the page functions for the reader is just as
important as how it functions for the writer. And just
as different writers have different abilities to
contribute prose to an article, we have different
coders with different abilities to add markup
to articles.
We don't dumb down the prose of articles to reach the
lowest common denominator reader/writer (except for
intro paragraphs) and we should not similarly dumb
down the markup just to make things a bit easier for
the lowest common denominator coder. Just segregate
the tables from the prose and both the markup-
phobic and the markup gurus will be happy (that's not
to say that I advocate for full HTML support; just
move the HTML off of the regular article page and into
its own namespace).
I would still like to know if a conversion script
would be run. If not, then disabling HTML would make
Wikipedia look badly broken with the displayed text of
tens of thousands of instances of HTML markup. And all
that would have to be re-coded in the new syntax by
hand. If it is run then the script is going to
mangle any table that has markup in it that is no
supported in the proposed wikicode. Either way we are
talking about changing masses of content that somebody
is going to have to repair.
Why in the world is it necessary to break so many
things and therefore create so much added work? The
negative side-effects of the proposed WikiSyntax will
cause far more problems than it purports to solve,
IMO.
Please replicate in WikiCode the HTML we currently
support (well, maybe not the obscure stuff that is
hardly ever used) and/or create a table:namespace.
-- Daniel Mayer (aka mav)
PS - We've seem to have done fine during the past 2+
years with tolerating HTML where it makes sense (such
as tables).
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