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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Codename Lisa (talk | contribs) at 17:13, 26 May 2017 ("at" versus "on": c.e). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Perma.cc support

I added support for the Perma.cc web archiver. In the process I also added the ability to call the webarchive function with arguments (i.e. as {{#invoke:webarchive|webarchive|url=http://perma.cc/F9NT-22AK|date=2015-04-09}} in addition to the preexisting {{#invoke:webarchive|webarchive}} (which grabs arguments from the parent). This makes the module easier to invoke from Scribunto test cases, which I added at Module:Webarchive/testcases and Module talk:Webarchive/testcases. —RP88 (talk) 18:26, 15 November 2016 (UTC)[reply]

"at" versus "on"

Re: this[1]

If the rendered text said "Archived on Wayback Machine" I could see this, but most of the time it says "Archived August 3, 2015 at Wayback Machine" which is a shorthand way of saying "Archived on August 3, 2015 at the Wayback Machine". If we said "Archived on August 3, 2015 on the Wayback Machine" it's a repetitive use of "on" and it doesn't sound right. What is the "on Wayback Machine" shorthand for in this context .. It's confusing. "at the Wayback Machine" is unambiguous and without repetition. -- GreenC 14:28, 23 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Hi, Green Cardamom
"it's a repetitive use of "on" and it doesn't sound right." Oh, yes, the cursed "it doesn't sound right" which I heard for years from students wrote incorrect answers in the exam because the correct answer didn't sound right. That's why I generally don't care if things sound right or not; I apply the tried and proven principle.
Maybe it doesn't sound right, but it nonetheless is right. Contents are hosted on websites, not at them. It is a simple matter of collocation.
Also, you reverted bad insertions of "the", against which MOS:COMPUTING has warned. I bet they sounded right to you.
Best regards,
Codename Lisa (talk) 15:13, 23 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]
You're going to need to get consensus for these changes. Thanks. -- GreenC 16:02, 23 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]
MOS:COMPUTING, in the role of guideline, represents consensus. —Codename Lisa (talk) 05:01, 24 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]
There is consensus this template has been in use for nearly a decade in its original form and wording at template:wayback and forcing through a change in style across 100s of thousands of articles is going to need consensus. There are issues to consider such as how this change will impact existing citations and how they are worded in-context. You can use the MOS as your argument but it's not hard policy. -- GreenC 13:01, 24 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Not hard policy? And what do we have against this "not hard policy"? An argument of "no one bothered to fix it so far, so let's not fix it ever".
You said "consensus", I gave you consensus. Now you are changing your word. Strip all the bureaucratic nonsense from your discussion and you have no arguments whatsoever.
Codename Lisa (talk) 08:48, 25 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]
The problem at this point is your behavior and abuse of template editor permissions. Your behaving righteously and unilaterally so you can't see any disagreement as being valid ("you have no arguments whatsoever") then attribute bad faith to it ("bureaucratic nonsense"). Then you aggressively edit war over it and ignore the fact there is clear and unambiguous disagreement with your changes. The way its been for over a decade. Finally your disrespecting the well established rules about how to edit Module and Templates. See Wikipedia:Template_editor#Abuse. You made a bold edit without prior discussion, it was reverted and we briefly discussed and I asked you to please establish consensus for these significant changes. Start an RfC etc.. but you continued to revert a second time using your template editor privileges prior to resolution of the dispute, unilaterally deciding your are right. -- GreenC 15:49, 25 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]
You are the one abusing the privilege. The Template Editor right is granted to effect the community consensus faster; you are using it to block the community consensus because you don't like it. Consensus has different levels; lack of action as a precedent is on a far lower level than MOS. Per Wikipedia:Template editor § No discussion, I was perfectly allowed to make the change without any discussion whatsoever.
Face it: You have long stopped discussing the contribution and instead starting commenting on me.
Codename Lisa (talk) 09:30, 26 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]
The change is clearly controversial accord to Wikipedia:Template editor: Changes that significantly affect a template or module's visual appearance to the reader.. Nevertheless you still made your first edit without discussion and discovered it was indeed controversial. But then you reverted a second time while discussion was still ongoing. Per Abuse if your edit is or may be controversial (see the "When to seek discussion" criteria above), avoid making unilateral decisions, and instead propose the change on the template's talk page, and then make the change if there are no objections . There are objections, you don't "unilaterally" decide to ignore them.
The wording of this template existed before me, it goes back over a decade. Using "at" or "or" is just a matter of opinion. So we pick one. We don't keep changing it every time a user has an angular opinion. The use of "at" is so well established many manually hard code it in the wikitext. So we have a site-wide multi-template consistent long term wording used by the community. If you want to change it then just start an RfC or something so the next time someone tries to switch it back to "at" you don't have to edit war. -- GreenC 13:51, 26 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]
@Green Cardamom: Good morning. I am in a very good mood and ready to compromise. Let's say it is controversial. Let's say my initial edit was wrong. Let's say my reinstatement of the edit was wrong. Let's say, as you reiterated many many times, a discussion is needed. Very well. Let's discuss.
Let me cut to the chase. You already stated your concern: It was like this for ten years. Per WP:SILENCE, being like this for ten years constitutes consensus. If the community didn't like it, the community would have changed it. Or would it? Let's see it from several angels:
  1. A template, for ten years, has misspelled "fast car" as "fart car". Would you say there is a consensus in favor of the latter and it must be kept?
  2. Where those templates edit-protected? (The answer is "yes". It has been edit-protected for nine years, since 2008.) If yes, the community's lack of action was out of inability not consent. They probably saw it, wanted to change it, met with the block, and aborted because they didn't want to go through our faulty and unpleasant consensus-building process.
  3. Did the ... [Abrupt stop.]
I am literally paraphrasing the contents Wikipedia:Silence and consensus § Silence is the weakest form of consensus, so allow me not to write the third, fourth and fifth entry. (You can read them there.) The point is: Silence is the weakest form of consensus. And we have a much stronger form of consensus here that overrules this weakest form of consensus: a guideline. Guideline represent broad community consensus. Of course, they must be treated with common sense and occasional consideration of exceptions. If you have grounds for an exception based on common sense, I am all ears. Blow me away.
Best regards,
16:49, 26 May 2017 (UTC)

Also, please be careful when making significant changes to a production Module that is so heavily used. If there is any chance of a technical problem and/or disagreement. The correct way would be to update the sandbox and wait a day or two for comment then copy it into the live Module. There are performance and backlinks database consequences with reverts. -- GreenC 14:31, 23 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Oh, yeah? Well if you are worried about the impact on the heavily used modules, don't revert contributions that are based on principle and logic, only because they don't sound right. Better yet, don't commit those mistakes in the first place. —Codename Lisa (talk) 15:15, 23 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Uninvolved editor stopping by Just saw this listed on ANI and thought I'd look it over and give feedback. Codename_Lisa I agree with the sentiment that guidelines represent consensus - that being said all guidelines are to be treated with common sense ( MOS:Computing ) says that on the very top of the page.
That said, I will point that on WP:Template editor , near the abuse section it does say
Any breaking changes, no matter how small. If it removes a parameter, or changes expected parameter behavior, do not do it without strong consensus, unless your reason for doing so is absolutely critical.
Your change appears to be breaking this template, so you would need to gain consensus for making this change, don't just revert , talk it out.
I also want to point out that your method of communication does come across as high-handed, dial it back a bit (I totally understand your point of view and like I said, I agree with you, but guidelines aren't set in stone -I had to learn this lesson myself! ). Explain why you believe the change is merited, and let's wait for others to join in, if consensus supports you, then you're fine.  Ҝ Ø Ƽ Ħ  18:41, 25 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]
It's not breaking the template that I can see. Only requesting an RfC so the community can be notified and decide due to decade+ long wording which is built-in the context of 100s of thousands of cites. And restore the template because of Wikipedia:Template_editor#Abuse. -- GreenC 19:39, 25 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]