Template talk:Nuclide/Archive 1
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Archive 1 |
Ununbium
Ununbium has not yet been replaced by copernicium.--Mikespedia is on Wikipedia! 15:00, 21 February 2010 (UTC)
- This seems to have been taken care of by replacing one with the other - I am affraid that any pages that were using the old name will now have errors.. I'll investigate. — SkyLined (talk) 18:56, 22 February 2010 (UTC)
- There were two pages, one a talk page, the other my list of nuclei, that were affected - nothing serious. The transition to the new name should now be complete and no more pages should have errors. — SkyLined (talk) 20:03, 22 February 2010 (UTC)
I can't read the &%$#ing things
In my reader, the "12" for carbon-12 only shows for the template {{SimpleNuclide2}}, but for none of the other three templates shown (where only the "6" shows, and the "12" is missing). I only noticed because somebody used these new templates in the isotope article, and I can't see them at all. Surely I'm not the only person that WP is becomming more and more unreadable for, due to these fancy transcluded templates? What happened to using the other perfectly good functions to show this stuff, for example: 12C ? SBHarris 04:37, 27 March 2010 (UTC)
- Re problem with templates: Unfortunately your fix of Isotope by changing Nuclide2 to Simplenuclide2 is not satisfactory, because (at least with Internet Explorer) Simplenuclide2 does not show the atomic number subscripts. True, the atomic number information is redundant for anyone who can find the element symbol on a periodic table, but the subscripts certainly should be given at the end of the third paragraph where the preceding sentence explains what the subscripts mean.
- Nuclide2 on the other hand does show both superscript and subscript on my screen, which is quite mysterious since I don't see the atomic number in the source code for either the Isotope article or the Nuclide2 template. Is there hidden source code which tells the system that carbon is element 6?
- And it is possible that the problem is browser-dependent. A few weeks ago with Internet Explorer I saw the Nuclide2 symbols with superscripts and subscripts piled on top of the element symbol (e.g. 12 on top of 6 on top of C !), but on Mozilla Firefox the symbols were normal. At the time I was preparing to describe this phenomenon on a talk page, but it was mysteriously fixed after a few days.
- I think all this needs to be fixed by someone who understands the hidden source code. Or else as SBHarris says, we can just go back to <sub> and <super>. Dirac66 (talk) 19:52, 27 March 2010 (UTC)
- Yes, please. For the record, I'm using IE also, but an older version, and it fixed the problem for me, but not you. So it's all screwed up. Since <sub, <sup, and <small work for everybody, why can't the people who write the templates employ them as subcode, so they can be sure this is going to work on everybody's browsers. This whole thing tmplate thing for superscripts is just wanking, as it converts code perfectly readable for anyone, into stuff that is now not accessable for large fractions of readers. And to save what amount of editing time cost? Almost nothing in this case. SBHarris 20:13, 27 March 2010 (UTC)
- To be fair there is one defect with sub and super which may have incited whoever developed the templates. For isotope notation you cannot place the superscript directly over the subscript, so you have to write 146C (or else 614C which is worse I think). The template appears to put the 14 directly over the 6 as in textbooks, which is an advantage IF it can be made readable by everyone. If not then I agree with you that we should revert to sub and super, though it may take a little time to convince everyone that there is a problem. Dirac66 (talk) 01:01, 28 March 2010 (UTC)
Overlaps in PDF render

The PDF created by Wikipedia's "Download as PDF" function on article MOX fuel contains bad rendering of the paragraphs containing subscripts and superscripts, which are produced with template {{Nuclide2}}. The Printable version function produces a correct rendering. I could not find another article that also uses {{Nuclide2}} directly, but articles that use the wrapper {{Nuclide}} do not have this problem. I am also posting a note at Help:Books/Feedback#Template Nuclide2 may cause overlaps in PDF. -84user (talk) 17:31, 9 June 2011 (UTC)
symbol by atomic number
It might have been nice if these templates allowed selecting the element by atomic number. That is: {{nuclide2|92}}
to work like: {{nuclide2|U}}
. It is just a little more convenient when making tables, especially machine generated tables. Otherwise, thanks to whoever made this template. <sub> and <sup> don't do so well. Gah4 (talk) 16:51, 14 November 2016 (UTC)
55
25Mn doesn't work.
It seems that there is an error in the table, such that {{nuclide2|Mn}}
doesn't work.
For testing purposes: 1
1H 4
2He 7
3Li 9
4Be 11
5B 12
6C 14
7N 16
8O 19
9F 20
10Ne 23
11Na 24
12Mg 27
13Al 28
14Si 31
15P 33
16S 35
17Cl 40
18Ar 39
19K 40
20Ca 45
21Sc 48
22Ti 51
23V 52
24Cr 55
25Mn 56
26Fe 59
27Co 58
28Ni 63
29Cu 64
30Zn 69
31Ga 74
32Ge 75
33As 80
34Se 79
35Br 84
36Kr 85
37Rb 88
38Sr 89
39Y 90
40Zr 93
41Nb 98
42Mo 99
43Tc 102
44Ru 103
45Rh 106
46Pd 107
47Ag 114
48Cd 115
49In 118
50Sn 121
51Sb 130
52Te 127
53I 132
54Xe 133
55Cs 138
56Ba 139
57La 140
58Ce 141
59Pr 142
60Nd 145
61Pm 152
62Sm 153
63Eu 158
64Gd 159
65Tb 164
66Dy 165
67Ho 166
68Er 169
69Tm 174
70Yb 175
71Lu 178
72Hf 181
73Ta 184
74W 187
75Re 192
76Os 193
77Ir 195
78Pt 197
79Au 202
80Hg 205
81Tl 208
82Pb 209
83Bi 210
84Po 210
85At 222
86Rn 223
87Fr 226
88Ra 227
89Ac 232
90Th 231
91Pa 238
92U 237
93Np 244
94Pu 243
95Am 247
96Cm 247
97Bk 251
98Cf 252
99Es 257
100Fm 258
101Md 259
102No 262
103Lr 261
104Rf 262
105Db 266
106Sg 264
107Bh 277
108Hs 268
109Mt 281
110Ds 272
111Rg 285
112Cn The element Uut does not exist. 289
114Fl The element Uup does not exist. 292
116Lv The element Uus does not exist. The element Uuo does not exist. Gah4 (talk) 17:17, 14 November 2016 (UTC)
- OK, after fixing both {{ProtonsForElement}} and {{NeutronsForElement}} it now works. Seems that I am the first ever to try
{{nuclide2|Mn}}
. By the way, template errors in section headings give funny results. Gah4 (talk) 17:57, 14 November 2016 (UTC)
{{tfm}} ruins tables!
Putting the {{tfm}} tag on this ruins a lot of tables that use this tag. I suppose I agree that it could be put on {{nuclide}} to get those changed over (however long that takes), but ruining all the tables using {{nuclide2}} for now, doesn't seem necessary. Gah4 (talk) 00:16, 19 November 2016 (UTC)