CZ Talk:The Article Checklist

From Citizendium
Revision as of 19:04, 29 April 2007 by imported>Nancy Sculerati (→‎cat_check)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Are pull down menus an option in wiki code? I have to admit i have never seen it but it would be very useful in this case. The workgroup names need to be EXACTLY right other wise the categories will be wrong. This is obviously true for all the parameters. Chris Day (Talk) 16:52, 20 February 2007 (CST)

On second thoughts I've taken this question to the forums. Chris Day (Talk) 16:53, 20 February 2007 (CST)

Well, one way to tell whether the correct name for the parameter was given is whether the data appear correctly on the form (as you see here: Talk:John Doherty (fiddler), and another way to tell is to see whether the category links are red or not. Presumably, we'll create very brief introductory sections that will turn all our (must be a few hundred) red category links blue. --Larry Sanger 16:51, 21 February 2007 (CST)


Article dUmMy

The article stati listed do not seem to fit reality. Marking a article as "2" results in an "developing" article not a "developed" one.--Markus Baumeister 11:03, 18 March 2007 (CDT)

Fixed. --Larry Sanger 11:58, 18 March 2007 (CDT)

Reality be damned, HOW do I get a status value into the template so that it actually happens? There is, of course, no "status" field in any of the few articles talk pages I've looked at. Neither [that word that starts and ends with s]= nor dUmMy= has worked for me in several experiments on the Galileo talk page, where working is defined as seeing the expected result both the preview and the code as submitted from a preview that looks ok.

Geeeez, in previewing this I see that the input function changes [that word about the standing of a thing]= to dUmMy= . I suppose it was all perfectly obvious from the start, Watson.

However, I'm still getting an unspecified status in the preview when using dUmMy= 3. Please, someone, give the article a usable explanation of how to set the status, preferably with a usage example that can be copied and modified and will work. Sorry to gripe, but life can be hard for a newbie without any knowledge of the internals of the code. Daniel Drake 12:16, 5 April 2007 (CDT)

cat_check

In the category of "'yes' is not an answer to an either-or question:" currently a section of the checklist reads:

"'cat_check' is used to indicate whether, in the opinion of the person filling out the checklist, the category list is OK or, instead, needs review by editors. Simply write 'y' or 'n' (or variations on these) for yes or no."

So does "yes" mean "yes the category list is OK", or does "yes" mean "yes the category list needs review by editors"? Very confusing. - Greg Martin 20:02, 29 April 2007 (CDT)

yes means its ok, no means it needs review Nancy Sculerati 20:04, 29 April 2007 (CDT) (often wrong but never in doubt :-)