UDWiki talk:Featured Articles: Difference between revisions

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==Let's get this over with==
''For pre-2011 discussion, please see [[UDWiki:Featured Articles/Archive|the talk archive]].''
and get the Featured articles up on the front page. What I propose is we replace the current [[:Template:Community Portal]] with [[User:Red Hawk One/Sandbox 2|this]]:
 
{{User:Red Hawk One/Sandbox 2}}
 
The Featured Article would be chosen weekly from the pool of Good Articles, and would consist of a brief summary (or the opening blurb) of the article, a link to the article, and a small picture representing the article.
 
If you have anything you'd like to see changed about this box, speak up; otherwise, I'll be upgrading the template to this version within the next few days. {{:User:Red Hawk One/sig}} 21:30, 11 July 2010 (BST)
 
Make it so. Although how long will each featured article run for? We can rotate through them if we want to change them more regularly, there's nothing stopping us looping them in a shuffled cycle. {{User:Misanthropy/Sig}} 21:40, 11 July 2010 (BST)
 
I might suggest longer than once a week, especially while starting out, but assuming we have the pool of articles and continued interest, one week, and going ahead with this, is fine. {{User:Aichon/Signature}} 21:42, 11 July 2010 (BST)
:Yeah, the "weekly" part is more of an ideal rotation. With only 18 articles in the [[:Category:Good Articles|FA pool]] right now, I'm thinking two weeks per rotation might be a better start. Thoughts?{{:User:Red Hawk One/sig}} 21:49, 11 July 2010 (BST)
::Hang on, I'm sure we can dredge up some nominees if you gimme an hour. {{User:Misanthropy/Sig}} 21:50, 11 July 2010 (BST)
:::That's the spirit :) The way I see it, if this thing gets more air, we'll see more nominees; more nominees means more candidates, which means more articles to cycle, which means shorter cycle times. {{:User:Red Hawk One/sig}} 21:56, 11 July 2010 (BST)
::::Is there still a moritorium on group pages? If not, [[BB3]] should be considered (fucking ''look at it''). Also I'm thinking [[Actions via "question marks"]], if it was prettied up some more. {{User:Misanthropy/Sig}} 22:11, 11 July 2010 (BST)
:::::Excellent. Alphabetical order? --{{User:Rosslessness/Sig}} 22:13, 11 July 2010 (BST)
::::::I was thinking random order, but it's really going to be up to whoever is cycling the FAs. And sorry Mis, but this suggestion is just getting the FAs up on the main page. We'd have to go through the GA page to change the group page rules (I might look into that after this stage is done). {{:User:Red Hawk One/sig}} 22:18, 11 July 2010 (BST)
 
Two weeks is fine in the short term.  We'll probably want between 25 and 30 FA's before we move to a one-week cycle (read: so the same article is not featured more than once in a six-month period.) {{User:Linkthewindow/Sig}} 01:13, 12 July 2010 (BST)
 
I'd strongly suggest showing a mockup of the main page before enacting this. I hardly see how that massive template is going to fit anywhere near as snugly as the current community portal box. --{{User:DanceDanceRevolution/sig3}} 08:05, 13 July 2010 (BST)
:The whole thing could easily be shrunk down to fit, there's no element to it that ''forces'' it to be that size, after all. {{User:Misanthropy/Sig}} 14:07, 13 July 2010 (BST)
::I've had an [[User:Red Hawk One/Sandbox 1|example]] for quite a few months. It's barely wider than the current community portal template, and a bit taller. Heck, on my computer, this thing fits the screen better than the navigation templates below it.
::That does remind me, though, that I never did the rounded-corners thing with this. One sec. {{:User:Red Hawk One/sig}} 19:49, 13 July 2010 (BST)
:::Shorter please. Lose the paragraph starting "Conceptually, River Tactics are simply any plan that uses avoidance of the enemy as a positive characteristic." --{{User:Rosslessness/Sig}} 20:08, 13 July 2010 (BST)
::::Also a space between the "meatshield tactics" and the "(see below)". {{User:Misanthropy/Sig}} 20:13, 13 July 2010 (BST)
 
::::: Look at the way they do the portal's at the [http://fallout.wikia.com/wiki/Fallout_Wiki Fallout Wiki]<br>Could we make a featured article about Kevan, Or how he made urbandead.<br>And we could always have a featured urbandead group of the day,<br> Maybe even make a portal specific to Borehamwood and Monroeville.<br>
--{{User:Jerrel Yokotory/signature}}. 20:34, 13 July 2010 (BST)
 
DO I NEED TO HELP? --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 22:02, 13 July 2010 (BST)
:Yeah. Probably. And finish your game! Stupid flooded underground tunnels. --{{User:Rosslessness/Sig}} 22:07, 13 July 2010 (BST)
::I thought I got past that part in the game. I don't really know. Maybe, but not now. Perhaps August. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 22:09, 13 July 2010 (BST)
I think we should have a vote to decide the Featured Article.  Just my 2 cents. --{{User:Axe Hack/Sig}} 22:16, 13 July 2010 (BST)
:Alphabetical, and just run through the list. No drama, no voting, just pure simplicity. --{{User:Rosslessness/Sig}} 22:18, 13 July 2010 (BST)
:::Did anyone look at the way they do it on the fallout wiki?--{{User:Jerrel Yokotory/signature}}. 22:21, 13 July 2010 (BST)
::::I did. It seems v. similar to the river tactics article shown in the example above. How else would you modify it? --{{User:Rosslessness/Sig}} 22:24, 13 July 2010 (BST)
::Using another well known wiki as my example, Bulbapedia (the Pokemon wiki) has a featured article on it's main page as well, but they only get featured if they pass the voting stage [http://bulbapedia.bulbagarden.net/wiki/Bulbapedia:Featured_article_candidates here]. --{{User:Axe Hack/Sig}} 22:25, 13 July 2010 (BST)
:::Weapons, clothes, and the atricle about kevan. Do we even have one like that?--{{User:Jerrel Yokotory/signature}}. 22:38, 13 July 2010 (BST)
::::[[User:Kevan]] {{User:Misanthropy/Sig}} 22:41, 13 July 2010 (BST)
:::We have a voting stage for [[UDWiki:Featured Articles/Good Articles|Good Articles]], which is the pool that the Features Articles are selected from. So, we do have voting. Ross and others are merely proposing that the Good Articles be cycled through as Featured Articles in alphabetical order, and I tend to agree. {{User:Aichon/Signature}} 22:49, 13 July 2010 (BST)
::::One thing I'm wondering about alphabetical: what happens when a new article get's added? {{:User:Red Hawk One/sig}} 00:42, 14 July 2010 (BST)
:::::This is why I think the article should be voted onto the front page... --{{User:Axe Hack/Sig}} 00:43, 14 July 2010 (BST)
:::::Slotted into the current rotation if possible, and added to the next rotation if not. If the current Featured Article is [[Decay]], and [[Eastonwood]] is added to the list, then happy days, it's the next one. However, if [[Brooke Hills]] gets added, it'll be shown in the next cycle after the current one rotates. {{User:Misanthropy/Sig}} 00:45, 14 July 2010 (BST)
::::::I'm more a fan of just picking randomly from the pool of yet-to-be featured articles, but whatever the majority says. :/ {{:User:Red Hawk One/sig}} 00:49, 14 July 2010 (BST)
:::::::I think it could also be possible to have the articles cycle randomly, either by one FA on Monday, another on Tuesday etc or switching each hour. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 01:07, 14 July 2010 (BST)
::::::::While it ''is'' possible to use switch statements and magic words to make it happen (though caching would kinda negate some of the effect, especially on an hourly basis), it'd be awfully difficult for a regular user to keep maintained (i.e. virtually impossible given that they'd have to expand the ''logic'' of the switch statement to add a new article once we get above a couple dozen articles). Anyway, while I think a random ordering is better as well, I just don't see how it can be done in a low hassle, low drama sort of way. Plus, if we were to have a separate Featured Article vote, that'd mean weekly or bi-weekly votes over the same material every time. That'd be miserable. {{User:Aichon/Signature}} 02:45, 14 July 2010 (BST)
:::::::::I don't see how random could be that dramatic, you just have someone go to [[:Category:Good Articles]] and throw a dart at their moni... I mean, randomly click on one of the articles, check if it's been a FA yet, and post it if it hasn't. {{:User:Red Hawk One/sig}} 02:52, 14 July 2010 (BST)
::::::::::People could just pick pools of 7 and rotate it every week, or two weeks, or month (whatever). It's easy to change the FAs for a new pool all you need to is exchange the individual cases for the new ones. Regardless, I really don't think anyone will really care which FA gets to be posted first. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 04:10, 14 July 2010 (BST)
 
==Suggested Order==
 
{{User:Rosslessness/Random Rambling/Sandbox42}} --{{User:Rosslessness/Sig}} 19:03, 14 July 2010 (BST)
 
I'd still rather we randomize the order, but this will do nicely. What do you say we transition the new template tonight, use [[River Tactics]] as a test FA (think of it as a  "gift" to the article for being such a good little example), then start the official rotation Saturday/Sunday night? {{:User:Red Hawk One/sig}} 02:54, 15 July 2010 (BST)
 
I'd prefer that the dates be listed in international standard (e.g. 2010-07-19) since what you have there looks like nonsense to Americans, but that's just a quibble point. Everything else looks fine though. {{User:Aichon/Signature}} 03:31, 15 July 2010 (BST)
 
Based on Ross's calendar, I've gone ahead and updated the template. If you'd like to jazz up the [[FA]] a little bit, be my guest; we're probably going to want to start working on the write-ups for the future FA's pretty soon. {{:User:Red Hawk One/sig}} 03:14, 19 July 2010 (BST)
:BoB has a spelling error under the [[Battle_of_Blackmore#A_Prologue|Prologue section]].  I'll give a cookie to whoever finds that minor mistake. ;) --{{User:Axe Hack/Sig}} 03:15, 19 July 2010 (BST)
::''Luckily'', I found it. {{:User:Red Hawk One/sig}} 03:18, 19 July 2010 (BST)
{{Cookie|Axe Hack|Red Hawk One|reason=luckily correcting a minor spelling error.}}
:::It wouldn't be a good thing if the Featured Article has mistakes in it, now would it? ;) --{{User:Axe Hack/Sig}} 03:19, 19 July 2010 (BST)
 
[[Battle_of_Blackmore#The_Effects_of_Numbers|The Effects of Numbers]] section has a misspelling as well.  Rat if you find it. --{{User:Axe Hack/Sig}} 03:30, 19 July 2010 (BST)
:I'll see that error and raise you 2 in "It begins," 2 in "The fight Narrows," 4 in "An amazing show of class," one more in "The effect of numbers," Two in "Mantooth..." and two in "Politics." {{:User:Red Hawk One/sig}} 03:36, 19 July 2010 (BST)
::I see that you're skiming the article as well.  I'd edit them if I can, but as you can see, I have no Psycho powers.  Therefore, it's all yours to edit.  Again, it wouldn't really be a good thing if the Featured Article has mistakes in it, now would it? --{{User:Axe Hack/Sig}} 03:39, 19 July 2010 (BST)
:::I reckon we should make it a mandatory that all articles going up for GA status be '''Spell-Checked.''' {{:User:Red Hawk One/sig}} 03:42, 19 July 2010 (BST)
::::I agree.  I'll just swap that rat there for a pint.  I'm sure it should cover everything. {{Guinness|Axe Hack|Red Hawk One|reason=minor spell check edits on the BoB page.}} --{{User:Axe Hack/Sig}} 03:45, 19 July 2010 (BST)
 
==New System?==
It seems clear that, despite looking good on paper, the current featured article system is not working. It was over six months after the current system was suggested that the first vote was called, and another four since then without any votes. As a counter-proposal, I suggest we adopt a system similar to [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia:Today's featured article/January 2010|Wikipedias']]. The system would work out something like this:
# The [[:Category:Good Articles|Good Article Category]] would serve as the FA pool. A new article would be featured each week.
#* Any page suggested and passed on [[UDWiki:Featured Articles/Good Articles]] would become a FA nominee.
# ''If no significant discussion is made on upcoming FA's, the system would default to a pre-determined and random queue''. This is to prevent problems such as the current abandonment.
#The queue would expand 1-2 months in advance (4-8 articles), with new articles being assigned at random. Users would be able to influence this by suggesting additional GAs to add to the queue, or petition to have the queue changed/shuffled.
# [[UDWiki:Featured Articles/Voting]] would become obsolete, and would be best replaced by a queue page much like [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia:Today's featured article/January 2010|This]].
#In order to be featured, an article must have an appropriate opening statement (or a substitute written) and preferably a related image.
 
By instituting a randomized system, we would insure that there would be a featured article, even if the community looses interest (which history shows it inevitably will).
 
Citations:
*[[Wikipedia:Wikipedia:Today's featured article/January 2010]] - an example of a FA queue. Note that one on the UDWiki would likely be organized by weeks, not days. May be a place to finalize the visible blurb.
*[[Wikipedia:Wikipedia:Today's featured article/requests]] - The wikipedia system for finalizing and/or changing queued FA's. The point system is a clever, and potentially adaptable tool. May serve as a model to base our system off of.
*[[User:Red Hawk One/Sandbox 1]] - Proposed addition of a FA box to the Main Page.
*[[User:Red Hawk One/Sandbox 2]] - Description of FA and DYK proposals.
 
Questions:
#How should the backup (random queue) system be run? Should an individual user be appointed to chair the project (like Wikipedia)? Should it be controlled by sysops? Should it be openly run by anyone?
#Should users supply a FA opening blurb with their nomination for GA?
#What happens if the pool is exhausted?
#Should there be restrictions on what can qualify as a FA candidate (possibly causing a GA-FA split)?
 
Thank you for taking the time to read this. I am sure that many of you, like myself, would love to see Featured Articles as a working project.--{{:User:Red Hawk One/sig}} 05:14, 28 January 2010 (UTC)
 
:Let's begin with the most obvious point; '''this is not Wikipedia''', nor is it any other encyclopaedia. If you insist on holding up Wikipedia as a example and saying we should move towards it is no more valid than idiot followers of the nailed god showing up and saying we should follow Conservapedia's 'principles'.
 
:The systems that 'work' on this wiki are short easily completable ones, suggestions, deletions, promotions.... just about everything is limited to two weeks, short exposure, discussion, final resolution. Matter solved. Ongoing 'projects' in this game and wiki fail, stall and fall apart.
 
:Point five is simply ridiculous, let's forget the fact that the NPOV statement criteria is never actually enforced except for drama reasons and had widespread support to remove such a criteria from pages in general, you want to start editing pages from groups from years ago that you have no basis to speak on intelligently? It's stupid, and based on the consensus of another project and not this one.
 
:This whole 'good article/featured article' shit is pointless for the simple reason that nobody looks at the front page after they get the hang of using wiki software, I get updates to the news based on my watchlist, not going to the front page and looking it over. The system works on the guides page in the same manner as the suggestions system, a one shot to determine placement in archives that hardly anyone looks at.
 
:You want a system for a front page that will work, you don't need a elaborate system from another community, you need a small focussed effort to happen periodically like with the suburb massacres. Here, I shall write one for you:
:#The year shall be split into four equal sections of 13 weeks.
:#*Resulting in four short and intense participation events each year, 'Featuring for the Spring/Summer/Autumn/Winter'.
:#For each period of the year there will be 13 featured articles that will be featured on the main page for one week each.
:#Four weeks before the end of a period a two week nomination window will open for users to nominate any page they choose.
:#*This nomination period allows for feedback to be given to users with the editing rights to those pages in case they wish to make changes in order to gain votes.
:#*Any page on the wiki may be nominated, except for pages that are featured in the current period.
:#At the end of the two weeks of nominations, a two week voting window is opened.
:#Each active user with more than 50 good faith edits to the project since the last voting window is permitted 13 votes.
:#*A small edit count qualifier prevents immediate meat puppetry.
:#*Each qualifying user may cast up to 13 votes and a maximum of one per nominated page.
:#At the end of the two weeks of voting the 13 pages with the most votes become the featured articles for the next cycle.
:#The articles are featured in the order of the number of votes received, ties will be settled alphabetically, further ties will be settled with monkey knife fights.
:#Featured articles are added to the featured articles category for the duration of the cycle that they are featured, after this they are removed and added to the former featured articles category.
 
:You see how easy that was? -- {{User:Iscariot/Signature}} 05:55, 28 January 2010 (UTC)
 
I demand monkey knife fights! In fact, I think this discussion should be resolved by monkey knife fight! --{{User:Maverick Farrant/sig}} 06:56, 28 January 2010 (UTC)
 
The first issue is that Did You Know's are too biased and useless to be put on the main page, let alone cycled. Cycling them means we'll run out of decent ones within a period of months. Our best bet at putting FA's onto the main page is by having them on their solo. DYK's are a dead plan imo. --{{User:DanceDanceRevolution/sig3}} 07:05, 28 January 2010 (UTC)
:That was actually a response to seeing your sandbox BTW, not responding to the FA bit just yet. --{{User:DanceDanceRevolution/sig3}} 07:07, 28 January 2010 (UTC)
 
I like the general idea of DYKs and FAs, but I have to agree that "Did you know the people are hungry for hippos?" isn't really the best thing to put on the main page. If we had, say, 5000 DYKs, and half as many GAs, we could do it.--{{User:Yonnua Koponen/signature‎}} 07:40, 28 January 2010 (UTC)
:That's why I'm trying to put more GA's into the system. I suppose I should start doing the same with DYK as well. :)
:Anyone have any good ideas?--{{:User:Red Hawk One/sig}} 14:33, 28 January 2010 (UTC)
 
For the DYK's, you could just get a nice pool of good ones (which we probably have) and keep them cycling automatically, or manually, whatever works. They were really just intended as filler. Originally, we were going to have the current FA on the main page on in the CommPort box, but we never really got it off the ground. We likely won't be able to keep a nice FA featured every day, or week for that mater, unlike Wikipedia, but we can do what [http://rationalwiki.com/wiki/Main_Page RationalWiki] does and just have it automatically flip through a list of FAs (dono how possible that is here, but from what I've done with my little userspace game, the {{tl|Switch}} template can sort of get this done to a similar effect). Also, I am no fan of what I've done with [[CommPort]], feel free to mutilate it as you will, and if you need help, just holler. I would keep the DYK's off of the main page, since they would be duplicated in the CP. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 16:34, 28 January 2010 (UTC)
 
You know, there is very rarely going to be a consensus on this and honestly, if I wasn't going to be leaving in a month I would have spent tonight just updating the FA list myself and modified the system so users can unilaterally cycle it according to a certain time period. In fact, if I find myself gravitating back here I'll probably end up doing it post April election. Over all these years the biggest thing about the CP has been proved; it takes workaholics or wikidragons to actually get the necessary changes done. Discussions don't work as well with this place. --{{User:DanceDanceRevolution/sig3}} 12:02, 9 March 2010 (UTC)
 
==Current Voting==
I think we are pretty much overdue for voting. Based on how I see things on the [[FA/V]] page, people can add a page they feel fits the Feature Article criterion to the "Next Pool" list. Every week one of these articles will get moved to "Current Voting" and voting will take place here (probably getting archived at the end of the week).  Voting will be done much as it is done for [[Suggestion|Current Suggestions]] or Sysop Nominations, with options being '''For''', '''Against''', and '''Abstain'''. Simple majority rules.  When a page is up for voting, a new header should be made here on the [[UDWiki talk:Featured Articles|talk page]] linked to the page in question.  Thus, the following header (and official voting space for the page):  --{{User:Maverick Farrant/sig}} 22:38, 1 November 2009 (UTC)
 
==[[Battle of Blackmore]]==
#'''For''' - A well-coded page and a good read. --{{User:Maverick Farrant/sig}} 22:24, 1 November 2009 (UTC)
#'''Abstain''' - As much as the Battle for Blackmore was an awesome event, I don't think, with the current state of the game (with Ridleybank currently being a ghost town and easy claiming for either side), that this article should be featured just yet. --{{User:Axe Hack/Sig}} 02:53, 19 July 2010 (BST)
#:You do realize this vote is almost a year old, right? And that the general concensus is to do the FAs in alphabetical order? <small>—The preceding [[wikipedia:Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment was added by [[User:Red Hawk One|Red Hawk One]] ([[User talk:Red Hawk One|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Red Hawk One|contribs]]) at an <span class="stealthexternallink">[{{fullurl:{{FULLPAGENAME}}|action=history}} unknown time]</span>.</small>
#::That, I never saw.  All I noticed was that this is on the talk page, so I merely replied to it... >< --{{User:Axe Hack/Sig}} 03:03, 19 July 2010 (BST)
 
==Nomnomnominations==
Lets get the show on the road, I guess. Anyone nominate a beautiful article for featured status?
 
I'll throw a few into the mix that I enjoyed reading.
*[[You know you've been playing Urban Dead too much when]]
*[[Groove Theory]]
*[[RNG]]
 
Maybe even [[First Siege of Caiger Mall]] - I think from a historical standpoint it is a good read.
{{User:DanceDanceRevolution/sig}} 02:29, 18 March 2009 (UTC)
 
I'll throw in [[NecroWatch]], because I think it's a good mix of fluff, encourages survivors to take risks and be proactive, and in its mission tries to get more people to contribute to the Wiki. {{User:Extropymine/sig}} 02:41, 18 March 2009 (UTC)
 
We should probably wait 'till we have the criteria up, and the voting page before nominating things. Silly peoples! --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 03:06, 18 March 2009 (UTC)
:Oops? Sorry! {{User:Extropymine/sig}} 03:59, 18 March 2009 (UTC)
:No, no, no - it has to start with Om, and then you go nomnomnomnom (i.e. omnomnomnomnom)!  --{{User:Zombie slay3r/Signature}} 05:31, 18 March 2009 (UTC)
::Certainly need some criteria, though nothing too stringent, if it's generally awesome, throw it in there. Also, this voting business, are we going to vote for articles that are of a FA quality, and then choose one each week? Or are we going to have a pool of random articles people collect, of which somebody chooses a couple to be voted on each week? Or something else, or what? We have no system goddamnit! PS: DRR, are you sure you mean [[RNG]], or do you mean [[RNG (Old Testament)]]? Just to clarify for my benefit, as I think the current RNG page is kinda crappy TBH so it seems odd to suggest it. {{User:The_Rooster/Sig}} 16:04, 18 March 2009 (UTC)
:::The old one has NPOV and it not-being-an-article kind of problem. For FAs we could:
 
:::#Vote FAs from a pool each week, the winner being the FA article. (the Pool of articles aren't FAs yet)
:::#Create a pool of FAs, then have a vote for which one will be on the ComPort/Main Page.
:::#Have two votes, one to determine FAs and the other to determine which/when they get to be on the ComPort/Main Page.
:::Yar? --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 16:38, 18 March 2009 (UTC)
 
I'm inclined towards method 1. People could just add to the pool at will, or just add it to a pre-pool list which then gets pooled if nobody adds any substantial objections after a week or something. {{User:The_Rooster/Sig}} 16:58, 18 March 2009 (UTC)
:1 as well. Of course, the pool will have to be set before being voted on. So Pool A is created, voting starts, but some people want some other articles in the pool. Therefore, it would go in Pool B, which would be voted on next week. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 21:02, 18 March 2009 (UTC)
::1. But what to nominate? Do i want informative/historic/or ALIM? Peer reviewed buildings?, [[The Fall of Monroeville Mall]], [[Danger Alley]]? --{{User:Rosslessness/Sig}} 21:13, 18 March 2009 (UTC)
:::Main Namespace articles. If it's an information page, like a location, glossary item, suburb, historical events etc then it should be included. Groups, user pages and things like projects shouldn't be included.--{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 21:14, 18 March 2009 (UTC)
::::How boring! There are some pretty awesome group pages out there. --{{User:Paddy Dignam/sig}} 21:27, 18 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::I can understand why active groups shouldn't be featured (unfair to other groups to advertize one on the main page), but what about dead and especially historical groups? --[[User:Midianian|Midianian]]<small><sup>¦[[User talk:Midianian|T]]¦[[Developing Suggestions|DS]]¦[[Suggestions|SP]]¦</sup></small> 21:53, 18 March 2009 (UTC)
Well, here's a question: what is the purpose of the FA? Is it just supposed to be fluffy? Or it it supposed to be a resource to show people pages they might not stumble upon? I mean, a really interesting location article is neat and all, but (and no offense to anyone)... who cares? Featuring a well-written article on [[the Lawson Arms]] isn't honestly going to enrich anyone's wiki or gameplay experience, it's just a five-minute distraction and maybe it gets a laugh. Now, if that's the point, then fine-- I'm on board. But if the purpose is to enrich wiki-goers' UD experience, then we shouldn't be so squeamish about letting group pages go on the list. After all, they still have to pass a vote to become an FA. {{User:Extropymine/sig}} 22:16, 18 March 2009 (UTC)
:I can't see why we can't have pages ranging from interesting locations articles to awesome backwater pages to some interesting write-up of history. Active group pages would just create so much damned drama though, totally not worth the effort. Historical groups I wouldn't have a problem with, though I can't imagine many of their pages are actually that interesting, the group and their history might be, but the FA is only going to direct your to their page. {{User:The_Rooster/Sig}} 22:57, 18 March 2009 (UTC)
::But this is a wiki for a game about a zombie apocalypse. Any truly NPOV articles are scarce and probably not that exciting. The beginning of the ALIM page isn't NPOV. Even building and suburb pages have a backstory that was made up by somebody. The RRF page is very well written, as is the Randoms page, etc. It's a shame not to have these eligible for featured article status, although creating criteria would become a lot harder. --{{User:Paddy Dignam/sig}} 23:12, 18 March 2009 (UTC)
:::I just don't think it's worth the potential drama, but if others think it worthwhile, well, that's the whole point of generating consensus from discussion. :) Hopefully it would work out. NPOV-wise, I think it's as big a problem as you say, there are plenty of articles that don't even have significant NPOV concerns in the backwaters of the wiki. Several articles might be better with some sort of obvious bias anyway. If people don't think it's worthy of being FA because it goes too far or whatever, then it won't get voted in. Finally, is ALIM the best we can do for interesting UD related pages? Surly there's better things than a disturbingly thoroughly complied list of cock jokes out there. {{User:The_Rooster/Sig}} 23:36, 18 March 2009 (UTC)
::::Historical Groups I suppose, though I don't know how many will make it. I'm sure we'll find FA quality articles, or perhaps we'll make them. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 22:49, 19 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::"Featured Articles are considered to be the best articles on the Urban Dead Wiki, as determined by the Wiki's users. Before being listed here, articles are voted on according to our featured article criteria, which include strong writing skills, neutrality (for NPOV articles), originality, style, stability (article is not subject to ongoing edit wars) and all-around awesomeness." How's that for criteria? Too many adjectives? It would cover all the articles, at least. I understand the concern about drama, but like I said before, there are some sweet pages out there that deserve a spotlight. Can you prevent a group from stacking the ballot box? --{{User:Paddy Dignam/sig}} 23:30, 19 March 2009 (UTC)
::::::I like those criteria. As for stacking the ballot box, I don't know if it could be prevented. Maybe we could try something like a rotating format? What I mean is, we could be express in the voting rules that the FA must follow the pattern of pro-zombie, neutral, pro-survivor, historical, repeat? So even if a group wanted to ballot stuff to promote their group or agenda, they could really only get their way once a rotation? How long does an article get FA props on the front page, anyway?{{User:Extropymine/sig}} 04:46, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::::A week by the sound of it, but I'm more inclined to go for a month, at leased while its trialed. {{User:DanceDanceRevolution/sig}} 05:04, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
 
[[FA/V|Added some stuff.]] I know it's missing stuff, but what kind of "style" are we looking for in an article? --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 21:55, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
:I wouldn't penalise long articles, the article should be comprehensive IMO. I would also add a caveat to the NPOV bit "where applicable", not all articles are bound to be NPOV, and some don't even the possibility of having a typical POV bias. Anyway, picking on some of Paddy's adjectives, I'd add
:*Well Written: The article uses good English and is written in a clear and highly readable style.
:*Generally Awesome: Here at the wiki, we're after stuff that's awesome.
:{{User:The_Rooster/Sig}} 22:38, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
 
==Protectionism==
 
Here's an issue: Will we be forced to protect articles that make it onto Featured Articles? I'm assuming we will. What if it is something that is subject to update or change? {{User:DanceDanceRevolution/sig}} 05:04, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
:Hmm. Damn good question. Obviously we can't protect NPOV articles, but maybe we compare the article that was voted on and featured to the same article when it rolls around to be featured a second time? Make sure all changes conform to the FA criteria? Assuming we use NPOV articles at all. --{{User:Paddy Dignam/sig}} 16:31, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
::I think the article should satisfy the FA criteria first, before becoming FAs. Protection, semi, or full is unnecessary for the current FA unless it is being targeted for vandalism. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 16:34, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
:::We probably should semi-protect it as a preventative measure.  I don't think we want a 3-page goatse-ing the thing.  --{{User:Zombie slay3r/Signature}} 17:14, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
::::We're talking temporary protection in most cases though, right? {{User:The_Rooster/Sig}} 19:36, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::Temporary protection makes sense-- but if FA articles are up for a month, that might be a downside. If they're up for a week, the protection for that time isn't so dangerous. At the same time, if they're only FA for a week, casual wiki-goers might not see them like regulars would. I'd say one way or the other, we should incorporate a "Previously Featured..." aspect, even if those pages were no longer protected. That way casual users could browse. {{User:Extropymine/sig}} 21:37, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
::::::Sure, lots of wikis do that. It would have to be a link underneath the FA though, otherwise clogging issues. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 21:46, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::::Personally, I'd say weekly seems good for FA. A month is damned long and we'd get a mere 12 articles a year from it. {{User:The_Rooster/Sig}} 22:21, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::I was thinking temporary protection as well.  The page's editing should be limited to the autoconfirmed users, the FA could get messed up by vandals or inexperienced newbies.  --{{User:Zombie slay3r/Signature}} 01:17, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
::::::Me too. Limit the editing to autoconfirmed users, perhaps sysops only (I would prefer the former, but the latter may be a necessity sometimes.) Once we get our Mediawiki upgrade, we should haz ability to set timelimits on protections. {{User:Linkthewindow/Sig}} 12:15, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
 
==Asking for trouble==
 
How about guests spots? An evening with (Insert name here) get a well known guest speaker in to speak on a subject. people can ask questions, and the lecturer can decide which he answers (Yes. Ignoring trolling.) Wonderful. Rooster hosts an evening on parsing etc. A DEM representatvie to talk about why there so maligned. A helpful little gnome presents an urban dead mini game workshop. --{{User:Rosslessness/Sig}} 20:10, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
:I suggested something like this in the very beginning, and was totally ignored because I'm so good-looking and clever and everyone hates me for it. You're not as good-looking and clever, so maybe ''now'' they'll listen. --{{User:Paddy Dignam/sig}} 20:35, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
::Though I wasn't around back then, I would get behind this. Though, just to be safe, I am going to completely ignore Paddy's support of it ;) {{User:Extropymine/sig}} 21:38, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
:So, what would it be called? And how would it be set up? Would it be announced on the Main Page and CP, possible elsewhere? --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 21:47, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
::Maybe "Featured User," to compliment "Featured Article?" Or if it's more about someone expounding on a topic, something like "Featured Topic?" I just wonder if it would be a trial-by-fire for any civility policy we might adopt. {{User:Extropymine/sig}} 21:52, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
:::Featured Topic sounds good. I think a month would do for that, though. I don't think we'll be able to make as many as Featured Articles. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 21:56, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
::::A month seems a tad long, fortnightly or twice monthly perhaps?{{User:The_Rooster/Sig}} 22:18, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
:My suggestion about how it would work: people can suggest a topic that they want to "moderate" (not in the forum moderator way, but more like a academic moderator way). These suggestions are collected one cycle in advance, and just like suggestions, people can vote on them-- but each cycle, users are asked to only vote once. So, let's say that there are four topics suggested for the upcoming cycle. We close the page for new suggestions and open it for voting. Each user can only vote for one keep (the one they want), and one kill (the topic they are most opposed to). Votes are tallied, the highest vote-getter will be the FT for the next cycle, and the one with the most kills is now ineligible to be re-suggested (I'm getting to that in a moment).
 
:The user who suggested the topic "owns" the topic; they will start off the conversation and then moderate. The topic page itself should be created as a sub-page of their user talk page (so, for instance, if I won for the topic of "Bananas," I would create User_Talk:Extropymine/Bananas to host the topic) so they have the right to remove offensive comments and trolling and drama without breaking wiki rules. It is the responsibility of the moderator to balance allowing dissenting opinions with removing trolls. Since it's on their user talk page, there is no arbitration (though if we have a civility policy, there might be mediation). The topic is their property, so what they risk by handling it badly is that the discussion will die and no one will vote for their suggestions in the future.
 
:Any suggestion that did not win (but was not killed) can be re-suggested again in a future cycle. Would that work? {{User:Extropymine/sig}} 23:23, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
::I imagined it working as such. During the voting period for the next featured article a user could say "I'd like to run a discussion on blah" If thats voted as the feature, they run it, if not its up to them if they want to reapply. --{{User:Rosslessness/Sig}} 11:32, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
 
== Because I love [[UDWiki:General Discussion|stealing stuff]] from Wikipedia ==
 
I've just uploaded [[wikipedia:File:Cscr-featured.svg|this file]] from Wikipedia (located [[:Image:LinkFA-star.png|here]], and because it's pretty darn smalls [[Image:LinkFA-star.png]]. We can use it to detonate a featured article, ether here or on general listings.
 
Sadly, [[UDWiki:Administration/Policy Discussion/Prohibiting Content Outside of the Normal Page Area|this policy]] prevents us using a version of [[wikipedia:Template:Featured article|this template]] to place a "FA star" outside the page area. However, does a featured article show a "clear need to violate the policy."? Then we may be able to place that star after all (and it will make it a lot easier to recognize for casual browsers.)
 
Also, a star like they have on Wikipedia is a lot less ugly then a big template saying "Featured Article," and doesn't interrupt the flow of the page as much.
 
Thoughts? {{User:Linkthewindow/Sig}} 09:18, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
:I don't think we want to [[wikipedia:detonation|detonate]] articles <tt>;)</tt>. There isn't really a ''need'' to do this, so using "clear need to violate the policy" would be stretching it. However, I doubt there'd be much opposition to a policy allowing page information icons (such as featured article, protected etc) as an exception. --[[User:Midianian|Midianian]]<small><sup>¦[[User talk:Midianian|T]]¦[[Developing Suggestions|DS]]¦[[Suggestions|SP]]¦</sup></small> 10:02, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
::As do I. I don't really see if it's really worth the effort to go through [[A/PD|here]] for what's really only going to effect a few pages. I may however. Protection icons could be quite useful. {{User:Linkthewindow/Sig}} 11:46, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
:::I don't see why it has to violate the page area policy. If it's just stuck in the top right of the page area for instance? Am I missing something obvious? {{User:The_Rooster/Sig}} 12:04, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
::::I'm not exactly sure what you are saying. Anyway, on Wikipedia ([[wikipedia:Autism|example article]],) the FA star is placed in the upper right ''right next to the title'' - it's outside the page area. That said, if someone can figure out a way to have this star in the far upper right without violating the policy (ie: it's still within the page area, just below the title,) the free cookie for them.
::::''Or'' we could just conduct a straw poll here and see if the community's okay with the policy being violated. It means we can bypass [[A/PD]] and still get our star. {{User:Linkthewindow/Sig}} 12:08, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::You could stick it in the top right (of the page area) very easily with a div I think. I'm going to go double check though because you've made me very uncertain all of a sudden. {{User:The_Rooster/Sig}} 12:15, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
::::::Shouldn't be a problem to put it there, but it could easily disturb the page layout. --[[User:Midianian|Midianian]]<small><sup>¦[[User talk:Midianian|T]]¦[[Developing Suggestions|DS]]¦[[Suggestions|SP]]¦</sup></small> 12:16, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::::Good point, the div wouldn't get stuff to wrap around it, in that case, what about just floating it to the right using a table? If called at the top of the page it ought to work fine I think. {{User:The_Rooster/Sig}} 12:38, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::I don't see why A/PD should be bypassed. If we're going to vote about it anyway, why not do it there? --[[User:Midianian|Midianian]]<small><sup>¦[[User talk:Midianian|T]]¦[[Developing Suggestions|DS]]¦[[Suggestions|SP]]¦</sup></small> 12:18, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
::::::If we are just doing it for featured articles, it's too much bother. However, if we want to go for protection icons, other administration icons, etc, the we probably ''will'' need a policy. {{User:Linkthewindow/Sig}} 12:30, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::::I don't see the bother. At least three days of discussion (which can be spent on discussing whether to also put protections there) and then voting. Pretty much what would happen here. --[[User:Midianian|Midianian]]<small><sup>¦[[User talk:Midianian|T]]¦[[Developing Suggestions|DS]]¦[[Suggestions|SP]]¦</sup></small> 13:36, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
 
It's not a big deal to add a little image icon on the top right of the page, that policy doesn't exist to prohibit that. It exists for [[User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sandbox15|these things]]. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 19:27, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
:I know it exists to prevent all that annoying image spam they have on user pages on Wikipedia. I don't think anyone would mind if we had a [[User:Linkthewindow/Sandbox/6|star like this]], but it would violate the ''letter'' of the policy (although not the spirit.) Might as well get consensus here or on A/PD first. {{User:Linkthewindow/Sig}} 22:34, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
::Consensus, don't think anyone will complain. There's a way, on this wiki, to get that image to link to the article without a redirect. I <s>figured it out</s> stole it once, but I've forgotten. edit: [http://wiki.urbandead.com/index.php?title=User:A_Helpful_Little_Gnome/Sandbox2&oldid=1055856 it's in this code, figure out later]--{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 22:49, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
 
[[Template:FA|Done, by the way.]] --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 20:52, 3 April 2009 (BST)
 
==Types of Articles==
What type of articles would you look to put here? Is the page supposed to be dedicated to useful, informative, or flat out amusing articles? If this were to start getting heavy use, personally, I'd prefer to not see user and group pages come up. Would event pages be eligible even though there's the nice historical events section? --[[User:Johnny Bass|Johnny Bass]] 20:06, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
:I think we're still trying to figure that out. Some are leaning toward NPOV articles only, others think active group pages should be included. Check out the Nomnomnominations heading for the conversation so far. --{{User:Paddy Dignam/sig}} 20:17, 21 March 2009 (UTC)
 
I think we should stick group and user pages up as long as they agree with the criteria we put together. There are several very well done pages out there, particularly things like the RRF pages and Gnome's user page, that deserve a wee gold star in the corner. -- {{User:Krazy_Monkey/sig}} 16:07, 10 April 2009 (BST)
 
So the general consensus is any article already considered a Good Article, as well as group and/or user pages that are well-put together and such? We really need to decide upon this and update the main [[FA/V]] page with whatever criterion we are deciding upon. --{{User:Maverick Farrant/sig}} 22:34, 1 November 2009 (UTC)
 
== Ball Rolling ==
 
Ok, things seem to have hung up for a little while. So, a quick summary of the discussions above:
*Articles (Not-yet FA standard) would probably be entered into a pool, with the winner of a vote becoming a FA and and featured on this page & main.
*Articles would probably be featured for a week, though maybe a month trial until things get going.
*Articles would likely be semi-protected as a precautionary measure, and fully if that becomes necessary.
*We'll probably use those FA stars you get on the English wiki, if people don't mind a minor addendum to the content outside the page area policy.
*People are split over articles being NPOV/minimal bias and allowing group pages (which are obviously biased) since some are of good quality.
*There's a few notes on the [[FA]] page header about criteria we're after, these can still be changed though.
 
I figure we may as well start putting in a few nominations since we've got an outline of where we're going. We can fix things on the fly and we're under no time limit so things can still be fixed if there is a big problem. Since we're still not sure about group pages yet, I think people should add them to the pool for now so we have a few ready if consensus suggests they're permissible. So chuck down some nominations and raise any other issues, and maybe we'll put [[FA/V]] to use in due course.
 
To start with, here's a few from the above discussions:
*[[You know you've been playing Urban Dead too much when]]
*[[Groove Theory]]
*[[RNG]]
*[[First Siege of Caiger Mall]]
*[[NecroWatch]]
*[[The Fall of Monroeville Mall]]
*[[Danger Alley]]
*[[The Lawson Arms]]
 
{{User:The_Rooster/Sig}} 21:33, 2 April 2009 (BST)
:Right. I don't think Lawson arms is "good enough". "You know you've..." is already linked on the new CP. However, I always liked groove theory. 2 of the others I wrote, so my vote must go to the [[Battle of Blackmore]] --{{User:Rosslessness/Sig}} 21:59, 2 April 2009 (BST)
:OOH OOH OOH OOH OOH [[Trenchcoater]]! {{User:DanceDanceRevolution/sig}} 01:34, 3 April 2009 (BST)
::Nah, it's a bit unprofessional, if funny. My vote goes to [[NecroWatch]] (once we get this rolling.) {{User:Linkthewindow/Sig}} 07:09, 3 April 2009 (BST)
:::Wait till we smash the [[FA/V]] page open. {{User:DanceDanceRevolution/sig}} 07:33, 3 April 2009 (BST)
::::Just want a pool of stuff Link, no need to cast votes for anything yet.
::::A bunch of obvious ones:
::::*[[Civilian]] & [[Civilian skills]]
::::*[[Military]] & [[Military skills]]
::::*[[Scientist]] & [[Science skills]]
::::*[[Zombie]] & [[Zombie skills]]
::::*[[Zombie Hunter skills]] {{User:The_Rooster/Sig}} 16:28, 3 April 2009 (BST)
 
I made some changes. Mmm? --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 20:30, 3 April 2009 (BST)
:Im still not sure about NPOV. You lose a lot of great pages. --{{User:Rosslessness/Sig}} 20:41, 3 April 2009 (BST)
::I think that's worked in under the criteria. It's basically just a guideline, the criteria is. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 20:51, 3 April 2009 (BST)
:::Yoda you are. --{{User:Paddy Dignam/sig}} 20:57, 3 April 2009 (BST)
::::Unintentional, it was. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 21:01, 3 April 2009 (BST)
:::::My opinion: I have nothing against pages that need a certain amount of POV in order to have a flair and style to make them interesting. But we shouldn't go around ignoring the issue because NPOV is key to many areas in the wiki and so articles who can manage it without compromising the article are likely to be good, so we wouldn't want them shunned because people prefer to vote for articles with bais towards their preferred side.
 
:::::Anyway, I'm not buying into the changes on FA/V. A Yes/No vote suggests we're just promoting articles to FA-standard but not featuring them. An article with the most yes votes wins (I assume, you need to make this clear), but if even one person has a damned good 'no' vote because the article is unsuitable, then featuring it is a bad idea. My impression was going to be a "One vote per user, vote for your favourite" system with people flagging up pages they think are unsuitable for FA (pages they dislike, but are FA-worthy, don't get any 'No' votes or anything). I don't have anything against a Ye/No vote to promote an article pool into FA-class articles with another vote for the FA-class to be featured this week, but that seems much more effort. {{User:The_Rooster/Sig}} 21:11, 3 April 2009 (BST)
::::::So, like 'crat elections? Except articles, not people. I'd prefer if people got the article to "FA quality" before nominating it, though. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 23:47, 3 April 2009 (BST)
:::::::In a sense. More effort but allows good articles to be identified as such at any time (Say a week's worth of voting after submission by any user). The articles which are later featured are picked from any good article not yet featured. If we do this, my only request is that we standardize some terms fastish so we know what the fuck we all mean with these different article qualities and voting statuses and stuff. {{User:The_Rooster/Sig}} 00:48, 4 April 2009 (BST)
::::::::Oh, yeah. Updated. Feel free to make any tweaks. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 18:19, 8 April 2009 (BST)
 
So are we going with method 1 or 2?
 
Method 1:
*A bunch of articles are pooled.
*Articles from the pool are voted on.
*Article with most votes becomes FA.
 
Method 2:
*Articles are submitted whenever for consideration to be good articles.
*Articles over which no major issues are raised and show support are promoted to good articles.
*Some good articles are pooled.
*Articles from the pool are voted on.
*Article with most votes becomes FA.
 
{{User:The_Rooster/Sig}} 15:24, 10 April 2009 (BST)
:<s>I'd say method 1. Much simpler and easier to get things going. (Sorry for the late joining in of discussion, I've been meaning to come and say hi for a while =))</s> -- {{User:Krazy_Monkey/sig}} 15:59, 10 April 2009 (BST)
:Actually after reading the bit above a bit more thoroughly I quite like the second one. That way we can weed out the crap articles and avoid any meatpuppetry that could arise in Method 1. Fair enough we could get some in Method 2 but it would be on "good" articles as opposed to any [[Special:Random|random one]]. -- {{User:Krazy_Monkey/sig}} 16:04, 10 April 2009 (BST)
::What I think. They'll still be meatpuppetry, but at least it won't be ''negative'' meatpuppetry (people force-voting an article out,) or if it happens, it's less likely. {{User:Linkthewindow/Sig}} 16:36, 10 April 2009 (BST)
:I like method two. Would we want a different page for that? Or a section laid out, or a subpage of FA? --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 17:13, 10 April 2009 (BST)
::I guess you could have a section on the current [[FA]] and [[FA/V]] pages. So a list of "good articles" (or whatever) below the FA's on the FA page, and the GA voting/discussion section below the FA voting on FA/V. Either that or create it's own pages: '''GA''' and '''GA/V'''. {{User:The_Rooster/Sig}} 16:41, 13 April 2009 (BST)
 
== Page Ownership ==
 
How are you planning to get templates and categories onto owned pages when the owners can remove them at will? -- {{User:Iscariot/Signature}} 20:55, 3 April 2009 (BST)
:They aren't going on user pages or group pages (that aren't historical) so there shouldn't be a problem. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 20:56, 3 April 2009 (BST)
::Even historical groups retain page ownership, they could even remove the historical template if they chose to. My point is, unlike wikipedia where every candidate page is considered a community page, you are very likely to run afoul of page ownership guidelines fast. -- {{User:Iscariot/Signature}} 21:29, 3 April 2009 (BST)
:::While I guess they could do that, I can't imagine a rational reason to object to it. In the case a group does have some bizarre reason for not wanting a small and out-of-the-way star on their page, being listed in a category and being listed here, then they can just not add their own page as a nomination or note their objection if nominated by another user. {{User:The_Rooster/Sig}} 21:37, 3 April 2009 (BST)
:::You are answering your own question. Let them remove it if they want, no one says its necessary to keep it on. {{User:DanceDanceRevolution/sig}} 05:43, 5 April 2009 (BST)
::::It's irrelevant, no one will be that petty. Don't work from the assumption that the community are dicks and understand that it's a non-issue anyway. Page ownership isn't the end all be all of the wiki, it's just a secondary tool to help with sorting out when an edit is or isn't in good faith, it's really nothing more. --<small>[[User:Karek#K|Karek]]<sup><font face="Monotype Corsiva">[[User:Karek/ProjDev/OmegaMap|maps?!]]</font></sup></small> 17:02, 10 April 2009 (BST)
 
== Journalism ==
 
I think we should promote the creation of engaging, humorous and informative journals. What do you guys think? I would vouch for a journal which made me laugh. {{User:DanceDanceRevolution/sig}} 04:51, 11 April 2009 (BST)
:I would Yarp to that. It would need to be pretty well written and not anywhere close to being trenchy bullshit to get through but there are a few decent ones that I've seen. -- {{User:Krazy_Monkey/sig}} 18:43, 12 April 2009 (BST)
::Yeah, I mean ones that use it for entertainment more than guiding noobs. I haven't read through any besides Grims, but I know there must be some really witty and clever ones out there. {{User:DanceDanceRevolution/sig}} 04:19, 13 April 2009 (BST)
 
== A Summary ==
 
I think this is dying again. =/ Ok. We appear to have made some headway towards getting this together with the main issues being the following:
*'''How shall we be picking said featured articles'''
**Rooster has proposed two methods:
***''Number 1''
**** A bunch of articles are pooled.
**** Articles from the pool are voted on.
**** Article with most votes becomes FA.
***''Number 2''
**** Articles are submitted whenever for consideration to be good articles.
**** Articles over which no major issues are raised and show support are promoted to good articles.
**** Some good articles are pooled.
**** Articles from the pool are voted on.
**** Article with most votes becomes FA.
**While more complicated, method 2 appears to be the best option as that way only the genuinely good articles will make it as a featured article as opposed to [[Bale Mallrats|any page getting meat puppetered there]].
 
*'''Should group, journal and user pages be able to be featured?'''
**There is some discussion over this with the consensus leaning towards these pages being included as long as they are deemed to be of a good enough quality to become a featured article.
 
And that's about it I think. Once we get these issues cleared up I think we can get started on pooling and voting on featured articles. =) Which would be good because Wiki news has been rather bare these past couple of weeks. =( -- {{User:Krazy_Monkey/sig}} 15:38, 19 April 2009 (BST)
:Um. The second one. --{{User:Rosslessness/Sig}} 16:17, 19 April 2009 (BST)
:Second. Should be more discussion oriented for good articles, though. I won't be around much to finish this, so someone else has to take over. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 18:50, 19 April 2009 (BST)
:Second. As Gnome, so articles that are good (but not great) can still get recognition.
:As for the groups, I'm find with them being included, as long as the groups themselves don't mind (obviously.) Any text promoting the article should be NPOV about the group. {{User:Linkthewindow/Sig}} 07:52, 20 April 2009 (BST)
:I'm inclined to method 2 myself. I'm also for allowing group, journal and user pages if they are deemed worthy. {{User:The_Rooster/Sig}} 18:11, 20 April 2009 (BST)
::Ok. I think that we're pretty much decided on Method 2 and on group pages getting in if they're thought to be good enough. Anyone got any objections to this or should we start work on step one for good article consideration? -- {{User:Krazy_Monkey/sig}} 22:15, 21 April 2009 (BST)
:::I reckon the silence means "Get to it". {{User:The_Rooster/Sig}} 13:11, 29 April 2009 (BST)
::::I agree. =p Let's get this ball rolling. -- {{User:Krazy_Monkey/sig}} 19:16, 29 April 2009 (BST)
 
==Nomination n stuff==
[[The Pluto Press]]--{{User:WOOT/sig}} 02:19, 30 April 2009 (BST)
:Take it [[UDWiki:Featured Articles/Good Articles|outside]], Godboy. {{User:DanceDanceRevolution/sig}} 03:22, 1 May 2009 (BST)
 
== Criteria Addition ==
 
After seeing the Shoemakers nomination, I think we should add something about formatting to the criteria for FAs. {{User:DanceDanceRevolution/sig}} 03:24, 1 May 2009 (BST)
 
== Front Page? ==
 
Aside from the fact that I don't see any activity to do with the Featured Article, why isn't it on the Front Page? Surely it should be on the Front Page, along with "Did You Know?", or is this planned, when it gets started up?
:{{User:Rorybob/Sig}}22:57, 3 July 2009 (BST)
 
==...==
Why isn't the [[Malton Incident]] on the FA list? --{{User:Axe Hack/Sig}} 01:56, 24 July 2010 (BST)
:Because no one nominated it for [[Good Articles]] status yet. Care to do the honors? {{:User:Red Hawk One/sig}} 02:01, 24 July 2010 (BST)
::The fact that it's a WALL OF TEXT OF DOOM might have something to do with it too. {{User:Aichon/Signature}} 03:15, 24 July 2010 (BST)
:::If it was less wall of text and broken up better (maybe even just image alignment?) I would support a GA vote for it. And yes, I am too lazy/busy to do it myself. --{{User:Maverick Farrant/sig}} 09:21, 24 July 2010 (BST)
 
== Awesome! ==
 
Good stuff! And some of this stuff needs archiving. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 03:03, 25 July 2010 (BST)


== Manually changing these...==
== Manually changing these...==
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:::Regarding automating the process, it really doesn't work well unless the number of FAs lines up against a [[Magic Words|magic word]] that we can use in the switch, and we also need to guarantee that the number of FAs doesn't change too often. If we could set it up so that there were exactly 53 FAs (one for each potential week in the year), it'd make things significantly easier to code (we could base the switch on the <nowiki>{{CURRENTWEEK}}</nowiki> magic word), and it would also mean no repeats or some getting shown more often than others (except for the 53rd, which would only be shown on some years). I'd also suggest that each FA page have its mini-blurb embedded in the page itself with an <nowiki><includeonly></nowiki> as part of its fulfillment for being an FA, that way the page itself can simply be included without having to paste mini-blurbs into templates or managing them in any way (and then this page, rather than housing all of the mini-blurbs, would instead just contain links to all of the FAs). All told, the template itself would only take about 55 lines of extremely simple code. Again though, this is all dependent on having a number of FAs that matches up with a magic word for an aspect of the calendar. If you want to do 31 FAs, one for each day of the month, that works too, for example. {{User:Aichon/Signature}} 20:02, 15 July 2012 (BST)
:::Regarding automating the process, it really doesn't work well unless the number of FAs lines up against a [[Magic Words|magic word]] that we can use in the switch, and we also need to guarantee that the number of FAs doesn't change too often. If we could set it up so that there were exactly 53 FAs (one for each potential week in the year), it'd make things significantly easier to code (we could base the switch on the <nowiki>{{CURRENTWEEK}}</nowiki> magic word), and it would also mean no repeats or some getting shown more often than others (except for the 53rd, which would only be shown on some years). I'd also suggest that each FA page have its mini-blurb embedded in the page itself with an <nowiki><includeonly></nowiki> as part of its fulfillment for being an FA, that way the page itself can simply be included without having to paste mini-blurbs into templates or managing them in any way (and then this page, rather than housing all of the mini-blurbs, would instead just contain links to all of the FAs). All told, the template itself would only take about 55 lines of extremely simple code. Again though, this is all dependent on having a number of FAs that matches up with a magic word for an aspect of the calendar. If you want to do 31 FAs, one for each day of the month, that works too, for example. {{User:Aichon/Signature}} 20:02, 15 July 2012 (BST)
::::Yep, those are all the issues we ran into last time. Any Magic Word we use puts a limit on the number of articles we can use or creates an uneven distribution. It also makes it difficult to add new FAs to the mix. I do like the idea of creating FA blurbs on each article. I really think a semi-automatic process that simplifies the updating processwill be the way to go. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>20:34, 15 July 2012 (UTC)</sub>
::::Yep, those are all the issues we ran into last time. Any Magic Word we use puts a limit on the number of articles we can use or creates an uneven distribution. It also makes it difficult to add new FAs to the mix. I do like the idea of creating FA blurbs on each article. I really think a semi-automatic process that simplifies the updating processwill be the way to go. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>20:34, 15 July 2012 (UTC)</sub>
:::::Most of the blurbs are already setup for automation [[UDWiki:Featured Articles/Queue|here]]. Aichon's idea to have the blurb in an include section in the actual article is a better idea though. -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 04:25, 16 July 2012 (BST)
::::Let's see what number we end up with and go from there. If it works out nicely, might as well Switch template it. There probably won't be many or any new FA additions if we go through an FA voting marathon. Maybe. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 04:41, 16 July 2012 (BST)
Rotating is done on a whim at the minute really. I'd love to see some new articles nominated. Plus its been updated since 2009. 2010 for blackmore 404 being an example. --[[User:Rosslessness|Ross]]<sup>[[User:Rosslessness/Persons Of Note|'''WHO????''']]</sup>[[User:Rosslessness|ness]]  17:16, 15 July 2012 (BST)
Rotating is done on a whim at the minute really. I'd love to see some new articles nominated. Plus its been updated since 2009. 2010 for blackmore 404 being an example. --[[User:Rosslessness|Ross]]<sup>[[User:Rosslessness/Persons Of Note|'''WHO????''']]</sup>[[User:Rosslessness|ness]]  17:16, 15 July 2012 (BST)
:Right, there have been GA votes since then, but the only FA promotions were done without actual voting (unless it occurred somewhere on the Wiki I can't locate?) {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 18:11, 15 July 2012 (BST)
:Right, there have been GA votes since then, but the only FA promotions were done without actual voting (unless it occurred somewhere on the Wiki I can't locate?) {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 18:11, 15 July 2012 (BST)
:Would [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Random_portal_component this] work with the software version we're using? No need to maintain unless the article pool grows, gives a random article at each pageview (purges may be needed but so it goes). {{User:Misanthropy/Sig}} 12:50, 16 July 2012 (BST)
::Looks like it uses {{WP|Template:Random number}}, which itself uses math expressions (which we don't have here) to generate random articles. It would be pretty awesome if we had a RNG, but we don't. {{Grr}} ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>14:59, 16 July 2012 (UTC)</sub>
:Lifting that restriction on articles under group pages would open up some more interesting candidates for GA/FA inclusion. -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 02:51, 17 July 2012 (BST)
I say pick 26 of them, double up the cases and use the currentweek for the switch, crack open a beer and call it a day. -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 02:34, 17 July 2012 (BST)
Bob, I overlooked something before about categorizing things. Are you planning on running multiple featured articles at once, i.e Featured Guide, Featured Event, etc? If so, I think the idea is interesting but I'd like to know more about how it would appear on the main page. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>01:27, 30 July 2012 (UTC)</sub>
:No, I didn't mean the categorizing to have any effect on the Main Page or the way FAs would be dealt with. I meant something like how the FAs on Wikipedia [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Featured_articles here] are categorized into broad topics, like "Biology", "History", "Music" etc. So it would just be putting headers into the [[UDWiki:Featured Articles]] page to group the articles by "Guides", "Locations", "Events", "Gameplay", "Classes" etc. {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 17:02, 30 July 2012 (BST)
Putting in 2 quick cents. I've done a fair deal to maintain this system from time to time, however broken it was from the start, but I wouldn't mind seeing it go. It's just apparent that the standard of the UDWiki community is too high to allow certain categories (groups, etc.) to become good articles, as well as the fact that we all are expecting a very high standard of quality for the good articles to pass. I'm not saying this is a bad thing. I personally like it very well the way it is, and I myself governed it for a while to maintain almost flawless level of quality to be allowed into GA. But the sad reality is that if there are not enough articles to cycle FAs for even a couple of years (even when cycling articles every ''quarter'') then it's not worth it. I'd remove them from the main page altogether. If you asked me of my personal opinion, I'd prefer to keep them and lower the standard an inch to allow a few more articles but that won't solve the problem, and I know that without some sort of FA-writing drive (like the location one ross had a year ago, which I would definitely participate in) we ''should'' remove them altogether. Not delete obviously, but remove them from the main page, especially whilst space is apparently precious at the moment between it, community content and "this month in UD" section. I'm drunk. {{User:DanceDanceRevolution/sig}} 14:15, 30 July 2012 (BST)
: That's what I am talking about. Let's go rogue, dump that hippy, tree-hugging no group pages rule crap, and take this to the next level. Wiki is about to get real. [[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 01:49, 31 July 2012 (BST)
::Not to derail the current direction of this discussion, but we're actually quite set to have a few different categories of featured content. [[Guides#Featured Guides|Featured Guides]] are voted on as are historical events and groups. Problem with groups of course is whether we include them based on content alone or something else, like (gasp) historical status.  I'd even be for opening up voting on featured images. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>02:44, 31 July 2012 (UTC)</sub>
:::Not to re-rail the tangential discussion, but I'm totally up for allowing Userspace pages. There are quite a few good ones out there. {{User:Aichon/Signature}} 03:12, 31 July 2012 (BST)
::::What do you have in mind? The only Userspace page I have heard mentioned is [[User:A Helpful Little Gnome|Gnome's game]]. I think this is a good place for other suggestions too. {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 06:20, 31 July 2012 (BST)
::::: How about [[RRF/ZomboMain|Zombo Tracker]]? Where else can you get your daily zombie weather, see a sortable list of targets the RRF has hit (current to 2011), and track the horde's migratory pattern (sortable by year)? -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 17:08, 31 July 2012 (BST)
::::: Or a  [[RRF/Malton Herald & Sun/Black404ZPOV|companion piece]] to the Blackmore:404 event, one that provides a broadened perspective and fills in missing details, allowing the reader to decide for themselves what really happened that pivotal month. -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 17:30, 31 July 2012 (BST)
:::It should be by content; the page/article needs to stand on its own from a quality perspective, IMO. -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 16:55, 31 July 2012 (BST)
=== Progress ===
OK, so I've closed down Good Articles. I'm still proofreading some articles in preparation for submission to FA voting (if anyone would like to help, articles to be proofed are [[User:Bob Moncrief/Sandbox|here]]), but I expect to submit them sometime in the next few days. Thanks! {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 17:57, 28 July 2012 (BST)
===Waving around my Crat status like it's some kind of badge of authority===
Hi. Unlike DDR I'm not drunk, but I'm a bit concerned about some of this. Both MHS and Bob have listed in their own ways articles I feel should never be used as featured articles, because, in all honesty they, like my spelling, are terrible. The first thing we need to do, if we are reviving this is to set up some kind of criteria. We may be merging the categories, but featured articles, should still be '''good''' articles. The original vote meant checking spelling, styling pages up, cross referencing and rewriting them to be clear and informative. We need to make sure we don't lose that. --[[User:Rosslessness|Ross]]<sup>[[User:Rosslessness/Persons Of Note|'''WHO????''']]</sup>[[User:Rosslessness|ness]]  18:22, 31 July 2012 (BST)
:Looks like Gnome already transferred the existing GA voting criteria to the FA voting page. He mentioned he wasn't done, though. Guess maybe he put on the brakes when "more consensus" was requested. So...is there more criteria (or less restrictive criteria as suggested above) than we originally used to determine Good Articles that we need for Featured? ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>19:10, 31 July 2012 (UTC)</sub>
:What criteria do you suggest then? -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 19:15, 31 July 2012 (BST)
:I've been trying to check spelling, styling & clarity on the articles I'm planning to submit for voting. I haven't really touched content very much because most of them are on subjects I know little about (like events that happened before I joined last year, or zombie tactics when I've only really played as a survivor). My hope was that in the process of voting we'd hammer out which articles the community feels qualify. I was also hoping that the voting would spur those who like an article to help clean it up to standard. I'm definitely not expecting all, or even most, of the articles I'm submitting to pass, but I think looking at which ones do and don't will help clarify what we want our standards to be. Does that make any sense? {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 20:01, 31 July 2012 (BST)
::I think you have done a great job proofing and prepping a large pool of possible candidates; problems with content (should) come out when we decide the next crop (and reevaluate the current ones) of FAs. Ross just likes derailing the fun train every now and then before it rolls into party station. -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 20:12, 31 July 2012 (BST)
::The original criteria for GA was for the article to be neutral, complete, well-written, and awesome. The first criteria was not just thrown out with the bath water, but was launched into low-level, Earth orbit to burn up on reentry when the Battle of Blackmore was voted in. The other three criteria are so arbitrary that anything can (and has) become a GA/FA. Ross can nail me on NPOV if he wants, but then BoB (and arguably BoB:404) needs to go if we want to even pretend approaching this with some sort of consistency with regard to the metrics. -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 20:30, 31 July 2012 (BST)
:::Has there ever been a vote for an article's featured status to be removed? A cursory check on my part came up with nothing. {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 20:34, 31 July 2012 (BST)
::::I don't believe so. -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 20:48, 31 July 2012 (BST)
:::::I do enjoy me evil side. I want to have the ability to "shop" the articles as a consensus, as part of the process. When it comes to blackmore, I have no legs to stand on, but its a damn sexy article. I can't say that about [[Groove Theory]] or the [[Fort]] pages, as they're pure gash. I'd argue Blackmore 404 is a lot more balanced than some other claptrap out there, but if you want changes to it, I'm more than willing to have it retooled.--[[User:Rosslessness|Ross]]<sup>[[User:Rosslessness/Persons Of Note|'''WHO????''']]</sup>[[User:Rosslessness|ness]]  20:53, 31 July 2012 (BST)
::::::Truth be told, I think it'd be more interesting with a mixed POV approach. Have the basic facts in NPOV at the top, but after that go back and forth over the chronology, offering the zombie and survivor perspectives at each step. It'd keep it fun, would maintain overall neutrality for the article by offering all sides, and would give it its own unique voice.
::::::That said, I wouldn't change it at this point. Instead, I'd just do that for anything that comes up later. I'd also open up FA to allow for POV stuff, so long as it's done extremely well. I think that the neutrality requirement is a silly one, since it strips the wiki of much of the tone of the game. {{User:Aichon/Signature}} 21:01, 31 July 2012 (BST)
::::::The way I always wanted to see events done is you essentially have three versions. The first is a mostly dry, NPOV main article, the second is the zombie version, and the third is the survivor version. There would be tabs along the top to let you select the one you want to read (similar to Roosters home page and the Zombie Weather page). -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 21:07, 31 July 2012 (BST)
We can customize the criteria for Featured Article categories, if we're going for categories (I think we should). The general guideline for all FAs is that the FAs are something we want on the main page (and Community Portal). It must have some notion of quality above the rest of the wiki. The thing I neglected to add when I moved over and changed some of the GA content to the FA page was how we go about saying a page is FA or not. Is it straight vote, like how we do with suggestions? Or something looser? The way we had it for determining GAs was that if no major concern(s) was raised after 7 days (with the criteria as a guideline) the page would become a GA. I think we should follow the same idea here. We need to work on the criteria though. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 23:15, 31 July 2012 (BST)
:I like the idea of different criteria for different categories if we're going that route. Obviosly a featured location article candidate would have different set of checks than a featured event article candidate or a featured group candidate. I'm just worried how muddied the water would become, not only in getting this project off the ground but also when it comes time to open up voting. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>17:14, 1 August 2012 (UTC)</sub>
::The criteria should be similar between categories. The only real difference would be NPOV demand. It doesn't make sense, for instance, to talk about neutrality when it comes to user pages, and for group pages, only a part needs to be NPOV, and for events the same. I'll offer up a suggested criteria soon. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 01:20, 2 August 2012 (BST)
====Werds of Judge Karke====
<div class="thumbinner" style="text-align:left;"><br />
&nbsp;The concept of NPOV being an article criteria is misguided if the issue is lack of articles. There's some damn good PoV articles out there. You don't need to provide context to balance the PoV, the article should itself already do that by making it clear it is PoV and being appropriately linked/sourced(a basic FA/GA criteria) makes it easy enough to find appropriately sourced counter-PoV if that's your thing.<br /><br />&nbsp;As for [http://wiki.urbandead.com/index.php?title=UDWiki_talk%3AFeatured_Articles&action=historysubmit&diff=2012280&oldid=2012275 Technical issues], those are technical, also easy enough to overcome since you can stack these in a manner that  you sub in a known set for undefined WEEK/DAY numbers and then just put the 'blurbs' on UDWiki:Featured_Articles subpages by /Week/Day. So long as those are consistent it's massively expandable from 7 minimum with no awkward limiting issues. Just apply Switch/If templates as appropriate. Don't even need to get into random generated numbers but if that's your shitck you can always try it if you can figure out [[User:Karek/ProjDev/Concat1440]] as that's the closest thing to a number randomizing function you can find on this wiki software last I checked.<br /><br />&nbsp;For article quality, make a committee or a panoply, or even just a consensus discussion page where you need a clear majority of approving voices, like 3/4ths or some such intentionally absurd number that way these articles can be nominated, reviewed, and can't get through until they are clearly very high quality. It's not like we ''need'' to have articles accepted to run the wiki so we can be super stringent with qualitative acceptance limits in this manner to exceptional-ize these articles.<br /> <br /><center>''' -- [[User:Karek|Judge Karke, weekie cyning hath thus spaek'd]] 09:04, 1 August 2012 (BST)  --'''</center>
<br /></div>
:I think the system we had before for determining GAs works fine. A strong concern with the article was enough to decline it. If you look through [[UDWiki:Featured_Articles/Good_Articles/Archive|the archives]], it worked well, even though the structure wasn't properly understood nor clear enough. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 01:20, 2 August 2012 (BST)
::That holds up until you start including bias driven PoV articles like group pages, historically that's been an issue around these parts. We don't need more nonsense like Historical Groups or ALiM submissions, particularly with the new proposed article sets. --<small>[[User:Karek#K|Karek]]<sup><font face="Monotype Corsiva">[[User:Karek/ProjDev#Buildings_Update_Danger_Maps|maps 2.0?!]]</font></sup></small> 20:52, 3 August 2012 (BST)
:::It works fine if you read the archive, for [[UDWiki:Featured_Articles/Good_Articles/Archive#Mycock|example]] or [[UDWiki:Featured_Articles/Good_Articles/Archive#Zombie_Renaissance|example]]. The number of participants doesn't matter (as long as there ''are'' some). The determining part of pass or fail is based on the strength of the criticism. This also makes the system more flexible, since criticisms can be addressed until the problem is fixed. (It doesn't need to be put up for a vote again for 2 weeks.) --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 22:49, 3 August 2012 (BST)
::::Meh, added stricture for the voting process is just an additional suggestion for preventing almost accidental submissions. It's just an example of a possible tool in the chest in these cases. --<small>[[User:Karek#K|Karek]]<sup><font face="Monotype Corsiva">[[User:Karek/ProjDev#Buildings_Update_Danger_Maps|maps 2.0?!]]</font></sup></small> 10:02, 4 August 2012 (BST)
===Criteria?===
Here's a try. Suggestions? The criteria needs re-wording, but let's get the basic idea down first. I've left Well Written unchanged for each FA type. The point of any writing is to communicate something, and something poorly written does not facilitate communicating something. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 01:22, 12 August 2012 (BST)
====Base criteria currently on [[FA/V]]====
*'''NPOV''' - The article must be from a [[UDWiki:NPOV|neutral point of view]] and not show significant bias. Possible exceptions may be made, depending on the article and community opinion.
*'''Complete''' - No major facts or details are neglected; it is finished as can be.
*'''Well Written''' - The article uses proper English, such as correct grammar and spelling, and it is written in a clear and readable style.
*'''Generally Awesome''' - This is a joke criteria, hence it is very serious.
====Article Criteria====
([[:Category:Glossary|Glossary pages]], event pages, historical events?)
*'''NPOV''' - The article must be from a [[UDWiki:NPOV|neutral point of view]]; articles should avoid taking sides (such as emphasizing zombies over humans, or a particular group or opinion). Exceptions may be made, depending on the article and community decision.
*'''Complete''' - No major facts or details are neglected; it is finished as can be.
*'''Well Written''' - The writing is grammatically correct and clear; it communicates what it's trying to say.
*'''Generally Awesome''' - This is a joke criteria, hence it is very serious.
====Group Page Criteria====
I trimmed down the NPOV criteria. I added Presentation, since the purpose of going to a group page can be broader than going to a glossary page (it's not just for the information, it could also be for some sort of interest).
*'''NPOV''' - There should be an [[NPOV]] lead or introduction, which explains who the group is (e.g. group type, structure, size, creation). Since it's expected that the article is created from the group's perspective, the rest of the page need not be neutral.
*'''Presentation''' - The group page should have an interesting and original page design brought about by the code and any images. Writing style and content can also satisfy the criteria.
*:(If we do keep with this criteria, we might want to add an explanation on what qualifies and what all this really means, or what we're looking for.)
*'''Well Written''' - The writing is grammatically correct and clear; it communicates what it's trying to say.
*'''Generally Awesome''' - This is a joke criteria, hence it is very serious.
====User Page Criteria====
This is really sparse. I completely removed the NPOV criteria here because it makes no sense: there aren't any sides to take, nor even necessarily any facts, arguments, nor information to balance. I also removed Complete. What's a complete userpage, and why would it need to be completed? I'm not sure what we're looking for here.
*'''Presentation''' - The user page should have an interesting and original page design brought about by the code and any images. Writing style and content can also satisfy the criteria. Userpages that have content consistent with guides or [[:Category:WikiRantings|wiki rantings]] still need to be accurate and complete, similar to the Article Criteria.
*:(If we do keep with this criteria, we might want to add an explanation on what qualifies and what all this really means, or what we're looking for.)
*'''Well Written''' - The writing is grammatically correct and clear; it communicates what it's trying to say.
*'''Generally Awesome''' - This is a joke criteria, hence it is very serious.
----
What do you plural think? --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 01:22, 12 August 2012 (BST)
:I think this is a great start. I think "Presentation" makes the most sense as being related to page design - for example, are there relevant images present (if applicable)? Is the text in giant unreadable blocks, or is it well-organized? Just some ideas. Regarding interest, I feel like that is kind of what "Generally Awesome" is going for, and is kind of the point of featured articles - would they be of interest & informative to those visiting the front page? I definitely want to hear more opinions. {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 02:49, 12 August 2012 (BST)
:Why not use the 5 criteria for all submissions with a caveat that NPOV may not always be possible? --[[User:Rosslessness|Ross]]<sup>[[User:Rosslessness/Persons Of Note|'''WHO????''']]</sup>[[User:Rosslessness|ness]]  11:20, 12 August 2012 (BST)
::I thought of that, but then it seemed that between the FA categories more needed to be different than just the NPOV (such as "Presentation" and removing "Complete" from group and user pages). --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 00:35, 13 August 2012 (BST)
Updated. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 00:35, 13 August 2012 (BST)
:Bump. Did we get bored of this already? --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 15:55, 16 August 2012 (BST)
::I like to imagine it means we've reached the pinnacle of perfection. {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 18:28, 16 August 2012 (BST)
:::Okay. That's good. Was there a low-point of perfection? {{tongue}} --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 20:09, 16 August 2012 (BST)
::Are you suggesting userpages or userspace subpages? I don't think we should feature userpages. Otherwise, I think you should just go forward with it, with or without added category criteria. Added criteria slightly complicates things but its not really a big deal. We need to finish prepping new submissions for voting and figure out a new method of rotating them to keep this from stalling further. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>20:33, 16 August 2012 (UTC)</sub>
:::Either the main userpage or any of its subpages. It's just a matter of the content. (And what makes the content qualify for being featured is the difficult thing to determine. I'm not thinking about featuring merely a pretty userpage—I'm not sure what other people are thinking qualifies featured userpages.) I thought that if we're really going to go with featured non-articles, the criteria for articles doesn't make sense for the non-articles. So despite complicating things a little, the criteria would need to be altered so as to make sense. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 20:54, 16 August 2012 (BST)
::::Personally, I'd prefer that any userspace pages that are linked from here be at a page with a dedicated name. So, for instance, if someone had something really awesome at User:ExampleUser/Sandbox/Demo7, that wouldn't qualify, simply because we have reasonable expectation to believe that it could change in the future. In contrast, if it were at User:ExampleUser/Analyzing_Urban_Dead's_History, we could expect it to stay in place and largely stay as it is. For that reason, I don't think that userpages should be linked, since there's plenty of reason to believe that they will change in the future. In the case of AHLG's userpage, which is the sort of thing that I think ''should'' be included, I'd probably suggest that he make a clone version of it in his userspace that can be linked from here (maybe transfer all of the userpage's content to the clone page, then include the clone page on his userpage?), that way he's free to alter his userpage later if he wants to, without us having to worry about it. {{User:Aichon/Signature}} 21:44, 16 August 2012 (BST)
:::::I agree. I don't think I'd be comfortable with featuring a user's main page directly, only subpages. I might be cool with an exception for your game, Gnome, since I think it's been demonstrated that that's not likely to go anywhere soon. And if you did decide to move it to a different location after it was voted as FA, it wouldn't be trouble to have the FA follow the content to the new destination, right? {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 01:55, 17 August 2012 (BST)
::::::Okay, we can go with a dedicated page (or, just offering as an alternative, a history revision... though that would be awkward). We could always add a clause that states that a userpage can become unfeatured if it's changed substantially in the sense that we wouldn't qualify it to be a featured userpage; if the userpage would go through the process again, whatever is the current version still needs to "make it". In the case of my game, there's 1800+ unique pages, so I neither want to transfer any of them anywhere, nor are they going to be used for any other purpose than the one they have now. I can add a page that would be linked acting as an intro and start page, say, with the name: [[User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Startpage]]. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 02:53, 17 August 2012 (BST)
:::::::A start page is exactly the sort of thing I meant, not that you should up and move everything, since that would be ludicrous. Sorry if I was unclear. {{User:Aichon/Signature}} 03:10, 17 August 2012 (BST)
::::::::Oh, ok. Good. {{smile}} I'll get to that soon. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 03:16, 17 August 2012 (BST)
Added a part to Presentation on the userpage criteria about article-like content. If we're going to include things like [[User:Grim s/Grims guide to staying alive|this]], then accuracy should be a concern in the same way that it's a concern for Article Criteria. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 02:53, 17 August 2012 (BST)
:Question: So like for subpages under group space, would those also have to have a NPOV section (seems redundant)? For example, I will probably submit the MHS under a group page category, which does have a [[RRF/Malton Herald &amp; Sun/About|an about page]], but not a strictly NPOV page. Adding a strictly NPOV page would be soul crushing. Soul crushing.-[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 03:30, 17 August 2012 (BST)
::Just the main group page needs it. The point of the NPOV lead is just to give some basic information about who the group is. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 05:21, 17 August 2012 (BST)
I'm going to put the changes up (with the additions discussed here and in my head) but we need a better name than [[UDWiki:Featured Articles/Voting]], since it's not a vote. Suggestions? How about [[UDWiki:Featured Articles/Candidates]]? --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 15:52, 20 August 2012 (BST)
:Works for me. Over the next day or so I'll finish proofing the last couple of articles I'm submitting and then mass-submit them sometime tomorrow. {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 18:20, 20 August 2012 (BST)
Looks good. Have a link to an example submission and I think you are golden.-[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 20:05, 21 August 2012 (BST)
:Should there be an example for each of the 3 FA criteria categories, or one general one? --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 20:21, 21 August 2012 (BST)
::It's tough, as we are expanding and we don't have that many examples. I could write a short page explaining why some pages have succeeded or failed in the past, to give a background if you wish? --[[User:Rosslessness|Ross]]<sup>[[User:Rosslessness/Persons Of Note|'''WHO????''']]</sup>[[User:Rosslessness|ness]]  20:25, 21 August 2012 (BST)
::I would just give an example that basically gets across the following: 1) What the formatting should look like for a candidate submission and 2) what the formatting should look like for the discussion/evaluation.-[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 20:31, 21 August 2012 (BST)
:::Okay, I'll stick up a formatting example. Content examples could be on another page, maybe one or more for each FA category. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 20:38, 21 August 2012 (BST)
::::Should there be a link/notification from the main page when a new candidate is submitted?-[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 21:35, 21 August 2012 (BST)
:::::Possibly. There should be at least for the big batch of candidates we have waiting to submit. Depends on what others think. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 21:40, 21 August 2012 (BST)
:::::I think new submissions should definitely be part of the Wiki News template, at least for the seven days allotted. For the big batch, though, we only need one message there, not two dozen. {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 21:44, 21 August 2012 (BST)
::::::agreed. --[[User:Rosslessness|Ross]]<sup>[[User:Rosslessness/Persons Of Note|'''WHO????''']]</sup>[[User:Rosslessness|ness]]  21:49, 21 August 2012 (BST)
::::::^^^^^ This.-[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 21:50, 21 August 2012 (BST)
=== "Major Issue" ===
Question: What exactly is a "major issue?" Who decides that? -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 00:22, 23 August 2012 (BST)
:Me, I have [[User_talk:Karek/20110513132417#A_ruler_for_a_ruler|a ruler]]. --<small>[[User:Karek#K|Karek]]<sup><font face="Monotype Corsiva">[[User:Karek/ProjDev#Buildings_Update_Danger_Maps|maps 2.0?!]]</font></sup></small> 04:52, 23 August 2012 (BST)
:Very interesting question! I was hoping someone was going to ask. I don't think anyone really brought it up last time, surprisingly.
:*'''Here's the quick, pragmatic answer, which doesn't directly answer your question''': We had the same system used for determining Good Articles, and although people didn't quite understand what system was in place (it apparently wasn't clear), decisions were still straightforward and there was no great fuss. Basically, whatever the answer to "What is a major concern?", we already know it works in the sense there wasn't a great cafuffle or disagreement (and instinctively, looking through the articles submitted, the ones that were unsuccessful should really be unsuccessful, the ones successful being successful).
:*For the longer version, I can't give a general rule or definition that isn't either too narrow or too broad, or which must rely already on some preconceived notion of what a "major concern" is. I can't apply a meaning to the concept that would precisely encompass any particular of "major concern" without simultaneously admitting something that doesn't seem to follow "major concern."
::*Basically we're going to rely on a vague impression of what "major concern" is. There could also be a formal definition along with the impression. In the case of the content present on [[FA/C]], there isn't actually a definition because no one has requested one (leaving only the impression: major + concern + context = meaning).
:::*I think it's unnecessary and pointless to try to define what is meant by "major concern", since I assume people will quibble over it more (they have more to quibble over) and if that doesn't happen, they're comfortable with the term. But if someone wants a definition, here it is: ''A major concern is a problem raised that significantly interferes with the purpose of an article. For example, an article relying heavily on statistics to prove its conclusion uses incorrect data or numbers.'' 
:*People already have an impression of what a major issue is given what the words mean and the context (the UDWiki, FA evaluations). I mean that people will intuitively point out what a major concern is, one indicating that the submission is not good enough to be featured.
::*Proof: Try to point out what a major issue is in article that appears to have one. Isn't it greater than a minor one, like a single spelling error? Wasn't it terribly concerning? You called something a major concern. But what was its definition?
:*Why's an impression valid at all (or a vague definition)? I can't give a really satisfying reason here except to use a bunch of analogies, or prove inductively that we don't need to precisely know what we're talking about (what terms mean) in order to appropriately use what we're talking about.
::*Analogy 1: What's a [[Wikipedia:Drug|drug]]? In pharmacology, which places a great emphasis on drugs, you'd imagine they've defined what a drug is precisely. It's not precise. Here's one definition of a drug, from Wikipedia: ''A drug, broadly speaking, is any substance that, when absorbed into the body of a living organism, alters normal bodily function.'' That's really vague. A banana could fall under that definition; it alters normal bodily function, greatly if you eat dozens in a day. Is a banana a drug? It doesn't sound like one. We have an impression of what a banana is and what a drug is. Despite a banana seemingly fitting the definition of drugs, we won't call it a drug.
:::*Yet apparently we go around and call things drug, despite what seems to be a terrible definition. Apparently we satisfied by what's called a drug and what isn't. It seems to be that precision isn't necessary. (From what I've been taught, there's a pragmatic definition: A drug is a drug if it's useful to call it a drug. Isn't that a clear definition.)
::*Analogy 2: What's [[Wikipedia:Culture|culture]]? In anthropology, which talks about culture a lot, you'd imagine that knowing what culture is would be a vital thing. Yet from Wikipedia, we have this silly definition: ''Culture is that which distinguishes life in one group from life in another group, including language, beliefs, morality, norms, customs, institutions, and physical objects, among other qualities.'' So a lot of things can be fit in here, as long as it's about groups. A larger proportion of people in Sweden have blonde hair compared to in China. Hair is a quality of the group Sweden. Therefore it's part of being Swedish to have blonde hair. That doesn't seem right. That's terrible. Anthropology is impossible.
::*Analogy 3: What's [[Wikipedia:Empath|empathy]]? In psychology, or any colloquial usage, it's obviously important to know what empathy is in order to apply empathy to someone; "He's empathetic" or "She's unempathetic." If we don't know what empathy means, then applying the term "empathy" to someone is meaningless. Looking at Wikipedia, there's a list of definitions (not even just one to poke fun at). I'll take a look at this one, from Carl Rogers: ''To perceive the internal frame of reference of another with accuracy and with the emotional components and meanings which pertain thereto as if one were the person, but without ever losing the "as if" condition. Thus, it means to sense the hurt or the pleasure of another as he senses it and to perceive the causes thereof as he perceives them, but without ever losing the recognition that it is as if I were hurt or pleased and so forth.''
:::*I think this is one of the better definitions. Here's my quibble: For a person to be empathetic, do they need to be accurate in their perception of their "internal frame of reference" and their emotions and the meaning of their emotions? Or do they only need to try? How do I know that my approximation in my mind of what is going in your mind emotionally is accurate?  Certainly I can't get in your head and experience you as you to confirm the approximation. I don't know if I've picked up your emotional communication and interpreted it as if they were ''your'' feelings. Anyways.
::*Extra Analogy for homework: Define chair.
:*We don't in fact actually need the term at all in some cases. For example, most english-speaking people don't know what a verb is (probably). If it's true that we need to precisely know the terms we're using in order to use them, or whatever relies on them, then whomever doesn't know what a verb is can't speak english in complete sentences (you need verbs to form a complete sentence). This clearly isn't true; you don't need to know the meaning and names for the grammatical structure of english so as to use english.
::*Of course for our uses here, it's sensible to point out that a major concern needs to be raised, rather than saying "If the submission doesn't appear to be going well, that means it's rejected." Vague on top of vague.
:*Concluding this, precision in definitions is neither necessary nor possible (at least in these examples, and ''probably'' impossible—it's typically hard to prove a negation). We can rely on our impression of a term following the words in the term and how the term is defined, if it is defined. I think for the very small and simple purposes, for Featured Articles in the Urban Dead wiki, we don't need to go nuts with explaining the meaning of "major concern."
:Your next question.
:*Who decides what's a major issue? Anyone. Whoever closes a submission can understand the conclusion of a discussion: whether any major concerns were raised and how they were addressed—the concern was refuted, or the article was corrected, or the concern couldn't be addressed. Then the closer passes or fails it. We very rarely will disagree on what a major concern is; people will generally agree on what a major concern is. Proof: [[UDWiki:Featured Articles/Good Articles/Archive]]. Because a large emphasis is placed on the opposing group (only an unaddressed major concern is needed to fail a submission; a major praise won't cause the article to pass without the absence of an unaddressed major concern), candidates can't be shunted through with poor for arguments... if someone took the time to give a good against. (So I'm assuming it's to pass a candidate that should be failed than to fail a candidate that should pass.)
::*So we're good on this point. If you were wondering who can close a submission—anyone. Who can judge the conclusion of the submission—it's easy enough to understand.
:Signed, the Gnome. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 06:12, 23 August 2012 (BST)
::Whew! Ok, I have a few responses.
::*As with many things that are wiki-related, deciding what is a “major issue” is something that shouldn’t work in theory, but does in practice, as evidenced by the Good Articles archive.
::*I’m joining Bananaholics Anonymous.
::*That definition of culture on Wikipedia is actually based in a late-19th century anthropological view of what culture is. A more modern definition is “the system of beliefs and activities which is passed from generation to generation among a social group, yet is not genetic and is not universal among all humans.” So hair, as genetic, is not part of culture, but the meanings and practices attributed to hair (anything from the use of braiding to the idea of blondes as being ditzy) is part of culture.
::**Also, the fact that we’re all operating in English is kind of a fluke of history, and isn’t useful (as the wiki isn’t useful) to most of the people on the planet. So all of these “definitions” are already heavily contingent on our linguistic context, which means any definition we come up with will automatically be non-universal. But we operate ignoring that for convenience.
::***If you haven’t figured it out by now, I’m getting a degree in linguistic anthropology at the moment.
::*All that said, I do think it’s possible to roughly define the line between “major” and “minor” issue. In my view, a “minor issue” is one (like spelling errors, etc.) which can (and should) be corrected during the course of discussion. A “major issue” would require more extensive work beyond the time frame (a week or two) of candidacy, at which point it could probably be re-submitted.
::Also, this made my day. {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 17:53, 23 August 2012 (BST)
:::Neat! That sounds like a better definition. I haven't gone too deep into Anthropology in university, so all I really know about culture is that it's a difficult definition. For issues or concerns being major or minor, the assumption is that minor ones would be something fixed easily and quickly, the major ones taking more effort. Major or minor, the problem(s) raised needs to be addressed for the page or whatever to become featured; that's the requirement (or I suppose you could also turn that into a definition). --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 19:33, 23 August 2012 (BST)
I am not reading any of that in detail. I skimmed though, and what I got out of it is that AHLG is apparently putting on an ARG in support of his main game...I think. If so, I think I need to say "I love bees" or something. {{User:Aichon/Signature}} 18:03, 23 August 2012 (BST)
:(Is it) Alternate reality game? How could you know? --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 19:33, 23 August 2012 (BST)
::Yep, that's what it stands for. As for your second question, because "the bonnet floats gently on the cerulean blue sea". Or if that's the wrong one...umm...try lat 30.622814, long -96.308785 between 6-10pm local time. {{User:Aichon/Signature}} 20:27, 23 August 2012 (BST)
== Major Candidates Submission Comments ==
Ok, so I just wanted to say a few things about the (I believe about fifty) [[UDWiki:Featured_Articles/Candidates#Article_Candidates|articles I just nominated]]. First of all, I definitely do not expect all of these to be accepted by the community, but my intent is partially to have us figure out what does and does not qualify as Featured Article-worthy. I understand that it's a lot, but most of them are articles that are pretty familiar to us all and so should be easy to figure out.
Also, there are a few categories of articles I didn't nominate. Foremost among these is articles for the various suburbs. This is because most of them are kind of poorly formatted, and I'm not sure if any would qualify for Featuring. If there are any, please submit them! The other category is groups, since I'm not sure we've worked out 100% how much NPOV there needs to be on a group page for it to be featured.
Finally, a note on the order of the items I've submitted: At the top are the articles that were Good Articles before that status was nixed; next are articles others have suggested on the FA talk page (either this page or [[UDWiki:Featured Articles/Archive|the archive]]); and finally, in alphabetical order, other articles I've been [[User:Bob Moncrief/Sandbox|working on proofreading]] over the past couple of months.
Thanks so much, and happy commenting! {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 21:03, 23 August 2012 (BST)
Also, a question: is there an FA equivalent to [[:Template:GoodArticleNom]] that can be put on the nominees' pages, or should I make one? {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 21:10, 23 August 2012 (BST)
:[[:Category:Maintenance_Templates|I don't think we have one]]. I think we should, and add it to the top of articles being submitted, maybe groups, and probably not user pages (instead use a talk page message like you did). --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 21:31, 23 August 2012 (BST)
::I've [[:Template:FANom|created one]] and placed it on the appropriate pages (and [[UDWiki:Administration/Protections#The Battle of SantLUEville|requested an edit]] to add it to the one protected nominee.) {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 22:03, 23 August 2012 (BST)
== End condition ==
So, since this isn't a vote any more, we need to talk about how this all ends. I'm thinking that someone should go through and simply identify the ones that clearly have support as FAs and do not have recommended changes, then should go ahead and bump them up to FA status already, that way we can start clearing the page. Similarly, the ones that clearly have reasons why they will never be in should also be cleared out. For the rest, if the suggestions are minimal, a quick summary of what needs to be changed or addressed should be made. If they're more substantial, remove them for now until those changes are made. What do you guys think?  {{User:Aichon/Signature}} 03:29, 27 August 2012 (BST)
:Yup. Clear out the obvious Yes or No submissions. Leave the rest sitting for the moment. So many headers. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 03:31, 27 August 2012 (BST)
::According to the info at the top of the page, the items need to be up for at minimum seven days. Since I submitted all my articles on the 23rd, that means we should wait until the 30th to move any along. But other than that, 100% agreement. {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 04:48, 27 August 2012 (BST)
Ok, Ross & I've moved most of the candidates into the appropriate portions of the archive. I've "officially extended" most of the remaining ones, in the hopes more discussion or a clearer consensus will emerge. I'm planning on writing up the Featured Article mini-paragraphs sometime tonight. {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 22:54, 2 September 2012 (BST)
== Things so far ==
How are we feeling with the commenting and decision making? There's a redlink leading to [[UDWiki:Featured Articles/Candidates/Examples|examples]] (under the example header). Ross mentioned he wanted to make examples, to show why things succeeded or didn't. Do we want to bother with examples? --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 23:47, 6 September 2012 (BST)
:Okay! {{smile}} --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 04:38, 12 September 2012 (BST)
::Lol sorry for not replying to this. I've been crazy busy with school the past couple weeks so I've kinda fallen down on the job. I don't really think we need examples, except for formatting (which we already have). If people want examples of why things succeeded or didn't, they can look in the archive. {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 04:44, 12 September 2012 (BST)
:::I'm posting here to draw more attention. Also, I liked how things were going and agree with Bob, especially so since the examples would be living articles that could change later and meet the qualifications. {{User:Aichon/Signature}} 04:45, 12 September 2012 (BST)
::::Cycle some candidates already. {{grr}} {{User:Misanthropy/Sig}} 04:46, 12 September 2012 (BST)
:::::A few have. They should be added to [[FA]] soon. I don't know if we want to care about ordering, and I'm not sure how we're deciding to cycle them. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 22:33, 13 September 2012 (BST)
::::::I'm going to take this opportunity to bring back up the fact that I'm planning on reorganizing the FA page so articles are grouped into groupings like "Events", "Classes" etc. I would encourage rotation to be based on not having two things in the same group be sequential. {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 22:58, 13 September 2012 (BST)
:::::::Sure. Categorizing seems to make sense. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 23:29, 13 September 2012 (BST)
::::::::Semi automatic cycling seems like the best option to me. See [[#Manually changing these...|above discussion]]. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>18:37, 15 September 2012 (UTC)</sub>
:::::::::Right. Not that I really matter here, since I'm too lazy cycle anything ever again. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 18:57, 15 September 2012 (BST)
== Featured Images ==
Should we work them in somehow? The big wiki does it. I have a few in mind. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>18:41, 15 September 2012 (UTC)</sub>
:Sure. We'll need to figure out how to work the FA section on the main page to incorporate that (and in my opinion expand the one on the needs-to-be-updated Community Portal). There'd probably be too much space taken up with an FA article and FA image at once on the main page. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 18:57, 15 September 2012 (BST)
::It could just be its own entity, without them being cycled into FAs. Create [[:Category:Featured Images]], instate polling on the talk page. Worthy images get the category. Maybe put a "see also" on the included part of [[UDWiki:Featured Articles]] and something on Community Portal. Perhaps figure out a cycling method if we want to cycle them somewhere other than the main page. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>19:04, 15 September 2012 (UTC)</sub>
:::Okay. Sorta like Featured Guides. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 19:08, 15 September 2012 (BST)s
::::Yeah, except without all that improvement suggestions stuff. Because, how can you improve on an image. It either passes or it doesn't. Say 2/3 majority. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>19:20, 15 September 2012 (UTC)</sub>
:I'd be in favor of adding a Featured Images category. Would voting occur at [[UDWiki:Featured Articles/Candidates]] or on a different page? {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 23:23, 15 September 2012 (BST)
::Given that all of the featured images on the big wiki have to be free as a matter of qualification, we ''can'' crib any of theirs at will. {{User:Misanthropy/Sig}} 00:22, 16 September 2012 (BST)
::Voting would probably just take place on [[:Category talk:Featured Images]]. The criteria would be vastly different than articles so it makes sense to keep it seperate. Mis, can you clarify "free"? ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>01:35, 16 September 2012 (UTC)</sub>
:::You know how we pretend that all the copyrighted images we use are used under some stretched definition of fair use? Wikipedia's Featured Pictures must either be public domain or released under a creative commons license so they're entirely copyleft. {{User:Misanthropy/Sig}} 01:42, 16 September 2012 (BST)
::::That's kind of what I thought you meant. It isn't a bad idea to disallow copyright images from being featured here I think. I know that excludes a boatload, but a lot of the unique imagery that we'd like featured is user created. Obviously the Umbrella Corps and Ron Burgandys and Sears Autos and Pacmans won't be public domain,.though. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>03:07, 16 September 2012 (UTC)</sub>
:::::You'd be surprised. Pacman probably fails the threshold of originality (though not the painted version I like so much. It's definitely not free) while I'd be surprised if Flickr didn't contain any free photos of Will Ferrel on set for the new Anchorman film. Shit's out there. Definitely don't feature any non-free material though. {{User:Misanthropy/Sig}} 03:32, 16 September 2012 (BST)
== The Archive is getting long... ==
Should I split the candidates archive into separate articles? (It's 50k long right now.) And if so, should they be split by date (month?) or by successful/unsuccessful? {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 00:28, 16 September 2012 (BST)
:Obviously successful/unsuccessful would be the best start as it's standard here (A/RE, A/PM, Historical); if it's still an issue beyond that then whatever seems manageable. {{User:Misanthropy/Sig}} 00:30, 16 September 2012 (BST)
::I've split off [[UDWiki:Featured Articles/Candidates/Archive/Successful|successful]] and [[UDWiki:Featured Articles/Candidates/Archive/Unsuccessful|unsuccessful]]. Once the current big batch is (finally) through eval, I may split up the unsuccessful archive further, probably by date of initial submission. {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 15:25, 18 September 2012 (BST)
:::Hmm. The big wiki tends to archive by the date things are cycled, might be worth considering here. {{User:Misanthropy/Sig}} 15:27, 18 September 2012 (BST)
::::I've added archiving tags (to indicate the time, date & archiver whenever a verdict is reached). Based on those, I'll split up the unsuccessful archive (which is already at 60k) in a little bit. (Right now I'm being kicked out of the library where I'm working because it closes at 1 am.) {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 05:51, 26 September 2012 (BST)
== More Things Happening ==
So I've taken the liberty of reorganizing the Featured Articles listing and doing some proofreading & formatting unification. A couple comments:
*Do we like the organizational paradigm I've come up with, or are there suggestions for other labels/patterns?
*Is there a better image out there for [[Spawning]]? The one in use right now is just a bunch of quotes and looks kind of ridiculous as an FA-accompanying image. There's nothing better on the page itself at the moment.
**(Also [[Guides:Ghost Town Reclamation]] and [[User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Startpage|World of Gnome]] have no images associated with them, so I just snagged ones from the general wiki. {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 00:57, 31 October 2012 (UTC))
*I've put up three of the old FAs for review, the ones I felt were most egregious and probably wouldn't pass if they were nominees now. Please [[UDWiki:Featured Articles/Candidates#Reviewing Featured Articles|comment on them]] and nominate others if there are ones that you feel no longer meet our standards.
*I'm going to add all of the things which have passed nomination since September either later tonight or tomorrow.
Thanks so much everyone! {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 03:03, 30 October 2012 (UTC)
:Okay! If I can't think of an image other than the Gnome one I stole from Wikipedia, or a slight alteration of the little blurb, then that's good. --{{User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Sig}} 01:38, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
:Just finished adding the blurbs & images for the ones which have passed muster. Feel free to comment/edit/etc. anything I've done. {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 01:42, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
::The Play Style image looks kinda weird, I think. Maybe it would look better with small versions of all three side-by-side. I'll 'Shop something tomorrow and put it up. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>01:53, 31 October 2012 (UTC)</sub>
=== Cycling System ===
So right now there are 36 featured articles (37 if you count TRP, which is likely to pass), which doesn't match up with any of our magic numbers: [[Magic Words#Date & time|if I'm not mistaken]], those are 7, 12, 24, 31 and 53. In that case, what do we want to do about cycling the articles? (See also part of the [[UDWiki talk:Featured Articles#Reviving FAs.2FGAs|big discussion above]].) {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 01:49, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
:I've got a couple of ideas. I'll throw something together tonight after I finish pumpkin decorating with the kids. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>02:04, 31 October 2012 (UTC)</sub>
:Here is what I would do:
:# Manually update them.
:# Or Generate a custom template for X number of articles (i.e. FASwitch40 is designed for 40 articles, FASwitch37 for 37). Use currentday and currentmonth as inputs to a switch with 365 cases. You then repeat 1:X until you have 365 entries. You then have a master switch where you enter the number of articles you have, and that switch chooses the right custom template with the correct pseudo RNG sequence. A computer program could probably generate the wiki code for the FASwitchXX templates pretty easily.
:# Or Force the number of articles to match a magic word. So you always have 31 or 53 or whatever.
:# Or Have a dummy article or something for the cases in which you are missing. -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 02:06, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
::Here is what I did. [[User:Vapor/sandbox/Featured Articles]]. The includeonly part of that page has a switch template embedded in a switch template. The first one uses the CURRENTWEEK magic word (that gives us 53 variables) and each article is numbered 1 through 36 (currently. more on that in a bit). After the last article, it goes to the default, which in this case is another switch template. That one also uses CURRENTWEEK, but it picks up where the last article number leaves off. I picked every third article for the second embedded switch, and then every 7th. So currently, 1-36, then 3,6,9,15,18,21,24,27,30,33,36 and then 7,14,20(instead of 21 again),28, and 35.
::So we've got a page that updates every week and which is expandable to up to 53 articles and which has a [retty good distribution of repeats. Hopefully that all makes sense. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>03:08, 31 October 2012 (UTC)</sub>
:::Oh, I forgot, here is what it looks like when included: [[User:Vapor/sandbox/Featured Articles/Test]]. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>03:10, 31 October 2012 (UTC)</sub>
:::Someone make this man a sysop. -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 03:15, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
:::Sweet! And seconded MHS. I think you both deserve it. {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 04:08, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
::This is the [[User:MHSstaff/Projects/FADemo|version I wrote]]. It updates daily. To add a new article, you just make a new case in the FAMasterList (shamelessly stolen from Vapor's page) with your blurb text and image, and then update the template call (in our example, change 37 to 38). The template than calls the right pseudoRNG list. We would have to pregenerate the lists though. Which is easy with a computer. -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 03:49, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
:::I think I understand what that means, but what do you mean by "pregenerate the lists" - are they lists of 365 numbers for each case, between (say) 35 and 50? Or do I have no clue what I'm doing? (Probably the latter.) {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 04:08, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
::::We would have to make [[User:MHSstaff/Projects/FASwitch60|templates like this]] and [[User:MHSstaff/Projects/FASwitch37|like this]] for the number of articles we think potentially we could use. I pregenerated the wiki code text files from like 30 something to like totally 60 I think. It's just a matter of cutting and pasting.-[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 04:16, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
:::::I do like myself RNGs ([[Rando|praise Randdo]]). How random is it? If it selects a random FA each day that would probably be preferable. The system I whipped up last night goes chronologicaly. I didn't attempt to reorder the FAs but we'll probably want to do that if we pick that system, unless we want weeks of FAs in same category back-to-back. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>14:07, 31 October 2012 (UTC)</sub>
::::::It is random in the sense that the order was randomly generated; it is not really random since you could just look at the code to see what number comes next. Also, right now only the first X numbers are randomly generated (X=number of articles) and then the sequence repeats itself up to 365 days. But it would be pretty simple to make an entire year's worth of random numbers with a balanced distribution. You could also pregenerate it for years in the future but the template would be longer. -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 17:08, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
::::::[[User:MHSstaff/Projects/FADemo|The bottom two]] use an out-to-2020 version. For years past that, it defaults to the 2012 list, at which point, the three people actually still playing UD can do whatever they want. This is what [[User:MHSstaff/Projects/FAYSwitch37|the switch code looks like.]]-[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 19:21, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
So both these proposals seem equally functional (although MHS's may be slightly more balanced), so the main difference to me seems to be whether the FA rotates daily or weekly. I've seen both on various wikis (and either is far better than the "rotates whenever-someone-feels-like-it" we have here) so I think this is a good place for people to voice their preferences. {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 04:10, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
:Both have their pros and cons. The really nice thing about the weekly one is that an article is featured for an entire week so it gets a lot of exposure. The bad thing is that we have around 30-40 articles so only some can be featured again. The nice thing about a daily one is that you see articles more frequently and it is not that a big deal if an article is repeated 8 times instead of let's say 9 times. The bad thing is that a given article is only featured for that day. -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 17:39, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
::A question: In either system, would it be possible to retain and automatize the "Current Featured Article"/"Previous Featured Article" system on the FAs page? {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 20:03, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
:::Yes. You could use a similar system as the weather templates where those know the weather data for days in advance of the current date. You would just go in the opposite direction for this.-[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 20:21, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
I'm trying to think of if there's a better system that might be better able to handle the addition and removal of FAs with minimal or no edits necessary. In the meantime though, I thought I'd point out that I just discovered an unlisted magic word. If you type in <code><nowiki>{{PAGESINCATEGORY:Featured Articles}}</nowiki></code> you'll get {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Featured Articles}}. That may prove useful for automating some things. Or not. Remains to be seen. {{User:Aichon/Signature}} 20:29, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
:That would work if we moved [[:Category:Featured Article Nominees]] out of the category, since it seems to be being counted as a page. {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 20:49, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
:That could be used to automate which switchtemplate is called. You would still have to manually add the blurb/image case to the master list though. -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 20:56, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
::Yeah, I was contemplating the possibility of doing something like <code><nowiki>{{MasterFASwitch{{PAGESINCATEGORY:Featured Articles}}}}</nowiki></code> to get it to use a different template depending on the count, and you could populate the variables for those templates from a master list of all the articles. As for the blurbs, what about using my earlier idea of simply putting them in an includeonly on the actual pages? Not only would they be in the most sane place for them to be, but it would also cut down on the amount of code you'd need in the switch statement, making it MUCH easier to maintain. At that point, the only thing you'd need to do is add the page names to the master list, and then you'd be done. Of course, there's still the open question of what is the best way to cycle through the articles, and I'm still working on ideas for that. I have nothing great at the moment. {{User:Aichon/Signature}} 21:15, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
:::So basically you have one switch which is the master list of the article names as cases, some RNG method that gives a number to the master list to pull the right article name, and then the actual FA template pulls the blurb information and image name from the include-only section of a given article, using the article name given by the master list switch? -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 21:23, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
::::Pretty much. The number of the pages in the category would either need to be passed into the RNG as a variable that would set a max value, or else would need to be hard-coded into the RNG, in which case we'd have to make dozens of RNGs, one for each number in a reasonable range. I'm guessing the second approach might be better, but I still want to figure out a better way of timing when articles appear before I try to think about the RNG too much. {{User:Aichon/Signature}} 21:49, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
:::::Nice find, Aichon! I wonder when that was added. We shoul updat [[Help:Magic Words]]. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>17:16, 1 November 2012 (UTC)</sub>
:::::Ok, [[User:MHSstaff/Projects/FASwitch37|here is a daily sorta RNG-like]] for the current article (Type=1) and the previous article (Type=2). I don't think it is worth randomizing every year. We just want a semi-balanced distribution through a given year. -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 19:13, 1 November 2012 (UTC)
::::::While that works (Feb 29th excluded), I'm hoping there's a more elegant solution that might only take a few dozen lines, though it may need to make use of some intermediate templates. {{User:Aichon/Signature}} 19:52, 1 November 2012 (UTC)
:::::::Same here. In an ideal world. you would have something that randomly selects an article name from a given category. Not sure what that is though. On leap days, this one will default to the first article. -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 19:56, 1 November 2012 (UTC)
::::::::Ah, right, I forgot to check the default. If we did go with that, we'd need to make versions of that for a decently wide range of numbers, that way we could accommodate future additions/removals from the FA pool. Anyway, I'll give the RNG ideas some more thought over the coming days. I'm starting to think that something ''resembling'' a recursive algorithm might be a good idea (it wouldn't actually be recursive, since recursion isn't possible with templates (which is a VERY good thing)). {{User:Aichon/Signature}} 20:14, 1 November 2012 (UTC)
:::::::::I'm going to hold off mass-generating (or copy/pasting them since they are already made) to see if a better RNG system can be made. I have no idea what you just said, but it sounds pretty hot. -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 18:13, 2 November 2012 (UTC)
:::::And [[User:MHSstaff/Projects/FAMasterList2|this is what the master list]] would look like? I am not sure what the includeonly part in the FAs themselves would look like so I'll let someone else take a stab at that. -[[MHS|<span style="color: Black">'''MHS'''</span>]][[User_Talk:MHSstaff|<span style="color: DarkBlue">'''staff'''</span>]] 19:45, 1 November 2012 (UTC)
Bump. Do we go with one of the above methods? I tried to figure out a pRNG we could use but didn't get far. Then I got distracted. Let's get this over with since its been a topic of discussion for so long (long before the FA overhaul). ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>16:45, 11 November 2012 (UTC)</sub>
:So after some more thought about this over coffee, I think I've come of a pRNG system we could use. It will take a bit of work, but will give us a random FA each day of the year and which will handle additions to and subtractions from the numner of FAs. It can also be used for other projects eventually. I'll work on it tonight. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>18:13, 11 November 2012 (UTC)</sub>
::Ok so what I came up with is {{tl|DailyRNG}}. It outputs a different number from 1-1000 each day of the year. But it also has a variable called "count", which can be used to cap the higher number. So if you set the count to 35, then it will output a different number from 1-35 each day of the year. The numbers were generated win Excel using the RAND function.
::This template can be used with the PAGESINCATEGORY magic word to effectively give us a unique number each day of the year based on the number of Featured Articles in the Featured Articles category. Here is a demonstration:
*<nowiki>{{DailyRNG}}</nowiki> = {{DailyRNG}}
*<nowiki>{{DailyRNG|count=33}}</nowiki> = {{DailyRNG|count=33}}
*<nowiki>{{DailyRNG|count={{PAGESINCATEGORY:Featured Articles|pages}}}}</nowiki> = {{DailyRNG|count={{PAGESINCATEGORY:Featured Articles|pages}}}}
*<nowiki>[[UDWiki:Featured Articles/FA{{DailyRNG|count={{PAGESINCATEGORY:Featured Articles|pages}}}}]]</nowiki> = [[UDWikiFeatured Articles/FA{{DailyRNG|count={{PAGESINCATEGORY:Featured Articles|pages}}}}]]
::If each FA had it's own page, we could let the DailyRNG template decide which FA to transclude each day. The only limitation so far is that the count variable is limited to a number between 33 and 43, but that's only because the variable relies on a series of other templates (i.e. {{tl|DailyRNG/33}} to {{tl|DailyRNG/43}}. These can be created fairly simply with a little help from Excel. I'll probably end up doing several more of these (probably 2-150 or so) as I get time. How is that for a solution? ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>23:11, 11 November 2012 (UTC)</sub>
:::So, it's basically the system that we proposed above, but fleshed out a bit further? Looks good, except that I don't quite see the need to use the day of the week in DailyRNG, since that just makes it 7 times larger (166Kb instead of about 24Kb) and doesn't seem to add anything, other than allowing it to be randomized for seven years at a time. For the individual ones (e.g. DailyRNG/33), I can see the use for it, but I'd suggest breaking those out into 7 separate templates instead of keeping them in one, then set up the DailyRNG/33 as a simple switch that calls those templates based on the day of the week. Doing so should significantly lighten the amount of data that needs to be loaded, especially when you're dealing with larger numbers. {{User:Aichon/Signature}} 04:00, 12 November 2012 (UTC)
::::Yeah, I see that it was proposed in a different format above. We could eliminate day of week but doing so would limit the number of possible random numbers from 1000 to 366 and it would repeat every year instead of every 7 (not that I think that either of those things is a huge deal, at least not for this project). Data load isn't that big of a problem. When a switch template is used, only the matching case is loaded in the browser and it's the same with If templates. So, if we need something that's intended only for this project, a 7 times shorter version should do. I don't mind continuing doing the longer ones, but I'll wait on doing more of them until we get some consensus on it. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>04:26, 12 November 2012 (UTC)</sub>
:::::Regarding a switch only loading the relevant templates, that's exactly what I was getting at with my suggestion to break it up. ;) Sorry, I could've been clearer. Also, I kinda realized that halfway through my comment and didn't go back to reconsider what I said at the start about the DailyRNG template. I suppose we could easily just break it up into 7 and then do the same there, that way we get all the benefits of 1000 numbers without the load that would currently be incurred with using it as it is now. {{User:Aichon/Signature}} 05:13, 12 November 2012 (UTC)
I went ahead and implemented a simple solution for now. Got tired of seeing the same FA up there for over a month. I used {{tl|SimpleFACycle}} for the switch. It cycles every week and should do for now until something more random and elegant can be hammered out. I tried to do something about the Previous Featured Articles by creating {{tl|PREVIOUSWEEK}} and using a variable as the switch criteria but there seems to be some issue with that. Will look closer later but can't seem to figure out why it isn't working as it seems to be coded fine. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>21:35, 23 November 2012 (UTC)</sub>
:That looks great! I don't actually know why we need "previous featured article": it's not listed on the front page and all the FAs are listed right below anyway. Also, quick question: if one or both of the current candidates gets a yes, how does a lay-wikier update the switch template to include that? {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 00:11, 24 November 2012 (UTC)
::We can probably just go ahead and remove previously featured. I think it was there so that people didn't make mistakes when manually cycling them. Adding new articles to the mix should be pretty simple. Just edit [[Template:SimpleFACycle]] and type {{CodeInline|<nowiki>|</nowiki>case: ''nn''<nowiki>=</nowiki>''FA Code''}} in the appropriate place just above the "default" (I'll make this more clear with a comment section in the template). Again, this doesn't have to be permanent but it's better than being in limbo where it has currently been for several months. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>01:08, 24 November 2012 (UTC)</sub>
:::Added some instructions via comments to the template and I've also removed the Recent Featured Articles section. I'll likely add some more instructions to the template to make it clearer how to add new ones. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>17:29, 24 November 2012 (UTC)</sub>
::::Just [http://wiki.urbandead.com/index.php?title=Template%3ASimpleFACycle&action=historysubmit&diff=2045928&oldid=2043141 added] DangerCenter. Can someone check that I did it right? Doesn't seem broken but just want a double-check. {{User:Bob Moncrief/Sig}} 18:40, 4 December 2012 (UTC)
:::::Yep, looks correct. ~[[Image:Vsig.png|link=User:Vapor]] <sub>03:05, 5 December 2012 (UTC)</sub>

Latest revision as of 19:56, 22 January 2014

For pre-2011 discussion, please see the talk archive.

Manually changing these...

is dumb when we can rotate the text and images automatically using switches. How often are they being rotated now? -MHSstaff 18:40, 19 January 2011 (UTC)

Looks like it is two weeks, which means it takes about 3/4 a year to cycle through all 17/18. We should make it more frequent. Like every day. -MHSstaff 18:43, 19 January 2011 (UTC)
A day version is ready. To make it more fair, we would probably want to rotate it through the 12 months. It would be similar to the weather templates that change the temperature and weather type based on month and day. -MHSstaff 19:31, 19 January 2011 (UTC)
I like the idea of an atomically updating UDWiki:Featured Articles. My only qualms about it are 1) What happens when we reach more than 31 FAs? 2) Is it easy enough for your typical wiki user to update with new FAs as they are voted in? ~Vsig.png 20:37, 19 January 2011 (UTC)
There are a couple of ways you could do it. You pregenerate the templates so that you have a different template for the number of articles, and a master switch template so that the wiki user just puts in the number of articles as a variable, and it takes care of the rest. Like {{FADaySwitch|18}} would use the 18 article version, and <nowiki>{{FADaySwitch|19}} would use the 19 day one. The 31-day bridge you cross when you get to it. It's not like FAs are being added willy-nilly now. They would have to make a new FA blurb though. -MHSstaff 21:14, 19 January 2011 (UTC)
Right, but what i meant is that when it is time to place a new Featured Article in the queue to be cycled in, where would they place it? It isn't really clear where it goes right now. I think I could figure it out, but without instructions, your average user will not know where to go with it. ~Vsig.png 21:27, 19 January 2011 (UTC)
You could make a queue page with links to the unedited versions of UDWiki:Featured Articles/FA##, and instruct them to make a new blurb in the next one. You then instruct them to update the template from {{FADaySwitch|XX}} to {{FADaySwitch|YY}} in the FA page. The people who are likely to do this could probably figure it out if we gave them a basic how to instruction page. I doubt like a new user will be like "Dude...I am going to edit me some FA pages today. Dude." -MHSstaff 21:38, 19 January 2011 (UTC)
Keep in mind that right now, someone has to make a blurb. Currently, it is placed in the FA page in the no include section. The major difference would be it would be placed instead in its own page and they would have to update a template to call the right number of articles. -MHSstaff 21:45, 19 January 2011 (UTC)
You'd probably also want to make a master list one that uses the same master switch idea, and display all the blurbs on the FA page in a noinclude section. That way, you make three changes when you add a new one: 1) Make a new FA## page, 2) Change FADaySwitchXX to match the right number of articles on the FA page 3) Change FAAllSwitchXX to match the number of articles on the FA page. Not too bad. -MHSstaff 21:48, 19 January 2011 (UTC)
Hmmm...welll maybe you could write up some instructions on how to add new entires to the list and post it here. I'm having a hard time following right now but that's likely because work is kicking my ass right now and I want to go home. If I see a visual I'd probably have a better time understanding. ~Vsig.png 22:36, 19 January 2011 (UTC)

Talking with Aichon, there a couple of problems ranging from 1) what to do after a cycle ends, where you repeat some of the articles until the next year, but not all of them and 2) this actually being more trouble than its worth. Moving this to the backburner for now. -MHSstaff 20:07, 30 January 2011 (UTC)

New Stuff

We've had some new GA's since last time around, including weather and blackmore 4(04). --RosslessnessWant a Location Image? 17:17, 22 February 2011 (UTC)

oops

someone please finish this or remind me to do it later... i'll be unable to keep working on this for the next four or five hours :\ --hagnat 15:35, 22 July 2011 (BST)

Has it occurred to you that making this template does not make it easier in ANY way? We were just copying and pasting sections of text into specific parts anyway. -- ϑanceϑanceevolution 02:53, 23 July 2011 (BST)

Reviving FAs/GAs

Hey y'all! So I've decided to take on the task of trying to get the Featured Articles/Good Articles process moving, especially since the Featured Articles voting process hasn't been used since 2009 and the Good Articles process seems to have died as well. To this end, I have a few things I'd like people to comment on.

The first is to ask why the process is two-tiered? Most of the discussion above concerns ways of moving articles to "Good" status and then "Featured" status. However, only one article (Weather) is currently a Good Article without also being Featured; this is because the Featured Article voting process has simply been abandoned with Good Articles being automatically promoted. To me it seems the process would be easier if there were just one layer, Featured Articles, and this would make sense as the wiki is rather small (19,389 articles) and the majority of those are rather short.

The next is, would people be up for a major addition of voting candidates (many of them listed above) and a marathon voting process? To me it seems having a whole bunch added at once would make voting easier.

Lastly, I might be doing a reorganization of the scheduling/arrangement of the Featured Articles page, so we can keep things rotating even without more voted articles and to put the Featured Articles into relevant categories ("classes", "guides", "events" etc.) Any thoughts on that?

Thanks so much everyone, and please comment! Bob Moncrief EBDW! 16:27, 15 July 2012 (BST)

I think the intention of FAs vs. GAs was that FAs went on the main page or community portal and GAs didn't. GAs are basically FAs or "Featured Good Articles." The distinction isn't important nor does it add any function. There's no real new layer of quality that separates FA from GA. Keeping to just FA seems a good option.
Voting all at once would be the thing to do. People would lose interest after a week of voting.
We should rotate the FAs from time to time. Maybe it's "unprofessional" if it's the same article on the main page the whole time. I don't know if we could manage this automatically. --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 16:55, 15 July 2012 (BST)
MHSStaff amd I tried our hand at automatic updating a while back using switch templates (see two headers up). It ended up complicating the project too much (adding new FAs into the mix was a pain) and so it was abandoned. I'm sure we were just overthinking it at the time and there is probably a simpler way. A semi-automatic system might be a solution. Each FA would be assigned a number and we'd use a switch template to cycle through the numbers. A user would still need to make an update, but instead of a big copy/paste ordeal, it would just require changing one numner to the next.
I'm totally for new FA votes and forgoing GA voting altogether. ~Vsig.png 18:02, 15 July 2012 (UTC)
I'd be willing to keep track of rotating the FAs manually once we've got some new ones voted in. I'll wait for a few more comments of endorsement before making the changes needed to bypass Good Article voting. Bob Moncrief EBDW! 18:11, 15 July 2012 (BST)
Regarding automating the process, it really doesn't work well unless the number of FAs lines up against a magic word that we can use in the switch, and we also need to guarantee that the number of FAs doesn't change too often. If we could set it up so that there were exactly 53 FAs (one for each potential week in the year), it'd make things significantly easier to code (we could base the switch on the {{CURRENTWEEK}} magic word), and it would also mean no repeats or some getting shown more often than others (except for the 53rd, which would only be shown on some years). I'd also suggest that each FA page have its mini-blurb embedded in the page itself with an <includeonly> as part of its fulfillment for being an FA, that way the page itself can simply be included without having to paste mini-blurbs into templates or managing them in any way (and then this page, rather than housing all of the mini-blurbs, would instead just contain links to all of the FAs). All told, the template itself would only take about 55 lines of extremely simple code. Again though, this is all dependent on having a number of FAs that matches up with a magic word for an aspect of the calendar. If you want to do 31 FAs, one for each day of the month, that works too, for example. Aichon 20:02, 15 July 2012 (BST)
Yep, those are all the issues we ran into last time. Any Magic Word we use puts a limit on the number of articles we can use or creates an uneven distribution. It also makes it difficult to add new FAs to the mix. I do like the idea of creating FA blurbs on each article. I really think a semi-automatic process that simplifies the updating processwill be the way to go. ~Vsig.png 20:34, 15 July 2012 (UTC)
Most of the blurbs are already setup for automation here. Aichon's idea to have the blurb in an include section in the actual article is a better idea though. -MHSstaff 04:25, 16 July 2012 (BST)
Let's see what number we end up with and go from there. If it works out nicely, might as well Switch template it. There probably won't be many or any new FA additions if we go through an FA voting marathon. Maybe. --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 04:41, 16 July 2012 (BST)

Rotating is done on a whim at the minute really. I'd love to see some new articles nominated. Plus its been updated since 2009. 2010 for blackmore 404 being an example. --RossWHO????ness 17:16, 15 July 2012 (BST)

Right, there have been GA votes since then, but the only FA promotions were done without actual voting (unless it occurred somewhere on the Wiki I can't locate?) Bob Moncrief EBDW! 18:11, 15 July 2012 (BST)
Would this work with the software version we're using? No need to maintain unless the article pool grows, gives a random article at each pageview (purges may be needed but so it goes). When I fall, I'll weep for happiness 12:50, 16 July 2012 (BST)
Looks like it uses Template:Random number, which itself uses math expressions (which we don't have here) to generate random articles. It would be pretty awesome if we had a RNG, but we don't. Grr! Argh! *shaking fist* ~Vsig.png 14:59, 16 July 2012 (UTC)
Lifting that restriction on articles under group pages would open up some more interesting candidates for GA/FA inclusion. -MHSstaff 02:51, 17 July 2012 (BST)

I say pick 26 of them, double up the cases and use the currentweek for the switch, crack open a beer and call it a day. -MHSstaff 02:34, 17 July 2012 (BST)

Bob, I overlooked something before about categorizing things. Are you planning on running multiple featured articles at once, i.e Featured Guide, Featured Event, etc? If so, I think the idea is interesting but I'd like to know more about how it would appear on the main page. ~Vsig.png 01:27, 30 July 2012 (UTC)

No, I didn't mean the categorizing to have any effect on the Main Page or the way FAs would be dealt with. I meant something like how the FAs on Wikipedia here are categorized into broad topics, like "Biology", "History", "Music" etc. So it would just be putting headers into the UDWiki:Featured Articles page to group the articles by "Guides", "Locations", "Events", "Gameplay", "Classes" etc. Bob Moncrief EBDW! 17:02, 30 July 2012 (BST)

Putting in 2 quick cents. I've done a fair deal to maintain this system from time to time, however broken it was from the start, but I wouldn't mind seeing it go. It's just apparent that the standard of the UDWiki community is too high to allow certain categories (groups, etc.) to become good articles, as well as the fact that we all are expecting a very high standard of quality for the good articles to pass. I'm not saying this is a bad thing. I personally like it very well the way it is, and I myself governed it for a while to maintain almost flawless level of quality to be allowed into GA. But the sad reality is that if there are not enough articles to cycle FAs for even a couple of years (even when cycling articles every quarter) then it's not worth it. I'd remove them from the main page altogether. If you asked me of my personal opinion, I'd prefer to keep them and lower the standard an inch to allow a few more articles but that won't solve the problem, and I know that without some sort of FA-writing drive (like the location one ross had a year ago, which I would definitely participate in) we should remove them altogether. Not delete obviously, but remove them from the main page, especially whilst space is apparently precious at the moment between it, community content and "this month in UD" section. I'm drunk. DANCEDANCEREVOLUTION (TALK | CONTRIBS) 14:15, 30 July 2012 (BST)

That's what I am talking about. Let's go rogue, dump that hippy, tree-hugging no group pages rule crap, and take this to the next level. Wiki is about to get real. MHSstaff 01:49, 31 July 2012 (BST)
Not to derail the current direction of this discussion, but we're actually quite set to have a few different categories of featured content. Featured Guides are voted on as are historical events and groups. Problem with groups of course is whether we include them based on content alone or something else, like (gasp) historical status. I'd even be for opening up voting on featured images. ~Vsig.png 02:44, 31 July 2012 (UTC)
Not to re-rail the tangential discussion, but I'm totally up for allowing Userspace pages. There are quite a few good ones out there. Aichon 03:12, 31 July 2012 (BST)
What do you have in mind? The only Userspace page I have heard mentioned is Gnome's game. I think this is a good place for other suggestions too. Bob Moncrief EBDW! 06:20, 31 July 2012 (BST)
How about Zombo Tracker? Where else can you get your daily zombie weather, see a sortable list of targets the RRF has hit (current to 2011), and track the horde's migratory pattern (sortable by year)? -MHSstaff 17:08, 31 July 2012 (BST)
Or a companion piece to the Blackmore:404 event, one that provides a broadened perspective and fills in missing details, allowing the reader to decide for themselves what really happened that pivotal month. -MHSstaff 17:30, 31 July 2012 (BST)
It should be by content; the page/article needs to stand on its own from a quality perspective, IMO. -MHSstaff 16:55, 31 July 2012 (BST)

Progress

OK, so I've closed down Good Articles. I'm still proofreading some articles in preparation for submission to FA voting (if anyone would like to help, articles to be proofed are here), but I expect to submit them sometime in the next few days. Thanks! Bob Moncrief EBDW! 17:57, 28 July 2012 (BST)

Waving around my Crat status like it's some kind of badge of authority

Hi. Unlike DDR I'm not drunk, but I'm a bit concerned about some of this. Both MHS and Bob have listed in their own ways articles I feel should never be used as featured articles, because, in all honesty they, like my spelling, are terrible. The first thing we need to do, if we are reviving this is to set up some kind of criteria. We may be merging the categories, but featured articles, should still be good articles. The original vote meant checking spelling, styling pages up, cross referencing and rewriting them to be clear and informative. We need to make sure we don't lose that. --RossWHO????ness 18:22, 31 July 2012 (BST)

Looks like Gnome already transferred the existing GA voting criteria to the FA voting page. He mentioned he wasn't done, though. Guess maybe he put on the brakes when "more consensus" was requested. So...is there more criteria (or less restrictive criteria as suggested above) than we originally used to determine Good Articles that we need for Featured? ~Vsig.png 19:10, 31 July 2012 (UTC)
What criteria do you suggest then? -MHSstaff 19:15, 31 July 2012 (BST)
I've been trying to check spelling, styling & clarity on the articles I'm planning to submit for voting. I haven't really touched content very much because most of them are on subjects I know little about (like events that happened before I joined last year, or zombie tactics when I've only really played as a survivor). My hope was that in the process of voting we'd hammer out which articles the community feels qualify. I was also hoping that the voting would spur those who like an article to help clean it up to standard. I'm definitely not expecting all, or even most, of the articles I'm submitting to pass, but I think looking at which ones do and don't will help clarify what we want our standards to be. Does that make any sense? Bob Moncrief EBDW! 20:01, 31 July 2012 (BST)
I think you have done a great job proofing and prepping a large pool of possible candidates; problems with content (should) come out when we decide the next crop (and reevaluate the current ones) of FAs. Ross just likes derailing the fun train every now and then before it rolls into party station. -MHSstaff 20:12, 31 July 2012 (BST)
The original criteria for GA was for the article to be neutral, complete, well-written, and awesome. The first criteria was not just thrown out with the bath water, but was launched into low-level, Earth orbit to burn up on reentry when the Battle of Blackmore was voted in. The other three criteria are so arbitrary that anything can (and has) become a GA/FA. Ross can nail me on NPOV if he wants, but then BoB (and arguably BoB:404) needs to go if we want to even pretend approaching this with some sort of consistency with regard to the metrics. -MHSstaff 20:30, 31 July 2012 (BST)
Has there ever been a vote for an article's featured status to be removed? A cursory check on my part came up with nothing. Bob Moncrief EBDW! 20:34, 31 July 2012 (BST)
I don't believe so. -MHSstaff 20:48, 31 July 2012 (BST)
I do enjoy me evil side. I want to have the ability to "shop" the articles as a consensus, as part of the process. When it comes to blackmore, I have no legs to stand on, but its a damn sexy article. I can't say that about Groove Theory or the Fort pages, as they're pure gash. I'd argue Blackmore 404 is a lot more balanced than some other claptrap out there, but if you want changes to it, I'm more than willing to have it retooled.--RossWHO????ness 20:53, 31 July 2012 (BST)
Truth be told, I think it'd be more interesting with a mixed POV approach. Have the basic facts in NPOV at the top, but after that go back and forth over the chronology, offering the zombie and survivor perspectives at each step. It'd keep it fun, would maintain overall neutrality for the article by offering all sides, and would give it its own unique voice.
That said, I wouldn't change it at this point. Instead, I'd just do that for anything that comes up later. I'd also open up FA to allow for POV stuff, so long as it's done extremely well. I think that the neutrality requirement is a silly one, since it strips the wiki of much of the tone of the game. Aichon 21:01, 31 July 2012 (BST)
The way I always wanted to see events done is you essentially have three versions. The first is a mostly dry, NPOV main article, the second is the zombie version, and the third is the survivor version. There would be tabs along the top to let you select the one you want to read (similar to Roosters home page and the Zombie Weather page). -MHSstaff 21:07, 31 July 2012 (BST)

We can customize the criteria for Featured Article categories, if we're going for categories (I think we should). The general guideline for all FAs is that the FAs are something we want on the main page (and Community Portal). It must have some notion of quality above the rest of the wiki. The thing I neglected to add when I moved over and changed some of the GA content to the FA page was how we go about saying a page is FA or not. Is it straight vote, like how we do with suggestions? Or something looser? The way we had it for determining GAs was that if no major concern(s) was raised after 7 days (with the criteria as a guideline) the page would become a GA. I think we should follow the same idea here. We need to work on the criteria though. --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 23:15, 31 July 2012 (BST)

I like the idea of different criteria for different categories if we're going that route. Obviosly a featured location article candidate would have different set of checks than a featured event article candidate or a featured group candidate. I'm just worried how muddied the water would become, not only in getting this project off the ground but also when it comes time to open up voting. ~Vsig.png 17:14, 1 August 2012 (UTC)
The criteria should be similar between categories. The only real difference would be NPOV demand. It doesn't make sense, for instance, to talk about neutrality when it comes to user pages, and for group pages, only a part needs to be NPOV, and for events the same. I'll offer up a suggested criteria soon. --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 01:20, 2 August 2012 (BST)

Werds of Judge Karke


 The concept of NPOV being an article criteria is misguided if the issue is lack of articles. There's some damn good PoV articles out there. You don't need to provide context to balance the PoV, the article should itself already do that by making it clear it is PoV and being appropriately linked/sourced(a basic FA/GA criteria) makes it easy enough to find appropriately sourced counter-PoV if that's your thing.

 As for Technical issues, those are technical, also easy enough to overcome since you can stack these in a manner that you sub in a known set for undefined WEEK/DAY numbers and then just put the 'blurbs' on UDWiki:Featured_Articles subpages by /Week/Day. So long as those are consistent it's massively expandable from 7 minimum with no awkward limiting issues. Just apply Switch/If templates as appropriate. Don't even need to get into random generated numbers but if that's your shitck you can always try it if you can figure out User:Karek/ProjDev/Concat1440 as that's the closest thing to a number randomizing function you can find on this wiki software last I checked.

 For article quality, make a committee or a panoply, or even just a consensus discussion page where you need a clear majority of approving voices, like 3/4ths or some such intentionally absurd number that way these articles can be nominated, reviewed, and can't get through until they are clearly very high quality. It's not like we need to have articles accepted to run the wiki so we can be super stringent with qualitative acceptance limits in this manner to exceptional-ize these articles.

-- Judge Karke, weekie cyning hath thus spaek'd 09:04, 1 August 2012 (BST) --

I think the system we had before for determining GAs works fine. A strong concern with the article was enough to decline it. If you look through the archives, it worked well, even though the structure wasn't properly understood nor clear enough. --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 01:20, 2 August 2012 (BST)
That holds up until you start including bias driven PoV articles like group pages, historically that's been an issue around these parts. We don't need more nonsense like Historical Groups or ALiM submissions, particularly with the new proposed article sets. --Karekmaps 2.0?! 20:52, 3 August 2012 (BST)
It works fine if you read the archive, for example or example. The number of participants doesn't matter (as long as there are some). The determining part of pass or fail is based on the strength of the criticism. This also makes the system more flexible, since criticisms can be addressed until the problem is fixed. (It doesn't need to be put up for a vote again for 2 weeks.) --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 22:49, 3 August 2012 (BST)
Meh, added stricture for the voting process is just an additional suggestion for preventing almost accidental submissions. It's just an example of a possible tool in the chest in these cases. --Karekmaps 2.0?! 10:02, 4 August 2012 (BST)

Criteria?

Here's a try. Suggestions? The criteria needs re-wording, but let's get the basic idea down first. I've left Well Written unchanged for each FA type. The point of any writing is to communicate something, and something poorly written does not facilitate communicating something. --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 01:22, 12 August 2012 (BST)

Base criteria currently on FA/V

  • NPOV - The article must be from a neutral point of view and not show significant bias. Possible exceptions may be made, depending on the article and community opinion.
  • Complete - No major facts or details are neglected; it is finished as can be.
  • Well Written - The article uses proper English, such as correct grammar and spelling, and it is written in a clear and readable style.
  • Generally Awesome - This is a joke criteria, hence it is very serious.

Article Criteria

(Glossary pages, event pages, historical events?)

  • NPOV - The article must be from a neutral point of view; articles should avoid taking sides (such as emphasizing zombies over humans, or a particular group or opinion). Exceptions may be made, depending on the article and community decision.
  • Complete - No major facts or details are neglected; it is finished as can be.
  • Well Written - The writing is grammatically correct and clear; it communicates what it's trying to say.
  • Generally Awesome - This is a joke criteria, hence it is very serious.

Group Page Criteria

I trimmed down the NPOV criteria. I added Presentation, since the purpose of going to a group page can be broader than going to a glossary page (it's not just for the information, it could also be for some sort of interest).

  • NPOV - There should be an NPOV lead or introduction, which explains who the group is (e.g. group type, structure, size, creation). Since it's expected that the article is created from the group's perspective, the rest of the page need not be neutral.
  • Presentation - The group page should have an interesting and original page design brought about by the code and any images. Writing style and content can also satisfy the criteria.
    (If we do keep with this criteria, we might want to add an explanation on what qualifies and what all this really means, or what we're looking for.)
  • Well Written - The writing is grammatically correct and clear; it communicates what it's trying to say.
  • Generally Awesome - This is a joke criteria, hence it is very serious.

User Page Criteria

This is really sparse. I completely removed the NPOV criteria here because it makes no sense: there aren't any sides to take, nor even necessarily any facts, arguments, nor information to balance. I also removed Complete. What's a complete userpage, and why would it need to be completed? I'm not sure what we're looking for here.

  • Presentation - The user page should have an interesting and original page design brought about by the code and any images. Writing style and content can also satisfy the criteria. Userpages that have content consistent with guides or wiki rantings still need to be accurate and complete, similar to the Article Criteria.
    (If we do keep with this criteria, we might want to add an explanation on what qualifies and what all this really means, or what we're looking for.)
  • Well Written - The writing is grammatically correct and clear; it communicates what it's trying to say.
  • Generally Awesome - This is a joke criteria, hence it is very serious.

What do you plural think? --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 01:22, 12 August 2012 (BST)

I think this is a great start. I think "Presentation" makes the most sense as being related to page design - for example, are there relevant images present (if applicable)? Is the text in giant unreadable blocks, or is it well-organized? Just some ideas. Regarding interest, I feel like that is kind of what "Generally Awesome" is going for, and is kind of the point of featured articles - would they be of interest & informative to those visiting the front page? I definitely want to hear more opinions. Bob Moncrief EBDW! 02:49, 12 August 2012 (BST)
Why not use the 5 criteria for all submissions with a caveat that NPOV may not always be possible? --RossWHO????ness 11:20, 12 August 2012 (BST)
I thought of that, but then it seemed that between the FA categories more needed to be different than just the NPOV (such as "Presentation" and removing "Complete" from group and user pages). --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 00:35, 13 August 2012 (BST)

Updated. --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 00:35, 13 August 2012 (BST)

Bump. Did we get bored of this already? --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 15:55, 16 August 2012 (BST)
I like to imagine it means we've reached the pinnacle of perfection. Bob Moncrief EBDW! 18:28, 16 August 2012 (BST)
Okay. That's good. Was there a low-point of perfection? Tongue :P --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 20:09, 16 August 2012 (BST)
Are you suggesting userpages or userspace subpages? I don't think we should feature userpages. Otherwise, I think you should just go forward with it, with or without added category criteria. Added criteria slightly complicates things but its not really a big deal. We need to finish prepping new submissions for voting and figure out a new method of rotating them to keep this from stalling further. ~Vsig.png 20:33, 16 August 2012 (UTC)
Either the main userpage or any of its subpages. It's just a matter of the content. (And what makes the content qualify for being featured is the difficult thing to determine. I'm not thinking about featuring merely a pretty userpage—I'm not sure what other people are thinking qualifies featured userpages.) I thought that if we're really going to go with featured non-articles, the criteria for articles doesn't make sense for the non-articles. So despite complicating things a little, the criteria would need to be altered so as to make sense. --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 20:54, 16 August 2012 (BST)
Personally, I'd prefer that any userspace pages that are linked from here be at a page with a dedicated name. So, for instance, if someone had something really awesome at User:ExampleUser/Sandbox/Demo7, that wouldn't qualify, simply because we have reasonable expectation to believe that it could change in the future. In contrast, if it were at User:ExampleUser/Analyzing_Urban_Dead's_History, we could expect it to stay in place and largely stay as it is. For that reason, I don't think that userpages should be linked, since there's plenty of reason to believe that they will change in the future. In the case of AHLG's userpage, which is the sort of thing that I think should be included, I'd probably suggest that he make a clone version of it in his userspace that can be linked from here (maybe transfer all of the userpage's content to the clone page, then include the clone page on his userpage?), that way he's free to alter his userpage later if he wants to, without us having to worry about it. Aichon 21:44, 16 August 2012 (BST)
I agree. I don't think I'd be comfortable with featuring a user's main page directly, only subpages. I might be cool with an exception for your game, Gnome, since I think it's been demonstrated that that's not likely to go anywhere soon. And if you did decide to move it to a different location after it was voted as FA, it wouldn't be trouble to have the FA follow the content to the new destination, right? Bob Moncrief EBDW! 01:55, 17 August 2012 (BST)
Okay, we can go with a dedicated page (or, just offering as an alternative, a history revision... though that would be awkward). We could always add a clause that states that a userpage can become unfeatured if it's changed substantially in the sense that we wouldn't qualify it to be a featured userpage; if the userpage would go through the process again, whatever is the current version still needs to "make it". In the case of my game, there's 1800+ unique pages, so I neither want to transfer any of them anywhere, nor are they going to be used for any other purpose than the one they have now. I can add a page that would be linked acting as an intro and start page, say, with the name: User:A Helpful Little Gnome/Startpage. --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 02:53, 17 August 2012 (BST)
A start page is exactly the sort of thing I meant, not that you should up and move everything, since that would be ludicrous. Sorry if I was unclear. Aichon 03:10, 17 August 2012 (BST)
Oh, ok. Good. Happy I'll get to that soon. --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 03:16, 17 August 2012 (BST)

Added a part to Presentation on the userpage criteria about article-like content. If we're going to include things like this, then accuracy should be a concern in the same way that it's a concern for Article Criteria. --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 02:53, 17 August 2012 (BST)

Question: So like for subpages under group space, would those also have to have a NPOV section (seems redundant)? For example, I will probably submit the MHS under a group page category, which does have a an about page, but not a strictly NPOV page. Adding a strictly NPOV page would be soul crushing. Soul crushing.-MHSstaff 03:30, 17 August 2012 (BST)
Just the main group page needs it. The point of the NPOV lead is just to give some basic information about who the group is. --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 05:21, 17 August 2012 (BST)

I'm going to put the changes up (with the additions discussed here and in my head) but we need a better name than UDWiki:Featured Articles/Voting, since it's not a vote. Suggestions? How about UDWiki:Featured Articles/Candidates? --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 15:52, 20 August 2012 (BST)

Works for me. Over the next day or so I'll finish proofing the last couple of articles I'm submitting and then mass-submit them sometime tomorrow. Bob Moncrief EBDW! 18:20, 20 August 2012 (BST)

Looks good. Have a link to an example submission and I think you are golden.-MHSstaff 20:05, 21 August 2012 (BST)

Should there be an example for each of the 3 FA criteria categories, or one general one? --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 20:21, 21 August 2012 (BST)
It's tough, as we are expanding and we don't have that many examples. I could write a short page explaining why some pages have succeeded or failed in the past, to give a background if you wish? --RossWHO????ness 20:25, 21 August 2012 (BST)
I would just give an example that basically gets across the following: 1) What the formatting should look like for a candidate submission and 2) what the formatting should look like for the discussion/evaluation.-MHSstaff 20:31, 21 August 2012 (BST)
Okay, I'll stick up a formatting example. Content examples could be on another page, maybe one or more for each FA category. --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 20:38, 21 August 2012 (BST)
Should there be a link/notification from the main page when a new candidate is submitted?-MHSstaff 21:35, 21 August 2012 (BST)
Possibly. There should be at least for the big batch of candidates we have waiting to submit. Depends on what others think. --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 21:40, 21 August 2012 (BST)
I think new submissions should definitely be part of the Wiki News template, at least for the seven days allotted. For the big batch, though, we only need one message there, not two dozen. Bob Moncrief EBDW! 21:44, 21 August 2012 (BST)
agreed. --RossWHO????ness 21:49, 21 August 2012 (BST)
^^^^^ This.-MHSstaff 21:50, 21 August 2012 (BST)

"Major Issue"

Question: What exactly is a "major issue?" Who decides that? -MHSstaff 00:22, 23 August 2012 (BST)

Me, I have a ruler. --Karekmaps 2.0?! 04:52, 23 August 2012 (BST)
Very interesting question! I was hoping someone was going to ask. I don't think anyone really brought it up last time, surprisingly.
  • Here's the quick, pragmatic answer, which doesn't directly answer your question: We had the same system used for determining Good Articles, and although people didn't quite understand what system was in place (it apparently wasn't clear), decisions were still straightforward and there was no great fuss. Basically, whatever the answer to "What is a major concern?", we already know it works in the sense there wasn't a great cafuffle or disagreement (and instinctively, looking through the articles submitted, the ones that were unsuccessful should really be unsuccessful, the ones successful being successful).
  • For the longer version, I can't give a general rule or definition that isn't either too narrow or too broad, or which must rely already on some preconceived notion of what a "major concern" is. I can't apply a meaning to the concept that would precisely encompass any particular of "major concern" without simultaneously admitting something that doesn't seem to follow "major concern."
  • Basically we're going to rely on a vague impression of what "major concern" is. There could also be a formal definition along with the impression. In the case of the content present on FA/C, there isn't actually a definition because no one has requested one (leaving only the impression: major + concern + context = meaning).
  • I think it's unnecessary and pointless to try to define what is meant by "major concern", since I assume people will quibble over it more (they have more to quibble over) and if that doesn't happen, they're comfortable with the term. But if someone wants a definition, here it is: A major concern is a problem raised that significantly interferes with the purpose of an article. For example, an article relying heavily on statistics to prove its conclusion uses incorrect data or numbers.
  • People already have an impression of what a major issue is given what the words mean and the context (the UDWiki, FA evaluations). I mean that people will intuitively point out what a major concern is, one indicating that the submission is not good enough to be featured.
  • Proof: Try to point out what a major issue is in article that appears to have one. Isn't it greater than a minor one, like a single spelling error? Wasn't it terribly concerning? You called something a major concern. But what was its definition?
  • Why's an impression valid at all (or a vague definition)? I can't give a really satisfying reason here except to use a bunch of analogies, or prove inductively that we don't need to precisely know what we're talking about (what terms mean) in order to appropriately use what we're talking about.
  • Analogy 1: What's a drug? In pharmacology, which places a great emphasis on drugs, you'd imagine they've defined what a drug is precisely. It's not precise. Here's one definition of a drug, from Wikipedia: A drug, broadly speaking, is any substance that, when absorbed into the body of a living organism, alters normal bodily function. That's really vague. A banana could fall under that definition; it alters normal bodily function, greatly if you eat dozens in a day. Is a banana a drug? It doesn't sound like one. We have an impression of what a banana is and what a drug is. Despite a banana seemingly fitting the definition of drugs, we won't call it a drug.
  • Yet apparently we go around and call things drug, despite what seems to be a terrible definition. Apparently we satisfied by what's called a drug and what isn't. It seems to be that precision isn't necessary. (From what I've been taught, there's a pragmatic definition: A drug is a drug if it's useful to call it a drug. Isn't that a clear definition.)
  • Analogy 2: What's culture? In anthropology, which talks about culture a lot, you'd imagine that knowing what culture is would be a vital thing. Yet from Wikipedia, we have this silly definition: Culture is that which distinguishes life in one group from life in another group, including language, beliefs, morality, norms, customs, institutions, and physical objects, among other qualities. So a lot of things can be fit in here, as long as it's about groups. A larger proportion of people in Sweden have blonde hair compared to in China. Hair is a quality of the group Sweden. Therefore it's part of being Swedish to have blonde hair. That doesn't seem right. That's terrible. Anthropology is impossible.
  • Analogy 3: What's empathy? In psychology, or any colloquial usage, it's obviously important to know what empathy is in order to apply empathy to someone; "He's empathetic" or "She's unempathetic." If we don't know what empathy means, then applying the term "empathy" to someone is meaningless. Looking at Wikipedia, there's a list of definitions (not even just one to poke fun at). I'll take a look at this one, from Carl Rogers: To perceive the internal frame of reference of another with accuracy and with the emotional components and meanings which pertain thereto as if one were the person, but without ever losing the "as if" condition. Thus, it means to sense the hurt or the pleasure of another as he senses it and to perceive the causes thereof as he perceives them, but without ever losing the recognition that it is as if I were hurt or pleased and so forth.
  • I think this is one of the better definitions. Here's my quibble: For a person to be empathetic, do they need to be accurate in their perception of their "internal frame of reference" and their emotions and the meaning of their emotions? Or do they only need to try? How do I know that my approximation in my mind of what is going in your mind emotionally is accurate? Certainly I can't get in your head and experience you as you to confirm the approximation. I don't know if I've picked up your emotional communication and interpreted it as if they were your feelings. Anyways.
  • Extra Analogy for homework: Define chair.
  • We don't in fact actually need the term at all in some cases. For example, most english-speaking people don't know what a verb is (probably). If it's true that we need to precisely know the terms we're using in order to use them, or whatever relies on them, then whomever doesn't know what a verb is can't speak english in complete sentences (you need verbs to form a complete sentence). This clearly isn't true; you don't need to know the meaning and names for the grammatical structure of english so as to use english.
  • Of course for our uses here, it's sensible to point out that a major concern needs to be raised, rather than saying "If the submission doesn't appear to be going well, that means it's rejected." Vague on top of vague.
  • Concluding this, precision in definitions is neither necessary nor possible (at least in these examples, and probably impossible—it's typically hard to prove a negation). We can rely on our impression of a term following the words in the term and how the term is defined, if it is defined. I think for the very small and simple purposes, for Featured Articles in the Urban Dead wiki, we don't need to go nuts with explaining the meaning of "major concern."
Your next question.
  • Who decides what's a major issue? Anyone. Whoever closes a submission can understand the conclusion of a discussion: whether any major concerns were raised and how they were addressed—the concern was refuted, or the article was corrected, or the concern couldn't be addressed. Then the closer passes or fails it. We very rarely will disagree on what a major concern is; people will generally agree on what a major concern is. Proof: UDWiki:Featured Articles/Good Articles/Archive. Because a large emphasis is placed on the opposing group (only an unaddressed major concern is needed to fail a submission; a major praise won't cause the article to pass without the absence of an unaddressed major concern), candidates can't be shunted through with poor for arguments... if someone took the time to give a good against. (So I'm assuming it's to pass a candidate that should be failed than to fail a candidate that should pass.)
  • So we're good on this point. If you were wondering who can close a submission—anyone. Who can judge the conclusion of the submission—it's easy enough to understand.
Signed, the Gnome. --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 06:12, 23 August 2012 (BST)
Whew! Ok, I have a few responses.
  • As with many things that are wiki-related, deciding what is a “major issue” is something that shouldn’t work in theory, but does in practice, as evidenced by the Good Articles archive.
  • I’m joining Bananaholics Anonymous.
  • That definition of culture on Wikipedia is actually based in a late-19th century anthropological view of what culture is. A more modern definition is “the system of beliefs and activities which is passed from generation to generation among a social group, yet is not genetic and is not universal among all humans.” So hair, as genetic, is not part of culture, but the meanings and practices attributed to hair (anything from the use of braiding to the idea of blondes as being ditzy) is part of culture.
    • Also, the fact that we’re all operating in English is kind of a fluke of history, and isn’t useful (as the wiki isn’t useful) to most of the people on the planet. So all of these “definitions” are already heavily contingent on our linguistic context, which means any definition we come up with will automatically be non-universal. But we operate ignoring that for convenience.
      • If you haven’t figured it out by now, I’m getting a degree in linguistic anthropology at the moment.
  • All that said, I do think it’s possible to roughly define the line between “major” and “minor” issue. In my view, a “minor issue” is one (like spelling errors, etc.) which can (and should) be corrected during the course of discussion. A “major issue” would require more extensive work beyond the time frame (a week or two) of candidacy, at which point it could probably be re-submitted.
Also, this made my day. Bob Moncrief EBDW! 17:53, 23 August 2012 (BST)
Neat! That sounds like a better definition. I haven't gone too deep into Anthropology in university, so all I really know about culture is that it's a difficult definition. For issues or concerns being major or minor, the assumption is that minor ones would be something fixed easily and quickly, the major ones taking more effort. Major or minor, the problem(s) raised needs to be addressed for the page or whatever to become featured; that's the requirement (or I suppose you could also turn that into a definition). --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 19:33, 23 August 2012 (BST)

I am not reading any of that in detail. I skimmed though, and what I got out of it is that AHLG is apparently putting on an ARG in support of his main game...I think. If so, I think I need to say "I love bees" or something. Aichon 18:03, 23 August 2012 (BST)

(Is it) Alternate reality game? How could you know? --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 19:33, 23 August 2012 (BST)
Yep, that's what it stands for. As for your second question, because "the bonnet floats gently on the cerulean blue sea". Or if that's the wrong one...umm...try lat 30.622814, long -96.308785 between 6-10pm local time. Aichon 20:27, 23 August 2012 (BST)

Major Candidates Submission Comments

Ok, so I just wanted to say a few things about the (I believe about fifty) articles I just nominated. First of all, I definitely do not expect all of these to be accepted by the community, but my intent is partially to have us figure out what does and does not qualify as Featured Article-worthy. I understand that it's a lot, but most of them are articles that are pretty familiar to us all and so should be easy to figure out.

Also, there are a few categories of articles I didn't nominate. Foremost among these is articles for the various suburbs. This is because most of them are kind of poorly formatted, and I'm not sure if any would qualify for Featuring. If there are any, please submit them! The other category is groups, since I'm not sure we've worked out 100% how much NPOV there needs to be on a group page for it to be featured.

Finally, a note on the order of the items I've submitted: At the top are the articles that were Good Articles before that status was nixed; next are articles others have suggested on the FA talk page (either this page or the archive); and finally, in alphabetical order, other articles I've been working on proofreading over the past couple of months.

Thanks so much, and happy commenting! Bob Moncrief EBDW! 21:03, 23 August 2012 (BST)

Also, a question: is there an FA equivalent to Template:GoodArticleNom that can be put on the nominees' pages, or should I make one? Bob Moncrief EBDW! 21:10, 23 August 2012 (BST)

I don't think we have one. I think we should, and add it to the top of articles being submitted, maybe groups, and probably not user pages (instead use a talk page message like you did). --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 21:31, 23 August 2012 (BST)
I've created one and placed it on the appropriate pages (and requested an edit to add it to the one protected nominee.) Bob Moncrief EBDW! 22:03, 23 August 2012 (BST)

End condition

So, since this isn't a vote any more, we need to talk about how this all ends. I'm thinking that someone should go through and simply identify the ones that clearly have support as FAs and do not have recommended changes, then should go ahead and bump them up to FA status already, that way we can start clearing the page. Similarly, the ones that clearly have reasons why they will never be in should also be cleared out. For the rest, if the suggestions are minimal, a quick summary of what needs to be changed or addressed should be made. If they're more substantial, remove them for now until those changes are made. What do you guys think? Aichon 03:29, 27 August 2012 (BST)

Yup. Clear out the obvious Yes or No submissions. Leave the rest sitting for the moment. So many headers. --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 03:31, 27 August 2012 (BST)
According to the info at the top of the page, the items need to be up for at minimum seven days. Since I submitted all my articles on the 23rd, that means we should wait until the 30th to move any along. But other than that, 100% agreement. Bob Moncrief EBDW! 04:48, 27 August 2012 (BST)

Ok, Ross & I've moved most of the candidates into the appropriate portions of the archive. I've "officially extended" most of the remaining ones, in the hopes more discussion or a clearer consensus will emerge. I'm planning on writing up the Featured Article mini-paragraphs sometime tonight. Bob Moncrief EBDW! 22:54, 2 September 2012 (BST)

Things so far

How are we feeling with the commenting and decision making? There's a redlink leading to examples (under the example header). Ross mentioned he wanted to make examples, to show why things succeeded or didn't. Do we want to bother with examples? --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 23:47, 6 September 2012 (BST)

Okay! Happy --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 04:38, 12 September 2012 (BST)
Lol sorry for not replying to this. I've been crazy busy with school the past couple weeks so I've kinda fallen down on the job. I don't really think we need examples, except for formatting (which we already have). If people want examples of why things succeeded or didn't, they can look in the archive. Bob Moncrief EBDW! 04:44, 12 September 2012 (BST)
I'm posting here to draw more attention. Also, I liked how things were going and agree with Bob, especially so since the examples would be living articles that could change later and meet the qualifications. Aichon 04:45, 12 September 2012 (BST)
Cycle some candidates already. Grr! Argh! *shaking fist* When I fall, I'll weep for happiness 04:46, 12 September 2012 (BST)
A few have. They should be added to FA soon. I don't know if we want to care about ordering, and I'm not sure how we're deciding to cycle them. --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 22:33, 13 September 2012 (BST)
I'm going to take this opportunity to bring back up the fact that I'm planning on reorganizing the FA page so articles are grouped into groupings like "Events", "Classes" etc. I would encourage rotation to be based on not having two things in the same group be sequential. Bob Moncrief EBDW! 22:58, 13 September 2012 (BST)
Sure. Categorizing seems to make sense. --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 23:29, 13 September 2012 (BST)
Semi automatic cycling seems like the best option to me. See above discussion. ~Vsig.png 18:37, 15 September 2012 (UTC)
Right. Not that I really matter here, since I'm too lazy cycle anything ever again. --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 18:57, 15 September 2012 (BST)

Featured Images

Should we work them in somehow? The big wiki does it. I have a few in mind. ~Vsig.png 18:41, 15 September 2012 (UTC)

Sure. We'll need to figure out how to work the FA section on the main page to incorporate that (and in my opinion expand the one on the needs-to-be-updated Community Portal). There'd probably be too much space taken up with an FA article and FA image at once on the main page. --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 18:57, 15 September 2012 (BST)
It could just be its own entity, without them being cycled into FAs. Create Category:Featured Images, instate polling on the talk page. Worthy images get the category. Maybe put a "see also" on the included part of UDWiki:Featured Articles and something on Community Portal. Perhaps figure out a cycling method if we want to cycle them somewhere other than the main page. ~Vsig.png 19:04, 15 September 2012 (UTC)
Okay. Sorta like Featured Guides. --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 19:08, 15 September 2012 (BST)s
Yeah, except without all that improvement suggestions stuff. Because, how can you improve on an image. It either passes or it doesn't. Say 2/3 majority. ~Vsig.png 19:20, 15 September 2012 (UTC)
I'd be in favor of adding a Featured Images category. Would voting occur at UDWiki:Featured Articles/Candidates or on a different page? Bob Moncrief EBDW! 23:23, 15 September 2012 (BST)
Given that all of the featured images on the big wiki have to be free as a matter of qualification, we can crib any of theirs at will. When I fall, I'll weep for happiness 00:22, 16 September 2012 (BST)
Voting would probably just take place on Category talk:Featured Images. The criteria would be vastly different than articles so it makes sense to keep it seperate. Mis, can you clarify "free"? ~Vsig.png 01:35, 16 September 2012 (UTC)
You know how we pretend that all the copyrighted images we use are used under some stretched definition of fair use? Wikipedia's Featured Pictures must either be public domain or released under a creative commons license so they're entirely copyleft. When I fall, I'll weep for happiness 01:42, 16 September 2012 (BST)
That's kind of what I thought you meant. It isn't a bad idea to disallow copyright images from being featured here I think. I know that excludes a boatload, but a lot of the unique imagery that we'd like featured is user created. Obviously the Umbrella Corps and Ron Burgandys and Sears Autos and Pacmans won't be public domain,.though. ~Vsig.png 03:07, 16 September 2012 (UTC)
You'd be surprised. Pacman probably fails the threshold of originality (though not the painted version I like so much. It's definitely not free) while I'd be surprised if Flickr didn't contain any free photos of Will Ferrel on set for the new Anchorman film. Shit's out there. Definitely don't feature any non-free material though. When I fall, I'll weep for happiness 03:32, 16 September 2012 (BST)

The Archive is getting long...

Should I split the candidates archive into separate articles? (It's 50k long right now.) And if so, should they be split by date (month?) or by successful/unsuccessful? Bob Moncrief EBDW! 00:28, 16 September 2012 (BST)

Obviously successful/unsuccessful would be the best start as it's standard here (A/RE, A/PM, Historical); if it's still an issue beyond that then whatever seems manageable. When I fall, I'll weep for happiness 00:30, 16 September 2012 (BST)
I've split off successful and unsuccessful. Once the current big batch is (finally) through eval, I may split up the unsuccessful archive further, probably by date of initial submission. Bob Moncrief EBDW! 15:25, 18 September 2012 (BST)
Hmm. The big wiki tends to archive by the date things are cycled, might be worth considering here. When I fall, I'll weep for happiness 15:27, 18 September 2012 (BST)
I've added archiving tags (to indicate the time, date & archiver whenever a verdict is reached). Based on those, I'll split up the unsuccessful archive (which is already at 60k) in a little bit. (Right now I'm being kicked out of the library where I'm working because it closes at 1 am.) Bob Moncrief EBDW! 05:51, 26 September 2012 (BST)

More Things Happening

So I've taken the liberty of reorganizing the Featured Articles listing and doing some proofreading & formatting unification. A couple comments:

  • Do we like the organizational paradigm I've come up with, or are there suggestions for other labels/patterns?
  • Is there a better image out there for Spawning? The one in use right now is just a bunch of quotes and looks kind of ridiculous as an FA-accompanying image. There's nothing better on the page itself at the moment.
  • I've put up three of the old FAs for review, the ones I felt were most egregious and probably wouldn't pass if they were nominees now. Please comment on them and nominate others if there are ones that you feel no longer meet our standards.
  • I'm going to add all of the things which have passed nomination since September either later tonight or tomorrow.

Thanks so much everyone! Bob Moncrief EBDW! 03:03, 30 October 2012 (UTC)

Okay! If I can't think of an image other than the Gnome one I stole from Wikipedia, or a slight alteration of the little blurb, then that's good. --  AHLGTG THE END IS NIGH! 01:38, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
Just finished adding the blurbs & images for the ones which have passed muster. Feel free to comment/edit/etc. anything I've done. Bob Moncrief EBDW! 01:42, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
The Play Style image looks kinda weird, I think. Maybe it would look better with small versions of all three side-by-side. I'll 'Shop something tomorrow and put it up. ~Vsig.png 01:53, 31 October 2012 (UTC)

Cycling System

So right now there are 36 featured articles (37 if you count TRP, which is likely to pass), which doesn't match up with any of our magic numbers: if I'm not mistaken, those are 7, 12, 24, 31 and 53. In that case, what do we want to do about cycling the articles? (See also part of the big discussion above.) Bob Moncrief EBDW! 01:49, 31 October 2012 (UTC)

I've got a couple of ideas. I'll throw something together tonight after I finish pumpkin decorating with the kids. ~Vsig.png 02:04, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
Here is what I would do:
  1. Manually update them.
  2. Or Generate a custom template for X number of articles (i.e. FASwitch40 is designed for 40 articles, FASwitch37 for 37). Use currentday and currentmonth as inputs to a switch with 365 cases. You then repeat 1:X until you have 365 entries. You then have a master switch where you enter the number of articles you have, and that switch chooses the right custom template with the correct pseudo RNG sequence. A computer program could probably generate the wiki code for the FASwitchXX templates pretty easily.
  3. Or Force the number of articles to match a magic word. So you always have 31 or 53 or whatever.
  4. Or Have a dummy article or something for the cases in which you are missing. -MHSstaff 02:06, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
Here is what I did. User:Vapor/sandbox/Featured Articles. The includeonly part of that page has a switch template embedded in a switch template. The first one uses the CURRENTWEEK magic word (that gives us 53 variables) and each article is numbered 1 through 36 (currently. more on that in a bit). After the last article, it goes to the default, which in this case is another switch template. That one also uses CURRENTWEEK, but it picks up where the last article number leaves off. I picked every third article for the second embedded switch, and then every 7th. So currently, 1-36, then 3,6,9,15,18,21,24,27,30,33,36 and then 7,14,20(instead of 21 again),28, and 35.
So we've got a page that updates every week and which is expandable to up to 53 articles and which has a [retty good distribution of repeats. Hopefully that all makes sense. ~Vsig.png 03:08, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
Oh, I forgot, here is what it looks like when included: User:Vapor/sandbox/Featured Articles/Test. ~Vsig.png 03:10, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
Someone make this man a sysop. -MHSstaff 03:15, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
Sweet! And seconded MHS. I think you both deserve it. Bob Moncrief EBDW! 04:08, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
This is the version I wrote. It updates daily. To add a new article, you just make a new case in the FAMasterList (shamelessly stolen from Vapor's page) with your blurb text and image, and then update the template call (in our example, change 37 to 38). The template than calls the right pseudoRNG list. We would have to pregenerate the lists though. Which is easy with a computer. -MHSstaff 03:49, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
I think I understand what that means, but what do you mean by "pregenerate the lists" - are they lists of 365 numbers for each case, between (say) 35 and 50? Or do I have no clue what I'm doing? (Probably the latter.) Bob Moncrief EBDW! 04:08, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
We would have to make templates like this and like this for the number of articles we think potentially we could use. I pregenerated the wiki code text files from like 30 something to like totally 60 I think. It's just a matter of cutting and pasting.-MHSstaff 04:16, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
I do like myself RNGs (praise Randdo). How random is it? If it selects a random FA each day that would probably be preferable. The system I whipped up last night goes chronologicaly. I didn't attempt to reorder the FAs but we'll probably want to do that if we pick that system, unless we want weeks of FAs in same category back-to-back. ~Vsig.png 14:07, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
It is random in the sense that the order was randomly generated; it is not really random since you could just look at the code to see what number comes next. Also, right now only the first X numbers are randomly generated (X=number of articles) and then the sequence repeats itself up to 365 days. But it would be pretty simple to make an entire year's worth of random numbers with a balanced distribution. You could also pregenerate it for years in the future but the template would be longer. -MHSstaff 17:08, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
The bottom two use an out-to-2020 version. For years past that, it defaults to the 2012 list, at which point, the three people actually still playing UD can do whatever they want. This is what the switch code looks like.-MHSstaff 19:21, 31 October 2012 (UTC)

So both these proposals seem equally functional (although MHS's may be slightly more balanced), so the main difference to me seems to be whether the FA rotates daily or weekly. I've seen both on various wikis (and either is far better than the "rotates whenever-someone-feels-like-it" we have here) so I think this is a good place for people to voice their preferences. Bob Moncrief EBDW! 04:10, 31 October 2012 (UTC)

Both have their pros and cons. The really nice thing about the weekly one is that an article is featured for an entire week so it gets a lot of exposure. The bad thing is that we have around 30-40 articles so only some can be featured again. The nice thing about a daily one is that you see articles more frequently and it is not that a big deal if an article is repeated 8 times instead of let's say 9 times. The bad thing is that a given article is only featured for that day. -MHSstaff 17:39, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
A question: In either system, would it be possible to retain and automatize the "Current Featured Article"/"Previous Featured Article" system on the FAs page? Bob Moncrief EBDW! 20:03, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
Yes. You could use a similar system as the weather templates where those know the weather data for days in advance of the current date. You would just go in the opposite direction for this.-MHSstaff 20:21, 31 October 2012 (UTC)

I'm trying to think of if there's a better system that might be better able to handle the addition and removal of FAs with minimal or no edits necessary. In the meantime though, I thought I'd point out that I just discovered an unlisted magic word. If you type in {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Featured Articles}} you'll get 40. That may prove useful for automating some things. Or not. Remains to be seen. Aichon 20:29, 31 October 2012 (UTC)

That would work if we moved Category:Featured Article Nominees out of the category, since it seems to be being counted as a page. Bob Moncrief EBDW! 20:49, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
That could be used to automate which switchtemplate is called. You would still have to manually add the blurb/image case to the master list though. -MHSstaff 20:56, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
Yeah, I was contemplating the possibility of doing something like {{MasterFASwitch{{PAGESINCATEGORY:Featured Articles}}}} to get it to use a different template depending on the count, and you could populate the variables for those templates from a master list of all the articles. As for the blurbs, what about using my earlier idea of simply putting them in an includeonly on the actual pages? Not only would they be in the most sane place for them to be, but it would also cut down on the amount of code you'd need in the switch statement, making it MUCH easier to maintain. At that point, the only thing you'd need to do is add the page names to the master list, and then you'd be done. Of course, there's still the open question of what is the best way to cycle through the articles, and I'm still working on ideas for that. I have nothing great at the moment. Aichon 21:15, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
So basically you have one switch which is the master list of the article names as cases, some RNG method that gives a number to the master list to pull the right article name, and then the actual FA template pulls the blurb information and image name from the include-only section of a given article, using the article name given by the master list switch? -MHSstaff 21:23, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
Pretty much. The number of the pages in the category would either need to be passed into the RNG as a variable that would set a max value, or else would need to be hard-coded into the RNG, in which case we'd have to make dozens of RNGs, one for each number in a reasonable range. I'm guessing the second approach might be better, but I still want to figure out a better way of timing when articles appear before I try to think about the RNG too much. Aichon 21:49, 31 October 2012 (UTC)
Nice find, Aichon! I wonder when that was added. We shoul updat Help:Magic Words. ~Vsig.png 17:16, 1 November 2012 (UTC)
Ok, here is a daily sorta RNG-like for the current article (Type=1) and the previous article (Type=2). I don't think it is worth randomizing every year. We just want a semi-balanced distribution through a given year. -MHSstaff 19:13, 1 November 2012 (UTC)
While that works (Feb 29th excluded), I'm hoping there's a more elegant solution that might only take a few dozen lines, though it may need to make use of some intermediate templates. Aichon 19:52, 1 November 2012 (UTC)
Same here. In an ideal world. you would have something that randomly selects an article name from a given category. Not sure what that is though. On leap days, this one will default to the first article. -MHSstaff 19:56, 1 November 2012 (UTC)
Ah, right, I forgot to check the default. If we did go with that, we'd need to make versions of that for a decently wide range of numbers, that way we could accommodate future additions/removals from the FA pool. Anyway, I'll give the RNG ideas some more thought over the coming days. I'm starting to think that something resembling a recursive algorithm might be a good idea (it wouldn't actually be recursive, since recursion isn't possible with templates (which is a VERY good thing)). Aichon 20:14, 1 November 2012 (UTC)
I'm going to hold off mass-generating (or copy/pasting them since they are already made) to see if a better RNG system can be made. I have no idea what you just said, but it sounds pretty hot. -MHSstaff 18:13, 2 November 2012 (UTC)
And this is what the master list would look like? I am not sure what the includeonly part in the FAs themselves would look like so I'll let someone else take a stab at that. -MHSstaff 19:45, 1 November 2012 (UTC)

Bump. Do we go with one of the above methods? I tried to figure out a pRNG we could use but didn't get far. Then I got distracted. Let's get this over with since its been a topic of discussion for so long (long before the FA overhaul). ~Vsig.png 16:45, 11 November 2012 (UTC)

So after some more thought about this over coffee, I think I've come of a pRNG system we could use. It will take a bit of work, but will give us a random FA each day of the year and which will handle additions to and subtractions from the numner of FAs. It can also be used for other projects eventually. I'll work on it tonight. ~Vsig.png 18:13, 11 November 2012 (UTC)
Ok so what I came up with is {{DailyRNG}}. It outputs a different number from 1-1000 each day of the year. But it also has a variable called "count", which can be used to cap the higher number. So if you set the count to 35, then it will output a different number from 1-35 each day of the year. The numbers were generated win Excel using the RAND function.
This template can be used with the PAGESINCATEGORY magic word to effectively give us a unique number each day of the year based on the number of Featured Articles in the Featured Articles category. Here is a demonstration:
  • {{DailyRNG}} = 700
  • {{DailyRNG|count=33}} = 4
  • {{DailyRNG|count={{PAGESINCATEGORY:Featured Articles|pages}}}} = 15
  • [[UDWiki:Featured Articles/FA{{DailyRNG|count={{PAGESINCATEGORY:Featured Articles|pages}}}}]] = UDWikiFeatured Articles/FA15
If each FA had it's own page, we could let the DailyRNG template decide which FA to transclude each day. The only limitation so far is that the count variable is limited to a number between 33 and 43, but that's only because the variable relies on a series of other templates (i.e. {{DailyRNG/33}} to {{DailyRNG/43}}. These can be created fairly simply with a little help from Excel. I'll probably end up doing several more of these (probably 2-150 or so) as I get time. How is that for a solution? ~Vsig.png 23:11, 11 November 2012 (UTC)
So, it's basically the system that we proposed above, but fleshed out a bit further? Looks good, except that I don't quite see the need to use the day of the week in DailyRNG, since that just makes it 7 times larger (166Kb instead of about 24Kb) and doesn't seem to add anything, other than allowing it to be randomized for seven years at a time. For the individual ones (e.g. DailyRNG/33), I can see the use for it, but I'd suggest breaking those out into 7 separate templates instead of keeping them in one, then set up the DailyRNG/33 as a simple switch that calls those templates based on the day of the week. Doing so should significantly lighten the amount of data that needs to be loaded, especially when you're dealing with larger numbers. Aichon 04:00, 12 November 2012 (UTC)
Yeah, I see that it was proposed in a different format above. We could eliminate day of week but doing so would limit the number of possible random numbers from 1000 to 366 and it would repeat every year instead of every 7 (not that I think that either of those things is a huge deal, at least not for this project). Data load isn't that big of a problem. When a switch template is used, only the matching case is loaded in the browser and it's the same with If templates. So, if we need something that's intended only for this project, a 7 times shorter version should do. I don't mind continuing doing the longer ones, but I'll wait on doing more of them until we get some consensus on it. ~Vsig.png 04:26, 12 November 2012 (UTC)
Regarding a switch only loading the relevant templates, that's exactly what I was getting at with my suggestion to break it up. ;) Sorry, I could've been clearer. Also, I kinda realized that halfway through my comment and didn't go back to reconsider what I said at the start about the DailyRNG template. I suppose we could easily just break it up into 7 and then do the same there, that way we get all the benefits of 1000 numbers without the load that would currently be incurred with using it as it is now. Aichon 05:13, 12 November 2012 (UTC)

I went ahead and implemented a simple solution for now. Got tired of seeing the same FA up there for over a month. I used {{SimpleFACycle}} for the switch. It cycles every week and should do for now until something more random and elegant can be hammered out. I tried to do something about the Previous Featured Articles by creating {{PREVIOUSWEEK}} and using a variable as the switch criteria but there seems to be some issue with that. Will look closer later but can't seem to figure out why it isn't working as it seems to be coded fine. ~Vsig.png 21:35, 23 November 2012 (UTC)

That looks great! I don't actually know why we need "previous featured article": it's not listed on the front page and all the FAs are listed right below anyway. Also, quick question: if one or both of the current candidates gets a yes, how does a lay-wikier update the switch template to include that? Bob Moncrief EBDW! 00:11, 24 November 2012 (UTC)
We can probably just go ahead and remove previously featured. I think it was there so that people didn't make mistakes when manually cycling them. Adding new articles to the mix should be pretty simple. Just edit Template:SimpleFACycle and type |case: nn=FA Code in the appropriate place just above the "default" (I'll make this more clear with a comment section in the template). Again, this doesn't have to be permanent but it's better than being in limbo where it has currently been for several months. ~Vsig.png 01:08, 24 November 2012 (UTC)
Added some instructions via comments to the template and I've also removed the Recent Featured Articles section. I'll likely add some more instructions to the template to make it clearer how to add new ones. ~Vsig.png 17:29, 24 November 2012 (UTC)
Just added DangerCenter. Can someone check that I did it right? Doesn't seem broken but just want a double-check. Bob Moncrief EBDW! 18:40, 4 December 2012 (UTC)
Yep, looks correct. ~Vsig.png 03:05, 5 December 2012 (UTC)