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We hope you enjoy editing here and being a Wikipedian! Please sign your name on talk pages using three tildes (~~~), or four (~~~~) if you want date stamp; this will automatically produce your name and the date. If you need help, check out Wikipedia:Questions, ask me on my talk page, or place {{helpme}} on your talk page and someone will show up shortly to answer your questions. {{{1}}} Again, welcome! Herostratus 06:45, 17 January 2007 (UTC)Reply

Ladonia

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Hello and thank you Quilbert, Yes, you can see "Nimis" and "Wotan’s tower" in the aerial images available thru the links. Click on the coordinates in the "Ladonia" article, which takes you to the GeoHack page, then the link to "Sweden" and "map". Click on "Flygfoto", and zoom-in. I did not see "Gene" in the aerial imagery but it would not be far away. truthdowser (talk) 13:36, 7 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Proposed merge of isotope tables

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As someone who has maintained Isotope table (complete) and/or Isotope table (divided) in the past, your input is needed. User:Greg L is proposing (and prematurely executing) a merge of the two tables, each about 50k, into one table of over 100k. I am opposing it, and no other editors have commented yet. Please come to Talk:Isotope table (complete) and offer your opinion. Thanks, JWB (talk) 00:27, 20 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Merger

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Quilbert: I see you voted for what is now option #2 on the vote page. What do you think about option #3, which would keep the best of both worlds and would leave only one article? In case other options get added and the numbering gets changed, here is a historical version to show which option I’m talking about. Greg L (my talk) 20:45, 20 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Hi, I didn’t vote for that. You just moved my suggestion away from my vote! With a soft merge, the single venue for maintaining and discussing would be the template containing the data. --Quilbert (talk) 20:57, 20 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
No problem. By the way, if both methods are merged to one article, you could still use my suggestion. --Quilbert (talk) 21:06, 20 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
  • I just don’t know how I managed to do that. Are you sure that the data is stored in a single template and that if it is changed in either of the two articles, the change will appear in both? I once changed a color code for the isotope half-life in one and it didn’t appear in the other. Did I just not wait long enough for the change to propogate or did I fail to refresh or something? Greg L (my talk) 21:09, 20 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
Yes, that is right. Just as I stored the data for elements 0 to 29 in User:Quilbert/IsotoneRows. --Quilbert (talk) 21:14, 20 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

I like what you’ve done at your proposal User:Quilbert/Experiment. Couldn’t your single-template method be implemented in a dual-view page like Isotope table (complete) currently is (which your Experiment page effectively replicates)? By combining both (your single data source, and the single page with both views), it would fix both my objections to the status quo: Having two places to edit data (errors) and having two venues to discuss issues (poor coordination). Greg L (my talk) 21:20, 20 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Yes, of course, that could be done as well. But, as stated above, coordination problems could also be solved by discussing data issues on the template’s discussion page and framework issues on the respective article discussion pages. --Quilbert (talk) 21:29, 20 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
  • Yes, it’s true that discussions can be directed to a single place and one way or another, that should be done. I guess there is a third issue that needs to be addressed: usability and convenience. When I added a link from Kilogram to these articles, I had to choose one article or the other. At the time, I chose “complete” because “divided” was hard to navigate. Of course, as has currently been done, advisos can always be posted within the articles providing a link to the alternative article. My reasoning was as follows: Why have two alternative places to go to? Many readers turn on their brain-filters and skim body text in order to quickly advance to the meat of the article; they don’t notice the availability of an alternative view.

    Then I quickly got frustrated with all the two-axis scrolling required on “complete” so I modified it—as you’ve seen. Now, if the user starts to scroll, they immediately end up in the über scrolling world. If they use the TOC, they end up in a real handy segmented area with the new “ ← Previous |  Next → ” navigation aids and other quick links (like to the periodic table where users can then hit their browser’s “back” arrow when they’re done with the periodic table). In the “segmented” section, users never have horizontal scrolling and have fast navigation to the periodic table and adjacent sections, and also have multiple color legends whereever they are (alll of which JWB copied the crap out of in only one day). With this method, users are immediately aware of the availability of both views and have handy access to both.

    I very much like your single-database template. I’d propose that I add a hybrid option to the discussion page. I would dump my original vote and instead support the hybrid option. Would you be willing to support that new option too? Alternatively, we can keep our original votes and post an additional vote on the alternative option. Greg L (my talk) 21:57, 20 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

209Bismuth

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Quilbert: I stumbled across Table of nuclides, 73-96 and saw that 209Bi is listed as being a “stable” isotope. Its actual half-life, as you probably already know, is 19±2 × 1018 years via alpha decay. I was really close to just fixing this myself but have no idea what dependencies there might be on that cell so I decided to not take it upon myself to alter it.

The shear enormity of isotope data on the various Wikipedia pages boggles the mind. I can look up info on bismuth here at Isotope table (complete)#Isotopes for elements 75-89, and at Isotopes of bismuth (where the data is correct), and at Table of nuclides, 73-96 (where the data is incorrect).

Given that keeping all this data in synch is already a butt-itch*, I’m really rather astonished that there have been advocates who thought it was a good idea to maintain two identical articles (Isotope table (divided) and Isotope table (complete))—each with its own talk page! It seems that until you stepped up to the plate with a big bat, no one was willing to do what it really takes to keep all this data coordinated using a rational approach.

I suppose the thing to do now on Isotope table (complete), is just sit back and let it soak in for a while. Do you agree?

* Butt-itch  n.: That nasty little problem that won’t go away on its own and which can’t easily be tended to in public.

Greg L (my talk) 18:13, 25 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

It seems like the coloring is not yet optimal. Bi-209 is listed as unstable (compare to the stable Pb-208), and the template hasn’t changed since yesterday:
! 126 202Os 203Ir 204Pt 205Au 206Hg 207Tl
208Pb
209Bi 210Po 211At 212Rn 213Fr 214Ra 215Ac
--Quilbert (talk) 19:09, 25 February 2008 (UTC)Reply


  • I was wondering about all that extra repetitive text. It’s now 29,458 bytes. Talk about compact.

    I’m not clear as to which article is supposed to appear like your above example. Is that what Table_of_nuclides,_73-96#Bismuth is supposed to look like? In your above example, I see a color-coded horizontal version of what one sees in a column on “complete”. Here’s what I see when I go to Table_of_nuclides,_73-96#Bismuth:

       | 209Bi |  stable | 9/2- | %Abundance=100     |
       | 210Bi | 5.013 d |  1-  |%β-=100, %α=1.32E-4 |


    As you can see, the 209Bi is listed as stable and there are no colors and it’s just a plain B&W tabular table. It appears that way using Safari, Internet Explorer, and FireFox on a Mac. Greg L (my talk) 20:30, 25 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Oh sorry, you are right. Somehow, I didn’t perceive that you were talking about that article. --Quilbert (talk) 20:35, 25 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
I fixed it now. You can edit those tables, they have no dependencies. By the way, we have to include these articles in our considerations when renaming our article ... Actually, in my opinion, they should be named Isotope lists and our table should be named Table of nuclides. --Quilbert (talk) 20:44, 25 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
  • Perhaps I’m not the best judge of the politics here. But it appears to me that opposition to what we’re doing here has largely collapsed since the advantages of what has been done are many and its disadvantages are non-existent. I would suggest the shortest possible filename for anything that repeats a hundred times in an article. As for the article name—“Table of nuclides”—if you think that is most technically accurate, then I would accede to your judgment. I would hope that you know how to simultaneously 1) handle the move so all the discussion transfer over, and 2) know how to simultaneously handle redirects on searches like “Table of isotopes (complete)”, “Lists of isotopes”, “Isotopes list”, “Table of isotopes”, etc.

    On a separate subject, do you know how to add a colored border to one of the cells in Template:Isotope colour chart? In the introductory text, I’d like to specifically reference that example cell. Greg L (my talk) 21:16, 25 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

You could use this code:

{|class="wikitable"
| {{Iso2|91|Nb|G|I}}
| rowspan=2 | nuclides with nuclear isomers<br/>in different half-life categories
|-
| {{Iso2|94|Nb|Y}}
|}

becoming:

91Nb
nuclides with nuclear isomers
in different half-life categories
94Nb

The moving of the talk pages won’t be a problem. But let’s wait for a while until the discussion is settled before we move the articles around. --Quilbert (talk) 21:52, 25 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Well, I tried this, but…

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I tried placing this in the article but the resulting placement is left-justified. I’m no damned good with these things.

91Nb

Yellow border: Isomer half-life 10–100 days
White border: Isomer half-life <1 day
Lt. green border: Isomer half-life 100 days–10 yrs

94Nb
102Rh

Using this code:

{|class="wikitable"
| {{Iso2|91|Nb|G|I}}
| rowspan=3 | <p style="line-height:180%">Yellow border: Isomer half-life 10–100 days<br/>
White border: Isomer half-life <1 day<br/>Lt. green border: Isomer half-life 100 days–10 yrs</p>
|-
| {{Iso2|94|Nb|Y}}
|-
| {{Iso2|102|Rh|B|B}}
|}

…but it didn’t quite work out like I planned. The line spacing must be managed to get it to line up but if I use the full amount of line spacing to make it really line up well, I end up with this:

91Nb

Yellow border: Isomer half-life 10–100 days
White border: Isomer half-life <1 day
Lt. green border: Isomer half-life 100 days–10 yrs

94Nb
102Rh

You get the idea of what I’m after. Maybe we can try it later as you are frying bigger fish right now. Greg L (my talk) 01:41, 27 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

try this

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I see what you want. I suggesgt this code:

{|align="right" class="wikitable"
| {{Iso2|91|Nb|G|I}}
| Yellow border: Isomer half-life {{Iso/I/text}}
|-
| {{Iso2|94|Nb|Y}}
| White border: Isomer half-life {{Iso/-/text}}
|-
| {{Iso2|102|Rh|B|B}}
| Lt. green border: Isomer half-life {{Iso/B/text}}
|}
91Nb
Yellow border: Isomer half-life 10–100 days
94Nb
White border: Isomer half-life < 1 day
102Rh
Lt. green border: Isomer half-life 100 days – 10 years


--Quilbert (talk) 02:22, 27 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Placement control

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That’s what I’m looking for. Thanks. I’ve taken your code and tried various layouts in a so-far vain effort to obtain a layout that looks good regardless of page width. There’s not a lot of text at top and the page flow makes for weird and ugly looking results in most cases. Is there a way to “join” the two tables so they can’t break?

Novices like me would think that the following code…

{{isotope colour chart|}}{|align="right" class="wikitable"
| {{Iso2|91|Nb|G|I}}
| Yellow border: Isomer half-life {{Iso/I/text}}
|-
| {{Iso2|94|Nb|Y}}
| White border: Isomer half-life {{Iso/-/text}}
|-
| {{Iso2|102|Rh|B|B}}
| Lt. green border: Isomer half-life {{Iso/B/text}}
|}
{{for|an overview of available representations|Table of nuclides}}
The various isotope tables below (scroll down) show the known [[isotope]]s of the [[chemical element]]s.
<ref>The data for these tables came from [[Brookhaven National Laboratory]] which has an interactive
[http://www-nds.iaea.org/nudat2/ Table of Nuclides] with data on ~3000 nuclides.</ref> They are
arranged with increasing [[atomic number]]s ([[proton]] numbers) from left to right and increasing [[neutron]]
numbers from top to bottom.

For convenience, two different views of the data are available here: ''“Segmented tables,”'' and a single 
''“Unitized table (all elements).”'' Choose…

…would put your little three-row table below the colour chart. But here’s what I get:


Half-lives (example: Gd)
145Gd < 1 day
149Gd 1–10 days
146Gd 10–100 days
153Gd 100 days–10 a
148Gd 10–10,000 a
150Gd 10 ka–700 Ma
152Gd > 700 Ma
158Gd Stable

{|align="right" class="wikitable" | style="background:#ffee66;" title="Half-life – Isotope: 10–10,000 years; Nuclear isomer: 10–100 days" |

91Nb

| Yellow border: Isomer half-life 10–100 days |-

| style="background:#ffffff;" title="Half-life – Isotope: 10k–103M years; Nuclear isomer: < 1 day" |

94Nb

| White border: Isomer half-life < 1 day |-

| style="background:#BF7;" title="Half-life – Isotope: 100 days – 10 years; Nuclear isomer: 100 days – 10 years" |

102Rh

| Lt. green border: Isomer half-life 100 days – 10 years |}

The various isotope tables below (scroll down) show the known isotopes of the chemical elements.[1] They are arranged with increasing atomic numbers (proton numbers) from left to right and increasing neutron numbers from top to bottom.

For convenience, two different views of the data are available here: “Segmented tables,” and a single “Unitized table (all elements).” Choose whichever one you need from the table of contents, below. The unitized table allows easy visualizion of proton/neutron-count trends but requires simultaneous horizontal and vertical scrolling. The segmented tables permit easier examination of a particular chemical element with much less scrolling. Links are provided to quickly jump between the different sections.

Note the example color legend shown at right. These legends are provided alongside each table below. Cell color denotes the half-life of each isotope. If you’ve scrolled so a color legend is not in view, allowing your cursor to dwell over a cell will cause a pop-up text box to indicate that isotope’s half-life. If a cell is two-colored, dwelling over it will also disclose the half-life of the most stable nuclear isomer state.



  1. ^ The data for these tables came from Brookhaven National Laboratory which has an interactive Table of Nuclides with data on ~3000 nuclides.

It looks like the colour chart has “administer privileges” that gives it priority to be at the top. So I just moved your new three-row table as far down as I can go. Check out Table of nuclides (combined) to see what I’ve managed so far. I’m not entirely happy with the way the page elements flow but can live with it. I’m hoping you know of a way to keep that three-row table below the top one and nailed against the right edge.

18:14, 28 February 2008 (UTC)

New suggestion

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I have slightly modified the Isotope color chart to allow for extensions. Maybe this is what you’re looking for?

Half-lives (example: Gd)
145Gd < 1 day
149Gd 1–10 days
146Gd 10–100 days
153Gd 100 days–10 a
148Gd 10–10,000 a
150Gd 10 ka–700 Ma
152Gd > 700 Ma
158Gd Stable
{{Isotope colour chart|
PLUS = {{!}}-
{{!}} {{Iso2|91|Nb|G|I}}
{{!}} Yellow border: Isomer half-life {{Iso/I/text}}
{{!}}-
{{!}} {{Iso2|94|Nb|Y}}
{{!}} White border: Isomer half-life {{Iso/-/text}}
{{!}}-
{{!}} {{Iso2|102|Rh|B|B}}
{{!}} Lt. green border: Isomer half-life {{Iso/B/text}}
}}


--Quilbert (talk) 20:04, 28 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

or so:

Half-lives (example: Gd)
145Gd < 1 day
149Gd 1–10 days
146Gd 10–100 days
153Gd 100 days–10 a
148Gd 10–10,000 a
150Gd 10 ka–700 Ma
152Gd > 700 Ma
158Gd Stable
{{Isotope colour chart|
PLUS = {{!}}-
{{!}} {{Iso2|91|Nb|G|I}}
{{!}} rowspan=2 {{!}} Yellow border:<br/>Isomer half-life {{Iso/I/text}}
{{!}}-
{{!}} &nbsp;
{{!}}-
{{!}} {{Iso2|94|Nb|Y}}
{{!}} rowspan=2 {{!}} White border:<br/>Isomer half-life {{Iso/-/text}}
{{!}}-
{{!}} &nbsp;
{{!}}-
{{!}} {{Iso2|102|Rh|B|B}}
{{!}} rowspan=2 {{!}} Lt. green border:<br/>Isomer half-life {{Iso/B/text}}
{{!}}-
{{!}} &nbsp;
}}


--Quilbert (talk) 20:22, 28 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

  • Great. I’ve revised “(combined)” with this. The new legend no longer resembles the actual ones used below and is much wider now. However, I’ve confirmed it works well on 800-pixel monitors. I’ll keep it here for a while and see if I warm up to it. Do you like the new look? We can easily go back to what I had. Sometime, I wish you’d explain how you got so good at templates. Is there a place on Wikipeida to read up on this? If so, I haven't found it yet. Besides, I’d never have the patience to try to learn all the tricks. Thanks so much. Greg L (my talk) 01:10, 29 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

    P.S.: I compacted the isomer text some (no need to name the colors). In a two-step process, I also changed to 198Au, so the border now progresses white, pink, yellow and the resulting “V” text takes up less room. I’ve really warmed up to the new look quite a lot now that it’s more compact. Do you like? Greg L (my talk) 01:47, 29 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Yes, that looks reasonable. Maybe we could even leave out “Border” and “half-life”?
I have been programming for quite some time. That is learning by doing. Once you get to know how computers “think”, such things are learned easily. If you want to learn more, the natural place to go would be Help:Template. --Quilbert (talk) 01:47, 29 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
  • You’re right. None of the other cells had the words “half-life.” I substituted “is.” I left the words “Border” and “Isomer” because we authors get darn familiar with these articles and it’s easy to think that all new readers must do is read a little body text. A picture of a colored border is a huge help for first-time readers; of that, I’m certain and I’m very appreciative you took the time to modify the template to support this feature. It takes imagination, but I try to pretend I’m a new reader visiting the article for the first time (which isn’t hard because I can still remember almost everything that initially confused me). I don’t think I’m unusual in my reading habits and know I’m horrible about skipping over introductory text and going first to pictures, captions, and the ‘meat & potatoes’ of articles. This is a byproduct of the Internet where one can quickly explore a lot of information. If I can get a caption fully self-explanatory and tight, that’s good. If I can get a caption fully self-explanatory and really pithy and tight, that’s great. Greg L (my talk) 02:19, 29 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Category:Isotope tables templates

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Thanks! The templates you made were a good idea too. :) --WoohookittyWoohoo! 10:21, 26 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Re: Table of nuclides

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Hi! I'm not sure why you picked me out, especially as I've been away for a couple days now. :-) Either way, another admin's taken care of it. Happy editing! east.718 at 05:47, February 27, 2008

Hi, thanks, I just picked someone from Recentchanges who obviously had administrator priviledges … It seems you were using a bot then, I didn’t notice that. Regards, --Quilbert (talk) 12:27, 27 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Barnstar

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  The Tireless Contributor Barnstar
For your huge effort on all the “isotope” templates (like Template:Isotones to name just one), which are used in articles such as Table of nuclides (combined), Table of nuclides (complete), Table of nuclides (segmented, narrow) and Table of nuclides (segmented, wide). Template authors are the unsung heros of Wikipedia. Thanks. Greg L (my talk) 02:33, 29 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
Thank you, Greg! --Quilbert (talk) 14:17, 29 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

If ever I've seen someone who deserved a barnstar it would be Quilbert for all his effort to the Isotones article! --Rebroad (talk) 11:18, 5 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

User:142.33.207.9

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Have you received any reply from the school's administration yet? Master of Puppets Call me MoP! :) 17:46, 31 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

Drip lines

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Quilbert, I see here on the table of nuclides that there is a new feature on the nuclides chart. I am referring to the “drip lines”, the heavy gray dashed border in the low-mass area. I want to touch upon this in the introductory part of Table of nuclides (combined) but want to clearly understand it myself. Apparently, the drip-line border represents both the proton drip line and the neutron drip line. In which direction is an element “beyond” these drip lines? Specifically, which isotone, hydrogen-5 or helium-6, leaks protons? Which isotope, carbon-8 or carbon-9, leaks neutrons? Another way I could ask this question is this way: Do most nuclides leak or not leak? I would appreciate it if you responded on my talk page, or, if you respond here, leave me a quick note on my talk page alerting me to your answer. Greg L (talk) 21:35, 18 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

"the important thing is that usage should be consistent"

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I have explained my reason for removing this sentence here. – flamurai (t) 05:04, 19 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

Re: My request

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My apologies for not responding sooner. It's been a bit of a crazy week. I understand your concerns and I apologize for the inconvenience. Those talk pages won't be deleted again. Cheers. --MZMcBride (talk) 21:25, 4 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

RfC

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I agree that this is less a debate about Greg’s conduct but about IEC prefixes.

It's entirely about Greg's conduct. Yes, we are involved in a dispute about SI prefixes, but it's the conduct of the users involved that's preventing us from reaching a consensus. Several users avoid the talk page altogether because of the hostile atmosphere, so Greg ignores their opinions and tries to drive off the rest who oppose him with personal attacks and mocking. Aluvus and SMcCandlish attempted informal mediation but gave up in disgust.

So I decided to go after the root of the problem, which is Greg's incivility and disregard for the opinions of others, instead of wasting my time on the talk page repeating the same arguments over and over to people with their fingers in their ears. If he was cooperative, we could reach a real consensus, instead of just spending all our time trying to prevent him from pushing through new policies based on stacked 7:5 votes. Should I behave like him and notify only the 20 people who originally voted in favor of IEC to override his votes? Of course not. This sort of thing needs to be decided based on good reasons and consensus. The guideline should only make a recommendation on this issue if that recommendation has wide agreement among all editors. If it does not have wide agreement, it should be removed, as I have repeatedly tried to do. — Omegatron (talk) 15:29, 7 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

OK, whatever that RfC is about … it is my honest belief that consensus is unreachable in that matter. Whether Greg is around or not. Sadly, enwiki seems to have no polling mechanism that would enable a poll with at least a hundred participants. So what can we do? I as a pro-IEC candidate will always dislike the “current literature” practice, as current literature is being inconsistent. Others will never get used to the “Kibi kindergarten”. How is that ever to lead to a consensus? --Quilbert (talk) 18:00, 7 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

Well, I still have faith that consensus can be reached, but not without Greg changing his behavior. This is not a case in which there are two "sides" that must battle each other to the death, and then the side with a 1% majority gets to run all over the other. There are several different positions here (pro-SI, anti-IEC, pro-IEC), and a variety of different solutions, and they aren't necessarily mutually exclusive. But when Greg refuses to consider the viewpoints of others, declares that he'll "stop at nothing" to push through his agenda, pisses people off and polarizes the discussion, he prevents any progress from being made.

You say, "I am really sure that he only fights for the better of Wikipedia and should not be accused for his temper in this way." I agree with you 100% that he's only fighting to improve Wikipedia; we all are, and I agree that he's sometimes a productive editor, but being belligerent to other users is never acceptable, no matter what you're fighting for. That's the whole point of Wikipedia:Civility. "Participate in a respectful and civil way. Do not ignore the positions and conclusions of others. ... avoid upsetting other editors whenever possible." Calling other editors "extremists" or "space cadets" is never acceptable on Wikipedia, no matter how spacey and extremist you might think they are. — Omegatron (talk) 22:28, 7 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

Of course I understand that your intentions are good, too. You are trying to fit the disucssion into a more well-regulated consensus-finding process. But you must excuse my not believing that the RfC will achieve that goal. Although I have no spontaneous idea what to do. I am a little hesitating to join the discussion (or should I say war). Maybe I will. At any rate, I promise to contemplate over the situation and possible methods of relaxation. If only one could set up a somewhat more structured discussion venue than WT:MOSNUM … See you then --Quilbert (talk) 21:13, 9 June 2008 (UTC)Reply
Hello Quilbert. Thanks for your attempt to start a proper discussion about IEC prefixes. It is unfortunate that the atmosphere at MOSNUM remains such that it is not possible to debate it calmly there, but I would be pleased to participate in a constructive debate going through the advantages and disadvantages of different methods of disambiguation, including, but not limited to, the use of IEC units. My feeling is that such a discussion could eventually lead to consensus.
As you concluded, there is no consensus now either for promotion or deprecation of their use, so the wisest policy would be for MOSNUM to do no either (Greg L, who forced through the present deprecation, has made precisely this point in the past, but seems to have conveniently forgotten). But the present version of MOSNUM was pushed through without make any attempt to address the concerns of those of us arguing against deprecation.
My own view is that it does not matter how disambiguation is carried out provided that the raw “megabyte” is disambiguated somehow and is agreed by consensus on the article talk page. My concern is that the present deprecation is so strong that editors use it as a justification to replace unambiguous units with ambiguous ones, thus destroying the information that someone somewhere took the trouble to include in the article. I am considering constructing a list of articles damaged in this way so that at some time in the future they can be restored. Would such a list be a useful addition to your discussion sub-page? Thunderbird2 (talk) 16:36, 11 June 2008 (UTC)Reply
TB2, stop writing things you know are not true. There is consensus, no matter how many times you claim the contrary it doesn't make it true. Also your baselss untrue accusation against Greg needs to be retracted at once. Also you failed to address concerns by refusing to answer questions, the fault rests entirely with you. I remind you that your continued efforts at misrepresentation actually weaken whatever arguments you do make. Fnagaton 23:22, 11 June 2008 (UTC)Reply
Of course, feel free to edit that page just as you like. It is now at User:Quilbert/IEC. I think a list of articles that are touched by this will be very useful. There are possibilities of disambiguation even without IEC prefixes. If you understand German, see de:Vorlage:MB10 (and de:Kategorie:Vorlage:Datenmenge). Those are the templates I created after we had “lost” the poll on dewiki. It makes at least clear what is meant. --Quilbert (talk) 16:59, 11 June 2008 (UTC)Reply
  • Quilbert, Thunderbird2’s above don’t post quote lacks out that of necessary context virtue T-bird of “truthiness.” He wrote above that there is no consensus now either for promotion or deprecation of their use. You should know that the “consensus” is amply evidenced by this lopsided vote, which is the most recent one that lead to the current contents on MOSNUM. Further, he fallaciously wrote above as follows: …Greg L, who forced through the present deprecation. He knows full well that is untrue since the entire contents of MOSNUM were entirely the product of Headbomb’s efforts at mediating the discussions. My efforts were to get Follow current literature into MOSNUM, which Headbomb’s efforts replaced. Besides, what is this “forced through” garbage? No one, not Headbomb, and not me, can “force” anything upon nine other editors. To allege otherwise is pure horsecrap.

    Also, any intelligent parsing of what he further wrote above will demonstrate that his post is internally inconsistent. He states that he doesn’t care how disambiguation is done (My own view is that it does not matter how disambiguation is carried out provided that the raw “megabyte” is disambiguated somehow and is agreed by consensus on the article talk page.”) And then he followed right up with …the present deprecation is so strong that editors use it as a justification to replace unambiguous units with ambiguous ones…. This wording of his, “ambiguous” units v.s. “unambiguous” ones, has consistently been his buzz words for advocating the continued use of the IEC prefixes; there can be no mistaking that this is his agenda. I think that if he is going to solicit you to help him advocate his position, that he could be a little more forthright with you and fully articulate exactly what it is he hopes to entangle you in.

    The rest of us understand that the world is not using the IEC prefixes and this is why all parties to this dispute agreed on one critical point: that the word “mebibyte” (symbol MiB) is not widely recognized by the typical Wikipedia reader. And why would this be the case? Because…

  • All the computer manufacturers, when they communicate to the general-interest customers via their advertisements, brochures, Web sites, product packaging, owners manuals, etc., use the conventional prefixes.
  • That’s why all general-interest computer magazines like PC World and Mac World use the conventional prefixes. And they see no need to disambiguate terms like “comes stock with 2 GB.” Such wording is clear enough to their readerships. In fact, the computer magazines don’t even bother to disambiguate hard drive capacity unless they are really splitting hairs on critical file-size issues; simply writing “500 GB hard drive” is close enough.
  • That’s why all professional encyclopedias like Encyclopedia Britannica and World Book (both their print and on-line versions) use wording like “megabyte” in their computer articles, and not “mebibyte.”
  • That’s why the edit page of MOSNUM says “This page is 64 kilobytes long.”
  • That’s why my library’s Microsoft Dictionary of Computer Terms doesn’t even have entries for “mebibyte” or “kibibit.”
The editors who voted for the current contents of MOSNUM simply feel that we volunteer, hobbyist editors are not somehow more… “enlightened” than all the editors at the world’s computer magazines and professional, print encyclopedias, all of whom are professional, paid editors, and most of whom undoubtedly have advanced degrees in journalism. We continue to believe that the wise thing to do is follow the time-tested, consistent practices observed by the computer manufacturers and the rest of the publishing world, rather than strike off doing our own thing.

Way back at the beginning of Wikipedia’s three-year experiment with the IEC prefixes, Ben Arnold wrote this when he voted against permitting their use:

Those word are as true today as they were three years ago. Greg L (talk) 00:30, 12 June 2008 (UTC)Reply
To be honest, I am not really keen on taking a stand here. There are different interpretations of the word “consensus”. The rest is personal conflict between you two. It seems like all have heated up here so much that whenever you touch something you run the risk of making it explode.
You know that, although I can fully comprehend your position, I am mostly pro-IEC. For a physicist, there is no other way. We never trust so much in what the rest of the world says … Well, but I’ve already had enough of being yelled at, so I better relax now and maybe come back when it seems suitable.
Remember: Nothing is worth a war, and this not in the slightest.
Have a nice day. Here it is sunny, and we are going to win in soccer today! --Quilbert (talk) 11:21, 12 June 2008 (UTC)Reply
  • Quilbert. See the below posts. Those are my current feelings and I’m sorry for having “yelled” at you. I certainly hope you don’t feel that any of the above that may seem harsh had been directed at you in any way. I hope you had a good time playing socker today. It’s great weather here in Washington state this morning. We had a huge thunderstorm last night, whith monster lightning strikes well within a 100 metres of the house, and this morning, it is bright and sunny. Later. Greg L (talk) 16:42, 12 June 2008 (UTC)Reply
No no, don’t worry, it’s alright. It was just the atmosphere over there that made me uneasy. See you soon. --Quilbert (talk) 20:10, 12 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

Thanks

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Quilbert, I had come here to apologize for misreading your intentions and plopped right in the middle of your effort here to come to my defense and argue with Omegatron. Please accept my apologies here on my talk page. By the way, my wife and I visited Austria for a couple of weeks. On the way out, we flew Lufthansa and stayed at the Kempinski in the Munich airport. Very impressive. Just from that limited experience, I want to come back and see more. For anyone else who might come across this post, I will here fulfill my pledge to espouse the virtues Lufthansa, and to advise that you never, ever fly through Heathrow. Greg L (talk) 16:33, 11 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

P.S.: I wouldn’t get involved in this if I were you; it’s not at all enjoyable and very time consuming. Greg L (talk) 00:42, 12 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

request for comment

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Hello. I would appreciate your comments here and here. Thank you. Thunderbird2 (talk) 18:35, 15 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

I have expressed myself that I take no stock in that RfC. I’m in no way saying that you are wrong. More specifically, I tend to agree to the first part and disagree with the second. Let’s rather work on possible solutions rather than revenge. --Quilbert (talk) 14:36, 16 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

I am not interested in revenge. I agree with you 100% that we should work towards possible solutions. It's just that the first step (as I see it) is to find a way of turning WT:MOSNUM back into a place that welcomes discussion. (There used to be such a time). What would you suggest as an alternative? Thunderbird2 (talk)
ps: By "the second part" that you disagree with I presume you mean my response to Greg_L's post on my talk page. This may help explain my reasons for writing it. Thunderbird2 (talk) 17:01, 16 June 2008 (UTC)Reply
Thunderbird2, if you really want to demonstrate you want to "work towards possible solutions" then I suggest in future you answer direct questions put to you, stop making untrue accusations, stop misrepresenting what is plainly the truth and substantiate your statements with strong arguments instead of repeating unsubstantiated weak claims. Fnagaton 17:04, 18 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

ZIP drive capacity

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I seem to remember you wanted to find out what the capacity is for this particular hardware. "100MB where 1MB =1 million bytes. The capacity reported by your operating system may vary."[1] Fnagaton 16:59, 18 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

Thanks so much --Quilbert (talk) 19:17, 18 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

IEC sub-page

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Hello Quilbert, I’ve been reading through your IEC sub-page with the intention of adding my views, but I find it hard to relate to the page as currently layed out. I think the most relevant question is not whether we should use IEC prefixes but under what circumstances. In particular, the present deprecation to be found in MOSNUM is controversial, and for that reason doesn't belong on a page that is supposed to reflect consensus. Perhaps it is worth listing the arguments for and against deprecation. I have in mind something like this

for
  1. IEC prefix is rare and unfamiliar to many readers
  2. etc
against
  1. IEC prefix is unambiguous, simple to use and simple to understand
  2. IEC prefix is supported by national and international standards bodies
  3. the alternative (binary use of SI-like prefixes) is deprecated by the same standards bodies
  4. etc

What do you think? Thunderbird2 (talk) 14:16, 21 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

I don’t fully understand what you say. Isn’t “for deprecation” the same as “pro IEC prefixes”? What do you want to change? I mean, of course the question only is whether or not to use IEC prefixes in case we relate to the binary meaning. Using SI prefixes to express the decimal meaning is undisputed, as far as I can see. Maybe the page has to be reformulated to make that clear. Is it that you meant? --Quilbert (talk) 14:35, 21 June 2008 (UTC)Reply
Sorry, I sometimes forget that I am dealing with non-native speakers (your English is so good that most of the time I can't tell). To deprecate something means to advise against its use. In very simple terms "for deprecation" means "anti-IEC prefixes". My objection to the MOSNUM wording is that it includes a near-prohibition of the use of the IEC prefixes, despite their many advantages. Does that make it clearer? Thunderbird2 (talk) 14:45, 21 June 2008 (UTC)Reply
It is not about being "anit-IEC" at all, it is disingenuous to say that. It is actually about following Wikipedia policy regarding not putting something into articles that is rarely found in the real world. In this specific case IEC prefixes are rarely found in the real world so we don't keep on putting them into articles. If there are "many advantages" to using IEC prefixes then Wikipedia must wait for that to be reflected in the real world sources first. This is because it is entirely personal point of view that "there are are many advantages" and we don't add personal point of view to articles in Wikipedia. The advise against using IEC prefixes in articles reflects the position of the real world and because we have a tiny minority of people who ignore consensus and push their personal opinion about IEC prefixes into articles. Fnagaton 14:52, 21 June 2008 (UTC)Reply
OK, sorry, I mixed it up. So “for deprecation” is the same as the “contra IEC prefixes” position on my sub-page? I actually meant that position to include prohibiting their use. Please explain in what way you’d like to change the sub-page. --Quilbert (talk) 15:05, 21 June 2008 (UTC)Reply
I think it can be improved by adding more context. Imagine an article describing the speed at which data can be loaded to memory from a computer hard drive. Should the article
  • use MB (and MB/s) and disambiguate using MiB
  • use MB (and MB/s) and disambiguate using exact numbers of bytes
  • use MB (and MB/s) and not disambiguate at all
  • use MiB (and MB/s)
  • use MiB (and MiB/s)?
I don’t mean to suggest that you consider all possible uses in all possible articles (a thankless task!), but that the question be changed from “should we use MiB” to “is MiB better or worse than a specified alternative or alternatives” Thunderbird2 (talk) 15:22, 21 June 2008 (UTC)Reply
I had initially planned to limit such detail to the “Solutions” section, but maybe I think it over and reformulate the page. On the other hand, the page isn’t used anyway. I will consider it. --Quilbert (talk) 15:30, 21 June 2008 (UTC)Reply
Thanks for your reply on my talk page. I would never have known where to look for that (although I think the problem is an ongoing one and should not have been closed). By the way, I noticed the recent change to your IEC sub-page. It seems to me that the table has outlived its purpose. Would you like me to remove it now? Thunderbird2 (talk) 19:33, 26 November 2008 (UTC)Reply
I leave that up to you. I just stumbled over the page once again and then updated the notice. On my behalf, the entire page could be deleted. —Quilbert (talk) 19:40, 26 November 2008 (UTC)Reply
OK, I've removed the table. You may also wish to read this. Your comments are welcome. Thunderbird2 (talk) 19:49, 26 November 2008 (UTC)Reply

AWG v.s. “sane” way

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Copied from Fnagaton’s talk page (archive).
  • I enjoy watching you two discuss this. I respect you both and hope you two don’t alienate each other while you engage in this mental thrust & parry. I agree with you both by the way. It seems to me that Fnagaton is correct that you divide binary quantities by binary quantities, and shift the value and meaning of the prefix when the measure is data rate. It also seems to me that Quilbert is correct that dual meanings for the same prefix is asinine and the convention totally blows. But then, the entire U.S. Customary system of measurement is asinine too and we Americans are still using it (I don’t though; I have a 1-meter tape measure in my pocket at all times).

    You want an example of über asinine? The U.S. system of wire gauges is beyond asinine; it is totally brain-damaged insane. How many wires of what gauge can you get into a wire nut? With the wire-gauge system, you have to have a lookup chart on the box, like so:

  • 3 #16
  • 5 #18
  • 1 #14 + 1–2 #16
  • 1 #14 + 2–3 #18
  • etc.
This is profoundly simple with the Euro way of doing things: the wire nut is good for up to 5 mm2 of conductors. That means the above translates as follows:
  • 3 of 1.5 mm2 (4.5 mm2 total)
  • 5 of 1.0 mm2 (5.0 mm2 total)
  • 1 of 2.0 mm2 + 1–2 of 1.5 mm2 (3.5–5.0 mm2 total)
  • 1 of 2.0 mm2 + 2–3 of 1.0 mm2 (4.0–5.0 mm2 total)
  • etc. where you simply add your conductors and don’t exceed 5 mm2 total. You need no lookup tables on the box.
You have to really know your conductors when you design fuel cells (where everything is a conductor). Every bit of resistance (there are all types, including proton resistances in the membrane separators) must be known and minimized.
So how insane is American Wire Gauge? Totally. And what can I do about it when I write an owners manual for one of our designs. Nothing. So we live with certain things, including “megabyte”, which is ambiguous. But who gives a damn, the errors of 2.4 to 7.4 percent don’t mean much except to us crazy Wikipedia editors. Greg L (talk) 04:15, 21 June 2008 (UTC)Reply
  • Funny stuff. I see your point. But what keeps you from explaining it the “Euro way”, as you entitle it, in the owners’ manual? It makes perfect sense and is much easier to understand. I for one would do it that way and include a table that maps the AWG number to the metric cross section. By the way, I find the formula quite amusing … --Quilbert (talk) 13:29, 21 June 2008 (UTC)Reply


  • If I used the “sane” way of discussing wire sizes in an owners manual (e.g. 2 mm2), it would baffle American owners of the device just as much as it would if I mentioned “AWG 14” to a European readership. Besides, there is no equivalent to AWG 14 wire in metric. For instance, here in America, you can easily get the following wire sizes:
AWG 10 (5.261 mm2 would be the nearest metric equivalent)
AWG 12 (3.309 mm2)
AWG 14 (2.081 mm2)
AWG 16 (1.309 mm2)
To my knowledge (and I’ve had to redesign and certify American industrial products to IEC compliance for sale in Europe, so I kinda know this stuff), European wire sizes come standard in the following near-equivalent sizes:
6 mm2 (9.43 AWG would be the nearest metric equivalent)
4 mm2 (11.18 AWG)
2.5 mm2 (13.21 AWG)
1.5 mm2 (15.41 AWG)
Fortunately, I have a spreadsheet that makes all this easy. Plus, my spreadsheet has the temperature coefficient of copper and it has “knowledge” of the heating rate of wires for different currents, so it can calculate what the actual, in-circuit resistance will be when things heat up. And it can calculate the maximum permissible current for NEC raceways (American household fixed wiring), and IEC 60335-1 (European industrial product wiring), as well as current-carry capacities to other standards and conventions. It’s a good spreadsheet. But the bottom line is that in reality, (I had to “cheat” to make the point in the wire nut example), there are are no direct equivalents anyway.

If I were president of the U.S., I’d simply put a federal 10% tax on everything that was non-metric. Overnight, every damned nut and bolt going into any product would be metric. Metric tools to turn the fasteners would become popular. And they’d be 10% cheaper too. Every piece of wire being sold would be metric. Everything would slowly become metric in only a handful of years and the federal deficit would be reduced in the mean time. Do you know what buyers do at companies when someone tells them they can beat some other supplier by 10% and all they have to do is go badger an engineer about whether 1.5 mm2 wire can be substituted for 16-gauge wire? The engineer gets badgered; that’s what happens. Plumbing would change. Machine tools would change (does it have an inch-based Acme screw in the table? Yes? Tax it.)

Besides, the bigger point here is that even though there are superior ways of doing things, Encyclopedias must use the language and terminology commonly used within any given discipline so we don’t confuse our readers. Made ya smile. ;-) Greg L (talk) 05:14, 22 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

Yes, I see. I noticed that 92117.9 is very close to  , so from a higher viewpoint (not entirely serious here) it would be best to express the cross-section area in the binary system, with 1.000002 being AWG 40 and 1.000012 × 213 being AWG 1. So one would only have to calculate modulo 3 and use the mantissas 1.000002, 1.010002  , and 1.100112 , depending on the modulus. But (serious again) even if there is very little reality in my veins, it suffices to see that no one would buy that.

But I still believe that people would easily understand that SI prefixes are no longer used in the binary but in the usual decimal sense. But that is my personal opinion. One can discussion about advantages and disadvantages (like I tried to explain to Fnagaton why the current system inflicts fundamental damage to logic), but in the end maybe that is a question of opinion and cannot be resolved objectively. Maybe we can have a really big vote some day. I still believe that is the easiest way to calm things down. --Quilbert (talk) 17:05, 22 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

Invisible Pink Unicorn

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Simply removing the thumb frame is a non-solution, as the absence of a frame or descriptive caption leaves the impression that the article simply contains a large vacant space. If questions of a technical nature—can a serious encyclopedia justify catering to the ploys of a satirical religion—cannot be resolved, than simply remove the image. Since you're only eliminating an "invisible" image, nothing of value would be lost if it wasn't there at all. --Cast (talk) 21:33, 27 November 2008 (UTC)Reply

I found that the frameless white rectangle described her pretty well. Also, hovering over it, as assumedly everyone would do, will open a tooltip with the description. —Quilbert (talk) 21:47, 27 November 2008 (UTC)Reply

It Gets Better Project

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Thanks for correcting that spelling error! Though, in my defence, I lay the blame at PCmag.com's door; this was taken directly from the quote in their article. (talk) 22:05, 22 October 2010 (UTC)Reply

Might you tell me how to get a "Russian integral" symbol in tex?

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Dear Quilbert,

follow google, I found that you sent a pic about good-looking integral sign in 2007, a Russian-style symbol. I like it, but I still do not know what font (or package) could provide the symbol for TEX after searched in google many times. I guess maybe the Russian or German Texers know some information. Hopes for your reply! —Preceding unsigned comment added by 58.252.109.225 (talk) 02:59, 30 October 2010 (UTC)Reply

Sorry, I just edited the image back then. Don’t know about a LaTeX solution, unfortunately. —Quilbert (talk) 20:15, 1 November 2010 (UTC)Reply

Re: Piecewise linear manifold

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Hello, Quilbert. You have new messages at Nbarth's talk page.
Message added 17:13, 13 March 2013 (UTC). You can remove this notice at any time by removing the {{Talkback}} or {{Tb}} template.Reply
User talk:Nbarth/Archive_2013#Piecewise_linear_manifoldQuilbert (talk) 20:09, 11 February 2017 (UTC)Reply

Orphaned non-free image File:Invisible pink unicorn.svg

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Thanks for uploading File:Invisible pink unicorn.svg. The image description page currently specifies that the image is non-free and may only be used on Wikipedia under a claim of fair use. However, the image is currently not used in any articles on Wikipedia. If the image was previously in an article, please go to the article and see why it was removed. You may add it back if you think that that will be useful. However, please note that images for which a replacement could be created are not acceptable for use on Wikipedia (see our policy for non-free media).

Note that any non-free images not used in any articles will be deleted after seven days, as described in the criteria for speedy deletion. Thank you. Stefan2 (talk) 21:30, 7 January 2015 (UTC)Reply

Orphaned non-free image File:Invisible pink unicorn.svg

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Thanks for uploading File:Invisible pink unicorn.svg. The image description page currently specifies that the image is non-free and may only be used on Wikipedia under a claim of fair use. However, the image is currently not used in any articles on Wikipedia. If the image was previously in an article, please go to the article and see why it was removed. You may add it back if you think that that will be useful. However, please note that images for which a replacement could be created are not acceptable for use on Wikipedia (see our policy for non-free media).

Note that any non-free images not used in any articles will be deleted after seven days, as described in the criteria for speedy deletion. Thank you. Stefan2 (talk) 15:14, 8 January 2015 (UTC)Reply

ArbCom elections are now open!

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Hi,
You appear to be eligible to vote in the current Arbitration Committee election. The Arbitration Committee is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the Wikipedia arbitration process. It has the authority to enact binding solutions for disputes between editors, primarily related to serious behavioural issues that the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the ability to impose site bans, topic bans, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The arbitration policy describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail. If you wish to participate, you are welcome to review the candidates' statements and submit your choices on the voting page. For the Election committee, MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 16:34, 23 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

Nomination for deletion of Template:Isotope lists headings

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 Template:Isotope lists headings has been nominated for deletion. You are invited to comment on the discussion at the template's entry on the Templates for discussion page.  — Mr. Guye (talk) (contribs)  06:13, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

Penguin diagram

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So as not to overload Talk:Penguin diagram#Image with off-topic conversation, I'm posting this here: can you (also) create and upload a diagram-only (no animal in background) SVG version of the penguin diagram? It looks like commons:Category:Feynman diagrams needs one. (If you can't make one, someone at Wikipedia:Graphics Lab/Illustration workshop can.) - dcljr (talk) 18:21, 9 October 2017 (UTC)Reply

File:Invisible pink unicorn.svg listed for discussion

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A file that you uploaded or altered, File:Invisible pink unicorn.svg, has been listed at Wikipedia:Files for discussion. Please see the discussion to see why it has been listed (you may have to search for the title of the image to find its entry). Feel free to add your opinion on the matter below the nomination. Thank you. B (talk) 15:01, 4 September 2018 (UTC)Reply

Einstein problem

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Hello, I think you did no understant this question of "orientatation of the "spectre"-tiles: You cannot say: All the tiles have the same orientation : The orientation is à multiple of 30 degrés If this multiple is (2k+1)30 deg, the tile is colored This évent products approx 1/7.

Please, think one more time about this. Greetings. Jacques Mrtzsn (talk) 11:48, 17 September 2023 (UTC)Reply

Hi Jacques, I see what you were saying! I missed the 60° as opposed to 30°. Your caption really tripped me up while reading the article because I am more accustomed to orientation meaning the handedness in mathematics, see Orientation (mathematics) and because with the hat tile we get a very similar image where the tiles are coloured according to their orientation in that sense, so having both notions side by side is confusing. That is also why I said that all tiles have the same orientation, because none of them needs to be mirrored, which is the point of this tiling. Also when you refer to rotational attitude as in Orientation (geometry), you should probably use 12 colours. So in fact, when by orientation you mean “rotational attitude modulo 60°”, as you said in the footnote, you are not wrong, so I am sorry for saying so. But I think distinguishing by the number of neighbours as in the original caption is easier, because your criterion would require a more elaborate explanation. —Quilbert (talk) 22:10, 17 September 2023 (UTC)Reply