Saintfevrier
Welcome
editWelcome to Wikipedia! I hope you enjoy the encyclopedia and want to stay. As a first step, you may wish to read the Introduction.
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Demiurge1000
Saintfevrier, good luck, and have fun. ----Demiurge1000 (talk) 18:23, 11 July 2011 (UTC)
July 2011
editWelcome to Wikipedia. Everyone is welcome to make constructive contributions to Wikipedia, but at least one of your recent edits, such as the one you made to List of Greek dishes, did not appear to be constructive and has been automatically reverted (undone) by ClueBot NG.
- Please use the sandbox for any test edits you would like to make, and take a look at the welcome page to learn more about contributing to this encyclopedia. Note that human editors do monitor recent changes to Wikipedia articles, and administrators have the ability to block users from editing if they repeatedly engage in vandalism.
WikiProject Greece Invitation!
editWikitherapy
editHello Saintfevrier, Im Greta, Manos contacted me to help with the Wikitherapy project. I read the introduction on IEG grants and i find it really interesting. For anything that you might need please share here or write me an email, and i will share it with my other Albanian fellows. All the best --Margott (talk) 07:50, 2 November 2015 (UTC)
Greek Medical Translations
editHere is a list of the 23 vaccine articles we recently translated. If you wanted, you could do a quick review and clean-up (if necessary).
Measles vaccine
Mumps vaccine
Cholera vaccine
Rabies vaccine
Tetanus vaccine
BCG vaccine
Hib vaccine
Hepatitis A vaccine
Hepatitis B vaccine
HPV vaccines
Influenza vaccine
Japanese encephalitis vaccine
Meningococcal vaccine
Pertussis vaccine
Pneumococcal vaccine
Polio vaccine
Rotavirus vaccine
Rubella vaccine
Tick-borne encephalitis vaccine
Typhoid vaccine
Varicella vaccine
Yellow fever vaccine
Diphtheria vaccine
Sorry, too lazy to do 23 Greek page links. But if you don't find those articles using the Greek search term you would enter into el.wiki, then we learn something. Some of those vaccines might need re-direct pages from alternative Greek names that people might use to search. (I can create those).
Here is a list of summary articles, many of which are missing in Greek. If you would like to translate one the missing topics I can coach you through a simple process. --Lucas559 (talk) 20:15, 24 June 2016 (UTC)
Κατηγορία:Γυναικεία ονόματα (ελληνικά)
editΑγαπητή Saintfevrier χαίρε! Σχετικά με το παραπάνω θέμα -εργασία για τα παιδιά σου- έχω να προσθέσω και το όνομα Βασώ (το οποίο είναι υποκοριστικό της Βασιλείας). Υπάρχει επίσης και το Φιλίκη το οποίο είναι μεν υποκοριστικό, αλλά δεν γνωρίζω ποιας ... τριανταφυλλιάς!!! Σε χαιρετώ - Φιλικότατα! --Aristo Class (talk) 12:13, 24 July 2016 (UTC)
Wikipedia:WikiProject United States/The 50,000 Challenge
editYou are invited to participate in the 50,000 Challenge, aiming for 50,000 article improvements and creations for articles relating to the United States. This effort began on November 1, 2016 and to reach our goal, we will need editors like you to participate, expand, and create. See more here! |
--MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 02:37, 8 November 2016 (UTC)
Ευχές
editΣου εύχομαι Καλά Χριστούγεννα και Καλές γιορτές :) --Ανώνυμος Βικιπαιδιστής (talk) 16:53, 7 December 2016 (UTC) |
Hi. We're into the last five days of the Women in Red World Contest. There's a new bonus prize of $200 worth of books of your choice to win for creating the most new women biographies between 0:00 on the 26th and 23:59 on 30th November. If you've been contributing to the contest, thank you for your support, we've produced over 2000 articles. If you haven't contributed yet, we would appreciate you taking the time to add entries to our articles achievements list by the end of the month. Thank you, and if participating, good luck with the finale!
Facto Post – Issue 14 – 21 July 2018
editFacto Post – Issue 14 – 21 July 2018
The Editor is Charles Matthews, for ContentMine. Please leave feedback for him, on his User talk page.
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Officially it is "bridging the gaps in knowledge", with Wikimania 2018 in Cape Town paying tribute to the southern African concept of ubuntu to implement it. Besides face-to-face interactions, Wikimedians do need their power sources. Facto Post interviewed Jdforrester, who has attended every Wikimania, and now works as Senior Product Manager for the Wikimedia Foundation. His take on tackling the gaps in the Wikimedia movement is that "if we were an army, we could march in a column and close up all the gaps". In his view though, that is a faulty metaphor, and it leads to a completely false misunderstanding of the movement, its diversity and different aspirations, and the nature of the work as "fighting" to be done in the open sector. There are many fronts, and as an eventualist he feels the gaps experienced both by editors and by users of Wikimedia content are inevitable. He would like to see a greater emphasis on reuse of content, not simply its volume. If that may not sound like radicalism, the Decolonizing the Internet conference here organized jointly with Whose Knowledge? can redress the picture. It comes with the claim to be "the first ever conference about centering marginalized knowledge online".
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Facto Post – Issue 15 – 21 August 2018
editFacto Post – Issue 15 – 21 August 2018
The Editor is Charles Matthews, for ContentMine. Please leave feedback for him, on his User talk page.
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To grasp the nettle, there are rare diseases, there are tropical diseases and then there are "neglected diseases". Evidently a rare enough disease is likely to be neglected, but neglected disease these days means a disease not rare, but tropical, and most often infectious or parasitic. Rare diseases as a group are dominated, in contrast, by genetic diseases. A major aspect of neglect is found in tracking drug discovery. Orphan drugs are those developed to treat rare diseases (rare enough not to have market-driven research), but there is some overlap in practice with the WHO's neglected diseases, where snakebite, a "neglected public health issue", is on the list. From an encyclopedic point of view, lack of research also may mean lack of high-quality references: the core medical literature differs from primary research, since it operates by aggregating trials. This bibliographic deficit clearly hinders Wikipedia's mission. The ScienceSource project is currently addressing this issue, on Wikidata. Its Wikidata focus list at WD:SSFL is trying to ensure that neglect does not turn into bias in its selection of science papers.
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MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 13:23, 21 August 2018 (UTC)
Facto Post – Issue 16 – 30 September 2018
editFacto Post – Issue 16 – 30 September 2018
The Editor is Charles Matthews, for ContentMine. Please leave feedback for him, on his User talk page.
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In an ideal world ... no, bear with your editor for just a minute ... there would be a format for scientific publishing online that was as much a standard as SI units are for the content. Likewise cataloguing publications would not be onerous, because part of the process would be to generate uniform metadata. Without claiming it could be the mythical free lunch, it might be reasonably be argued that sandwiches can be packaged much alike and have barcodes, whatever the fillings. The best on offer, to stretch the metaphor, is the meal kit option, in the form of XML. Where scientific papers are delivered as XML downloads, you get all the ingredients ready to cook. But have to prepare the actual meal of slow food yourself. See Scholarly HTML for a recent pass at heading off XML with HTML, in other words in the native language of the Web. The argument from real life is a traditional mixture of frictional forces, vested interests, and the classic irony of the principle of unripe time. On the other hand, discoverability actually diminishes with the prolific progress of science publishing. No, it really doesn't scale. Wikimedia as movement can do something in such cases. We know from open access, we grok the Web, we have our own horse in the HTML race, we have Wikidata and WikiJournal, and we have the chops to act.
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MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 17:57, 30 September 2018 (UTC)
Facto Post – Issue 17 – 29 October 2018
editFacto Post – Issue 17 – 29 October 2018
The Editor is Charles Matthews, for ContentMine. Please leave feedback for him, on his User talk page.
To subscribe to Facto Post go to Wikipedia:Facto Post mailing list. For the ways to unsubscribe, see the footer.
Around 2.7 million Wikidata items have an illustrative image. These files, you might say, are Wikimedia's stock images, and if the number is large, it is still only 5% or so of items that have one. All such images are taken from Wikimedia Commons, which has 50 million media files. One key issue is how to expand the stock. Indeed, there is a tool. WD-FIST exploits the fact that each Wikipedia is differently illustrated, mostly with images from Commons but also with fair use images. An item that has sitelinks but no illustrative image can be tested to see if the linked wikis have a suitable one. This works well for a volunteer who wants to add images at a reasonable scale, and a small amount of SPARQL knowledge goes a long way in producing checklists. It should be noted, though, that there are currently 53 Wikidata properties that link to Commons, of which P18 for the basic image is just one. WD-FIST prompts the user to add signatures, plaques, pictures of graves and so on. There are a couple of hundred monograms, mostly of historical figures, and this query allows you to view all of them. commons:Category:Monograms and its subcategories provide rich scope for adding more. And so it is generally. The list of properties linking to Commons does contain a few that concern video and audio files, and rather more for maps. But it contains gems such as P3451 for "nighttime view". Over 1000 of those on Wikidata, but as for so much else, there could be yet more. Go on. Today is Wikidata's birthday. An illustrative image is always an acceptable gift, so why not add one? You can follow these easy steps: (i) log in at https://tools.wmflabs.org/widar/, (ii) paste the Petscan ID 6263583 into https://tools.wmflabs.org/fist/wdfist/ and click run, and (iii) just add cake.
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MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 15:01, 29 October 2018 (UTC)
Facto Post – Issue 18 – 30 November 2018
editFacto Post – Issue 18 – 30 November 2018
The Editor is Charles Matthews, for ContentMine. Please leave feedback for him, on his User talk page.
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GLAM ♥ data — what is a gallery, library, archive or museum without a catalogue? It follows that Wikidata must love librarians. Bibliography supports students and researchers in any topic, but open and machine-readable bibliographic data even more so, outside the silo. Cue the WikiCite initiative, which was meeting in conference this week, in the Bay Area of California. In fact there is a broad scope: "Open Knowledge Maps via SPARQL" and the "Sum of All Welsh Literature", identification of research outputs, Library.Link Network and Bibframe 2.0, OSCAR and LUCINDA (who they?), OCLC and Scholia, all these co-exist on the agenda. Certainly more library science is coming Wikidata's way. That poses the question about the other direction: is more Wikimedia technology advancing on libraries? Good point. Wikimedians generally are not aware of the tech background that can be assumed, unless they are close to current training for librarians. A baseline definition is useful here: "bash, git and OpenRefine". Compare and contrast with pywikibot, GitHub and mix'n'match. Translation: scripting for automation, version control, data set matching and wrangling in the large, are on the agenda also for contemporary library work. Certainly there is some possible common ground here. Time to understand rather more about the motivations that operate in the library sector.
Account creation is now open on the ScienceSource wiki, where you can see SPARQL visualisations of text mining.
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MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 11:20, 30 November 2018 (UTC)
Facto Post – Issue 19 – 27 December 2018
editFacto Post – Issue 19 – 27 December 2018
The Editor is Charles Matthews, for ContentMine. Please leave feedback for him, on his User talk page.
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Zotero is free software for reference management by the Center for History and New Media: see Wikipedia:Citing sources with Zotero. It is also an active user community, and has broad-based language support. Besides the handiness of Zotero's warehousing of personal citation collections, the Zotero translator underlies the citoid service, at work behind the VisualEditor. Metadata from Wikidata can be imported into Zotero; and in the other direction the zotkat tool from the University of Mannheim allows Zotero bibliographies to be exported to Wikidata, by item creation. With an extra feature to add statements, that route could lead to much development of the focus list (P5008) tagging on Wikidata, by WikiProjects. There is also a large-scale encyclopedic dimension here. The construction of Zotero translators is one facet of Web scraping that has a strong community and open source basis. In that it resembles the less formal mix'n'match import community, and growing networks around other approaches that can integrate datasets into Wikidata, such as the use of OpenRefine. Looking ahead, the thirtieth birthday of the World Wide Web falls in 2019, and yet the ambition to make webpages routinely readable by machines can still seem an ever-retreating mirage. Wikidata should not only be helping Wikimedia integrate its projects, an ongoing process represented by Structured Data on Commons and lexemes. It should also be acting as a catalyst to bring scraping in from the cold, with institutional strengths as well as resourceful code.
Diversitech, the latest ContentMine grant application to the Wikimedia Foundation, is in its community review stage until January 2.
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MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 19:08, 27 December 2018 (UTC)
Facto Post – Issue 20 – 31 January 2019
editFacto Post – Issue 20 – 31 January 2019
The Editor is Charles Matthews, for ContentMine. Please leave feedback for him, on his User talk page.
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Recently Jimmy Wales has made the point that computer home assistants take much of their data from Wikipedia, one way or another. So as well as getting Spotify to play Frosty the Snowman for you, they may be able to answer the question "is the Pope Catholic?" Possibly by asking for disambiguation (Coptic?). Headlines about data breaches are now familiar, but the unannounced circulation of information raises other issues. One of those is Gresham's law stated as "bad data drives out good". Wikipedia and now Wikidata have been criticised on related grounds: what if their content, unattributed, is taken to have a higher standing than Wikimedians themselves would grant it? See Wikiquote on a misattribution to Bismarck for the usual quip about "law and sausages", and why one shouldn't watch them in the making. Wikipedia has now turned 18, so should act like as adult, as well as being treated like one. The Web itself turns 30 some time between March and November this year, per Tim Berners-Lee. If the Knowledge Graph by Google exemplifies Heraclitean Web technology gaining authority, contra GIGO, Wikimedians still have a role in its critique. But not just with the teenage skill of detecting phoniness. There is more to beating Gresham than exposing the factoid and urban myth, where WP:V does do a great job. Placeholders must be detected, and working with Wikidata is a good way to understand how having one statement as data can blind us to replacing it by a more accurate one. An example that is important to open access is that, firstly, the term itself needs considerable unpacking, because just being able to read material online is a poor relation of "open"; and secondly, trying to get Creative Commons license information into Wikidata shows up issues with classes of license (such as CC-BY) standing for the actual license in major repositories. Detailed investigation shows that "everything flows" exacerbates the issue. But Wikidata can solve it.
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MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 10:53, 31 January 2019 (UTC)
Facto Post – Issue 21 – 28 February 2019
editFacto Post – Issue 21 – 28 February 2019
The Editor is Charles Matthews, for ContentMine. Please leave feedback for him, on his User talk page.
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Systematic reviews are basic building blocks of evidence-based medicine, surveys of existing literature devoted typically to a definite question that aim to bring out scientific conclusions. They are principled in a way Wikipedians can appreciate, taking a critical view of their sources. Ben Goldacre in 2014 wrote (link below) "[...] : the "information architecture" of evidence based medicine (if you can tolerate such a phrase) is a chaotic, ad hoc, poorly connected ecosystem of legacy projects. In some respects the whole show is still run on paper, like it's the 19th century." Is there a Wikidatan in the house? Wouldn't some machine-readable content that is structured data help? Most likely it would, but the arcana of systematic reviews and how they add value would still need formal handling. The PRISMA standard dates from 2009, with an update started in 2018. The concerns there include the corpus of papers used: how selected and filtered? Now that Wikidata has a 20.9 million item bibliography, one can at least pose questions. Each systematic review is a tagging opportunity for a bibliography. Could that tagging be reproduced by a query, in principle? Can it even be second-guessed by a query (i.e. simulated by a protocol which translates into SPARQL)? Homing in on the arcana, do the inclusion and filtering criteria translate into metadata? At some level they must, but are these metadata explicitly expressed in the articles themselves? The answer to that is surely "no" at this point, but can TDM find them? Again "no", right now. Automatic identification doesn't just happen. Actually these questions lack originality. It should be noted though that WP:MEDRS, the reliable sources guideline used here for health information, hinges on the assumption that the usefully systematic reviews of biomedical literature can be recognised. Its nutshell summary, normally the part of a guideline with the highest density of common sense, allows literature reviews in general validity, but WP:MEDASSESS qualifies that indication heavily. Process wonkery about systematic reviews definitely has merit.
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MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 10:02, 28 February 2019 (UTC)
Facto Post – Issue 22 – 28 March 2019
editFacto Post – Issue 22 – 28 March 2019
The Editor is Charles Matthews, for ContentMine. Please leave feedback for him, on his User talk page.
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Half a century ago, it was the era of the mainframe computer, with its air-conditioned room, twitching tape-drives, and appearance in the title of a spy novel Billion-Dollar Brain then made into a Hollywood film. Now we have the cloud, with server farms and the client–server model as quotidian: this text is being typed on a Chromebook. The term Applications Programming Interface or API is 50 years old, and refers to a type of software library as well as the interface to its use. While a compiler is what you need to get high-level code executed by a mainframe, an API out in the cloud somewhere offers a chance to perform operations on a remote server. For example, the multifarious bots active on Wikipedia have owners who exploit the MediaWiki API. APIs (called RESTful) that allow for the GET HTTP request are fundamental for what could colloquially be called "moving data around the Web"; from which Wikidata benefits 24/7. So the fact that the Wikidata SPARQL endpoint at query.wikidata.org has a RESTful API means that, in lay terms, Wikidata content can be GOT from it. The programming involved, besides the SPARQL language, could be in Python, younger by a few months than the Web. Magic words, such as occur in fantasy stories, are wishful (rather than RESTful) solutions to gaining access. You may need to be a linguist to enter Ali Baba's cave or the western door of Moria (French in the case of "Open Sesame", in fact, and Sindarin being the respective languages). Talking to an API requires a bigger toolkit, which first means you have to recognise the tools in terms of what they can do. On the way to the wikt:impactful or polymathic modern handling of facts, one must perhaps take only tactful notice of tech's endemic problem with documentation, and absorb the insightful point that the code in APIs does articulate the customary procedures now in place on the cloud for getting information. As Owl explained to Winnie-the-Pooh, it tells you The Thing to Do.
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MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 11:46, 28 March 2019 (UTC)
Facto Post – Issue 23 – 30 April 2019
editFacto Post – Issue 23 – 30 April 2019
The Editor is Charles Matthews, for ContentMine. Please leave feedback for him, on his User talk page.
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Talk of cloud computing draws a veil over hardware, but also, less obviously but more importantly, obscures such intellectual distinction as matters most in its use. Wikidata begins to allow tasks to be undertaken that were out of easy reach. The facility should not be taken as the real point. Coming in from another angle, the "executive decision" is more glamorous; but the "administrative decision" should be admired for its command of facts. Think of the attitudes ad fontes, so prevalent here on Wikipedia as "can you give me a source for that?", and being prepared to deal with complicated analyses into specified subcases. Impatience expressed as a disdain for such pedantry is quite understandable, but neither dirty data nor false dichotomies are at all good to have around. Issue 13 and Issue 21, respectively on WP:MEDRS and systematic reviews, talk about biomedical literature and computing tasks that would be of higher quality if they could be made more "administrative". For example, it is desirable that the decisions involved be consistent, explicable, and reproducible by non-experts from specified inputs. What gets clouded out is not impossibly hard to understand. You do need to put together the insights of functional programming, which is a doctrinaire and purist but clearcut approach, with the practicality of office software. Loopless computation can be conceived of as a seamless forward march of spreadsheet columns, each determined by the content of previous ones. Very well: to do a backward audit, when now we are talking about Wikidata, we rely on integrity of data and its scrupulous sourcing: and clearcut case analyses. The MEDRS example forces attention on purge attempts such as Beall's list.
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MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 11:27, 30 April 2019 (UTC)
Facto Post – Issue 24 – 17 May 2019
editFacto Post – Issue 24 – 17 May 2019
The Editor is Charles Matthews, for ContentMine. Please leave feedback for him, on his User talk page.
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Two dozen issues, and this may be the last, a valediction at least for a while. It's time for a two-year summation of ContentMine projects involving TDM (text and data mining). Wikidata and now Structured Data on Commons represent the overlap of Wikimedia with the Semantic Web. This common ground is helping to convert an engineering concept into a movement. TDM generally has little enough connection with the Semantic Web, being instead in the orbit of machine learning which is no respecter of the semantic. Don't break a taboo by asking bots "and what do you mean by that?" The ScienceSource project innovates in TDM, by storing its text mining results in a Wikibase site. It strives for compliance of its fact mining, on drug treatments of diseases, with an automated form of the relevant Wikipedia referencing guideline MEDRS. Where WikiFactMine set up an API for reuse of its results, ScienceSource has a SPARQL query service, with look-and-feel exactly that of Wikidata's at query.wikidata.org. It also now has a custom front end, and its content can be federated, in other words used in data mashups: it is one of over 50 sites that can federate with Wikidata. The human factor comes to bear through the front end, which combines a link to the HTML version of a paper, text mining results organised in drug and disease columns, and a SPARQL display of nearby drug and disease terms. Much software to develop and explain, so little time! Rather than telling the tale, Facto Post brings you ScienceSource links, starting from the how-to video, lower right.
The review tool requires a log in on sciencesource.wmflabs.org, and an OAuth permission (bottom of a review page) to operate. It can be used in simple and more advanced workflows. Examples of queries for the latter are at d:Wikidata_talk:ScienceSource project/Queries#SS_disease_list and d:Wikidata_talk:ScienceSource_project/Queries#NDF-RT issue. Please be aware that this is a research project in development, and may have outages for planned maintenance. That will apply for the next few days, at least. The ScienceSource wiki main page carries information on practical matters. Email is not enabled on the wiki: use site mail here to Charles Matthews in case of difficulty, or if you need support. Further explanatory videos will be put into commons:Category:ContentMine videos. If you wish to receive no further issues of Facto Post, please remove your name from our mailing list. Alternatively, to opt out of all massmessage mailings, you may add Category:Wikipedians who opt out of message delivery to your user talk page.
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Ways to improve Amygdaleza detention center
editHello, Saintfevrier,
Thanks for creating Amygdaleza detention center! I edit here too, under the username Hughesdarren and it's nice to meet you :-)
I wanted to let you know that I have tagged the page as having some issues to fix, as a part of our page curation process and note that:-
The part that is on Greek needs to be translated to English, do you need help fixing up the references?
The tags can be removed by you or another editor once the issues they mention are addressed. If you have questions, leave a comment here and prepend it with {{Re|Hughesdarren}}
. And, don't forget to sign your reply with ~~~~
. For broader editing help, please visit the Teahouse.
Delivered via the Page Curation tool, on behalf of the reviewer.
Hughesdarren (talk) 04:56, 26 August 2019 (UTC)
- Hello Hughesdarren and thank you for the message! I accidentally published the article before completing it... apologies for that! This is the first time I am creating a translation and I thought that by hitting "publish" I would be offered the option of previewing the article. I undid the action but obviously it didn't work... Yes, please help me! If I hit "publish" now with the fully translated article, will it add only the parts that were missing, or make a new article? I am confused... as for the references, how do I quickly deal with the "check date values" bit? All help greatly appreciated, apologies if I have caused any inconvenience, nice to meet you too :-) Saintfevrier (talk) 05:02, 26 August 2019 (UTC)
- No problems, nice to meet you too. Once you hit publish all the article changes go up to Wikipedia proper, maybe use the preview button next time. (Or can can use your sandbox to experiment in). When you edit the article next it will only put in the changes you make and don't worry it won't recreate the entire article. Just be patient and take your time. If you reply to this message when you are finished with the translating bit I can come and take a look if you like. Maybe leave the "check date values" part for now and I'll help you out once the translation part is finished. Cheers Hughesdarren (talk) 05:07, 26 August 2019 (UTC)
- Excellent, thank you for the useful info! I just published and it overwrote the existing article, I think the only issue now is the "check date values" bit. Please help me in that part if you can. All the best from Kefalonia, Greece :-) Saintfevrier (talk) 05:12, 26 August 2019 (UTC)
- I just edited the first and second references ref 1 has dmy style and ref2 has ydm style, pick whichever you prefer (either is acceptable) and it use it consistently through the rest of the article. Nice job - a great article!. All the best from Albany, Western Australia. Hughesdarren (talk) 05:22, 26 August 2019 (UTC)
- Thanks very much for everything! Sorry it took me a day to get back to you, caught up in business at home :P I have one last question: The links were retrieved in 2015 for the Greek article... shouldn't the English translation reflect that these links are still available in 2019? (also, I should note here that the Greek article needs updating, as it hasn't been edited since 2015. I will do that at a later time and update the English one as well :-) Saintfevrier (talk) 05:49, 27 August 2019 (UTC)
- If the translation was done without looking at the articles then leave the original date but if you have looked at them since you can change it to 2019. Regards. Hughesdarren (talk) 09:40, 27 August 2019 (UTC)
- Thanks very much for everything! Sorry it took me a day to get back to you, caught up in business at home :P I have one last question: The links were retrieved in 2015 for the Greek article... shouldn't the English translation reflect that these links are still available in 2019? (also, I should note here that the Greek article needs updating, as it hasn't been edited since 2015. I will do that at a later time and update the English one as well :-) Saintfevrier (talk) 05:49, 27 August 2019 (UTC)
- I just edited the first and second references ref 1 has dmy style and ref2 has ydm style, pick whichever you prefer (either is acceptable) and it use it consistently through the rest of the article. Nice job - a great article!. All the best from Albany, Western Australia. Hughesdarren (talk) 05:22, 26 August 2019 (UTC)
- Excellent, thank you for the useful info! I just published and it overwrote the existing article, I think the only issue now is the "check date values" bit. Please help me in that part if you can. All the best from Kefalonia, Greece :-) Saintfevrier (talk) 05:12, 26 August 2019 (UTC)
- No problems, nice to meet you too. Once you hit publish all the article changes go up to Wikipedia proper, maybe use the preview button next time. (Or can can use your sandbox to experiment in). When you edit the article next it will only put in the changes you make and don't worry it won't recreate the entire article. Just be patient and take your time. If you reply to this message when you are finished with the translating bit I can come and take a look if you like. Maybe leave the "check date values" part for now and I'll help you out once the translation part is finished. Cheers Hughesdarren (talk) 05:07, 26 August 2019 (UTC)
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Thanks very much:) Saintfevrier (talk) 12:38, 26 February 2020 (UTC)
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The Drover's Wife (talk) 08:29, 26 February 2020 (UTC)Nomination of 3rd Gymnasium of Agia Paraskevi for deletion
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editHello. This message is being sent to inform you that there is currently a report involving you at Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Enforcement regarding a possible violation of an Arbitration Committee decision. The thread is Saintfevrier. Thank you. jps (talk) 23:16, 6 September 2023 (UTC)
- Hi Saintfevrier, please avoid modifying archive pages. To implement the closest allowable action to yours, I have un-archived the request. It's now back at WP:AE. Best regards, ~ ToBeFree (talk) 01:55, 23 September 2023 (UTC)
- Thanks for the notice ToBeFree. This is the first time I've ever been sent a RfE and I have never followed any discussions there in the past so I had no idea how it works. In any case, I would prefer a decision on the request so thank you for un-archiving it. Saintfevrier (talk) 22:28, 23 September 2023 (UTC)
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September 2023
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- This is a site ban imposed as a contentious topic sanction and will last for one year. In addition I have indefinitely blocked you because it is clear to me that your only purpose on this site is to push a fringe point of view and whitewash articles that don't conform to that point of view. The term "concern troll" has been used, especially in relation to the Wikimania-l thread, which may be unfair to your intentions but is a reasonable description of your actions. You can appeal the indefinite block in the usual way but appeals of the siteban must follow the process detailed in the box above. HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts? 08:12, 24 September 2023 (UTC)
- Thank you @HJ Mitchell for the message and quite frankly, thank you for blocking me. Wikipedia has turned into a bad joke so you've just made it easier for me to put it behind me and move on. So as you can imagine, I won't be wasting any more of my time to go through the appeal procedure, which most likely will amount to nothing as you seem indefinitey determined that I'm profringe, a whitewasher of fringe theories who adds puffery to Greek scientists, a concern troll, and I'm sure you'll agree with Wikimania-I that I'm also transphobic, maybe also alt right and complete the list as you wish. You couldn't be farther from the truth, but who am I to speak? Wikipedia newspeak is all you need. Goodbye and good luck (I don't even know if the reply is a default option to messages on talk pages so possibly my response may not even make it as I'm blocked. I don't really care much anyway) Saintfevrier (talk) 18:37, 24 September 2023 (UTC)