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2151:(June 2024) "Beyond ID to vote, this survey also measured if voting-age American citizens have documentary proof of citizenship documents, including a US Birth Certificate, US Passport/US Passport Card, US Naturalization Certificate, and US Certificate of Citizenship. Over 9% of voting-age citizens, or 21.3 million people, cannot readily access documentary proof of citizenship (DPOC), either because they do not have it at all or because they could not access it easily if needed. Just under 2% of voting-age American citizens, or over 3.8 million people, lack ANY form of DPOC. This means 3.8 million voting-age American citizens do not have a birth certificate, passport, naturalization certificate, or a certificate of citizenship. This disproportionately affects marginalized racial and ethnic groups, as 3% of People of Color lack any form of DPOC, compared to 1% of White Americans. Eight percent of White Americans (or over 12.9 million people) and 11% of People of Color (or over 8.4 million people) cannot readily access DPOC. Independents are also more likely to lack DPOC (4%) compared to Democrats (2%) and Republicans (1%). Independents are also more likely to be unable to readily access DPOC (13%, or almost 4.5 million) than Democrats (10%, or just under 9.7 million) and Republicans (7%, or over 7.1 million)" 2163:(June 2024) "Beyond ID to vote, this survey also measured if voting-age American citizens have documentary proof of citizenship documents, including a US Birth Certificate, US Passport/US Passport Card, US Naturalization Certificate, and US Certificate of Citizenship.Over 9% of voting-age citizens, or 21.3 million people, cannot readily access documentary proof of citizenship (DPOC), either because they do not have it at all or because they could not access it easily if needed.Just under 2% of voting-age American citizens, or over 3.8 million people, lack ANY form of DPOC. This means 3.8 million voting-age American citizens do not have a birth certificate, passport, naturalization certificate, or a certificate of citizenship. This disproportionately affects marginalized racial and ethnic groups, as 3% of People of Color lack any form of DPOC, compared to 1% of White Americans. Eight percent of White Americans (or over 12.9 million people) and 11% of People of Color (or over 8.4 million people) cannot readily access DPOC. Independents are also more likely to lack DPOC (4%) compared to Democrats (2%) and Republicans (1%). Independents are also more likely to be unable to readily access DPOC (13%, or almost 4.5 million) than Democrats (10%, or just under 9.7 million) and Republicans (7%, or over 7.1 million)" 2208:
million people, cannot readily access documentary proof of citizenship (DPOC), either because they do not have it at all or because they could not access it easily if needed."Just under 2% of voting-age American citizens, or over 3.8 million people, lack ANY form of DPOC. This means 3.8 million voting-age American citizens do not have a birth certificate, passport, naturalization certificate, or a certificate of citizenship. This disproportionately affects marginalized racial and ethnic groups, as 3% of People of Color lack any form of DPOC, compared to 1% of White Americans. Eight percent of White Americans (or over 12.9 million people) and 11% of People of Color (or over 8.4 million people) cannot readily access DPOC. Independents are also more likely to lack DPOC (4%) compared to Democrats (2%) and Republicans (1%). Independents are also more likely to be unable to readily access DPOC (13%, or almost 4.5 million) than Democrats (10%, or just under 9.7 million) and Republicans (7%, or over 7.1 million)
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million people, cannot readily access documentary proof of citizenship (DPOC), either because they do not have it at all or because they could not access it easily if needed.Just under 2% of voting-age American citizens, or over 3.8 million people, lack ANY form of DPOC. This means 3.8 million voting-age American citizens do not have a birth certificate, passport, naturalization certificate, or a certificate of citizenship. This disproportionately affects marginalized racial and ethnic groups, as 3% of People of Color lack any form of DPOC, compared to 1% of White Americans. Eight percent of White Americans (or over 12.9 million people) and 11% of People of Color (or over 8.4 million people) cannot readily access DPOC. Independents are also more likely to lack DPOC (4%) compared to Democrats (2%) and Republicans (1%). Independents are also more likely to be unable to readily access DPOC (13%, or almost 4.5 million) than Democrats (10%, or just under 9.7 million) and Republicans (7%, or over 7.1 million)
2222:(June 2024) "...3.8 million voting-age American citizens do not have a birth certificate, passport, naturalization certificate, or a certificate of citizenship...3% of People of Color lack any form of DPOC, compared to 1% of White Americans. Eight percent of White Americans (or over 12.9 million people) and 11% of People of Color (or over 8.4 million people) cannot readily access DPOC ...Independents are also more likely to be unable to readily access DPOC (13%, or almost 4.5 million) than Democrats (10%, or just under 9.7 million) and Republicans (7%, or over 7.1 million)." 950: 1752:. It could be an artefact from the 2024-08-17 module suite update. During an update there is a brief period when new and old modules coexist; attempt to use the module suite in that brief period will show as lua script errors. Another possibility is that en.wiki could not interwiki to Commons to fetch identifier limits because of a fault at MediaWiki. The usual fix when there are many upon many of these sorts of error messages is a null edit or purge your cache. 738: 720: 928: 636: 615: 584: 873: 528: 806: 788: 5179: 558: 3987:, for example, seem to be in navboxes). In this case though— given this is the article about the reference work the template points to, and there are like three hundred external links usually backy-back to an internal link, I'm really unconvinced putting them into citations or removing them would benefit anybody, irrespective of any MOS acronyms they contravene. 889: 3632:(I don't know where the "Script warning" message is coming from, that sounds like some userscript you may have installed. I don't see that, I just see the CS1 maint message attached to the citation in the reflist. But the message itself is not a warning; some script is warning you of the message's existence.) 4610:
is not used, there is no confusion created by duplicate IDs, as far as I can see. The footnotes link properly to the correct full citations. When sfn is used, we properly emit an error, since multiple citations are viable targets for the sfn template. We already have a system for seeing and resolving
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No, it's not 169k articles/pages, it's 169k instances of an offending error. So at maximum that's 169k divided by 2 pages, and at minimum 169k divided by 20, pages (because that's the maximum identified by the linter per page). I gather the linter is still growing its known pages at issue as I saw it
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PubMed.gov is a dedicated domain set up for this purpose, which suggests stability. Often a PubMed page does link to a free copy without a PMCID. Leads me to wonder if anyone has made a display tweak to surface sci-hub links. (Not arguing the main site should offer them by default, that would be a
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I have been fixing Linter errors for six years, and sometimes the WMF developers, without consulting with the people who actually use their software, create "error" tracking pages (or categories, if we are lucky; don't get me started on these faux Linter "categories") that are less helpful than they
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I see "trans-title", "trans-work", "trans-website", ...; but there are missing parameters for "trans-author...", "trans-first...", "trans-last..." ; if the work's name is being translated, then the author should also appear in the original language form to match the source, and a translated version,
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This sort of thing is a FAQ. The answer has always been no because the purpose of an archive is not to skirt paywalls nor should we openly be making that our stated aim else these websites look at Knowledge and remove their content from the Wayback Machine entirely which is trivially easy to do, and
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I propose we add support for an archive-access parameter. Why? I think https://en.wikipedia.org/Cardiac_stress_test#cite_note-13 would benefit from an indicator that a freely accessible copy is available at the archive by an archive-access=free parameter (which I've added for now, anticipating the
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Thanks. It's a brand new article so an old update to this module couldn't here be the reason, a link issue to Commons or so is of course perfectly possible. It would be nice if there is a way to make the error more meaningful, but no big deal if that is impossible (or too much work for the few cases
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I mean, you can't have it both ways: either MediaWiki checks every page for duplicate IDs or it doesn't. It's very rare when MediaWiki adds hacks for user-generated constructs that are malformed in one or another ways, and especially not malformed HTML. As it happens, this issue was spawned by both
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icon to any ref. This is distinct from (albeit similar to) the open access movement. The point, from my perspective, is to help college students, other destitute researchers, and the techno-phobic know which resources are going to be readily accessible with a click or two, contra resources that
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Beyond ID to vote, this survey also measured if voting-age American citizens have documentary proof of citizenship documents, including a US Birth Certificate, US Passport/US Passport Card, US Naturalization Certificate, and US Certificate of Citizenship."Over 9% of voting-age citizens, or 21.3
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Beyond ID to vote, this survey also measured if voting-age American citizens have documentary proof of citizenship documents, including a US Birth Certificate, US Passport/US Passport Card, US Naturalization Certificate, and US Certificate of Citizenship.Over 9% of voting-age citizens, or 21.3
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I worked out a version in my sandbox. In my version, I put a double quote at the beginning of each middle paragraph, which is the correct in a multi-paragraph quote that doesn't use a block quote. I also used the cite report template with as many parameters as I could find from the source.
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Yes. It's still bad to emit duplicate IDs - the software has previously just pooped out the duplicate IDs, but it might not in the future, because they should be unique. I am not sure what we should advise in this case to fix the issue(s) particularly for cites that have this problem.
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That's fine. The tracking isn't the problem. Tracking is good. The problem is the maintenance message. These messages imply that something needs to be maintained, i.e. fixed, i.e. cleaned up. But there's nothing to maintain / fix / clean up here. The script warning is
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ing to open access resources. There are plenty of open access books these days, and plenty of books with DOIs, free and subscription both. Can this functionality be enabled for this template? Could cut down on unnecessary URLs and their attendant archival and rotting.
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You should always use the direct link and not a redirect, even if that redirect is neater. As websites change overtime redirects are usually the first thing to be deleted or lost. Pubmed is likely more stable than most, but I would still apply the general rule. --
3126:. I don't (won't) use ve so I did not know this until recently, but ve doesn't know about aliases even though the aliases are listed as aliases in TemplateData. Apparently the hack to work around that is to treat each alias as if it were not an alias. Per 5172:." I find that adding this template helps ward off alarmed new page reviewers who have found that a chunk of text in an article has triggered the copyright bot (because, of course, it's in the public domain so has been published multiple places on the web). 2293:
If an archived copy is not free to access, it should be removed. What are subscribers going to do? Log into the publisher's website via the archive snapshot? There's no need to tag an archive as free because they are assumed to be free, and should be.
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section above. As an immediate solution purging the article clears the error. A search for the error in articles turns up 258 articles, being a mix of already fixed articles and others needing purging. These are all new since the previous section. --
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No idea about anything to do with ve; I won't go anywhere near that thing. No doubt there are lurkers here who do use ve who might answer your question. Seems like a design flaw if a MediaWiki messaging system doesn't work with with MediaWiki's
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are (expected to be) infrequently-used parameters that warrant "keeping an eye on" them indefinitely. But, like I said, I understand your point that cleanup of that category is not possible, something that AFAICT makes it unique among the
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Local consensus is that these modules sync from their sandboxes approximately once every 3-6 months. This is due to complexity of changes, the number of transclusions these modules have, and to be sure sufficient consensus exists for a
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There are several references on that article to NHRP documents, of which some seem to be primary sources that may not really have encyclopaedic value. (For example, I'm not sure what value is added by citing a facsimile of an NHRP
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support.) (many/most people will assume that because it's currently paywalled, they can't access it.) The green open lock would help a good fraction. It would also be useful on the two+ other pages that use the same source.
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the fact that the HTML gods say that thou shalt have only one ID on any specific web page, and by the fact that it was specifically short references where we didn't know which pages have duplicate IDs to fix. (I filed
4619:, have been hidden after feedback from gnomes that there were too many false positives and non-errors in the list. Maybe the duplicate IDs will be able to go that way too. It is currently listed as "high priority" at 2779:, and what I said is true: 1. PubMed.gov is a dedicated domain set up for this purpose, which suggests stability. 2. Often a PubMed page does link to a free copy without a PMC version. 3. Example in the OP above : 567:
discussions and keep related topics together, the talk pages for all Citation Style 1 and Citation Style 2 templates and modules redirect here. A list of those talk pages and their historical archives can be found
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IMO, the report should be fixed/tweaked to ignore anything with CITEREF as a starting string, or at least give the option to ignore those 'errors'. Truly problematic CITEREF duplication errors are tracking in
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Huh. Thanks. I wonder why I'm not seeing that? Is it displayed even when using the Visual Editor edit interface (in source mode)? ...Could be the userCSS I installed to unhide the hidden messages also hides
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I checked through to see if anything was wrong, and made a couple of unrelated changes and the issue went away. It appears it needs a dummy edit for some reason. There are a few articles with the same error
1629:"ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&rft.genre=book&rft.btitle=Title&rft.pub=Random&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fen.wikipedia.org%3AHelp+talk%3ACitation+Style+1" 1516:"ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&rft.genre=book&rft.btitle=Title&rft.pub=Random&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fen.wikipedia.org%3AHelp+talk%3ACitation+Style+1" 4061:
Aren't duplicate CITEREFs to be expected? Articles using inline references could use different sources that have the same author and year, and the wiki software already deals with this automatically. --
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What are the CITEREFs being used for other than short form references? The norm is inline references and will require no fixes. This seems to be an issue that should be dealt with my the software. --
3942:. It mostly contains subcategories that don't generate visible messages and aren't meant for cleanup; maybe "unfit url" would be better tracked with a property instead of a maintenance message, @ 2421:
Really these URLS should just be removed entirely. It makes it look like there's a full free version when there's not. No opinion on shortening the URL used by the template/identifiers though.
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What about just the last paragraph and just for the parts not already in the text but could merit inclusion based on their coverage in reliable sources for easier context? Something like this
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Previous discussions have come to the conclusion that this is not workable. Websites change which regions can access them regularly, and these websites are regardless not fundamentally dead.
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disproves 2 earlier claims. CS1 could be more helpful at https://en.wikipedia.org/Cardiac_stress_test#cite_note-13 but agreed i- t could backfire to make them so, for GreenC's reason. I'm
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require login/membership/money/time etc. Further research can then start with the free/easy stuff and then if they need a deeper dive, they can start figuring out scholarly databases etc.
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I think the API allows more results, 50 is just what's presented in the UI, but I don't know who has tried to integrate with these reports. That's something that can be inquired about at
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seem like they have cleanup potential — more so than unfit-url, anyway. So it feels like a bit of an inversion to have year-range-abbreviated in properties but unfit-url in maintenance.)
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to link to their Knowledge article and show English rendering. That would prevent citation rot, if some editors transliterate names and that doesn't preserve source identifiablilty --
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Unfortunately there's no way to determine which references are good and support claims cited to them apart from manual verification. I removed the single application form cited at
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FWIW the article has about 30 duplicate citations, the most I've ever seen in one article. If they were combined, the total number of citations could be reduced by about 10%. --
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At the time that I looked at that report, there were 169k articles? pages? but all that you can see is one report page at a time. Who thought that was a good idea? cs1|2 uses
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As for such a bot, I would add the requirement that the references not be identical (well, at least within the ref tags). That should call for adjustment beyond ref=none IMO.
4246:. I anticipate on most pages it is the rare case that has a duplicate ID generated from one of these templates (lint errors are per instance per page, not per page listings). 2365:
signal restrictions on access to material provided via the external links included in a citation." Adding support for an archive-access parameter is a logical way to do so.
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These messages imply that something needs to be maintained, i.e. fixed, i.e. cleaned up. But there's nothing to maintain / fix / clean up here. The script warning is unjust.
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says that it was printed by the press of Francesco Rampazetto but you won't find that on the title page and a printer is not exactly the same as a publisher. Our article
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The issue for book citations is that it's impossible to know if the chapter is meant to be linked, or the book title meant to be linked. And cite journal only links if
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I agree it's a monstrosity. I mentioned this discussion in the talk page of the relevant article. I'll leave it to the proponent of the quote to find this discussion.
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Thanks for flagging those - most are now fixed and we're now down to 355 citations (the other 5 duplicates had different quotes to help solidify an article in flux).
1918:. In the form I removed it, it didn't work because it ignored line feeds which were in both the wikitext and in the original document. I tried to make it work with 1421: 2502:
In practice websites do not always change all URLs equally. They change some, delete some, keep some. The top-down method is how silent linkrot is introduced. --
5231: 4956: 4903: 3977:, the existence of a widely transcluded external link template doesn't necessarily mean it's always fine and good to put it in body prose (most transclusions of 519: 849: 52: 3350:
is a sort of "last resort" citation template, for when you don't even have a URL and your source isn't a normal type of publication like a book or periodical.
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etc. When there are duplicates in that list, Module:Footnotes might add a category that at least identifies articles that have duplicate IDs not related to
4478: 4389: 3736:), which are normally not permitted in article bodies. Was some sort of exception decided on for those links, or do those need to be turned into citations?) 754: 2911:
Do not know what the problem is but getting "Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2083: attempt to index a boolean value." with change to
1729:: "Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2083: attempt to index a boolean value." Even if it is an error in the article, it shouldn't give 5226: 5168:
I would like to be able to click a box that adds the PD-inline text to the end of a ref: "This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the
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Alternatively, the documentation should state that generational suffixes should not include the comma even if printed with a comma in the cited source. --
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Regarding the maintenance message itself, the Category intro text provides the "call to action" for why those messages are both displayed and tracked:
3518:. Again, this isn't a huge problem, because maintenance messages usually can't be seen. But it's still a bug, so it has to be fixed someday. Cheers, 5241: 3354:
has a surprisingly large number of member templates, none of which appears to be a bespoke citation template for the source, although it looks like
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issues in the yellowish box at the top of a previewed page. MediaWiki prepends the 'Script warning:' text to each cs1|2 message. See example at
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Which is itself rife for false positives such that it requires a whole whitelist of its own. No, that doesn't actually track them all that well.
2276:? (Before posting, I searched for archive-access and found no discussion.) Actually, no need - It's been resolved; there's a similar parameter. 4927:
The solution is to remove the location, because the location is the location of the publisher. If there is no publisher, there is no location.
647:, a collaborative effort to improve Knowledge's help documentation for readers and contributors. If you would like to participate, please visit 5216: 4435: 692: 5221: 4160: 3186: 515: 511: 507: 503: 499: 495: 491: 487: 483: 479: 475: 471: 467: 463: 459: 455: 451: 447: 443: 439: 435: 431: 427: 423: 419: 415: 411: 407: 403: 399: 395: 391: 387: 383: 379: 375: 371: 367: 363: 359: 355: 351: 347: 343: 339: 335: 331: 327: 323: 319: 315: 311: 307: 303: 299: 295: 291: 287: 283: 279: 275: 271: 267: 263: 259: 255: 251: 247: 243: 239: 235: 231: 227: 223: 219: 215: 211: 207: 203: 199: 195: 191: 187: 183: 179: 175: 171: 93: 3951: 3283: 2219: 2199: 2173: 2160: 2148: 1911: 822: 167: 163: 159: 155: 151: 147: 143: 139: 135: 4898:
For those times when something self-published (not by me) is used as a reference, how do we format the "publisher" field in the template?
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posts when the page is published or previewed. That information might be improved to separately list anchor IDs that aren't linked from
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on the list before the query started timing out, I'd say that "high priority" is definitely off the table, yeah. (Three MILLION!)
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True enough, and an excellent point. In fact, the documentation for those templates says they're "primarily intended for use with
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The specific page of a specific PDF may change between clients with the same file or files with the same client. Consider using a
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Filter by tag name I think is exclusive to certain other lint reports that actually check the tags (like "obsolete tag" filter).
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The point is whatever bot would 'shorten' these URLs should rather remove them so that they don't take the place of free links.
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identifiers from wikitext that it can see in the article so cs1|2 templates buried inside template wrappers aren't detected.
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In citations, the location is the location of the publisher. If there are no publisher, there are no location to report.
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But, if that quote is truly needed for the article (I don't think that it is – the source is free-to-read) then put it in
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You did not say that your problem is with ve/templatedata. Your OP suggested that you wanted some sort of change to the
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I don't know where the "Script warning" message is coming from, that sounds like some userscript you may have installed.
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At this point, I think we can safely ignore these errors when they are reported for CITEREF duplication. I created an
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are intended to identify original URLs that point to live sites that are inappropriate: spam, advertising, porn, etc.
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parameter. Putting the pmid url will suppress these free-to-read links in favour of the abstract-only PMID link. See
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IMO this content should be summarized in the article, not quoted, and certainly not quoted with multiple paragraphs.
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as part of an effort to combat the passive spamming of an Indonesian gambling syndicate that targets Knowledge; see
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You can also just put "no pub." or "no publisher stated" or "self-published ebook" (etc) in the publisher field.
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ID creation. The only difference from the past would be that all cs1|2 templates would needs do this including
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In both case, this is the DOI link, which can/will be automatically flagged as free-to-red by Citation bot with
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This is done to differentiate identifier links (... lorem ipsum dolor sit amet. ... ) from prose links (... the
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ID in the report. But 50 at a time? Nah, I don't think that I'll be writing that bot – too much manual labor.
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False. In some very old books, we know the city that it was published in but not a publisher. An example from
4997:"None" is useful. Plenty of sources have a location but no publisher, including the one I formatted above and 4849:
then preview the page and look at Parser profiling data → Lua logs you can see the logging information that
3514:, because I see no reason why the script must throw an "unfit URL" warning when a ref is correctly marked as 4873: 4623:, which doesn't make a lot of sense to me, but maybe I misunderstand the sudden urgency of this tracking. – 4529: 4331: 4272: 4213: 3947: 3943: 3939: 3881: 3860: 3845: 3829: 3703: 3666: 3525: 3146: 3070: 2326: 1985: 1756: 1685: 1405: 4170:. I just want to see if anyone else wants to pipe up with another suggestion or other potential workaround. 3344: 3300: 3259: 3216: 3175: 2415: 1036: 996: 648: 643: 620: 3507:
for more info. This shady organization re-registers expired domain names and turns them into spam sites.
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The documentation is not protected. If you believe that improvements can (should) be made, please do so,
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You can override it by changing "type=" but that is just a workaround, and not built into the template.
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I would add that our documentation is explicit: "As a courtesy to readers and other editors, editors
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I can imagine that a bot might trawl the articles in the report looking for articles that don't use
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is available for a while. I am personally a fan of default ID generation and think opting out with
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on Knowledge. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
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on Knowledge. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
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The cs1|2 templates cannot override MediaWiki-provided text so we're stuck with 'Script warning'.
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If you were to add a couple of more references to your sandbox someplace that are not linked by
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Spot checking the search results there's a lot more articles with errors than the last time. --
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2024-09-27 01:34:03: Fatal exception of type "Wikimedia\RequestTimeout\RequestTimeoutException"
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Yes, but there is no option to change it through the visual editor. That seems like an issue.
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says, we're stuck with the "Script warning" text, and the "warning" is simply that there are
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automatically links the title to a freely available external resource when it is marked with
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CS1 and CS2 templates in pages listed in this category should be checked to ensure that the
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CS1 and CS2 templates in pages listed in this category should be checked to ensure that the
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as applying to the format of the suffix when it actually applies only to its existence. --
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Feature request: enable manual title-linking of open access stable identifiers in Cite book
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the articles associated with that DOI pattern must be free-to read. Once that is done, the
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There's a third type of tracking for the citation templates beyond error and maintenance:
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Who Lacks ID in America Today? An Exploration of Voter ID Access, Barriers, and Knowledge]
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to get article lists but that doesn't have an integration (despite a long-requested one).
4046:.) Letting people on this page know because a lot of them are due to duplicate CITEREFs. 3531: 2220:
Who Lacks ID in America Today? An Exploration of Voter ID Access, Barriers, and Knowledge
2161:
Who Lacks ID in America Today? An Exploration of Voter ID Access, Barriers, and Knowledge
2149:
Who Lacks ID in America Today? An Exploration of Voter ID Access, Barriers, and Knowledge
1424:, I gotta ask why? Are you seeing some sort of problem with properly piped wikilinks in 4044: 737: 719: 5035: 4941: 4624: 4587: 4452: 4425: 4406: 4378: 4360: 4349: 4251: 4178: 4102: 4051: 4036: 3988: 3981: 3761: 3753: 3403: 3373: 3359: 3230: 3190: 2871: 2829: 2761: 2729: 2703: 2677: 2586: 2489: 2435: 2401:
because it doesn't redirect to the right location. "/articles" can be removed though.)
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If a CS1 citation contains a valid full URL for a PMID, it should be converted to use
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All but a few of the search results where already cleared, I've purged the others. --
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tags, I don't think that we should bother to 'fix' it until MediaWiki fixes their end.
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tags and cite it. Quotations require citations; citations do not require quotations.
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Pages with this condition are automatically placed in Category:CS1 maint: unfit URL.
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Hi everyone! This isn't a big problem, but it's worth looking into. I noticed that
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many have. If users figure this "feature" out on their own, more power to them. --
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Well, to your latter point, I'd agree; there's no reason to be 'warning' the user
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parameter) has a specific meaning: the file format of the linked source. See the
5178: 4438:, which has some false positives. The multiple targets error category is clean. 542: 5197: 5189: 5156: 5148: 5140: 5098: 5072: 5044: 5016: 4992: 4950: 4921: 4881: 4650: 4632: 4591: 4577: 4537: 4461: 4429: 4415: 4382: 4364: 4339: 4280: 4255: 4221: 4182: 4140: 4106: 4091: 4055: 4018: 3996: 3967: 3868: 3851: 3775: 3745: 3711: 3693: 3674: 3641: 3627: 3411: 3399: 3391: 3385: 3377: 3367: 3327: 3315: 3307: 3279: 3268: 3238: 3220: 3198: 3179: 3154: 3092: 3078: 3053: 2998: 2964: 2924: 2880: 2852: 2838: 2792: 2780: 2770: 2628: 2612:
here with two links under "full text links". False - example in the OP above :
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redirects to it, then it should at least support both. For now it marks up as:
1328:, or other such distinctions, including in the lead sentence of an article, is 987:
the publications of the publisher must be free-to read. Once that is done, the
3449:. Maintenance messages are usually not visible, unless you make them visible, 2720: 2668: 1664:
I suspect, though I haven't tried it, that the pipe trick can be made to work
1372: 2205:(Report). College Park, Maryland: Center for Democracy and Civic Engagement. 2198:
Rothschild, Jillian Andres; Novey, Samuel B; Hanmer, Michael J. (June 2024).
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I thought that I had seen it fail. And, yes, the pipe trick works outside of
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Ignoring that, this may also identify duplicate inline references as well.
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error is not considered to be unfit and, in such cases, editors should set
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links never link to free copies. When there's a free copy, it's linked via
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nonstarter, even for a free-content website. Heavy corporate presence...)
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It's coming from the MediaWiki software. I do not have scripts installed (
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tags but, the report returns nothing when 'Filter by tag name' is set to
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Help talk:Citation Style 1/Archive 92 § Proposed script-author parameter
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In other words, I propose https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/<PMID: -->
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but couldn't figure out a way to make line feeds work. Any suggestions?
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Thank you, how can I clean the page of these unnecessary references?--
970:
I would like to add a free-to-read publisher to the DOI prefix list in
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and see a list of open tasks. To browse help related resources see the
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What are the CITEREFs being used for other than short form references?
3750:(To answer my own question, those offsite links are all created using 2843:
Which has nothing to do with shorter PubMed URLs, right? Broken out.
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Some hidden tracking categories are just that: Categories that track
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can be embedded within a CS1 template to save typing / confuse bots.
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Currently, an author name containing a comma-delimited suffix, e.g.,
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I would like to add a free-to-read journal to the DOI prefix list in
2797:"Often a PubMed page does link to a free copy without a PMC version" 2812: 2702:
Asim, A.; Kumar, A.; Muthuswamy, S.; Jain, S.; Agarwal, S. (2015).
2650:
Asim, A.; Kumar, A.; Muthuswamy, S.; Jain, S.; Agarwal, S. (2015).
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given). It should also link when other identifiers of record (e.g.
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This seems to be an issue that should be dealt with the software.
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a page from the category once it HAS been "checked to ensure...".
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to display author names in both native and transliterated forms.
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Maintenance messages are not the same as errors. The former are
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Can you explain why you think it necessary to escape the pipe?
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Not all self-published sources are RS, but some could be per
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Granted, that's a bit specious since there's still no way to
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when published. It shows OK when in preview without errors.
1368:. The documentation should note that "|" must be escaped as 5175:
I would like to be able to have add to the {{free access}}
2341:
Can you point to where consensus was previously achieved, @
4043:. (Which may time out, here's the mainspace only version: 3618:
applications of certain templates in certain conditions.
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had a really horrible citation added, which I removed in
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Hello, another generic title which is not very useful is
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Some of the templates discussed here were considered for
4865:. The same caveats apply: Module:Footnotes is creating 4582:
Joy, the mainspace query is now falling over also, yes.
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Correct: it has not been implemented. We're still using
2274:
Can you point to where consensus was previously achieved
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That's not a problem, and it's not a warning. It's the
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Category:National Register of Historic Places templates
3255: 2804:, or a link to the actual free version. In the case of 2385:
Should bots that are cleaning up CS1 replace URLs like
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gives a maintenance message when a ref is tagged with
3466:
One or more (...) templates have maintenance messages
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not only doesn't do this, but doesn't support manual
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I would like to add a geo-dead/geo-access URL keyword
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Is it not the case that self-published sources fail
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Considering there were already over 3 million pages
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The maximum request time of 60 seconds was exceeded.
3545:
of that tracking category. Read the introduction at
2696:
No URL specified - autolinks to the full PMC version
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when bots are doing other CS1 cleanup (same rules).
2395:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4345631
817:, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of 749:, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of 4761: 4675: 4520: 3660:
Help:CS1 errors § Controlling error message display
3395: 1588: 1544: 1475: 1431: 1199:. This can be avoided by omitting the comma, e.g., 1127: 5063:cites the book with a location but no publisher. — 4035:In case you want something to fix, there is a new 3499:has been (correctly) marking thousands of URLs as 3460:-tagged source, it shows this warning at the top: 3211:proposal doesn't seem to have been implemented -- 5056:, Venice. In that particular example archive.org 3185:We had a related but not identical discussion at 2930:Appears to be an intermittent issue, as with the 2405:be replaced with https://pubmed.gov/<PMID: --> 1748:Are you sure? I don't see any error messages at 1281:Thomas, George B. Jr (2022). "Article of stuff". 1215:parameter would be a cleaner way to handle this. 993:local function build_free_doi_registrants_table() 3554:This hidden tracking category lists pages with 3286:; is there a specific template or should I use 1906:Line feed characters in quote within a citation 1422:Template:Citation Style documentation/publisher 983:part of the DOI associated with the publisher. 3480:-tagged refs have this bit tagged at the end: 1420:Now that I've seen the text that you added to 1197:CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) 3802:It's the exact job of that tracking category. 1015:part of the DOI associated with the journal. 8: 4479:Category:Harv and Sfn multiple-target errors 4390:Category:Harv and Sfn multiple-target errors 4242:) is the appropriate fix, not opting in via 3340:would work fine for these kinds of sources. 2704:""Down syndrome: An insight of the disease"" 2652:""Down syndrome: An insight of the disease"" 1203:or by wrapping in double parentheses, e.g., 4189:Which seems like an argument for restoring 4009:" (an external-links formatting template). 3606:should directly add pages to this category. 664: 38:Help:Citation Style 1 and the CS1 templates 4161:discussion which made ref=harv the default 3646:The script warning is a MediaWiki thing. 3510:The maintenance messages must be a bug in 3109:that underlies all of the cs1|2 templates. 2618:#We should add support for archive-access. 2614:#We should add support for archive-access. 1589:'"`UNIQ--templatestyles-00000031-QINU`"' 1476:'"`UNIQ--templatestyles-0000002D-QINU`"' 782: 714: 609: 5107:. Other non-RS sources could be used for 2781:#We should add support for archive-access 2728: 2719: 2676: 2667: 2387:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18566177/ 2231:We should add support for archive-access. 2181:Center for Democracy and Civic Engagement 1048:I would like support for PDF page numbers 594:does not require a rating on Knowledge's 4481:only tracks multiple target errors when 2931: 2644:PMID in the url - links to abstract only 1705:Shmuel (Seymour J.) Metz Username:Chatul 1388:Shmuel (Seymour J.) Metz Username:Chatul 1340:Shmuel (Seymour J.) Metz Username:Chatul 1220:Shmuel (Seymour J.) Metz Username:Chatul 854:for tips on how to improve this article. 4499:-family template; and then, only those 4166:The solution is available to us today, 3025: 2393:? I think so. (Annoyingly, URLs like 2380: 2141: 1776:and a dummy edit cleared the issue. -- 784: 763:Knowledge:WikiProject Academic Journals 716: 611: 4960: 4436:Category:Harv and Sfn no-target errors 4320: 4265: 4261: 4243: 4239: 4235: 4231: 4190: 4167: 4151: 4145: 4039:category for duplicate HTML IDs. It's 3927: 3923: 3900: 3873: 3226: 3208: 3139: 3135: 3131: 3123: 3119: 3063: 3059: 3037:(PhD thesis). University of Wikimedia. 3007:Dissertation versus thesis in template 2801: 2638: 2634: 2485: 2311: 2107:template. Thanks for pointing it out. 2027:100% agree it was way too much before 1968: 1887: 1868: 1425: 1361: 1319: 1276: 1272: 1208: 1204: 1200: 1155: 1151: 1147: 1109: 1056: 1052: 766:Template:WikiProject Academic Journals 5232:WikiProject Academic Journal articles 4226:That might be a valid approach after 4031:New linter category for duplicate IDs 1336:is commonly used in reliable sources. 1332:for cases in which the name with the 1023:parts can be added to the list under 671:and a volunteer will visit you there. 641:This page is within the scope of the 7: 3952:Category:CS1: abbreviated year range 3284:National Register of Historic Places 3274:National Register of Historic Places 1912:Electoral fraud in the United States 1195:, generates the maintenance message 991:part can be added to the list under 850:WikiProject Magazines' writing guide 4323:for those templates that match the 4292: 4193:and removing support for automatic 3766:, so I guess they are exceptions.) 3422:False warning when URL is 'usurped' 3116:Template:Cite thesis § TemplateData 2800:In which case it can be linked via 1977: 1699: 1677: 1669: 1080:was introduced in 2000 by ... ) in 36:for discussing improvements to the 5227:NA-Class Academic Journal articles 2616:False - example in the OP above : 900:Knowledge:Templates for discussion 25: 4617:the "large table" Linter tracking 3451:like I have done in my common.css 3250:Category:CS1 errors: generic name 2310:Do not misuse cs1|2 parameters. 1871:about 450 of them at the moment. 1009:Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration 1004:Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration 977:Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration 972:Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration 811:This page is within the scope of 743:This page is within the scope of 583: 581: 5177: 4552:Special:LintErrors/duplicate-ids 4041:Special:LintErrors/duplicate-ids 3062:is a template-specific alias of 2813:https://hal.science/hal-01688786 1673:tags. But, since it won't work 1187:Feature request: author suffixes 1073:in the links to identifier pages 1025:local extended_registrants_t = { 948: 926: 887: 871: 804: 786: 736: 718: 634: 613: 582: 556: 526: 53:Click here to start a new topic. 18:Module talk:Citation/CS1/Updates 5242:NA-importance magazine articles 3954:, a set of transclusions which 3909:keywords are correctly applied. 3599:keywords are correctly applied. 1428:? For me, both of these work: 1382:does not work, although normal 1318:Sorry, I incorrecly remembered 1062:I would like my change done now 831:Knowledge:WikiProject Magazines 680:Template:Knowledge Help Project 5247:WikiProject Magazines articles 5198:22:17, 29 September 2024 (UTC) 5157:22:09, 29 September 2024 (UTC) 5141:14:31, 28 September 2024 (UTC) 5099:14:27, 28 September 2024 (UTC) 5073:20:05, 28 September 2024 (UTC) 5045:19:51, 28 September 2024 (UTC) 5017:13:45, 28 September 2024 (UTC) 4993:10:52, 28 September 2024 (UTC) 4951:03:12, 28 September 2024 (UTC) 4922:02:10, 28 September 2024 (UTC) 4882:22:20, 27 September 2024 (UTC) 4651:21:59, 27 September 2024 (UTC) 4633:21:07, 27 September 2024 (UTC) 4615:should be. Some of them, like 4592:05:18, 27 September 2024 (UTC) 4578:01:39, 27 September 2024 (UTC) 4538:01:06, 27 September 2024 (UTC) 4462:02:14, 27 September 2024 (UTC) 4430:00:54, 27 September 2024 (UTC) 4416:00:15, 27 September 2024 (UTC) 4383:23:38, 26 September 2024 (UTC) 4365:23:35, 26 September 2024 (UTC) 4340:23:01, 26 September 2024 (UTC) 4281:23:01, 26 September 2024 (UTC) 4256:21:57, 26 September 2024 (UTC) 4222:21:51, 26 September 2024 (UTC) 4205:which as always had automatic 4183:21:53, 26 September 2024 (UTC) 4141:21:39, 26 September 2024 (UTC) 4107:21:33, 26 September 2024 (UTC) 4092:21:31, 26 September 2024 (UTC) 4056:20:45, 26 September 2024 (UTC) 4019:03:03, 27 September 2024 (UTC) 3997:01:53, 27 September 2024 (UTC) 3968:01:29, 27 September 2024 (UTC) 3869:19:04, 26 September 2024 (UTC) 3852:18:30, 26 September 2024 (UTC) 3795:The preview message says it is 3776:18:26, 26 September 2024 (UTC) 3746:17:56, 26 September 2024 (UTC) 3712:19:04, 26 September 2024 (UTC) 3694:18:24, 26 September 2024 (UTC) 3675:18:18, 26 September 2024 (UTC) 3642:17:49, 26 September 2024 (UTC) 3628:17:46, 26 September 2024 (UTC) 3532:19:40, 25 September 2024 (UTC) 3505:Knowledge:Long-term abuse/Judi 3412:11:35, 26 September 2024 (UTC) 3386:09:11, 26 September 2024 (UTC) 3368:22:26, 25 September 2024 (UTC) 3316:19:31, 25 September 2024 (UTC) 3269:15:44, 24 September 2024 (UTC) 3239:22:31, 25 September 2024 (UTC) 3221:01:30, 25 September 2024 (UTC) 3199:01:09, 23 September 2024 (UTC) 3180:23:11, 22 September 2024 (UTC) 3155:23:17, 21 September 2024 (UTC) 3093:22:59, 21 September 2024 (UTC) 3079:22:46, 21 September 2024 (UTC) 3054:22:38, 21 September 2024 (UTC) 2999:13:33, 19 September 2024 (UTC) 2965:13:19, 19 September 2024 (UTC) 2925:12:35, 19 September 2024 (UTC) 2881:06:53, 27 September 2024 (UTC) 2853:06:37, 27 September 2024 (UTC) 2839:07:53, 25 September 2024 (UTC) 2793:05:54, 25 September 2024 (UTC) 2771:05:34, 25 September 2024 (UTC) 2629:05:24, 25 September 2024 (UTC) 2596:15:11, 18 September 2024 (UTC) 2540:14:26, 18 September 2024 (UTC) 2518:23:22, 17 September 2024 (UTC) 2498:11:14, 17 September 2024 (UTC) 2480:10:56, 17 September 2024 (UTC) 2445:10:53, 17 September 2024 (UTC) 2416:10:34, 17 September 2024 (UTC) 2381:How 'bout shorter PubMed URLs? 2375:05:33, 25 September 2024 (UTC) 2355:05:27, 25 September 2024 (UTC) 2335:14:46, 18 September 2024 (UTC) 2304:14:37, 18 September 2024 (UTC) 2289:14:16, 18 September 2024 (UTC) 2268:23:26, 17 September 2024 (UTC) 2246:10:13, 17 September 2024 (UTC) 2131:06:26, 18 September 2024 (UTC) 2117:06:22, 18 September 2024 (UTC) 2092:04:52, 18 September 2024 (UTC) 2071:01:12, 11 September 2024 (UTC) 2055:23:58, 10 September 2024 (UTC) 2037:23:59, 10 September 2024 (UTC) 2023:21:56, 10 September 2024 (UTC) 2009:21:55, 10 September 2024 (UTC) 1994:21:43, 10 September 2024 (UTC) 1938:20:00, 10 September 2024 (UTC) 1900:19:38, 22 September 2024 (UTC) 1881:17:14, 10 September 2024 (UTC) 1855:16:02, 10 September 2024 (UTC) 1840:15:59, 10 September 2024 (UTC) 1806:15:45, 10 September 2024 (UTC) 1765:15:43, 10 September 2024 (UTC) 1743:15:20, 10 September 2024 (UTC) 1713:16:38, 12 September 2024 (UTC) 1694:16:55, 10 September 2024 (UTC) 1414:14:00, 10 September 2024 (UTC) 1396:13:42, 10 September 2024 (UTC) 1233:Isn't this already covered by 1182:15:17, 18 September 2024 (UTC) 834:Template:WikiProject Magazines 667:ask for help on your talk page 600:It is of interest to multiple 1: 5217:High-importance Help articles 4902:. Trying to get rid of a few 3684:message, I'll have to check. 3547:Category:CS1 maint: unfit URL 3456:When I preview a page with a 2708:Journal of Biomedical Science 2656:Journal of Biomedical Science 2399:https://pubmed.gov/PMC4345631 1348:15:08, 9 September 2024 (UTC) 1314:12:51, 9 September 2024 (UTC) 1267:12:44, 9 September 2024 (UTC) 1228:11:43, 9 September 2024 (UTC) 825:and see a list of open tasks. 757:and see a list of open tasks. 746:WikiProject Academic Journals 50:Put new text under old text. 5222:Knowledge Help Project pages 5052:: Girolamo Ruscelli (1566), 4963:to suppress the message. -- 3724:(On an unrelated note, that 3398:section of the main article 3130:, here is your task: remove 2600:What are you talking about @ 697:This page has been rated as 5188:Thank you for all you do!! 4234:(or perhaps a new keyword, 2391:https://pubmed.gov/18566177 1948:Replace the linefeeds with 1141:14:24, 31 August 2024 (UTC) 911:Template:Cite press release 58:New to Knowledge? Welcome! 5263: 5237:NA-Class magazine articles 4519:-family template or other 4264:works and I would support 3468:; messages may be hidden ( 3017:Template:Cite dissertation 1360:Several parameters, e.g., 1033:= {'YYYY', 'ZZZZ', '...'}, 965:Frequently asked questions 703:project's importance scale 101: 4503:IDs that are targeted by 3922:argument to be made that 3888:maintenance messages, of 2721:10.1186/s12929-015-0138-y 2669:10.1186/s12929-015-0138-y 1943:That would be this thing? 1205:|first1=((George B., Jr)) 1078:digital object identifier 882: 845: 799: 769:Academic Journal articles 731: 696: 651:, where you can join the 629: 608: 88:Be welcoming to newcomers 5089:, so why are bothering? 4370:at just 100k earlier. :) 4319:referencing and setting 4148:Nothing to my knowledge. 3933:Category:CS1 maintenance 3330:.)For most other pages, 3015:to say dissertation? If 1725:Countless Lua errors at 3948:Category:CS1 properties 3940:Category:CS1 properties 3732:with offsite links (to 3118:where someone has made 1979:...</blockquote: --> 1733:error message I think. 1035:. Also leave a note at 995:. Also leave a note at 878:Other talk page banners 5212:NA-Class Help articles 4959:says you can also set 4568: 3896:citations on the page. 3650:places messages about 3611: 3421: 3394:, and moved it to the 3142:as a proper parameter. 3035:Something About Citing 3011:Is it possible to get 2397:can't be shortened to 1037:User talk:Citation bot 997:User talk:Citation bot 917:on March 2, 2018, see 677:Knowledge:Help Project 644:Knowledge Help Project 83:avoid personal attacks 4598:example in my sandbox 4557: 4159:in 2018 based on the 3580:A URL that returns a 3552: 2572:. Bots handle that. 2097:I was unaware of the 1890:about 45 around now. 1845:it would be needed). 1193:George B. Thomas, Jr. 1082:Special:WhatLinksHere 814:WikiProject Magazines 520:Auto-archiving period 4348:. I'd suggest using 3734:https://icd.who.int/ 3486:CS1 maint: unfit URL 3432:| url-status=usurped 3306:to cite a record?-- 3033:Ask, Why? I (2024). 3013:Template:Cite thesis 2932:#Errors at line 2083 2278:archive-format=free. 2102:Duplicated citations 1956:. Rewriting it with 1356:Linking restrictions 1201:|first1=George B. Jr 909:" proposal to merge 5054:Le imprese illustri 4999:here is another one 4434:You're thinking of 3924:|url-status=usurped 3790:it's not a warning. 3648:Module:Citation/CS1 3604:Module:Citation/CS1 3560:|url-status=usurped 3512:Module:Citation/CS1 3476:Also, with me, the 3428:Module:Citation/CS1 3107:Module:Citation/CS1 2552:Free copies tangent 1978:<blockquote: --> 1967:This also works in 1888:|title=Amazon.co.uk 1863:More generic titles 1721:Errors at line 2083 1603:"citation book cs1" 1490:"citation book cs1" 1277:|first=George B. Jr 896:merging or deletion 4900:This is what I did 4621:Special:LintErrors 4554:is now timing out: 3918:I suppose there's 3396:==External links== 3282:there is a ref to 2775:OK, but there are 1156:|jstor-access=free 915:Template:Cite news 596:content assessment 94:dispute resolution 55: 5139: 5124: 5120: 5114: 5061:Girolamo Ruscelli 4991: 4976: 4972: 4966: 4904:entries from here 4874:Trappist the monk 4661: 4530:Trappist the monk 4485:is invoked by an 4474: 4332:Trappist the monk 4294:...</cite: --> 4273:Trappist the monk 4240:|ref=duplicate-id 4214:Trappist the monk 4139: 4124: 4120: 4114: 4090: 4075: 4071: 4065: 4005:medical resources 3928:|url-status=unfit 3882:Trappist the monk 3861:Trappist the monk 3849: 3830:Trappist the monk 3704:Trappist the monk 3667:Trappist the monk 3564:|url-status=unfit 3529: 3464:"Script warning: 3445:, the latter are 3356:Template:NRHP url 3147:Trappist the monk 3071:Trappist the monk 2997: 2982: 2978: 2972: 2963: 2948: 2944: 2938: 2478: 2463: 2459: 2453: 2327:Trappist the monk 1986:Trappist the monk 1838: 1823: 1819: 1813: 1804: 1789: 1785: 1779: 1757:Trappist the monk 1686:Trappist the monk 1406:Trappist the monk 1283:Journal of Things 1265: 1250: 1246: 1240: 1092: 1091: 963: 938: 937: 934: 933: 866: 865: 862: 861: 858: 857: 837:magazine articles 781: 780: 777: 776: 760:Academic Journals 751:Academic Journals 726:Academic Journals 713: 712: 709: 708: 576: 575: 551: 550: 74:Assume good faith 51: 16:(Redirected from 5254: 5182: 5181: 5163:Feature requests 5127: 5122: 5118: 5112: 5043: 5015: 5013: 5008: 4979: 4974: 4970: 4964: 4962: 4949: 4920: 4918: 4913: 4868: 4864: 4863: 4858: 4857: 4851:Module:Footnotes 4844: 4843: 4840: 4837: 4833: 4830: 4827: 4823: 4820: 4817: 4813: 4810: 4807: 4803: 4800: 4797: 4793: 4790: 4787: 4783: 4780: 4777: 4774: 4771: 4767: 4764: 4758: 4757: 4754: 4751: 4747: 4744: 4741: 4737: 4734: 4731: 4727: 4724: 4721: 4717: 4714: 4711: 4707: 4704: 4701: 4697: 4694: 4691: 4688: 4685: 4681: 4678: 4671: 4655: 4609: 4603: 4524: 4523: 4518: 4517: 4512: 4511: 4506: 4502: 4498: 4497: 4492: 4483:Module:Footnotes 4468: 4460: 4414: 4326: 4322: 4318: 4317: 4312: 4299: 4295: 4267: 4263: 4245: 4241: 4237: 4233: 4208: 4204: 4196: 4192: 4169: 4127: 4122: 4118: 4112: 4078: 4073: 4069: 4063: 4008: 3986: 3980: 3929: 3925: 3908: 3904: 3850: 3843: 3835:That is correct. 3833: 3786: 3765: 3757: 3657: 3653: 3598: 3594: 3587: 3586:|url-status=dead 3576: 3572: 3565: 3561: 3530: 3523: 3517: 3502: 3487: 3479: 3467: 3459: 3448: 3444: 3434:. An example is 3433: 3397: 3349: 3343: 3339: 3333: 3324:application form 3305: 3299: 3295: 3289: 3228: 3210: 3165:trans-parameters 3141: 3137: 3133: 3125: 3121: 3104: 3065: 3061: 3039: 3038: 3030: 2985: 2980: 2976: 2970: 2951: 2946: 2942: 2936: 2879: 2837: 2803: 2769: 2741: 2732: 2723: 2689: 2680: 2671: 2640: 2636: 2635:|doi-access=free 2594: 2524:Michael Bednarek 2515: 2508: 2487: 2466: 2461: 2457: 2451: 2443: 2313: 2312:|archive-format= 2279: 2265: 2258: 2223: 2217: 2211: 2210: 2204: 2195: 2189: 2188: 2178: 2170: 2164: 2158: 2152: 2146: 2106: 2100: 2089: 2082: 1980: 1970: 1961: 1960: 1955: 1927: 1921: 1889: 1870: 1826: 1821: 1817: 1811: 1792: 1787: 1783: 1777: 1702: 1701:...</ref: --> 1680: 1679:...</ref: --> 1672: 1671:...</ref: --> 1650: 1649: 1646: 1643: 1639: 1636: 1633: 1630: 1627: 1624: 1621: 1618: 1614: 1611: 1607: 1604: 1601: 1598: 1595: 1592: 1585: 1573: 1572: 1569: 1566: 1563: 1559: 1556: 1553: 1550: 1547: 1537: 1536: 1533: 1530: 1526: 1523: 1520: 1517: 1514: 1511: 1508: 1505: 1501: 1498: 1494: 1491: 1488: 1485: 1482: 1479: 1472: 1460: 1459: 1456: 1453: 1450: 1446: 1443: 1440: 1437: 1434: 1427: 1377: 1371: 1363: 1312: 1290: 1278: 1274: 1253: 1248: 1244: 1238: 1214: 1206: 1202: 1198: 1180: 1157: 1153: 1149: 1148:|doi-access=free 1129: 1125: 1119: 1115: 1107: 1101: 1058: 1054: 1034: 1030: 1027:with the format 1022: 1014: 990: 982: 953: 952: 940: 930: 891: 884: 875: 874: 868: 839: 838: 835: 832: 829: 808: 801: 800: 790: 783: 771: 770: 767: 764: 761: 740: 733: 732: 722: 715: 685: 684: 681: 678: 675: 670: 649:the project page 638: 631: 630: 625: 617: 610: 587: 586: 585: 578: 560: 553: 545: 531: 530: 521: 114: 29: 21: 5262: 5261: 5257: 5256: 5255: 5253: 5252: 5251: 5202: 5201: 5176: 5165: 5111:statements. -- 5022: 5011: 5004: 5002: 4961:|publisher=none 4928: 4916: 4909: 4907: 4896: 4866: 4861: 4860: 4855: 4854: 4841: 4838: 4835: 4831: 4828: 4825: 4821: 4818: 4815: 4811: 4808: 4805: 4801: 4798: 4795: 4791: 4788: 4785: 4781: 4778: 4775: 4772: 4768: 4765: 4762: 4755: 4752: 4749: 4745: 4742: 4739: 4735: 4732: 4729: 4725: 4722: 4719: 4715: 4712: 4709: 4705: 4702: 4699: 4695: 4692: 4689: 4686: 4682: 4679: 4676: 4665: 4639:in the category 4611:those problems. 4607: 4601: 4567: 4566: 4565: 4521: 4515: 4514: 4509: 4508: 4504: 4500: 4495: 4494: 4486: 4439: 4393: 4324: 4315: 4314: 4306: 4297: 4228:sub-referencing 4206: 4198: 4194: 4033: 4002: 3984: 3978: 3906: 3902: 3839: 3827: 3780: 3759: 3751: 3655: 3651: 3596: 3592: 3585: 3574: 3570: 3563: 3559: 3519: 3515: 3500: 3485: 3477: 3465: 3457: 3446: 3442: 3431: 3424: 3347: 3341: 3337: 3331: 3303: 3297: 3293: 3287: 3276: 3253: 3209:|script-author= 3167: 3134:as an alias of 3105:template or to 3098: 3042: 3032: 3031: 3027: 3009: 2909: 2858: 2816: 2777:better examples 2748: 2701: 2649: 2573: 2554: 2511: 2504: 2422: 2389:with URLs like 2383: 2314:(and any other 2277: 2261: 2254: 2233: 2228: 2227: 2226: 2218: 2214: 2202: 2197: 2196: 2192: 2176: 2172: 2171: 2167: 2159: 2155: 2147: 2143: 2104: 2098: 2085: 2078: 1958: 1957: 1949: 1925: 1919: 1908: 1886:Another one is 1865: 1750:Gabrielle Baker 1727:Gabrielle Baker 1723: 1647: 1644: 1640: 1637: 1634: 1631: 1628: 1625: 1622: 1619: 1615: 1612: 1609: 1605: 1602: 1599: 1596: 1593: 1590: 1576: 1570: 1567: 1564: 1561: 1557: 1554: 1551: 1548: 1545: 1534: 1531: 1527: 1524: 1521: 1518: 1515: 1512: 1509: 1506: 1502: 1499: 1496: 1492: 1489: 1486: 1483: 1480: 1477: 1463: 1457: 1454: 1451: 1448: 1444: 1441: 1438: 1435: 1432: 1375: 1369: 1358: 1291: 1280: 1196: 1189: 1159: 1123: 1117: 1105: 1099: 1097: 1088: 1087: 1032: 1028: 1020: 1012: 988: 980: 966: 964: 872: 836: 833: 830: 827: 826: 768: 765: 762: 759: 758: 699:High-importance 682: 679: 676: 673: 672: 624:High‑importance 623: 547: 546: 541: 518: 120: 119: 118: 117: 110: 106: 99: 69: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 5260: 5258: 5250: 5249: 5244: 5239: 5234: 5229: 5224: 5219: 5214: 5204: 5203: 5186: 5185: 5173: 5164: 5161: 5160: 5159: 5145: 5144: 5143: 5083: 5082: 5081: 5080: 5079: 5078: 5077: 5076: 5075: 5065:David Eppstein 5006:Mr.choppers | 4911:Mr.choppers | 4895: 4894:Self published 4892: 4891: 4890: 4889: 4888: 4887: 4886: 4885: 4884: 4870: 4847: 4846: 4845: 4759: 4662: 4653: 4612: 4563: 4562: 4558: 4555: 4548: 4547: 4546: 4545: 4544: 4543: 4542: 4541: 4540: 4526: 4507:links from an 4475: 4466: 4465: 4464: 4371: 4367: 4353: 4350:Special:Search 4328: 4303: 4301: 4289: 4288: 4287: 4286: 4285: 4284: 4283: 4269: 4266:|ref=duplicate 4236:|ref=duplicate 4210: 4187: 4186: 4185: 4171: 4164: 4149: 4032: 4029: 4028: 4027: 4026: 4025: 4024: 4023: 4022: 4021: 3972: 3971: 3970: 3950:even contains 3936: 3935:subcategories. 3916: 3897: 3871: 3857: 3836: 3834: 3825: 3815: 3808: 3805: 3798: 3793: 3787: 3722: 3721: 3720: 3719: 3718: 3717: 3716: 3715: 3714: 3700: 3663: 3612: 3550: 3494: 3493: 3474: 3473: 3423: 3420: 3419: 3418: 3417: 3416: 3415: 3414: 3325: 3275: 3272: 3252: 3247: 3246: 3245: 3244: 3243: 3242: 3241: 3202: 3201: 3166: 3163: 3162: 3161: 3160: 3159: 3158: 3157: 3143: 3112: 3110: 3067: 3041: 3040: 3024: 3008: 3005: 3004: 3003: 3002: 3001: 2908: 2905: 2904: 2903: 2902: 2901: 2900: 2899: 2898: 2897: 2896: 2895: 2894: 2893: 2892: 2891: 2890: 2889: 2888: 2887: 2886: 2885: 2884: 2883: 2845:RememberOrwell 2798: 2785:RememberOrwell 2746: 2745: 2744: 2743: 2742: 2697: 2693: 2692: 2691: 2690: 2645: 2621:RememberOrwell 2553: 2550: 2549: 2548: 2547: 2546: 2545: 2544: 2543: 2542: 2532:RememberOrwell 2527: 2447: 2408:RememberOrwell 2382: 2379: 2378: 2377: 2367:RememberOrwell 2359: 2358: 2357: 2347:RememberOrwell 2339: 2338: 2337: 2323: 2308: 2306: 2281:RememberOrwell 2238:RememberOrwell 2232: 2229: 2225: 2224: 2212: 2190: 2165: 2153: 2140: 2139: 2135: 2134: 2133: 2119: 2074: 2073: 2059: 2058: 2057: 2043: 2042: 2041: 2040: 2039: 1982: 1974: 1972: 1965: 1963: 1946: 1944: 1907: 1904: 1903: 1902: 1864: 1861: 1860: 1859: 1858: 1857: 1842: 1767: 1753: 1722: 1719: 1718: 1717: 1716: 1715: 1682: 1676: 1667: 1662: 1660: 1657: 1656: 1655: 1654: 1653: 1652: 1651: 1542: 1541: 1540: 1539: 1538: 1418: 1416: 1402: 1357: 1354: 1353: 1352: 1351: 1350: 1331: 1316: 1188: 1185: 1145: 1096: 1093: 1090: 1089: 1086: 1085: 1074: 1067: 1063: 1060: 1049: 1046: 1043: 1040: 1006: 1000: 974: 967: 947: 946: 945: 943: 936: 935: 932: 931: 924: 923: 922: 892: 880: 879: 876: 864: 863: 860: 859: 856: 855: 843: 842: 840: 823:the discussion 809: 797: 796: 791: 779: 778: 775: 774: 772: 755:the discussion 741: 729: 728: 723: 711: 710: 707: 706: 695: 689: 688: 686: 674:Knowledge Help 661:Help Directory 639: 627: 626: 621:Knowledge Help 618: 606: 605: 599: 588: 574: 573: 561: 549: 548: 539: 537: 536: 533: 532: 122: 121: 116: 115: 107: 102: 100: 98: 97: 90: 85: 76: 70: 68: 67: 56: 47: 46: 43: 42: 41: 27: 24: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 5259: 5248: 5245: 5243: 5240: 5238: 5235: 5233: 5230: 5228: 5225: 5223: 5220: 5218: 5215: 5213: 5210: 5209: 5207: 5200: 5199: 5195: 5191: 5180: 5174: 5171: 5170:public domain 5167: 5166: 5162: 5158: 5154: 5150: 5146: 5142: 5138: 5136: 5132: 5126: 5125: 5110: 5106: 5102: 5101: 5100: 5096: 5092: 5088: 5084: 5074: 5070: 5066: 5062: 5058: 5055: 5051: 5048: 5047: 5046: 5041: 5037: 5033: 5029: 5025: 5020: 5019: 5018: 5014: 5009: 5007: 5000: 4996: 4995: 4994: 4990: 4988: 4984: 4978: 4977: 4958: 4955:The tracking 4954: 4953: 4952: 4947: 4943: 4939: 4935: 4931: 4926: 4925: 4924: 4923: 4919: 4914: 4912: 4905: 4901: 4893: 4883: 4879: 4875: 4871: 4852: 4848: 4760: 4674: 4673: 4669: 4663: 4659: 4658:edit conflict 4654: 4652: 4648: 4644: 4640: 4636: 4635: 4634: 4630: 4626: 4622: 4618: 4613: 4606: 4599: 4595: 4594: 4593: 4589: 4585: 4581: 4580: 4579: 4575: 4571: 4561: 4556: 4553: 4549: 4539: 4535: 4531: 4527: 4525:sort of link. 4490: 4484: 4480: 4476: 4472: 4471:edit conflict 4467: 4463: 4458: 4454: 4450: 4446: 4442: 4437: 4433: 4432: 4431: 4427: 4423: 4419: 4418: 4417: 4412: 4408: 4404: 4400: 4396: 4391: 4386: 4385: 4384: 4380: 4376: 4372: 4368: 4366: 4362: 4358: 4354: 4351: 4347: 4343: 4342: 4341: 4337: 4333: 4329: 4310: 4304: 4302: 4293:<cite: --> 4290: 4282: 4278: 4274: 4270: 4259: 4258: 4257: 4253: 4249: 4229: 4225: 4224: 4223: 4219: 4215: 4211: 4202: 4188: 4184: 4180: 4176: 4172: 4165: 4162: 4158: 4153: 4150: 4147: 4144: 4143: 4142: 4138: 4136: 4132: 4126: 4125: 4110: 4109: 4108: 4104: 4100: 4095: 4094: 4093: 4089: 4087: 4083: 4077: 4076: 4060: 4059: 4058: 4057: 4053: 4049: 4045: 4042: 4038: 4030: 4020: 4016: 4012: 4006: 4000: 3999: 3998: 3994: 3990: 3983: 3976: 3973: 3969: 3965: 3961: 3957: 3953: 3949: 3945: 3941: 3937: 3934: 3921: 3917: 3914: 3910: 3898: 3895: 3891: 3887: 3883: 3879: 3875: 3872: 3870: 3866: 3862: 3858: 3855: 3854: 3853: 3847: 3842: 3841:Manifestation 3837: 3831: 3826: 3823: 3819: 3813: 3809: 3803: 3799: 3796: 3791: 3784: 3779: 3778: 3777: 3773: 3769: 3763: 3755: 3749: 3748: 3747: 3743: 3739: 3735: 3731: 3727: 3723: 3713: 3709: 3705: 3701: 3697: 3696: 3695: 3691: 3687: 3683: 3678: 3677: 3676: 3672: 3668: 3664: 3661: 3649: 3645: 3644: 3643: 3639: 3635: 3631: 3630: 3629: 3625: 3621: 3617: 3613: 3610: 3607: 3605: 3600: 3589: 3583: 3578: 3569:The keywords 3567: 3557: 3556:CS1 citations 3551: 3548: 3544: 3540: 3539:Manifestation 3536: 3535: 3534: 3533: 3527: 3522: 3521:Manifestation 3513: 3508: 3506: 3498: 3491: 3483: 3482: 3481: 3471: 3463: 3462: 3461: 3454: 3452: 3439: 3437: 3429: 3413: 3409: 3405: 3401: 3393: 3389: 3388: 3387: 3383: 3379: 3375: 3371: 3370: 3369: 3365: 3361: 3357: 3353: 3346: 3345:Cite document 3336: 3329: 3323: 3320: 3319: 3318: 3317: 3313: 3309: 3302: 3301:cite document 3292: 3285: 3281: 3273: 3271: 3270: 3267: 3264: 3261: 3257: 3251: 3248: 3240: 3236: 3232: 3227:|author-mask= 3224: 3223: 3222: 3218: 3214: 3206: 3205: 3204: 3203: 3200: 3196: 3192: 3188: 3184: 3183: 3182: 3181: 3177: 3173: 3164: 3156: 3152: 3148: 3144: 3129: 3117: 3113: 3111: 3108: 3102: 3096: 3095: 3094: 3090: 3086: 3082: 3081: 3080: 3076: 3072: 3068: 3058: 3057: 3056: 3055: 3051: 3047: 3036: 3029: 3026: 3023: 3022: 3018: 3014: 3006: 3000: 2996: 2994: 2990: 2984: 2983: 2968: 2967: 2966: 2962: 2960: 2956: 2950: 2949: 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