3453:, I don't think that I got a compellingly definitive answer. There are those who believe that we should revert all of the access-signal-related changes; there are those who believe that we should implement the individual aspects of the RfC that received consensus no matter how slight; there are those who believe that, for now, we should do neither of those things and continue with the status quo pending supplementary RfCs. I find myself in this latter camp because of closer's writing quoted above and because the status quo version of access-signal support is already out there in use and has been since 29 October 2016.
2514:
registration required" instead of "You are required to register to read this article, but it does not cost money to do so. Websites will typically asks for your email and some personal information. You could also ask a friend to register for you, or register with a dummy email if you do not trust the website with your personal information, however this may violate their terms of service. Your password and login information might be stored in a cookie. That being said, an excerpt might still be available to unregistered users."
1094:, which doesn't do that since website/publisher is obvious (it's the arxiv repository). Likewise for bioRxiv, it's hosted on the bioRxiv repository. The only difference between the two is bioRxiv is relatively new and only starting to pick up steam (at a very impressive rate too). The real question is how are bioRxiv entries usually cited in the literature? We should follow that, but I suspect biology treats them the same way as physics/astronomy treats arxiv citations.
3911:—but they're very uncommon. (I don't think the error message should acknowledge these rare exceptions; it should just state the rule that's almost always true.) If anyone agrees we should do this and someone can provide the code (I cannot), we would need a way to turn off the error message for proper uses. If we reached that stage, if necessary, I would volunteer to spend the time (within reason) to find all instances and implement whatever that fix might be (maybe
31:
2692:
2353:
2793:
2821:
2499:
much hover text. But these people can quickly learn what the paywall lock means. They can read the hover text once, understand it, and never feel a need to hover their mouse over a paywall lock ever again. But, for high-school students and other individuals not in the know, we may be opening their eyes (maybe for the first time ever) to vast trove of scholarly knowledge. —
2049:
3124:
average reader. I don't think it's helpful to the average reader to obliquely define
Knowledge reference inclusion policy in the help for what the tag means. Finally, why the weasel words in "may be required"? The parameter says "registration=yes", and it renders as "registration required" -- the "may be" has no business being there.
3320:
mis-informs, possibly because the RFC itself did not clarify that subscription/registration access flags are apparently dependent on the lock scheme. Aspect B3 may not be independent, but a sub-aspect of Aspect B1. Something like this should have been pointed out, as it may have been material to the RFC's consideration.
3824:, problem solved. It is not the purpose of a citation to explain to reader what the cited content contains or describes. The purpose of a citation is to assist readers in locating the source that supports claims made in a Knowledge article. If I go to the library and checkout the 17 November 2000 issue of
5056:
This occurs for most of the citation templates which might have a sub-work unit (notably, websites, encyclopedias, and so-forth, and even contributions to some books which might be in language X versus the book's Y). I can't recall having seen a discussion regarding the topic since the module-ization
3172:
I see that the period after the ")" gets added elsewhere, and may be done in such a way that it would be difficult to omit it for registration=yes and subscription=yes so that the period can be placed inside the parentheses in the above text, so I have not yet looked into that. Before I do, I wanted
2135:
Dear
Trappist: The problem with the old dark-red access lock icon is that it had a transparent background. This made it nearly invisible when the icon was superimposed upon a black webpage. I see four possible workarounds: A) Underlay a white rectangle beneath the dark-red lock. B) Or a white rounded
2066:
many paywalled sources let you read the abstract for free, or a page or two for free. Please correct Mark and I if we're wrong, but we think that bright red may imply "you can't read any of this for free". This may mislead our readers, and dissuade them from clicking through and reading abstracts for
1128:
Can anyone know how to manage these templates for volumes with publication dates spread over multiple years? (they're unusual, but early 20th century works sometimes had publication dates of 1910-1913, for example). I've done it once before, but can't remember where! Any advice gratefully received...
420:
This seems to be generalized to all biorxiv dois, but might be a temporary database issue. However, I have no faith that the crossref information would not polute the citation with extraneous and unecessary information, like putting CSHL as the publisher, biorxiv as the journal, and similar. It would
3566:
or similar. Additionally, you have to include the information that will help others easily discover the source: if the review has a title, you should use that title - or at least as much of the title as would be required to make it a legible, discoverable citation. If the review's title is the title
3116:
I was just editing an article where one of the citations required (free) registration to read, so I looked at the {{cite web}} template and found there was a "|registration=yes" parameter, so I added that. However, it renders so poorly and confusingly for readers -- "(registration required (help))."
2498:
Both you and I have been to university. Also, both you and I both know that we can get free online access to many papers at a university library. But many laypeople don't know this. In fact, even some university graduates don't know this. For those in the know, we're wasting their time by writing so
4999:
describes) not the entire journal, so I would imagine it to be either near the title of the article or somehow modifying the entire citation. Right now it makes it seem like the entire series of a journal is in whatever language instead of just the article under discussion, which is quite often not
4776:
parameters where editors had added inappropriate annotations. That experience and this discussion were the impetus to add name checks to the Module sandbox. I have added code that detects a variety of editor annotations that occur at the end of values assigned to author, contributor, interviewer,
3840:
The bibliographical details of Rubin's book are included in the review's title but to include them here only confuses the issue. Our reader does not need to have those details when seeking the review at the public library. I can imagine a reader checking the book for something that was written in
2172:
In that RFC, Headbomb offered a choice of multiple colors for the free-access lock and the partial-access lock. But the only color choice he offered for the paywall lock was bright red. (In other words, bright red was the only choice available on the ballot.) Because the ballot offered no choice in
1640:
correctly applies
Citation Style 1. The back-end, and/or the scripting language utilized, is not directly relevant to style issues in general, and to citing IETF docs in particular, at least per the current CS1 implementation. If this template has bugs that trouble you and/or bad documentation that
4298:
seems a rather insubstantial reason for opposition. I'm no grammarian so there may be more substantive grammatical reasons why we should not use the colon to introduce the title at the end of the editor list. I suppose that my preference for the colon stems from the use of the full stop (cs1) or
3852:
as a descriptor. In each case, the title of the review was supplied by the source and was obvious to me. I did not set out to be wholly consistent; that isn't my job here. I did set out to show how I think these three reviews might be cited; that I did them differently just shows that there are
2445:
Good idea. In fact, maybe we could provide even more alt text than that. Perhaps this: "A summary or excerpt may be available for free. However, to read the full text, you must either buy access or visit a library with a paid subscription. Try phoning your nearest university library." In addition,
801:
in the future, but right now I don't understand the SSRNs system well enough to be sure that it's needed, or what should or shouldn't be allowed for parameters if there is a need for it. I'll be focusing on biorxiv/citeseerx cleanup for now (and I'll create documentation for them later this week).
254:
would do two things. It specifically identifies the publication as a preprint, and which would facilitate the bot-maintenance of these templates and general cleanup of the citations. Right now, there's a lot of people doing citations to biorxiv preprints like this (the first is done by putting the
2189:
Only one color was offered for the free access lock, green. The only one where there was a choice was the partial access lock, yellow vs blue which left very few people happy. I personally believe Green/Grey/Red will gain support the next time we ask, but it's possibly Green/Grey/Grey will get it
1060:
quick query from a by-stander: should the template output some sort of indication of the name of the website or the publisher of the website that's hosting these articles beyond the bioRxiv identifier number? I understand what it is from clicking on the ID number, but maybe we could give just an
3484:
without having a title? Sometimes I need to cite pieces in academic journals that don't have a title, per se. The most obvious example of this is a book review, which generally would be cited as , where in lieu or or alongside any proper title is a description of the work itself; and titles and
3366:
And my point is that the community was presented with a partly false or incomplete set of options. Aspect B3 was not fully explained as dependent on Aspect B1. This may have affected the outcome. It certainly affected the closing, and the closer's comments, which seem contradictory as indicated
3319:
Not what I am asking. The exact placement or wording of the flag to be applied is not relevant to my question. All I want to be able to do is to signal subscription requirement, but without using locks. It seems that locks are locked in when it comes to this. If that is the case, the RFC close
3123:
First off, the "r" in "registration" should be capitalized if there's a period at the end, and the period should go inside the parentheses, not outside. Secondly, "Sources are not required to be available online. Online sources do not have to be freely available." must be very confusing to the
2513:
It's not a matter of having been to university or not, it's a matter of the message being exceedingly long. This is a message that will need to be read by screen readers several times per article, and thus needs to be short. This is why all the messages are short and to the point, e.g. "Free
5095:
all don't suggest the article would be in anything other than
English, and the JSTOR link doesn't provide a preview for this work unless you log into your account/have access. I agree, though, that it probably isn't necessary to add the language a work is written in; I just thought that all
3841:
the review because the book's bibliographic detail is the first thing he reads after the title. One can omit the reviewed work's bibliographic details as I did or hint at them with ellipses or include an editor's note: ; in any of these cases the reader will be able to locate the review.
2363:
A) How about a thin white outline, perhaps one pixel thick or a few pixels thick? B) What percent of our readers view
Knowledge on a black background? I suspect that it's a tiny percentage. Shouldn't we care more about making things look nice for the majority than for the minority?
5823:
Would it be possible to change the yellow/blue lock to the grey lock? No one was really happy with either color, the commnunity was evenly split, and grey pretty much addresses everyone's concerns. I'd rather avoid a lengthy RFC on the issue for such a simple and IMO reasonable change.
3078:
the default because we do not highlight the normal state, either with an icon or with text. For most identifiers the links normally link to sources behind a registration or subscription wall. Because of this, there is no need to clutter the rendered citation with extraneous access
5852:
I don't think it appropriate to disregard the outcome of an RFC. The community uses RFCs as an accepted method for making considered decisions. To hold an RFC and then disregard the decision essentially renders the process meaningless. You invoked the last RFC; you can invoke
2632:
attribute may be rendered by user agents in a variety of ways. For instance, visual browsers frequently display the title as a "tooltip" (a short message that appears when the pointing device pauses over an object). Audio user agents may speak the title information in a similar
3828:
and look in the table of contents, I likely won't find any reference to Brown & Duguid but I will find the title "Learning by text or context?" and that review's author. (Apparently not possible to directly link to that issue's TOC but a link to the TOC is available at the
839:
When using {{Cite biorxiv | last1 = Goldberg|first1 = Amy |display-authors=etal. |year=2016 |title=Familial migration of the
Neolithic contrasts massive male migration during Bronze Age in Europe inferred from ancient X chromosomes|biorxiv=078360}}, the title gets italicized.
1149:
I think that it is true that, generally, each of the the several volumes of a multi-volume source should be treated as a separate source. The cs1|2 templates are not designed to render the necessary bibliographic details for a single source. So, best practice is, I think:
5177:
But I definitely agree that only one tag for language is needed; I can maybe understand why a reader might want to know the language of the actual source, but I don't know why it would be necessary to know all the languages in a given book/journal/encyclopedia/whatever.
4242:: "Kelly, John D. “Seeing Red: Mao Fetishism, Pax Americana, and the Moral Economy of War.” In Anthropology and Global Counterinsurgency, edited by John D. Kelly, Beatrice Jauregui, Sean T. Mitchell, and Jeremy Walton, 67–83. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2010."
3117:
with the help tooltip giving "Sources are not required to be available online. Online sources do not have to be freely available. The site may require registration." -- that I reverted my change and just added "(Registration required.)" at the end of the <ref: -->
2109:
As part of the initial discussions I proposed a series of icons that were all blue; access indicated by the lock shape only. That idea was shot down because others believed that multiple indications of access (shape and color) are better than the single (shape
559:
The only argument against them really is "but that's more templates to deal with", and I think I've shown pretty conclusively that using the existing ones create lots of issues in the long term, while lots of benefits would come from a dedicated template like
3429:
There is,however, a greater issue: A significant body of opinion has been expressed below that the entire visual status indicator idea is not acceptable. The above assessment must be interpreted in light of this. I would urge that this close is treated as a
3561:
Aesthetics are not the main concern when it comes to citing claims. What if a citation looks good but is illegible or obtuse? In any case, almost all serials that review works with some regularity have a "Reviews" column, section, or department. You can use
720:) is no different. I have shown a need for it, and no one objects. We don't need RFCs for every single incremental upgrade to the CS1 suite of templates. The only reason I haven't created it myself is because I can't write in LUA. I could have half-assed a
2304:
I've thought of some possible workarounds, and described them, in a comment which you probably haven't read yet. Search through this page for the phrase if you'd like to learn about them. I believe that, with the workarounds, dark red is a viable option.
2150:
Sure, those are work-arounds. But, neither you nor I have the power to change that which was decided by RFC, do we? Without another RFC that overrides the current consensus, the access signals shall have the forms and colors that were determined by the
3880:
We constantly see new users citing other
Knowledge articles. I think it would be very useful if the cite templates generated an error message when a Knowledge url was placed in the url field (maybe also when "Knowledge" was placed in {{cite web}}'s
2105:
The dark red fails one of the criteria we established for the icon designs, to wit: contrast against both white and black backgrounds. This is important for the visually impaired and for those who invert their colors (light text on a dark or black
683:
Is there a consensus to add this template to cs1? Of all the editors who monitor this talk page (234 at this writing) only three have had anything to say here. If I read this topic correctly, you are the only editor who has expressed support for
4160:
Certainly the templates should be responsible for static text, but the fact than many editors are adding this manually is evidence of demand. If the change were made to the templates, a bot would be needed to remove these manual annotations.
2382:. Must I repeat myself? Neither you nor I have the authority to arbitrarily overturn such a decision. The number of readers who use an inverted color scheme is irrelevant; those who do deserve to be accommodated if it is possible to do so.
521:
If the decision is taken to create these templates as cs1 templates, there is a side benefit in that it will force me to finally do the unsupported arXiv parameter test properly because these two templates will require the same sort of error
3788:" section and the article has an info box with the publication details of the work in question. But only having the title "Learning by Text or Context?" doesn't provide information to the reader that it's a review of Brown & Duguid 2000.
933:{{Cite biorxiv/new | last1 = Goldberg|first1 = Amy |display-authors=etal. |year=2016 |title=Familial migration of the Neolithic contrasts massive male migration during Bronze Age in Europe inferred from ancient X chromosomes|biorxiv=078360}}
3381:
Again, those are not contradictory, and does not hinge on locks being their or not. People could decide to go text-based, with arxiv:1234.1234 (Free to read), doi:10.1234/whatever (Subscription
Required), JSTOR(Registration required).
5323:. All of the cs1|2 templates have a '/new' version so that changes to the module sandboxen can be evaluated. The '/new' versions of the template are not for use in article space. At the next module update from sandbox to live,
3795:. Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. 2007. Pp. 470. $ 29.95"; if you modify it, say, by removing extra information like the price, then you shouldn't surround it in quotes as it suggest that's the title.
884:
seems to be allowed (see above for the list that should be allowed), and it shouldn't be. There the . at the end of the citation can also appear on a different line, but that may be a wider issue related to access locks and
2517:"Paid subscription required" implies a subscription is required to have access to the full version; it doesn't matter if it's yours, your supervisor's, your friend's or the library's institutional subscription. If you have
5057:
of the templates. I agree it is somewhat confusing. There might be some desire to deprecate language in favor of e.g. |work-language... OTOH, I'm not entirely sure why we indicate the language at all. I suppose it might
4104:
It is the responsibility of the cs1|2 templates to render the citation with appropriate punctuation and appropriate static text. Editors should not be adding extraneous text to template parameters as you have done with
1994:) to be usable by DNS but render's a Unicode version for the reader. If I drop the Punycode version of the url into my browser's address bar, I get the correct web site and my browser renders the Cyrillic domain name.
1918:
generates a warning when a (valid) URL is in
Cyrillic (and, I suspect, in any other non-Latin script), which it probably shouldn't, since there is nothing wrong with the URL. An example of this behavior can be seen
5061:
someone from spending time finding a document were they to know they could not read the language of that document, but I wonder if that isn't (usually) immediately obvious when the title is in a certain language.
2113:
Before continuing this conversation, might I recommend that you spend some time in the archives of this page reading the discussions that got us to where we are today? I think that the bulk of it begins in
4178:(maybe into its own subcategory) and so gain more knowledge of the extent of this issue. Such tests don't indicate much about 'demand'; only that editors have in the past misused the editor parameters.
3291:
is the question. URLs? arXiv links? DOIs? JSTOR identifiers? Simply appending "subscription required" at the end of the citation is ambiguous. How would you like things rendered? Do you have a mockup?
5128:
Yes, the language note would make more sense immediately following the title of the work cited. I don't see a need for a parameter to indicate the language of a containing book or journal, though.
4798:
Looks good. I tested a few more cases where the author or editor's first name was "Ed" (short for Edward), and none of them gave me an error, even when I formatted them in slightly incorrect ways. –
2173:
the matter, I believe it might be inaccurate to say that the RFC participants agreed to make it bright red. I believe it'd be more accurate to say that the lock ended up bright red by default. —
2077:). And then we could add a white background or white border, to make sure that users reading Knowledge on a black background would get sufficient contrast. In fact, if you look through the
3780:
But those three are wildly inconsistent and don't all provide sufficient information like the author and title of the reviewed work, which most style guides recommend. The Schatz example
3156:(subscription required (<span title="Sources are not required to be available online. Online sources do not have to be freely available. The site may require a paid subscription.": -->
4366:
The colon would be inconsistent with how we cite the book alone. We should reconsider all those period separators in cs1, but that can be separate from the issue of flagging editors.
1982:
As far as I know, DNS domain names must still be Latin characters. Unless the standard has changed, I suspect that what is happening is that your browser is now capable of translating
4709:
In answer to my own question on how to instruct the templates to distinguish between the two styles of author, editor, chapter, title citations, we might deprecate and then re-purpose
4591:
In general, I would not be opposed to such a fix. Yet, 'In Editor (ed.).' seems like a sentence fragment to me (it isn't in cs2 where it would be rendered as 'in Editor (ed.), ...').
2572:
And your little speech discussing dummy emails and cookies made me laugh. :) How's this?: "Paid or library access required; but a summary may be available for free. Click for help." —
1876:
has been removed from the module sandboxen. I have changed the deprecated parameter category name. After we take the module sandboxen live (we ought to do that, it's been a while)
3136:(registration required (<span title="Sources are not required to be available online. Online sources do not have to be freely available. The site may require registration.": -->
3527:
David Kamp, “Deconstructing Dinner,” review of The
Omnivore’s Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals, by Michael Pollan, New York Times, April 23, 2006, Sunday Book Review,
3546:
Does this make sense? Is there a way to not have a title (i.e., something that is surrounded with quotation marks) and instead (or in addition) have a description? Thanks!
3508:"If the review is untitled, use the material in brackets as the title; retain the brackets to indicate that the material is a description of form and content, not a title."
2564:
Ah OK fair. Your point about screen readers is a good one. Indeed, I looked into the matter just now; and it turns out that screen readers will indeed read out the image's
4598:
But, if we're going to fix editor rendering, we should also address the two different cases of author, editor, chapter, title. In the first case, Author is the author of
2470:
That is a ridiculously long message. 'Paid subscription required, abstract or excerpt may be available' covers all of that. I'm not against the cursor/underlining though.
285:
Navarrete, Israel; Panchi, Nancy; Kromann, Peter; Forbes, Gregory; Andrade-Piedra, Jorge (15 February 2017). "Health quality of seed potato and yield losses in Ecuador".
4174:
found 1130 matches – ymmv; insource: searches are not always consistent or reliable. I suppose, as a first step, we might add a test similar to the tests that populate
2319:
Those aren't viable workarounds. A white rectangle underneath the lock for instance, would look downright awful and be very distracting. Likewise for the other choices.
2751:
Not true: consider the twelve images in Headbomb's post of 22:42, 10 February 2017 (UTC) beginning "No, we unrestrict their use on identifiers and urls" in the section
5413:
I'll start a new section on this, since TTM's post about it got lost: It's been nearly 6 months since our previous release. Maybe we should update the module soon? --
2409:
One thing we could possibly add to the hover text is "Paid subscription required, abstract or excerpt may be available" instead of just "Paid subscription required".
938:
Goldberg, Amy; et al. (2016). "Familial migration of the Neolithic contrasts massive male migration during Bronze Age in Europe inferred from ancient X chromosomes".
845:
Goldberg, Amy; et al. (2016). "Familial migration of the Neolithic contrasts massive male migration during Bronze Age in Europe inferred from ancient X chromosomes".
5870:
It's not disregarding the decision, the !vote was split 50-50 with very few people being 100% happy with either option. But I suppose we can hold another RFC on it.
3743:
For Shatz, the term 'review' does not appear on the linked page though the actual article may use it. For this reason I left out mention of that. In Kamp, because
3128:
And the same is true for "|subscription=yes". Thank you, Trappist the monk, for pointing me to where I would need to make my suggested changes. I have just edited
2450:
This would help readers realize that there's useful alt text, and that they should wait a second for it to appear. You can see a live preview of the full package at
5675:
3189:
2379:
2152:
3273:
Using the facilities of CS1, I would like to not use locks as allowed to, but I would like to flag access requiring subscription, as also allowed to. Any ideas?
2521:
wordings, those could be suitable however. But they need to be short, e.g. "Paid or library subscription required, free abstract or excerpt may be available".
2980:
or one of the identifiers – there can be multiples – requires the subscription. As the code stands now, it assumes, correctly, that most identifiers (like
4765:
2190:
too. Green/Blue/Red is a a truly ridiculous scheme that makes zero sense, and people only went for it because the yellow was felt 'not yellow enough' or
1840:
1836:
1805:
3930:
I wonder if this wouldn't be better done by a filter. The CS1 templates are not the only places where a reference to another article might show up... --
3129:
2992:
to highlight that identifier. There are exceptions: a couple of identifiers are automatically flagged because it is known that these identifiers are
1600:. Then add proper support for BCP, FYI, IEN, I-D, RFC, RTR and STD identifiers, with auto-url generation. I'd do it, but I can't do anything in LUA.
5289:
Oh, weird that it would be formatted differently when it's actually used an article as compared to when you're looking at it in a sandbox. Strange.
1847:. Without objection, I shall make the necessary changes to implement this suggestion. Now is a good time since the category is more-or-less empty.
5508:, finds one use in the 2,940,000–2,949,999 range (2940297). That would suggest that the 3 million upper limit is sufficient for the time being.
5364:
Not clear to me that changing the rendering so that the file format annotation flollow the link but precedes the translated title is any better:
5259:
Not in your sandbox--the template's sandbox. It was a note to indicate that trans-title is not linked in the sandbox, since you made the comment
1957:
I'm aware of that. The point is that there is no need to convert the characters, since the original URL is perfectly valid (and more readable).—
4777:
editor, and translator names. Still to do is similar annotations that occur at the begining of the name value. For examples see my sandbox:
173:
without the '10.1011' part of the doi. If a valid doi that doesn't start with 10.1011 is used, the message should invite users to instead use
5693:
5686:
5679:
5668:
5661:
5654:
5647:
5640:
5625:
5454:
5436:
the plan was (and still is) to announce an update to the live module this weekend with the update to follow a week later as it normally does.
4641:
3646:
3493:
a description, then it would have to end up as "Author X has done it again ". For examples of this latter type, see this example from APA 6:
3450:
3438:
to see if there is significant buy-in to proceed forward. To move forward with the shaky consensus established below would not comport with
3109:
2115:
1972:
94:
89:
84:
72:
67:
59:
3012:
and their aliases are assumed to be free-to-read. Again, we don't hightlight the norm but when these are not free-to-read, editors may set
3650:
3583:
3221:
I wouldn't believe the outcome of that rfc. Its conclusions, well-meaning as they are, are self-contradictory: aspect B1 allows all locks (
4817:. Are there other variants of inappropriate editor annotation that I've missed? Do these tests catch things that they should not catch?
3336:
Then what you would like is not a viable or sustainable option. The reasons have been explained to you, and the community agrees on this.
1843:. I agree with this suggestion. The current name is too long; the proposed name is in keeping with the majority of subcategory names in
411:
2230:
Look also at the post timestamped at "22:42, 10 February 2017 (UTC)" on this page for possible alternatives, some of which include gray.
1512:
1486:
486:
can any of you code this? I would, but I know nothing of LUA. I could hack something via an invocation of cite web, but I'd rather not.
3567:
of the reviewed work, then use that. Hopefully, helped by the rest of the citation, the context will be obvious to the average reader.
3568:
3321:
3274:
3232:
1809:
4602:
which has been edited by Editor. We do not currently support this style. Perhaps this case could be rendered in one of these ways:
3669:
Of the three examples provided by Editor Umimmak, in each case, I think I can find a title and so can construct three cs1 templates:
514:
Of course, but is there consensus to add yet two more cs1 templates with attendant error messages and categories, documentation, etc?
5722:
3368:
2809:
2136:
rectangle. C) Or a white oval. D) Or add a thick white outline to the dark-red lock. Even three or four pixels thick, if you want. —
2053:
1652:
5083:"I wonder if that isn't (usually) immediately obvious when the title is in a certain language" — well in the example I have above,
5000:
the case as there are multi-language journals. For a concrete example, see below, which suggests to me at least the entire journal
4255:; is not MLA; is not APA; nor any other published style. It is bits, pieces, and parts from all of these and from none of these.
1877:
3759:
means that it is not necessary to describe the type and because the reviewed work's title in in the article title, no need to use
3950:
Can we automatically identify editors with "ed." or "eds." through this template in all instances? I'm doing a source review of
5777:
4814:
4778:
1377:
5880:
5834:
5467:
4127:
If we are to make this change, is the full stop (cs1) or comma (cs2) the correct punctuation to separate <editor list: -->
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5457:
gets in then. I did a lot of SSRN-related cleanup, and the category would be useful to get mistakes I've made / bad SSRNs.
4058:
Also marking the editor in in this case would be clearer. I would suggest the same formatting as for books without years:
5760:
4690:. Nothing in the cs1|2 documentation proscribes such citations. No doubt there are a bazillion such cites in the wild.
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Is there a reason for this, or am I missing something obvious? This just doesn't seem to be super clear for a reader.
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Perhaps you know how many editors are actually adding manual annotations? I don't. This insource: search pattern,
2656:
Re "There need not be anything clickable". The proposed message has "click for help". That's what I'm referring to.
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attribute to be used; it is valid on most HTML elements since HTML 4.00, and all elements from HTML5 onward. From
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wrapper for it, and only allow a few basic parameters, but I'd much rather have proper support from the start go.
5798:
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non-English sources had to be explicitly tagged since otherwise sources are assumed to be English and that's why
4686:
Wishful thinking on your part methinks. You know that Knowledge editors can and will cite "Chapter" in Author's
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Flagging would be allowed, whether to do so or not would be up to editor's discretion. There's no contradiction.
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comma (cs2) at the end of the editor list when introducing the title so perhaps an alternate is no punctuation:
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so perhaps if we are to make a test for the editor parameters, we should do the same for the author parameters.
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Locks aren't currently clickable and aren't linked to anything. Where would clicking on the lock take people?
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There is a minor rendering bug in the live module that inserts extra punctuation between <author list: -->
4262:
choice to style chapters in edited works in the manner you illustrate does not obligate cs1|2 to do the same.
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259:
Navarrete, Israel; Panchi, Nancy; Kromann, Peter; Forbes, Gregory; Andrade-Piedra, Jorge (15 February 2017).
5857:
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I expect to update the live cs1|2 modules on the weekend of 29–30 April. Changes since the last update are:
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and related modules to render citations. Changes to those modules are made first in the sandbox versions (
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is in German instead of just the article by Lukas, especially as there's no punctuation separation between
4286:
Of course it's not, I was just giving an alternative example because I think the colon looks terrible. ;-)
1815:
In the whitelist sandbox I have disabled the two parameters and will cleanup the supporting code in a bit.
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Or we could use gray (on a transparent background), or black (on a white background), or any other color.
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I'd like to see this IETF template go away, or be fixed of its bugs. Any other proposals or suggestions?
5348:
gets linked (or rather doesn't get linked). Thanks for clarifying. (Can you tell I'm new to this, haha).
4973:
4111:. If we make this change as you've requested, then that citation will render the editor list this way:
3806:
for a description of the work (cf. the proposed templates for Kamp vs Sorby) seems wildly inconsistent.
3372:
3166:(Subscription required (<span title="The site requires a paid subscription to access this page.": -->
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1884:. Similarly, the new deprecated parameter category needs to be created and the help text pointed to it.
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different possible methods. It is for you to impose consistency when you create citations in articles.
2949:
So I am expecting the subscription will be set to yes by default if one of these is set. But it isn't.
1262:{{cite book |author=Author |title=Title |chapter=Chapter |pages=xxiv, 31–33, 354 |date=1913 |volume=4}}
3188:
I guess I wouldn't worry too much about the separator character. If one is to believe the outcome of
999:
Ah I see. I was waiting for it to go live before creating the doc, but I suppose I could do that now.
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sometime in late 2013 to early 2014. These two parameters contributed the vast majority of pages to
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Out of curiosity, I changed the insource: search pattern to look at three of the author parameters:
2697:
The question on the left hasn't yet been answered. After someone replies, please remove this notice.
2569:
2358:
The question on the left hasn't yet been answered. After someone replies, please remove this notice.
222:, I'm not sure I understand the added value of these specific templates… Isn't it enough to use the
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option would work, turning off the default quotation marks around a news or journal article title?
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also troubles you, by all means fix them. Converting it to a CS1 template is another topic. As for
1537:
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1317:{{cite book |author=Author |title=Title |chapter=Chapter |pages=100–110 |date=1910–1913 |volume=1}}
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5311:...) before they are made to the live versions. Editor Izno's example of your citation (without
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3146:(Registration required (<span title="The site requires registration to access this page.": -->
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should not be set. But if we were citing a part of the book written by someone else, we'd use
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to see what the reaction was to my suggested changes and the logic behind them. Thank you. --
3112:, but didn't have time to pursue it further then. I'll quote here my main points from before:
3106:(Sorry to add this new section not at the end of the page, but it's related to the one above.)
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1226:{{cite book |author=Author |title=Title |chapter=Chapter |pages=204, 223 |date=1912 |volume=3}}
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also highjack the doi parameter which should be used for the official version, once published.
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which is an anthology or compilation of chapters edited by Editor. We support this case now:
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1154:{{cite book |author=Author |title=Title |chapter=Chapter |pages=100–110 |date=1910 |volume=1}}
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353:, but using those templates misleads people into filling unnecessary and undesired parameters.
337:
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231:
140:, except without the "fill this with a bot" code. That is, the supported parameters should be
3695:
3528:
3512:
And these examples from CMoS 16 (the first two as notes, the third as a bibliography entry):
2081:, you'll see that it used to be dark red, until it changed to light red this past September.
1144:
Real life examples are almost always useful. It saves us from the need to contrive examples.
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We have some access-lock images which are occasionally used to indicate whether a source is
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3954:, and I really can't imagine that it's clear to a reader when someone is an editor or not.
2861:
You should find six instances, other than the one in this post. All six are identical: the
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3915:), if I had some help in generating a list of all articles with such circular citations.--
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1190:{{cite book |author=Author |title=Title |chapter=Chapter |page=78 |date=1911 |volume=2}}
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5344:
Oooohhh, I see; I didn't realize there was already a to-be-implemented change for how
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so dismissing the use of a colon based on inconsistency doesn't seem very persuasive.
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5692:
replace cite arxiv unsupported parameter test with list of supported in whitelist; (
3480:
Hey, I hope this is the right place. I was wondering if there was a way to use, say
3228:"the editorial discretion of individual Wikipedians should be allowed and supported"
2865:
tag has seven attributes, being (some values replaced with an ellipsis for clarity)
5485:
I just sent an e-mail to the SSRN folks to ask if they have a spec for their ID. –
5351:
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5113:
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3223:"the editorial discretion of individual Wikipedians should be allowed and supported
2780:
I think that we are both mistaken. Your mistake: none of those twelve images have
473:
458:
227:
3686:
3629:
Yeah perhaps, although what happens when you need both a title and a description?
333:
You might argue that this can be already be achieved with existing templates like
3907:
There are rare exception—proper citations to Knowledge pages such as in articles
1835:
At the WP:VPT conversation, Editor Jonesey95 has suggested that cs1|2 stop using
107:
2012:
1958:
1924:
46:
If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the
4640:
How do we instruct the templates to distinguish between the two? Here is some
2984:) rarely offer free access to the source. We do not highlight the norm. When
2857:
attributes. Use your browser's "View page source" feature. Search for the text
2011:
Thanks. I was looking for previous discussions, but must have missed that one.—
226:
parameter with an existing CS1 template? The same holds for citeseerx below. −
2792:
362:
And if you try letting citation bot expand the doi in a cite journal, you get
5504:
I chose ssrn limits to be 100 and 3 million. This insource: search pattern,
2972:
or other identifier is set, then no, that does not happen. The problem with
1536:#2). If it passes (for delete) I'll make a script for converting the 181. --
5414:
5276:
5227:
5211:
5078:
5063:
3931:
3654:
3426:
You will notice that what I wrote, included a caveat. The RfC closer wrote:
281:
Which is not how bioRxiv preprints should be cited. They should be cited as
3476:
Way to override |title requirement, or to replace title with a description?
1313:
Or, for a single volume with a publication date that spans multiple years:
3733:
3712:
3961:
I agree. The template currently does this when the whole book is cited:
3673:
Schatz, B. R. (17 November 2000). "Learning by text or context?". Books.
1987:
5033:
4734:
We should not be adding parameters to support unjustified new usages.
2039:
5232:
I'm confused what you're getting at. Does my citation not display as:
3791:
For the Sorby review, the actual listed title is "Joan Shelley Rubin.
3225:"), but aspect B3 imposes them by not offering any other alternative (
3489:, but that creates the unsightly "". And if there is a proper title
3485:
descriptions are distinguished in formatting. Right now I just have
2378:
The colors and shapes of the access signals lock was decided by the
2048:
5660:
detect and alert on wayback machine deprecated liveweb host name; (
5192:
Trans-title is not linked in the sandbox. The same in the sandbox:
4766:
Category:Pages containing cite templates with deprecated parameters
3518:
The Mystery of Samba: Popular Music and National Identity in Brazil
2258:
That gray is fine, though I still suspect that I prefer dark red. —
1837:
Category:Pages containing cite templates with deprecated parameters
1806:
Category:Pages containing cite templates with deprecated parameters
1636:
As far as I can tell (and I have not looked at all possible cases)
371:
272:
4234:
3497:
Schatz, B. R. (2000, November 17). Learning by text or context? .
3449:
This I believe leaves us in some sort of limbo. When previously
3037:
card does not trigger a "subscription required" note, nor does a
2446:
perhaps we could even add a dotted underline and a fancy cursor.
763:
Created. Both need documentation which I shall leave to others.
260:
5455:
Help_talk:Citation_Style_1/Archive_31#Category:CS1_errors:_SSRN
3898:
Other Knowledge articles should not be used for citations. See
2752:
1507:
is also affected and most templates have been converted to use
5245:
That's how it looks for me in articles as well as my sandbox.
3848:
In none of the example templates that I constructed did I use
3102:"|registration=yes" and "|subscription=yes" rendering is awful
2686:
2347:
1808:. Except for eight stubborn pages (see separate discussion at
109:
25:
5624:
override mw:Extension:CLDR language definition for code bn; (
5100:
doesn't show up (although there certainly are times when the
2867:
alt="Lock-green.svg" src=... width="9" height="14" srcset=...
2451:
2070:
I think that we should use some color other than bright red.
5609:
update to the live cs1|2 module weekend of 29–30 April 2017
3520:, by Hermano Vianna, ed. and trans. John Charles Chasteen,
2907:
So they do. MediaWiki copies the image file name into the
2828:
where the text to the right of the pipe is assigned to the
261:"Health quality of seed potato and yield losses in Ecuador"
186:
All other identifiers and parameters should be unsupported.
5789:
modify PMC error check to allow "PMC" identifier prefix; (
4128:
from title? Somehow, for me, a colon seems more correct:
3529:
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/23/books/review/23kamp.html
2034:
Access locks on paywalled links: lock color and hover text
1943:
are available via the "help" link in the error message. –
976:
this is true because the live module does not yet support
4624:
In the second case, Author is the author of "Chapter" in
4028:
Contributor, A. (2000). "Chapter". In Editor, Ann (ed.).
2988:
refers to a source that is free-to-read, editors may add
2883:<a href="/File:Lock-green.svg" class="db-aW1hZ2U": -->
1457:
can do almost everything this template can do, including
943:
850:
290:
255:
URL in the reftoolbar and letting the gadget complete it
5769:
2017-03-26: support for cite biorxiv and cite citeseerx;
4813:
Added checks for annotation that precedes a name. See
4557:
Then let's fix the inconsistency, by changing these to
4119:
or this way, if Editor Kanguole's preference prevails:
4107:
3751:
The Omnivore’s Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals
3704:
The Omnivore’s Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals
2064:
1920:
5023:
Africa: Journal of the International African Institute
3747:
pretty well describes the type of the article, I made
1880:
can be deleted along with its supporting help text at
2947:
are not expected to offer a free full text by default
2734:
attributes and no need for the image to be clickable.
3542:
113 (April 2008): 449–51. doi:10.1086/ahr.113.2.449.
1468:
As an example, right now this template needs to use
4024:but not when a chapter of an edited book is cited:
3434:of how the Citation Template processing would work
2784:attributes – though some have 'alt' in their name:
2702:Clicking on the paywall lock could take readers to
4995:describes the language of the article (i.e., what
4472:is different from author-editor-title rendering:
3793:Songs of Ourselves: The Uses of Poetry in America
3715:Songs of Ourselves: The Uses of Poetry in America
3536:Songs of Ourselves: The Uses of Poetry in America
2976:is that it doesn't specify which external link,
4377:be inconsistent with how we cite the book alone
3444:not yet significant consensus on implementation
2911:attribute. Better that than nothing I suppose.
5699:support for cite biorxiv and cite citeseerx; (
2059:I don't like the bright red. Why? Because, as
5327:will no longer be linked anywhere on en.wiki.
5315:linked) used the module's sandbox by calling
2812:where the lock images are defined like this:
2636:
2448:border-bottom: 1px dotted #000; cursor: help;
2013:Ëzhiki (Igels Hérissonovich Ïzhakoff-Amursky)
1959:Ëzhiki (Igels Hérissonovich Ïzhakoff-Amursky)
1925:Ëzhiki (Igels Hérissonovich Ïzhakoff-Amursky)
1878:Category:CS1 errors: coauthors without author
1084:I suppose that's possible, but I based it on
410:CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of February 2017 (
169:should throw an error, telling people to use
8:
5804:support for cite biorxiv and cite citeseerx;
5706:remove support for coauthor and coauthors; (
5646:fix spacing oddity in maint cat messaging; (
5303:You misunderstand. The cs1|2 templates use
4849:is not set. Fixed, I think in the sandbox:
4713:. This parameter is a rarely used alias of
3586:such as it was ... I don't know of any other
1923:. Can someone please take a look into this?—
1431:It has bugs which are not easy to fix. i.e.
4438:The author-editor-chapter-title rendering:
2753:#Whatever happened to the access lock RFCs?
2615:There need not be anything clickable for a
1414:Can something be done about this template?
982:; still waiting for template documentation.
457:Makes sense, thanks for the explanation! −
5772:remove support for coauthor and coauthors;
5766:removed cite interview special parameters;
5741:remove support for coauthor and coauthors;
5653:fix multi-byte character |vauthors= bug; (
5021:by E. Lilias Armstrong". Review of Books.
4506:is different from editor-title rendering:
4132:(2000). "Chapter". In <editor list: -->
1841:Category:CS1 errors: deprecated parameters
1511:. It's used on 2362 articles as of today.
1378:Knowledge talk:WikiProject Spam#amazon.com
580:too, but I haven't looked into them much.
5729:remove cite interview special parameters;
3732:
3505:, 1304. doi:10.1126/science.290.5495.1304
3130:Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration/sandbox
2820:
942:
849:
289:
4851:
4665:, which has been edited by Editor, then
1672:
130:Basically, it should be very similar to
5732:add Burmese language script-title code;
5667:move transtitle out of external link; (
4677:in addition to the author and editor.
4296:ecause I think the colon looks terrible
2056:uses it to indicate paywalled sources.
1992:xn----7sbbfb0baicf2bdizhdn4c5b.xn--p1ai
880:It should be put in quotes. Similarly,
5537:
5526:
5433:
5345:
5324:
5312:
5270:
5266:
5262:
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5150:
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5109:
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5097:
5092:
5088:
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5009:
5005:
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4984:
4980:
4969:
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4902:
4892:
4868:|contributor=<contributor list: -->
4846:
4842:
4773:
4769:
4714:
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4674:
4670:
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4459:
4449:
4417:
4407:
4376:
4295:
4200:
4194:
4188:
4080:
4070:
4061:Contributor, A. (2000). "Chapter". In
4045:
4035:
4011:
4001:
3982:
3972:
3849:
3821:
3760:
3756:
3748:
3744:
3604:
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3227:
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3197:
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3071:
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3042:
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3034:
3013:
3009:
3005:
3001:
2997:
2989:
2985:
2981:
2977:
2973:
2969:
2965:
2944:
2943:Links inserted by identifiers such as
2052:), with a transparent background. The
1941:converting the URL to Roman characters
1873:
1869:
1801:
1797:
1782:
1778:
1766:
1756:
1732:
1728:
1716:
1706:
1597:
1593:
1589:
1585:
1354:That should work. Note the en dash. –
1339:
1329:
1284:
1274:
1248:
1238:
1212:
1202:
1176:
1166:
961:
950:
881:
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857:
785:
400:
388:
377:
320:
308:
297:
223:
170:
166:
161:
156:
150:
144:
44:Do not edit the contents of this page.
3876:Add error message for circular cites?
3446:of these citation template behaviors.
1447:instead of Lua module templates like
7:
4631:Author. "Chapter". In Editor (ed.).
4560:Author. "Chapter". In Editor (ed.).
4442:Author. "Chapter". In Editor (ed.).
2800:My mistake: MediaWiki does not copy
5685:remove duplicate lock image code; (
4232:I would prefer to not use a colon.
2964:If you mean that the template sets
2882:
2862:
2759:attribute, and none of them have a
2755:- here, all twelve images have the
1669:|coauthor= and |coauthors= are dead
1418:It has quite low use (according to
1027:Done. I hope I haven't screwed up.
5751:drop the dx. in //dx.doi.org/... (
5735:access signal lock images per RFC;
4979:Hey, I was just wondering why the
3784:a book review; it's in the "Books
24:
5783:remove duplicate lock image code;
5738:remove duplicate lock image code;
5723:Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration
4605:Author. Editor (ed.). "Chapter".
4313:– as the templates render cs2 now
4306:– as the templates render cs1 now
2810:Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration
2730:attribute. No need to muck with
2272:The dark red would still violate
1564:No need for a TFD, 'just' update
5506:insource:/\| *ssrn *= *294{4,}/i
5019:The Phonetic Structure of Somali
4172:insource:/\| *editor*=+? +\(?ed/
3893:fields). Maybe something like:
3649:, which cites a discussion from
3647:in the context of cite interview
3645:We had a brief discussion on it
2819:
2791:
2690:
2351:
2047:
127:Could someone help create this?
29:
5778:Module:Citation/CS1/Identifiers
5236:"Engelsche vacantieleergangen"
4669:is the work that is cited, and
4122:Bolman, Elizabeth S., ed. (ed.)
1322:Author (1910–1913). "Chapter".
1271:. Vol. 4. pp. xxiv, 31–33, 354.
5674:access signal lock images per
5428:Not lost. See my last post in
5368:"Engelsche vacantieleergangen"
5195:"Engelsche vacantieleergangen"
5158:"Engelsche vacantieleergangen"
4176:Category:CS1 maint: Extra text
4114:Bolman, Elizabeth S., ed., ed.
3745:|department=Sunday Book Review
1812:), the category is now empty.
1:
5761:Module:Citation/CS1/Whitelist
3820:If Schatz is a review, then,
3694:Kamp, David (23 April 2006).
3687:10.1126/science.290.5495.1304
3451:I asked how we should proceed
3110:I brought this up awhile back
2924:11:12, 24 February 2017 (UTC)
2903:01:33, 24 February 2017 (UTC)
2845:23:09, 23 February 2017 (UTC)
2776:21:58, 23 February 2017 (UTC)
2747:20:17, 23 February 2017 (UTC)
2722:MediaWiki copies the image's
2716:14:48, 24 February 2017 (UTC)
2680:20:38, 23 February 2017 (UTC)
2652:20:09, 23 February 2017 (UTC)
2637:Try hovering your mouse here.
2611:19:29, 23 February 2017 (UTC)
2582:19:05, 23 February 2017 (UTC)
2545:10:29, 23 February 2017 (UTC)
2509:06:09, 23 February 2017 (UTC)
2494:04:45, 23 February 2017 (UTC)
2464:02:51, 23 February 2017 (UTC)
2433:12:44, 22 February 2017 (UTC)
2374:14:39, 24 February 2017 (UTC)
2343:10:29, 23 February 2017 (UTC)
2315:05:52, 23 February 2017 (UTC)
2300:04:46, 23 February 2017 (UTC)
2268:02:51, 23 February 2017 (UTC)
2254:12:17, 22 February 2017 (UTC)
2218:04:54, 23 February 2017 (UTC)
2183:04:27, 23 February 2017 (UTC)
2168:03:56, 23 February 2017 (UTC)
2146:02:51, 23 February 2017 (UTC)
2131:03:54, 22 February 2017 (UTC)
2100:02:30, 22 February 2017 (UTC)
1868:I think that all support for
710:exists, this one (as well as
604:12:34, 22 February 2017 (UTC)
535:12:28, 22 February 2017 (UTC)
510:12:18, 22 February 2017 (UTC)
467:18:12, 16 February 2017 (UTC)
445:17:58, 16 February 2017 (UTC)
236:17:44, 16 February 2017 (UTC)
213:17:09, 16 February 2017 (UTC)
5713:extra punctuation bug fix; (
4870:|editor=<editor list: -->
4864:|author=<author list: -->
3757:|department=Featured Reviews
3711:Sorby, Angela (April 2008).
3004:, etc). In the same sense,
2079:file history of Lock-red.svg
2073:We could use dark red (like
2054:{{cite journal}} source code
1061:extra clue for our readers?
5631:remove support for special
5309:Module:Citation/CS1/sandbox
5104:would suggest a work would
4815:Special:Permalink/776493274
4779:Special:Permalink/776334484
4661:If Author is the author of
4238:handles book chapters like
3952:Macedonia (ancient kingdom)
2063:pointed out six months ago,
5914:
5894:14:10, 22 April 2017 (UTC)
5866:12:27, 22 April 2017 (UTC)
5848:11:19, 22 April 2017 (UTC)
5818:11:11, 22 April 2017 (UTC)
5604:22:30, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
5495:21:07, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
5481:17:01, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
5449:16:27, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
5423:15:52, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
5387:17:44, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
5360:17:21, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
5340:17:06, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
5299:16:44, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
5285:16:33, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
5255:16:29, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
5220:15:50, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
5188:15:31, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
5133:15:20, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
5122:15:25, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
5072:15:01, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
5051:14:43, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
4963:11:14, 18 April 2017 (UTC)
4830:10:43, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
4808:12:35, 20 April 2017 (UTC)
4793:11:18, 20 April 2017 (UTC)
4739:14:57, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
4730:14:23, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
4703:11:45, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
4682:11:17, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
4657:10:43, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
4587:19:25, 20 April 2017 (UTC)
4553:19:01, 20 April 2017 (UTC)
4434:17:45, 20 April 2017 (UTC)
4392:16:36, 20 April 2017 (UTC)
4371:15:24, 20 April 2017 (UTC)
4356:16:36, 20 April 2017 (UTC)
4291:14:18, 20 April 2017 (UTC)
4275:09:53, 19 April 2017 (UTC)
4247:03:06, 19 April 2017 (UTC)
4221:12:33, 18 April 2017 (UTC)
4166:11:30, 18 April 2017 (UTC)
4152:11:14, 18 April 2017 (UTC)
4098:08:47, 18 April 2017 (UTC)
3940:14:27, 20 April 2017 (UTC)
3925:14:05, 20 April 2017 (UTC)
3866:12:58, 19 April 2017 (UTC)
3816:11:50, 19 April 2017 (UTC)
3776:23:59, 18 April 2017 (UTC)
3721:American Historical Review
3663:23:27, 18 April 2017 (UTC)
3639:11:51, 19 April 2017 (UTC)
3625:23:21, 18 April 2017 (UTC)
3599:23:00, 18 April 2017 (UTC)
3577:22:36, 18 April 2017 (UTC)
3556:21:52, 18 April 2017 (UTC)
3540:American Historical Review
3466:15:38, 17 April 2017 (UTC)
3406:19:58, 17 April 2017 (UTC)
3377:19:51, 17 April 2017 (UTC)
3360:18:11, 17 April 2017 (UTC)
3330:18:08, 17 April 2017 (UTC)
3315:16:24, 17 April 2017 (UTC)
3283:16:08, 17 April 2017 (UTC)
3269:14:58, 17 April 2017 (UTC)
3241:14:33, 17 April 2017 (UTC)
3213:12:32, 14 April 2017 (UTC)
3183:01:26, 14 April 2017 (UTC)
3092:23:17, 10 March 2017 (UTC)
3055:23:07, 10 March 2017 (UTC)
3029:21:48, 10 March 2017 (UTC)
2959:21:20, 10 March 2017 (UTC)
2704:Knowledge:Find your source
2007:18:46, 17 April 2017 (UTC)
1953:18:00, 17 April 2017 (UTC)
1897:15:58, 16 April 2017 (UTC)
1860:15:07, 16 April 2017 (UTC)
1828:13:49, 16 April 2017 (UTC)
1661:18:17, 14 April 2017 (UTC)
1624:07:00, 14 April 2017 (UTC)
1552:02:26, 14 April 2017 (UTC)
1532:with the above rationale (
1521:00:12, 14 April 2017 (UTC)
1495:23:59, 13 April 2017 (UTC)
1464:Documentation is outdated.
1443:are not the same. It uses
1403:11:56, 13 April 2017 (UTC)
1364:14:41, 10 April 2017 (UTC)
1309:10:47, 10 April 2017 (UTC)
1267:Author (1913). "Chapter".
1231:Author (1912). "Chapter".
1195:Author (1911). "Chapter".
1159:Author (1910). "Chapter".
1139:08:12, 10 April 2017 (UTC)
826:08:50, 27 March 2017 (UTC)
776:16:52, 26 March 2017 (UTC)
754:14:41, 22 March 2017 (UTC)
697:13:51, 22 March 2017 (UTC)
679:09:41, 22 March 2017 (UTC)
18:Help talk:Citation Style 1
5799:Module:Citation/CS1/COinS
4924:. By <author list: -->
4919:<contributor list: -->
4914:
4887:. By <author list: -->
4882:<contributor list: -->
4877:
4857:
4764:While I was cleaning out
4341:– cs2 without punctuation
4334:– cs1 without punctuation
3965:Editor, Ann, ed. (2000).
3538:, by Joan Shelley Rubin.
3534:Sorby, Angela. Review of
2881:attribute. The enclosing
2808:. Rather, it is done in
2395:11:17, 8 March 2017 (UTC)
1744:
1694:
1678:
1118:14:28, 8 April 2017 (UTC)
1079:06:10, 8 April 2017 (UTC)
1051:03:27, 8 April 2017 (UTC)
1023:03:11, 8 April 2017 (UTC)
995:03:01, 8 April 2017 (UTC)
909:02:36, 8 April 2017 (UTC)
643:16:37, 1 March 2017 (UTC)
4840:and <editor list: -->
3524:9 (April 1999): B13–B14.
3014:|url-access=subscription
2726:attribute text into the
1505:Template:Cite wikisource
781:Thanks! We might need a
5141:? Especially since any
4983:gets displayed between
4768:I saw a lot of misused
3696:"Deconstructing Dinner"
3516:Ben Ratliff, review of
2886:element doesn't have a
2042:or not. One of them is
1372:ASIN-related discussion
1235:. Vol. 3. pp. 204, 223.
5744:add ssrn validation; (
5265:would be linked to by
5145:would be linked to by
5108:be in English and the
4925:. <editor list: -->
4888:. <editor list: -->
4567:Author. Editor (ed.).
4476:Author. Editor (ed.).
3698:. Sunday Book Review.
3605:|descriptive-title=yes
3448:
2635:
1984:хвастовичский-район.рф
1501:Template:Citation/core
1445:Template:Citation/core
1425:Special:Diff/775225851
1326:. Vol. 1. pp. 100–110.
1163:. Vol. 1. pp. 100–110.
1124:Can anyone remember...
619:Any progress on this?
387:Cite journal requires
374:(inactive 2017-02-16).
5432:. Upon the death of
5261:Especially since any
5153:combined, see, e.g.:
4974:Template:Cite Journal
4866:|contribution=Preface
4853:Cite book comparison
4396:There is no colon in
3734:10.1086/ahr.113.2.449
3713:"Joan Shelley Rubin.
3706:, by Michael Pollan).
3442:. Overall, there is
3427:
2624:
1674:Cite book comparison
1428:, only 181 articles).
42:of past discussions.
5786:add ssrn validation;
5202:Leuvensche Bijdragen
5165:Leuvensche Bijdragen
4375:How would the colon
4131:<author list: -->
3802:and sometimes using
3798:And sometimes using
3719:. Featured Reviews.
3432:tentative indication
2873:attribute; there is
2706:. Would this work? —
921:does not yet exist;
5618:Module:Citation/CS1
5305:Module:Citation/CS1
5017:Lukas, J. (1938). "
4968:Weird placement of
4854:
4642:previous discussion
4612:Author. "Chapter".
4400:Editor, Ann (ed.).
4063:Editor, Ann (ed.).
3994:Editor, Ann (ed.).
3946:Identifying editors
3753:, by Michael Pollan
3584:Previous discussion
3564:|department=Reviews
3200:will be going away.
2568:text in this case.
2046:. It's bright red (
1973:Previous discussion
1845:Category:CS1 errors
1675:
1509:Module:Citation/CS1
1476:, seen in revision
1472:for the purpose of
1470:Template:Webarchive
1420:User:Green Cardamom
4942:has generic name (
4905:has generic name (
4852:
4530:has generic name (
4496:has generic name (
4462:has generic name (
4420:has generic name (
4327:– cs2 with a colon
4320:– cs1 with a colon
4083:has generic name (
4048:has generic name (
4014:has generic name (
3985:has generic name (
3700:The New York Times
3167:help</span: -->
3157:help</span: -->
3147:help</span: -->
3137:help</span: -->
2621:the HTML 4.01 spec
1777:Unknown parameter
1769:has generic name (
1727:Unknown parameter
1719:has generic name (
1687:|coauthor=Coauthor
1673:
1409:Template:Cite IETF
1342:has generic name (
1287:has generic name (
1251:has generic name (
1215:has generic name (
1179:has generic name (
570:. We might need a
5858:Trappist the monk
5810:Trappist the monk
5596:Trappist the monk
5441:Trappist the monk
5379:Trappist the monk
5332:Trappist the monk
5208:(1–2): 134. 1921.
5171:(1–2): 134. 1921.
4955:Trappist the monk
4951:
4950:
4822:Trappist the monk
4785:Trappist the monk
4722:Trappist the monk
4695:Trappist the monk
4649:Trappist the monk
4545:Trappist the monk
4384:Trappist the monk
4348:Trappist the monk
4282:Trappist the monk
4267:Trappist the monk
4228:Trappist the monk
4213:Trappist the monk
4144:Trappist the monk
3858:Trappist the monk
3768:Trappist the monk
3591:Trappist the monk
3458:Trappist the monk
3205:Trappist the monk
3084:Trappist the monk
3021:Trappist the monk
2966:|subscription=yes
2916:Trappist the monk
2837:Trappist the monk
2739:Trappist the monk
2701:
2700:
2387:Trappist the monk
2380:visual design RFC
2362:
2361:
2160:Trappist the monk
2153:visual design RFC
2123:Trappist the monk
2044:File:Lock-red.svg
1999:Trappist the monk
1939:Instructions for
1889:Trappist the monk
1852:Trappist the monk
1820:Trappist the monk
1794:
1793:
1455:Template:Cite web
1449:Template:Cite web
1435:is ignored, plus
1301:Trappist the monk
987:Trappist the monk
835:Trappist the monk
768:Trappist the monk
689:Trappist the monk
651:Trappist the monk
527:Trappist the monk
478:Trappist the monk
399:Missing or empty
319:Missing or empty
100:
99:
54:
53:
48:current talk page
5905:
5892:
5846:
5638:
5590:
5575:
5560:
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5534:
5532:
5524:
5507:
5479:
5453:Let's make sure
5435:
5372:
5347:
5326:
5322:
5319:cite journal/new
5314:
5272:
5268:
5264:
5240:
5231:
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5199:
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4323:in Editor Name:
4316:In Editor Name:
4309:in Editor Name,
4302:In Editor Name.
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3483:
3482:{{cite journal}}
3404:
3358:
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3267:
3199:
3195:
3073:
3072:|doi-access=free
3045:is the default.
3044:
3043:|doi-access=free
3040:
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1993:
1985:
1968:
1934:
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1911:
1875:
1871:
1839:and instead use
1803:
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1199:. Vol. 2. p. 78.
1191:
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1021:
981:
980:
979:{{cite biorxiv}}
969:
963:
958:
956:
948:
946:
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928:
925:cite biorxiv/new
920:
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795:Empty citation (
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5825:
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5611:
5578:
5563:
5548:
5535:
5525:
5512:
5505:
5458:
5430:this discussion
5411:
5370:
5316:
5238:
5225:
5197:
5193:
5160:
5156:
5137:Or maybe after
5112:is of no help.
5076:
5016:
4977:
4938:
4928:
4918:
4901:
4891:
4881:
4871:
4869:
4867:
4865:
4863:
4861:
4837:
4835:related bug fix
4619:some other way?
4616:. Editor (ed.).
4526:
4516:
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2090:Kind regards, —
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2021:April 18, 2017
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1933:April 17, 2017
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3727:(2): 449–51.
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3522:Lingua Franca
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2939:documentation
2925:
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2763:attribute. --
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2023:; 13:27 (UTC)
2018:
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1905:Cyrillic URLs
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267:. p. 108712.
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5167:(in Dutch).
5164:
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3831:summary page
3825:
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3792:
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3714:
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3192:, then both
3175:Dan Harkless
3171:
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2106:background).
2089:
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1750:
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917:cite biorxiv
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725:cite journal
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348:cite journal
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178:cite journal
153:and variants
147:and variants
129:
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119:cite bioRxiv
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5200:. Kroniek.
5163:. Kroniek.
4920:. Preface.
4883:. Preface.
4862:{{cite book
4845:is set and
4402:Edited book
4137:. pp. 1–23.
4135:Edited book
4065:Edited book
4032:. pp. 1–23.
4030:Edited book
3996:Edited book
3967:Edited book
3913:|WP-url=yes
3900:WP:CIRCULAR
3612:Imzadi 1979
3369:65.88.88.69
3132:to change:
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1874:|coauthors=
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1683:{{cite book
1653:65.88.88.75
1433:|deadurl=no
1066:Imzadi 1979
244:This, like
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5791:discussion
5753:discussion
5746:discussion
5715:discussion
5708:discussion
5701:discussion
5694:discussion
5687:discussion
5680:discussion
5669:discussion
5662:discussion
5655:discussion
5648:discussion
5641:discussion
5626:discussion
5010:|language=
4993:|language=
4981:|language=
4970:|language=
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3603:Perhaps a
2890:either. --
2832:attribute.
2116:Archive 22
2087:Thoughts?
1870:|coauthor=
1798:|coauthor=
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1574:to mirror
1089:cite arxiv
705:cite arxiv
565:cite arxiv
522:detection.
249:cite arxiv
135:cite arXiv
95:Archive 35
90:Archive 34
85:Archive 33
79:Archive 32
73:Archive 31
68:Archive 30
60:Archive 25
5529:cite book
5487:Jonesey95
5102:|journal=
5093:|journal=
5006:|journal=
4985:|journal=
4932:cite book
4895:cite book
4858:Wikitext
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4486:cite book
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4189:|author*=
4108:this edit
4089:pp. 1–23.
4073:cite book
4038:cite book
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3975:cite book
3884:publisher
3651:archive 5
3118:manually.
3041:card; so
2570:(Source.)
2452:this link
2274:WP:ACCESS
2192:WP:ACCESS
2040:paywalled
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1781:ignored (
1759:cite book
1731:ignored (
1709:cite book
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1241:cite book
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962:|biorxiv=
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788:cite SSRN
575:cite SSRN
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5873:Headbomb
5853:another.
5827:Headbomb
5460:Headbomb
5273:combined
5130:Kanguole
4989:|volume=
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4163:Kanguole
4095:Kanguole
3385:Headbomb
3339:Headbomb
3294:Headbomb
3248:Headbomb
3190:this rfc
3079:signals.
3059:What is
3047:Hawkeye7
2951:Hawkeye7
2667:contribs
2659:Headbomb
2633:context.
2598:contribs
2590:Headbomb
2532:contribs
2524:Headbomb
2481:contribs
2473:Headbomb
2441:Headbomb
2420:contribs
2412:Headbomb
2330:contribs
2322:Headbomb
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2279:Headbomb
2241:contribs
2233:Headbomb
2205:contribs
2197:Headbomb
1988:Punycode
1913:Cite web
1783:|author=
1767:|author=
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1745:Sandbox
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1699:Author.
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1097:Headbomb
1030:Headbomb
1002:Headbomb
888:Headbomb
805:Headbomb
741:contribs
733:Headbomb
666:contribs
658:Headbomb
630:contribs
622:Headbomb
591:contribs
583:Headbomb
497:contribs
489:Headbomb
432:contribs
424:Headbomb
338:cite web
300:cite web
220:Headbomb
200:contribs
192:Headbomb
5587:3000001
5572:3000000
5540:value (
5409:Update?
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3367:above.
3039:|jstor=
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2671:physics
2602:physics
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2110:alone).
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1986:to its
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480:, and
474:Pintoch
459:Pintoch
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311:value (
287:bioRxiv
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4991:. The
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4889:(ed.).
4847:|date=
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5580:Title
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5371:(PDF)
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5542:help
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5419:talk
5415:Izno
5383:talk
5356:talk
5336:talk
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5281:talk
5277:Izno
5275:. --
5269:and
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3653:. --
3635:talk
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3326:talk
3287:The
3279:talk
3237:talk
3209:talk
3196:and
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3142:to:
3088:talk
3070:No,
3061:card
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