Knowledge (XXG)

:Featured list candidates/List of National Historic Landmarks in Michigan/archive1 - Knowledge (XXG)

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the sense that many screen readers read it as '?'. The characters that can be typed from a standard keyboard are usually read accurately by screen readers, so I always recommend '#', '+', '*', as good choices. We have created templates for some of the common inaccessible characters like {{†}} and {{‡}}, which use an image plus user-definable alt text to make those keys much friendlier for screen readers. You might, for example, use {{†|alt=Historic District}} and {{‡|alt=Landmark}} throughout the table and key. This would produce a very similar visual appearance for the sighted, but a much more satisfactory experience for the blind.
236:. The benefit of this is to allow users of screen readers to hear the row and column header for each cell if they choose. In that way they can navigate in any direction within the table and still receive useful information. The alternative is to restrict them to having to hear the contents of the table cell-by-cell from left-to-right, then top-to-bottom. Imagine trying to find the date of designation for St. Ignace Mission, if you had to hear every piece of information in every cell for every row above it first. I suggest that it would be a major benefit to mark up the first row as column headers with 319:
were National Historic Landmarks, then any 'no information' item (i.e. not a NHL) would not have colour or symbol, but the NHLs would have both. In this list, you are providing two classes, NHL and NHLD, both of which convey information; both of which are coloured, and both of which would benefit from a symbol. I can see that you're suggesting that NHL is a base property of all of the list items and treating NHLD as a
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the Landmark name were marked as the the row header, they would hear: "Bay View, Date of designation, 1987"; "Calumet Historic District, Date of designation, 1989"; etc. I'm sure you'd agree that it would be much more informative for the screen reader user. You may want to add the plainroweaders class to restore the left-aligned, unbolded appearance to the names if you do mark them up as row headers (it's
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but the scheme really needs lighter or less blue colours if they are going to be fully accessible. I'm not suggesting this is anything you can rectify individually (other than abandoning the NRHP scheme in favour of the default wikitable colours), but it doesn't reflect well on Knowledge (XXG) if examples of our very best work don't match up to world-wide standards for accessibility.
1123:"The National Historic Landmarks in Michigan represent Michigan's history from pre-colonial days through the space age..." is this right space age? I take it you're referring to the space age as in the pace race between USA and USSR in 50s, 60s etc, but I can't be sure this definitely needs clarifying and a link to space age would be great. 274:. The answer given there made sense to me, so I'm going to copy it here. In a list where "most of the cells were not colored, and the colored cells were different, explanation by a color/symbol key. Here in this list, the light blue coloring is the base coloring, and only the differently colored cells need explanation." Is this wrong? 520:
do understand that it can be difficult for editors to appreciate the difficulties that visually-impaired visitors can have when reading our articles, but I believe that our standards are being raised across the 'pedia – and our featured content can take much of the credit for those improvements. Well done Dana! --
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You're welcome, Dana, and there's nothing to apologise for: you've worked hard on this. Formatting tables for accessibility is a relatively new innovation and nobody can be expected to take it all in without considerable practice, but we pride ourselves at FLC that we do our best to iron out problems
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was setting the width of the div (the box that the text goes in) to 6em wide by default (that's about 6 characters). Somebody had prevented the line wrapping by inserting   between each word, so that each item was forced to be on one line. However, Firefox (but not IE) reserves space for the
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The first column isn't even footnotes, though, it's just numbering by significant words (i.e., by the word which the NPS alphabetizes them). So, the Alden Dow House is #6 by significant wording (since the NPS calls it the Dow, Alden House), but when sorted by true first word it would be first on the
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Apologies for not revisiting sooner, but I've been on a wikibreak. Thanks to the collaborative efforts of Dana and TRM, the article is now as compliant with our expectations for accessibility as possible, and I'm more than happy to recommend the awarding of FL from the standpoint of accessibility. I
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Finally, images benefit from having alt text, because it is read out by screen readers. If we don't specify alt text (as with some of the images in the table), the wikimedia software supplies the filename as alt text which means the screen reader reads out the filename twice (because there is a link
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which shows that 'NHL color' (i.e. #87CEEB) and 'NHLD color' (i.e. #00CED1) are marginal for black text with the small small point size used, but the latter fails even the lower AA standard if the text is wikilinked (colour is #0645AD). I understand the desire to retain a project-wide colour scheme,
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I have absolutely no idea what is going on with those tables. The last time I looked at it (granted, that was probably a week ago) both the color and the keys were there. Now, I agree, they're not. All of the formatting is still there, it's just not showing up in the reader screen. Nothing has been
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I'm at a loss how to respond at this point. I did not feel that my standards were any stricter than the normal ones, or that I was being inconsistent. Other things keep me from reviewing many articles, but I try to as often as I can, so I really can't comment on lists that I have not reviewed. I'll
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Looking at the map in Firefox 9.0.1, I see the list of Detroit NHLs much more widely spaced compared to how they display in IE9, such that Pewabic Pottery is lost. The problem does not manifest itself in Google Chrome, but I'll have to boot up another PC to check in other browsers. This is probably
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user wants to know the dates of designation of several sites. They can set JAWS to read row and column header before each cell, then go down the 'Date of designation' column. At present they would hear: "1, Date of designation, 1987"; "2, Date of designation, 1989"; etc. If, instead of the number,
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information is to be conveyed and a colour is used to convey it, then providing a corresponding symbol will be helpful to the visually impaired. I don't agree with the concept of a base colour in this case. Let me put it another way, if this were a list of "important buildings in Detroit" and some
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from the way the colours are used in this article? I can see that you added '†' to indicate 'Historic District', but there's no audible cue for 'Landmark'. This would make it awkward for anyone using a screen reader to distinguish the two categories used here. In addition, '†' is not accessible in
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Thanks for your comments, TRM. I've addressed everything, and left some responses above. The ones with no responses I have addressed, but they were fairly straightforward, so I didn't bother leaving a reply. The list formatting/sorting issues are the hardest for me, and I've managed to break the
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This is the capitalization used by the Nat'l Park Service in their listings of these landmarks (both for the names and the disambiguators, per the below comment). I was on the fence about using the uppercase letterings, but this is what is used on other NHL lists, so I didn't change it. I would
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I would be good if the colours could be adjusted throughout Knowledge (XXG), but I don't expect that to be a quick job. As long as you don't place a wikilink on the NHLD colour, the contrast is acceptable, if sub-optimal. I must admit I have to strain a little to read the reference link in the
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Standards have tightened, I think, over the last year or so, and FLC has become more sensitive to the issues surrounding accessibility, principally because of the fact that tables are prominent in most list articles. I'd like to make a few points that I feel would improve the list if they were
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Thank you for your comments, NapHit! I believe I have addressed them all. On the first point, I looked back through the entries and realized that the latest one was from World War II, so I changed the sentence and linked it properly. Please let me know if you have any additional comments.
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I can see the key itself fine. It's when I scroll down to look at the rows of information for each landmark that there is no formatting. Where previously some rows were blue and some were turquoise and some had one symbol and some had the other...now there's nothing. It's just all gray.
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that is also read out). That must be incredibly annoying to visually impaired visitors. I don't know how easy it will be to fix but the alt text for the map in the lead is "List of National Historic Landmarks in Michigan is located in Michigan", which I find rather odd.
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I'm sorry if I sound snarky on this, but it feels like I'm being asked to do things that are not part of the criteria. There are several other (older) nominations on the FLC page that are lacking alt text - some of which have been reviewed by one of the featured list
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I think I have all of the column and row markers in the right place (I didn't really understand your explanation of placement, so I'm basing it off of another featured list I did where someone else added them in for me). Let me know if they're not
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Thanks for the nomination, Dana. Although I know almost nothing about Michigan, I found the list very interesting and the introduction well written. The statistics and the detailed map in the lead went a long way to establishing the context for
323:, but the introduction seems to imply that it is more an alternative. You're also still using the symbol '†', despite the fact that screen readers may read it as '?', or worse, silently drop it. There's a series of discussions at 203:
The use of colour – we should not be providing information through the use of colour alone. If you imagine that you were reading the article to a friend over the telephone, would they get the different meanings that are in
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top-left cell, but I have poor blue-green discrimination anyway. Incidentally, is that footnote required in its present form? It lists several designations that are not used in this article, so it may be confusing.
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We also need to be aware of the effect of colour contrast on viewers who may not have the same colour responses as the general population. The standard called 'Web Content Accessibilty Guidelines' (
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I'll keep this page bookmarked, so if you need any clarification or assistance, I should notice it. I'm also quite certain that any of the regulars here will also be happy to help out if needed. --
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Hi Giants and thanks for your comments! I apologize for taking a while to get back to you - I haven't been on WP all that much in the past few days... The above should be addressed. Thanks again,
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Thanks for the support, Rexxs! I apologize again if I was a bit snarky above - table formatting makes me slightly frustrated on the best of days, but I shouldn't have taken that out on you...
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I've been working on the list over the past week or so and think that it is ready for a shot at FL. Because this is the first list of this sort that I've worked on, I've based it off of
292:. I have no idea how to (or if it's even possible to) add alt text to templates. I have added alt text to the rest of the images, although AFAIK this is not a requirement for FL status. 854:
Any reason why, sorting by date, Quincy sorts after the Huron, despite the Huron having a precise date rather than just a year? Do we know the Qunicy was designated after the Huron?
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Thanks for adding the missing alt text on those images. Looking at other FLCs, I don't think that a list would currently pass if accessibility concerns were not addressed because
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I'm afraid I'd have to disagree with doncram's interpretation of the guidance. Where there is no information to be conveyed, then no colour and no symbol is obviously correct. If
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that I linked above to see the recommended markup. You've made a good step forward with the markup you used, but I wouldn't have picked the number as the row header. Let's say a
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time :) Anyway, I think I've managed to complete the rest of the changes to make the pretty formatting come back...please let me know if I've managed to screw anything up!
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lines that it would need if the text wrapped, resulting in blank lines between each item. For future reference, there's no need to put   between words, just add
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Hi Rexx, and thanks for your comments. Although I don't know that much about accessibility guidelines/policies on WP, I will try to answer your questions as best I can.
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Is there a reason why the CITY OF MILWAUKEE and the COLUMBIA are capitalised? Similar comments apply to the other ships. (cf. "Ste. Claire (passenger steamboat)")
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I thought MOS etc just said to write it per our own MOS? So unless there's a convincing reason otherwise, it should just comply with our own style guidelines.
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If no image for the "Norton Mound Group", I would place a centrally aligned en-dash so people don't sit there thinking "when's the image going to load..."
620:"detailing the state's automotive" would link "state" to Michigan otherwise we don't seem to have a direct link to the state itself anywhere in the lead. 138: 40: 1390: 1202: 228:
that they should identify column and row headers where possible, and mark them up as headers with the relevant scope. So column headers should have
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No need to capitalise (Steamer) nor (... Car Ferry). Again, similarly applies to the other ship types. (cf. "Ste. Claire (passenger steamboat))
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If you mean the # National Historical Landmark (in blue) and the + National Historic Landmark District in turquoise key, I can see it fine.
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Normally, no, but since this is more of a note than a reference (and now is not formatted as a ref) it should be OK, at least in my opinion.
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for an example of where the row headers are in the second column. I should mention that on my browser, the column headings are rendering as
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I really don't want to put this list out of step with all of the other national register articles/lists. So, I have left a message with the
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of the nominations I looked at. If you're going to make lists conform to your (stricter than normal) standards, please do so consistently.
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I have no idea what you're talking about. The coding in this list is already way beyond my pay grade. If you want to change it, have at it.
848:"Copper mining in the US" although it doesn't exist, so the point may be moot, wouldn't it be called "Copper mining in the United States"? 379: 443:
markup, and this has not been challenged, nor has the readability of certain colors according to an external site been challenged on
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If you'd like me to find other examples of best practice, or make some illustrative edits to this list, please feel free to ask. --
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Tried to do this and broke the table. (I've left it broken, so that you can see what I tried and let me know how to fix it.) - DB
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Some quick responses there, will get back to you re:sorting, hope you can see what I did with the "scope" thing. Best wishes,
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You've made some useful improvements to the list, and its accessibility has increased as a result. I'll re-examine the points:
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Ref 5, you link to the Knowledge (XXG) namespace, is that something that is acceptable at FAC? I wouldn't expect to see that.
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Removed. There was a lot of overlinking here when I started, and although I removed a bunch of it I guess I missed some! - DB
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done to the article - maybe something's going on with the table formatting on the back end? Anybody else have any ideas?
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isn't a dab page, reading it, it says the word has two distince meanings, so its use (and linking) here could be unclear.
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Looks fine. I don't know about the map - I didn't make it and I'm not enough of a coding guru to change how it displays.
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I think I've done the rest of these, and the sorting is working correctly in my browser. Thanks again for the review!
1126:"and one, a ship..." would be much better if you linked the actual ship that was moved instead of just saying a ship. 623:
Normally would expect to see (NHL) after the first expanded use before it's then used as an abbreviation in the lead.
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I think you meant in the map? If so, I've changed it - I can't find a punctuated usage in the list itself. - DB
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Find it hard to see the in the heading, and wonder why that column doesn't have any visible heading at all.
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Highland Park Ford Plant: Remove "were" from "Automobile manufacturing operations were begun in 1910..."?
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Can't figure out how to do this. Please check what I've done and let me know what I'm doing wrong... - DB
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I guess if you want to link skyscraper once then you should link it every time in this sortable table.
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Not sure there's a need to link House, and pipelinking "work" to "architecture" is a little odd to me.
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Number col doesn't sort correctly, you'll need to use a sorting template to stop 10 sorting after 1.
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Ahhhh.... It's still the little things that trip me up with this coding. Should be fixed now. - DB
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number 5 requires compliance with the Manual of Style and its supplementary pages (which includes
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template (with a preceding couple of zeroes for safety!!) but follow the guidance of what I did
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prefer to use sentence case, but I guess I would like some further thoughts on the subject. - DB
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Would expect that the !scope="row" would be applied to the landmark name itself, not the number.
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Knowledge (XXG):Featured list candidates/List of National Historic Landmarks in Indiana/archive2
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The key probably doesn't need a section entirely of its own since it's only got two components.
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should do the trick. If not, I'll retire, scramble my password and delete my user page.....
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as far as we can. I hope I haven't put you off from nominating more lists in the future :) --
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Knowledge (XXG):Featured list candidates/Philadelphia Phillies all-time roster (C)/archive1
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Works for me, especially since I like it better in sentence case. Should be done now. - DB
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Thanks again, and hopefully the work that I did improved the accessibility of this list.
781:) the Wikimedia software treats it as text rather than numbers, so you'll need to use a 217: 1129:
I would split the ref column in two, looks a bit clunky in one long list at the moment
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Grand Hotel: Double period at description's end (one inside quote marks, one outside).
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Ref appears to be a footnote, not a reference so should be separated from the others.
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General Motors Building: Oddity here, as there seem to be two competing descriptions.
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Rightyho, I've trialled one change, it looks promising. You may need to use the
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Featured list candidates/List of National Historic Landmarks in Michigan/archive1
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Knowledge (XXG) talk:Manual of Style/Accessibility/Archive 11#Accessible symbols
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Moved ref 5 into the text. Do you have a recommendation for a header name? - DB
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If you prefer different alternate text, it should now be simple to change it.
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I just removed the full date from Quincy so that they were standardized. - DB
606:? Our article is the latter, your usage is the former, just wanted to check. 371:
markup as well. The latter isn't needed, and double-bolding doesn't fit with
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template or similar. Will look into it more for you and get back to you.
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I don't see neither the keys nor the indicated green/blue background...--
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bold because they are now marked as row headers (bold) and also have the
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template works nicely in the # column. Have done the first 12 or so...
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list, so if you could figure out how to do what you guys are asking and
825:"the American dream of "a summer place."". is there a spare period here? 270:
This also came up in the FLC for the Indiana list, which can be see at
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The major issue was resolved, and otherwise the list is excellent.--
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Subsequent comments should be made on the article's talk page or in
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ask for some other opinions and adjust my comments as necessary. --
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list. I'm not sure how to go about explaining this, though? - DB
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Is there a reason that DETROIT is shouting in the clickable map?
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User talk:Bamse/Archive 2#Re: Dagger and double dagger with JAWS
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and the Landmark names in the second column as row headers with
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You appear to have the map co-ordinates/Bing/Google box twice.
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to see if these colors can be changed throughout the project.
485:(or whatever number works) to make the containing box wider 398:
something beyond your control, but I thought I'd flag it up.
851:"top-ranked " would it be clearer to say "most decorated"? 777:
I think when you use the symbols (which are essential for
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The lead "image" is actually a template, transcluded from
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Former NHLs - no need to allow image col to be sortable.
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break the list, it would be much appreciated. Thanks!
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List of ministers of law and human rights of Indonesia
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http://snook.ca/technical/colour_contrast/colour.html
335:if you want to understand the issues more clearly. 1423:The above discussion is preserved as an archive. 1282:when you tried to force the sorting and used a 72:List of National Historic Landmarks in Michigan 65:List of National Historic Landmarks in Michigan 43:. No further edits should be made to this page. 175:List of National Historic Landmarks in Indiana 1429:No further edits should be made to this page. 1264:Oh yeah, I see. I'll have a closer look.... 680:I've pulled this out into the main text. - DB 224:Data tables now have a recommendation in the 41:Knowledge (XXG) talk:Featured list candidates 29:The following is an archived discussion of a 8: 918:Don't think there's a need to link factory. 1097: 566: 122: 1100: 569: 18:Knowledge (XXG):Featured list candidates 125: 115: 7: 842:Same comment applies to Great Lakes. 206:Knowledge (XXG):NRHP colors legend 24: 359:, by the way). You could look at 1: 1416:22:05, 26 February 2012 (UTC) 1398:19:19, 26 February 2012 (UTC) 1360:07:58, 10 February 2012 (UTC) 921:Ref 1 we would normally have 835:Delinked this and below. - DB 560:23:24, 26 February 2012 (UTC) 545:22:05, 26 February 2012 (UTC) 530:18:53, 26 February 2012 (UTC) 1346:23:03, 9 February 2012 (UTC) 1324:17:24, 9 February 2012 (UTC) 1296:17:13, 9 February 2012 (UTC) 1274:17:06, 9 February 2012 (UTC) 1260:16:27, 9 February 2012 (UTC) 1245:15:56, 9 February 2012 (UTC) 1229:15:31, 9 February 2012 (UTC) 1210:14:39, 9 February 2012 (UTC) 1183:21:59, 23 January 2012 (UTC) 1160:18:05, 23 January 2012 (UTC) 1142:17:47, 22 January 2012 (UTC) 1112:21:59, 23 January 2012 (UTC) 1091:19:38, 17 January 2012 (UTC) 1073:02:37, 15 January 2012 (UTC) 1027:23:05, 11 January 2012 (UTC) 1013:21:14, 11 January 2012 (UTC) 989:20:48, 11 January 2012 (UTC) 975:20:35, 11 January 2012 (UTC) 955:08:22, 11 January 2012 (UTC) 892:20:48, 11 January 2012 (UTC) 801:20:48, 11 January 2012 (UTC) 712:20:48, 11 January 2012 (UTC) 654:20:44, 11 January 2012 (UTC) 581:19:40, 20 January 2012 (UTC) 501:00:27, 12 January 2012 (UTC) 472:16:26, 10 January 2012 (UTC) 457:16:04, 10 January 2012 (UTC) 414:15:34, 10 January 2012 (UTC) 232:and row headers should have 307:20:37, 8 January 2012 (UTC) 263:15:10, 8 January 2012 (UTC) 187:20:31, 7 January 2012 (UTC) 166:20:31, 7 January 2012 (UTC) 1446: 738:See previous comment. - DB 478:Template:Michigan NHLs map 388:Template:Michigan NHLs map 290:Template:Michigan NHLs map 380:WP:Featured list criteria 1426:Please do not modify it. 56:23:08, 27 February 2012 36:Please do not modify it. 31:featured list nomination 1102:Resolved comments from 571:Resolved comments from 1278:It looks like it was 192:Comments from RexxS 1350:Looks good to me! 1286:bit of coding.... 321:higher designation 1169: 1168: 1038: 1037: 604:City of Milwaukee 600:City of Milwaukee 476:I found that the 169: 151: 150: 1437: 1428: 1383: 1352:The Rambling Man 1316:The Rambling Man 1309: 1303: 1288:The Rambling Man 1285: 1266:The Rambling Man 1237:The Rambling Man 1195: 1101: 1098: 1069: 1063: 1005:The Rambling Man 1002: 996: 981:The Rambling Man 947:The Rambling Man 924: 884:The Rambling Man 793:The Rambling Man 790: 784: 704:The Rambling Man 646:The Rambling Man 573:The Rambling Man 570: 567: 490: 394: 279:NRHP WikiProject 154: 123: 113: 95: 38: 1445: 1444: 1440: 1439: 1438: 1436: 1435: 1434: 1433: 1424: 1395: 1388: 1381: 1307: 1301: 1283: 1207: 1200: 1193: 1067: 1061: 1000: 994: 993:Looks like the 922: 788: 782: 486: 420:Whatever. Done. 391: 369:'''Bold text''' 342:Have a look at 226:Manual of Style 86: 70: 68: 34: 22: 21: 20: 12: 11: 5: 1443: 1441: 1432: 1431: 1420: 1419: 1418: 1401: 1400: 1393: 1386: 1373: 1372: 1371: 1370: 1369: 1368: 1367: 1366: 1365: 1364: 1363: 1362: 1298: 1276: 1232: 1231: 1213: 1212: 1205: 1198: 1167: 1166: 1165: 1164: 1163: 1162: 1131: 1130: 1127: 1124: 1115: 1114: 1096: 1095: 1094: 1093: 1076: 1075: 1055: 1050: 1036: 1035: 1034: 1033: 1032: 1031: 1030: 1029: 991: 944: 943: 939: 938: 937: 936: 930: 929: 926: 919: 916: 913: 909: 908: 907: 906: 905: 904: 903: 902: 895: 894: 877: 876: 870: 869: 865: 864: 863: 862: 856: 855: 852: 849: 846: 843: 839: 838: 837: 836: 830: 829: 826: 822: 821: 820: 819: 813: 812: 808: 807: 806: 805: 804: 803: 772: 771: 765: 764: 760: 759: 758: 757: 756:Unlinked. - DB 751: 750: 742: 741: 740: 739: 733: 732: 728: 727: 726: 725: 724: 723: 722: 721: 715: 714: 697: 696: 689: 688: 684: 683: 682: 681: 675: 674: 670: 669: 668: 667: 666: 665: 664: 663: 657: 656: 635: 634: 628: 627: 624: 621: 617: 616: 615: 614: 608: 607: 596: 593: 584: 583: 565: 564: 563: 562: 514: 513: 512: 511: 510: 509: 508: 507: 506: 505: 504: 503: 484: 483:|line_width=12 432: 431: 430: 427: 424: 421: 402: 401: 400: 376: 370: 358: 357:|! scope="row" 354: 340: 336: 295: 294: 293: 286: 282: 275: 251: 250: 249: 245: 243: 239: 235: 231: 222: 210: 197: 193: 171: 170: 156:Nominator(s): 149: 148: 147: 146: 144:External links 141: 136: 128: 127: 121: 120: 67: 62: 61: 46: 45: 25: 23: 15: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 1442: 1430: 1427: 1421: 1417: 1413: 1409: 1406:Thanks, GOP! 1405: 1404: 1403: 1402: 1399: 1396: 1391: 1389: 1384: 1378: 1375: 1374: 1361: 1357: 1353: 1349: 1348: 1347: 1343: 1339: 1335: 1331: 1328:Ah, don't do 1327: 1326: 1325: 1321: 1317: 1313: 1306: 1299: 1297: 1293: 1289: 1281: 1277: 1275: 1271: 1267: 1263: 1262: 1261: 1257: 1253: 1248: 1247: 1246: 1242: 1238: 1234: 1233: 1230: 1226: 1222: 1217: 1216: 1215: 1214: 1211: 1208: 1203: 1201: 1196: 1190: 1187: 1186: 1185: 1184: 1180: 1176: 1173: 1161: 1157: 1153: 1148: 1147: 1146: 1145: 1144: 1143: 1139: 1135: 1128: 1125: 1122: 1121: 1120: 1117: 1116: 1113: 1109: 1105: 1099: 1092: 1088: 1084: 1080: 1079: 1078: 1077: 1074: 1070: 1064: 1059: 1056: 1054: 1051: 1049: 1046: 1045: 1044: 1042: 1028: 1024: 1020: 1016: 1015: 1014: 1010: 1006: 999: 992: 990: 986: 982: 978: 977: 976: 972: 968: 964: 959: 958: 957: 956: 952: 948: 941: 940: 934: 933: 932: 931: 927: 920: 917: 914: 911: 910: 899: 898: 897: 896: 893: 889: 885: 882:Footnote(s)? 881: 880: 879: 878: 874: 873: 872: 871: 867: 866: 860: 859: 858: 857: 853: 850: 847: 844: 841: 840: 834: 833: 832: 831: 827: 824: 823: 817: 816: 815: 814: 810: 809: 802: 798: 794: 787: 780: 776: 775: 774: 773: 769: 768: 767: 766: 762: 761: 755: 754: 753: 752: 748: 744: 743: 737: 736: 735: 734: 730: 729: 719: 718: 717: 716: 713: 709: 705: 701: 700: 699: 698: 693: 692: 691: 690: 686: 685: 679: 678: 677: 676: 672: 671: 661: 660: 659: 658: 655: 651: 647: 643: 642:missed a pipe 639: 638: 637: 636: 632: 631: 630: 629: 625: 622: 619: 618: 612: 611: 610: 609: 605: 601: 597: 594: 591: 590: 589: 586: 585: 582: 578: 574: 568: 561: 557: 553: 548: 547: 546: 542: 538: 534: 533: 532: 531: 527: 523: 518: 502: 498: 494: 489: 482: 479: 475: 474: 473: 469: 465: 460: 459: 458: 454: 450: 446: 442: 438: 433: 428: 425: 422: 419: 418: 417: 416: 415: 411: 407: 403: 399: 393: 389: 385: 381: 377: 374: 368: 366: 362: 356: 353:! scope="row" 352: 349: 345: 341: 337: 334: 330: 326: 322: 317: 313: 312: 310: 309: 308: 304: 300: 296: 291: 287: 283: 280: 276: 273: 269: 268: 266: 265: 264: 260: 256: 252: 246: 242:! scope="row" 241: 238:! scope="col" 237: 234:! scope="row" 233: 230:! scope="col" 229: 227: 223: 219: 215: 211: 207: 202: 201: 198: 194: 191: 190: 189: 188: 184: 180: 176: 168: 167: 163: 159: 153: 152: 145: 142: 140: 137: 135: 132: 131: 130: 129: 124: 119: 116: 114: 111: 107: 103: 99: 94: 90: 85: 81: 77: 73: 66: 63: 60: 58: 55: 51: 48:The list was 44: 42: 37: 32: 27: 26: 19: 1425: 1422: 1376: 1333: 1329: 1284:display=none 1188: 1171: 1170: 1132: 1118: 1057: 1052: 1047: 1040: 1039: 962: 945: 603: 599: 587: 516: 515: 444: 440: 436: 396: 364: 320: 315: 172: 155: 139:Citation bot 69: 49: 47: 35: 28: 1408:Dana boomer 1338:Dana boomer 1252:Dana boomer 1221:Dana boomer 1152:Dana boomer 1083:Dana boomer 1019:Dana boomer 967:Dana boomer 925:in the ref. 644:each time. 598:Is it S.S. 537:Dana boomer 449:Dana boomer 299:Dana boomer 200:addressed: 179:Dana boomer 158:Dana boomer 1062:Giants2008 923:format=pdf 54:Giants2008 1280:this edit 779:WP:ACCESS 747:community 745:Although 488:like this 437:directors 384:WP:ACCESS 1119:Comments 1041:Comments 588:Comments 517:Support: 373:MOS:BOLD 134:Analysis 50:promoted 1377:Support 1189:Comment 1172:Support 344:WP:DTAB 126:Toolbox 89:protect 84:history 1175:NapHit 1134:NapHit 1104:NapHit 602:or SS 355:, not 285:right. 93:delete 1382:♫GoP♫ 1194:♫GoP♫ 552:RexxS 522:RexxS 493:RexxS 464:RexxS 423:Done. 406:RexxS 255:RexxS 110:views 102:watch 98:links 16:< 1412:talk 1356:talk 1342:talk 1334:this 1330:that 1320:talk 1312:here 1305:sort 1292:talk 1270:talk 1256:talk 1241:talk 1225:talk 1179:talk 1156:talk 1138:talk 1108:talk 1087:talk 1068:Talk 1023:talk 1009:talk 985:talk 971:talk 951:talk 888:talk 797:talk 786:sort 708:talk 650:talk 640:You 577:talk 556:talk 541:talk 526:talk 497:talk 491:. -- 468:talk 453:talk 410:talk 365:very 348:JAWS 331:and 316:some 303:talk 259:talk 214:WCAG 183:talk 162:talk 106:logs 80:talk 76:edit 998:nts 963:not 445:any 196:me. 52:by 1414:) 1358:) 1344:) 1322:) 1308:}} 1302:{{ 1294:) 1272:) 1258:) 1243:) 1227:) 1181:) 1158:) 1140:) 1110:) 1089:) 1071:) 1043:– 1025:) 1011:) 1001:}} 995:{{ 987:) 973:) 953:) 890:) 799:) 789:}} 783:{{ 710:) 652:) 579:) 558:) 543:) 528:) 499:) 470:) 455:) 441:no 412:) 327:, 305:) 261:) 185:) 164:) 108:| 104:| 100:| 96:| 91:| 87:| 82:| 78:| 59:. 33:. 1410:( 1394:N 1387:T 1354:( 1340:( 1318:( 1290:( 1268:( 1254:( 1239:( 1223:( 1206:N 1199:T 1177:( 1154:( 1136:( 1106:( 1085:( 1065:( 1021:( 1007:( 983:( 969:( 949:( 886:( 795:( 706:( 648:( 575:( 554:( 539:( 524:( 495:( 466:( 451:( 408:( 390:. 375:. 301:( 257:( 244:. 181:( 160:( 112:) 74:(

Index

Knowledge (XXG):Featured list candidates
featured list nomination
Knowledge (XXG) talk:Featured list candidates
Giants2008

List of National Historic Landmarks in Michigan
List of National Historic Landmarks in Michigan
edit
talk
history
protect
delete
links
watch
logs
views
Featured list candidates/List of National Historic Landmarks in Michigan/archive1
Analysis
Citation bot
External links
Dana boomer
talk
20:31, 7 January 2012 (UTC)
List of National Historic Landmarks in Indiana
Dana boomer
talk
20:31, 7 January 2012 (UTC)
Knowledge (XXG):NRHP colors legend
WCAG
http://snook.ca/technical/colour_contrast/colour.html

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