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September 15

Template:Infobox Dalai Lama and Template:Infobox religious biography

The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the template below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the template's talk page or in a deletion review).

The result of the discussion was relisted on 2017 September 23. Primefac (talk) 17:58, 23 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]

The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the template's talk page or in a deletion review).

Template:Cite Q

The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the template below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the template's talk page or in a deletion review).

The result of the discussion was no consensus. The arguments made in this discussion are largely similar to those made in the TFD for ((infobox person/Wikidata)). Those opposed to this template are concerned that it is not accurate, is not easy to edit in these instances, and is less prone to oversight than material hosted on Wikipedia itself. Those in favour argue that because it is a work in progress there will undoubtedly be errors, but that it will allow for more accurate usage down the line and easier syncing between languages, and that Wikidata is just as good as Wikipedia at finding/reverting bad info.

As discussed previously, simply being a work in progress or not being perfect are not reasons to delete a template, but on the other hand works-in-progress should rarely be used in the article space until they are 99% finished/accurate/etc. Until the matter of transcluding Wikidata on Wikipedia is resolved (most likely with a huge and contentious RFC) usage of this template should be extremely vetted to ensure that all of the transcluded information is accurate.

As this template is a work-in-progress, there is no prejudice against re-nomination in 6 months if there is no improvement over the accuracy/ease-of-editing issues, but only if diffs can be provided to demonstrate that either a) no action to change it has been taken, or b) the concerns simply cannot be fixed. However, I personally feel a better use of time would be to determine a community-wide consensus about Wikidata and it's role in templates used on Wikipedia. Primefac (talk) 15:51, 2 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]

This template is a baffling thing when one comes across it while editing. It creates a properly formed citation. Turns out it is pulling data from Wikidata somehow. This is used in about 225 places which is unfortunate. But based on the deprecation of template:doi per Template talk:Cite doi#RfC: Should cite doi template be deprecated?, this should not have been implemented. Citation data should be in the article where the citation is used, not somewhere else, and not in another project altogether.

See also discussion at Wikipedia_talk:Wikidata/2017_State_of_affairs#UNREADABLE_WIKIDATA_REFS which is what made me aware of this. -- Jytdog (talk) 08:23, 15 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]

For another example of problems with the template, see Regensburg. A long way down on that page, you have the infobox for a UNESCO World Heritage Site. "Area [7]". Reference 7 is "Bavarian State Office for Statistics and Data, ed. (1991), Amtliches Ortsverzeichnis für Bayern, Munich: Bavarian State Office for Statistics and Data, p. 242, Wikidata Q15707237". Great, we have a reference without anything it references. Furthermore, the source, if you succeed in eventually finding it, has no info on the area anyway[3]. Then again, how could a 1991 source have information of the area designed as world Heritage Site in 2006... Similarly, on Visby they use a 1961 reference for a 1995 world heritage site, resulting in "Location Gotland Municipality, Q10716061, Gotland[10][11], Sweden" (emphasis mine) in the text of the infobox.
And a third group of articles this is used on are telescopes. Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory has the location of the telescope, "Location Coquimbo Region, Chile[1]" with the source "GRID Release 2017-05-22, 22 May 2017, doi:10.6084/M9.FIGSHARE.5032286, Wikidata Q30141628". Neither the doi nor the Wikidata link bring you any closer to the actual source, [4].
Some loose articles also use this, e.g. Moksha (Jainism) has a source: "Paul Dundas (2002, 1992), The Jains, London, New York: Routledge, ISBN 0-415-26605-X Check date values in: |date= (help), Wikidata Q36518532" (emphasis mine). Oops! Often, these pages have a Wikidata link to a general website, not an actual reference to the object in question (e.g. Bengtskär lighthouse links to this, not to this; Crucifixion with the Virgin Mary, St John and St Mary Magdalene links to this, not to this which as already present in the article anyway.
Basically, whether you believe we should have this template or not (I don't, hence my "delete"), it clearly isn't ready to be used in the mainspace and is added to articles and templates in a reckless, often WP:POINTY manner. Fram (talk) 09:12, 15 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
I certainly remember how difficult it was for me to learn how to format a citation... and you are correct in saying that it wasn't easy. For a long time, I simply cut and pasted a citation from another part of the article (or some other article), and then simply rewrote the citation text. And I still use the old <ref>...</ref> format that I learned back then (All these "parameters" and "fields" and what not, are beyond me). But, that just reinforces my point... For a non tech-oriented Luddite like me, the template makes it even harder and more confusing to edit. I would be all for it if it actually made things easier... but it doesn't. Blueboar (talk) 14:09, 15 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
@Fram: In part because when it comes to copying and pasting I know that machines can do a better job with a lower error rate that I do as a human being. But the second factor is that it's easier to compare data in Wikidata to the original source, and much easier if you want to make such comparisons at scale. En-wp is very good at catching bad edits. But if a bad edit gets through that initial screen, you're never going to find it again. Suppose you wanted to check all the citations on en-wiki to a particular journal, to see whether the article titles were correct. You would have to scrape an enormous amount a material, simply to find those cites. Whereas on wikidata you could write a query that would retrieve all those article titles in under a minute. There are a lot of things that wikitext is good for, in particular its ease and speed of editing. But systematic at-scale data retrieval and data checking is not one of them. Jheald (talk) 14:35, 15 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
I have seen very little evidence so far that Wikidata at the moment does any such data checking (or does it well). I have also seen very little evidence, from the current 250 or so citations using citeQ, that Wikidata is in any way better to a) find the right source, b) display the right source, and c) correct when it is wrong. And of course, most sources don't get used in that many articles, most sources are used once or twice, making the benefit of this minimal. I just checked one of the articles using Cite Q, and noticed that the Wikidata source is a generic one, instead of a specific one. If I would change this source to point at the right item on Wikidata, I would break dozens of other articles which use the same generic source. On enwiki, I would change the reference for this article and I wouldn't break any other articles. Funny bit (well, not really, another very sad reminder of the true state of Wikidata: the article I checked was La Madeleine, Paris, a rather famous Paris landmark and World Heritage site. Since 28 February 2017 this item has the wrong English label at Wikidata (basically meaning that it has been page-moved vandalized and no one saw it or cared for more than 6 months), where it is called "La Madeleine ceosoner"[6]. And tragically matching another current Wikidata debate, the English description "Roman Catholic church occupying in the 8th arrondissement of Paris" could do with some copy-editing as well. That error has been there only since October 2013 though[7]. It's the first line our mobile- and app viewers (used to) see when visiting the article, not something buried deep in the body of it. And that's the kind of site we should trust to keep our references up-to-date and correct? Fram (talk) 14:52, 15 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Well thank you for that vote of deep appreciation, Fram. And now, if you don't mind, I'll go back to the 1:1 matching of Wikidata's items on civil parishes in England to the identifiers and authoritative data from the UK national stats office, to facilitate just that kind of cross-checking. 10325 matched so far, closing in on the last 125. The kind of ongoing data matching and iterative improvement that is typical right across Wikidata. Jheald (talk) 15:31, 15 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Humans and machines do not read data the same way, and never have done. If they did, browser development would have stopped at Lynx as "a solved problem" and we'd all still be programming in assembly language. Ritchie333 (talk) (cont) 15:43, 15 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Haphazardly sprinkling WD on everything does not make it "Great TM". I like the idea of WD actually. There however has been specific requests NOT to do this and yet here it is. Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 23:20, 15 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
--Mike Christie (talk - contribs - library) 17:24, 15 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, I did read the template's documentation beforehand. Have you reviewed WP:civility any time recently? ~ J. Johnson (JJ) (talk) 21:01, 16 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
User:Rhododendrites I don't know what the future holds, but having this available for experimentation makes sense to me. An outcome that is "prohibit use in mainspace" is an entirely reasonable to me, with a big fat notice placed on the template doc, warning people not to use it in mainspace. I worry that Wikidata advocates won't abide by that but we would have this AfD to point back to at ANI or elsewhere, I reckon. Jytdog (talk) 01:00, 16 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
That would be sufficient for me. Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 01:08, 16 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Re: use in drafts: What happens when those drafts are moved into Mainspace? All the Cite Q refs get altered? What are the chances that everyone's going to remember that? I think the chances are pretty low, and we're going to end up with it in Mainspace by the backdoor. Beyond My Ken (talk) 07:22, 16 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
I am happy to see it tested. I guess the question is should we have a bot that converts for this to a normal citation when it occurs in mainspace? Such a bot would than keep it from getting into mainspace. Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 18:14, 16 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
The template works, mostly quite well, and is quite well documented (although the documentation doesn't already get read ;-) ). There are issues with the template, but it is under active development, and issues either get quickly fixed by tweaks to the template (just point them out on the template talk page) or to the information on Wikidata (which is also still under development/expansion!).
A lot of the arguments I hear about incomplete information could easily be said about Wikipedia in the past (and even currently)! And a lot of the arguments about 'it's difficult to edit the information on Wikidata' can equally be said about the standard citation templates here (we just have stockholm syndrome...)
As for 'you can't follow changes here', please go to Special:Preferences, go to the 'Watchlist' tab, and tick the check-box next to 'Show Wikidata edits in your watchlist'. Maybe this should be enabled by default... Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 23:29, 15 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
This is how it goes. The community allows infoboxes to be drawn from Wikidata, which leads to citation templates drawing data from wikidata, which irresponsible editors start using more widely outside of infoboxes. This is the problem with working in an unstructured community like this. People are going to do irresponsible things, running well ahead of consensus.
Many many reasons have been given for deleting this citation template. If that makes things difficult with wikidata-driven infoboxes, then those will have to be redone, but that is an entirely different conversation. Not relevant here. It is not the en-WP community's problem, that Wikidata advocates are making problems for themselves. Jytdog (talk) 23:47, 15 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
@Jytdog: Consensus without practical examples tends to lead to conservatism - "this can't be done", "this will break everything", "this will never happen". Everything I've been doing with Wikidata infoboxes so far has to prove that the concept works, within the bounds of existing consensus as I understand it, and to work through the technical and (mostly) social issues as best as I can. I have not yet seen a valid reason for deleting this template - restricting its usage to certain circumstances, maybe, but not deleting it. We can have Wikidata infoboxes that don't show references, but I worry that this will then be seen as a reason to delete the infoboxes ("they don't support references"/"you can't display references from Wikidata correctly"). Most of the problems I've seen so far with this work have been due to the en-WP community's ad-hoc approach to things... Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 00:22, 16 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
I get it that you see nothing wrong with this; you wrote that the first time. Jytdog (talk) 00:48, 16 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you for listening. Mike Peel (talk) 01:04, 16 September 2017 (UTC
"This is how it goes. The community allows infoboxes to be drawn from Wikidata, which leads to citation templates drawing data from wikidata, which irresponsible editors start using more widely outside of infoboxes." In this case you are demonstrating a remarkable ignorance of the facts. That is most certainly not how it has gone, as just a few seconds reading of the links already posting this discussion would have shown you. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 17:02, 16 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Just to reply to this: "As for 'you can't follow changes here', please go to Special:Preferences, go to the 'Watchlist' tab, and tick the check-box next to 'Show Wikidata edits in your watchlist'.". I tried it for a couple of days and it does not work. Or at least it is badly broken in a number of ways. First with no edit summaries only automated ones you are often forced to guess what the edit is, certainly what its intent is. Second there is no 'diff' link, you have to go to the page, then view history, then view the last change. Third Navigation Popups don’t work. But fourth and worst it pulls in every change, not just ones to the items that correspond to the pages on your watchlist but every item used on them, filling the list with irrelevant changes, but which are not obviously irrelevant until you dive in and see what the change is. E.g. I saw reports of vandalism of the description at Argentina on Wikidata, not because I have that page watched but because there was something on my watchlist which is in Argentina, which has an infobox which gets the country name from the country’s Wikidata page. And this is only likely to get worse as infoboxes and templates pull data from multiple Wikidata pages.--JohnBlackburnewordsdeeds 22:40, 17 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
@JohnBlackburne: It's not broken, although it's not as feature-complete as you (and I) would like. First, the automated edit summaries are because manual edit summaries aren't used when editing Wikidata as each edit is quite small (the sort of edits you'd make with summaries of 'tweak', 'ce', '+', '-' here) - although the display of these could be a lot better (property name, value changes), and for larger edit sets a summary would be useful. Second, the diff link works for me as usual (except it points to the wikidata edit diff rather than the wikipedia one), if it doesn't work for you then that's a bug that needs to be fixed. Third, yes, pop-ups don't work (which is a shame). Fourth, this is both a pro and a con - it's a pro because you need to see when things change in other entries that affect the page you're watching (which is particularly relevant for the template being discussed here!), but a con is it would be better if duplicate edits didn't show up (although maybe this shows up the important changes to check. ;-) ). Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 00:20, 19 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
That would definitely be a step in the right direction. Ok... I can see allowing it on a user page for testing... but don't roll it out to mainspace until fully vetted and approved by the WP:en community. Blueboar (talk) 19:33, 16 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
template:infobox gene is used in Dihydrofolate reductase; it is one of the very few infoboxes that is drawn completely from Wikidata. It does not rely on the template we are discussing and is not relevant to this discussion. (i had an extended discussion about excluding health information from that infobox at Module talk:Infobox gene). Jytdog (talk) 19:48, 16 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
@Jytdog:, you're technically right in this case. I figured out how to look under the hood (at the Lua code that underlies Infobox gene) and it uses cite web for all footnotes it generates, not Cite Q. But, (1) those references are also invisible in wikitext (which just shows ((Infobox gene)), and (2) it would be better if it did provide more fully elaborate references, such as journal articles.--Carwil (talk) 15:28, 18 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • This sort of experimentation should not be happening in live articles. Keep it for testing in sandboxes etc, fine, but no more. - Sitush (talk) 18:44, 16 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • We regularly test things on live articles (bot runs etc.) and then monitor what happens and revert when things go wrong. Being afraid of change or innovation is not how we became what we are now. —Kusma (t·c) 19:42, 16 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • If I was afraid of change or innovation, I wouldn't be doing the job that I do. However, being sensible is rarely a bad thing: this thing is nowhere near ready for articles, for a bundle of reasons already noted in this discussion. Sandboxes are for testing. - Sitush (talk) 19:49, 16 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Main issues with using Wikidata in order that they bother me, others' concerns will vary:
  • not properly referenced by en.wiki standards - however these ARE references
  • hard to see what the reference is (the cite doi problem) - this can be improved, I've tried using named references and comments, but there can be other ways
  • hard to see vandalism - with thousands and thousands of references in Wikidata it is less likely that those we use here would be randomly hit
  • hard to edit references in Wikidata - painfully true, but only a few editors are using cite Q at the moment, just ask us to fix it
StarryGrandma (talk) 01:58, 17 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
I endorse the importance of this feature without changing my !vote above. As someone who occasionally translates Wikipedia articles and frequently draws on material written in other languages, it's incredibly valuable to have a simple way for a reference to appear in a different Wikipedia without having to learn a new set of citation formats.--Carwil (talk) 15:28, 18 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
That is an excellent reason to keep this template (and to make sure it is rolled out everywhere). Translations should be able to share the same citation database. —Kusma (t·c) 09:24, 19 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
The content translation tool takes care of references during translation and we have "cite journal" and "cite book" installed in nearly all languages. As someone who manages a large translation project yes it would be nice to have centralized references, but this should not come at the loss of metadata within wikitext. Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 16:52, 19 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Arbitray break 1[edit]
I'm still divided between "delete" and "keep for experimentation, with implementation restricted to a limited set of sandboxes and/or talk pages until if and when a beta-version (probably with "subst:") can be approved, or until all experimentation is ultimately deemed unsuccessful resulting in a delete of the template". Another suggestion for a way forward is inspired by German-language ADB pages at Wikisource: such pages, e.g. wikisource:de:ADB:Gesenius, Wilhelm, contain at the bottom of the page a "Suggested citation format" (German: "Empfohlene Zitierweise"). Other reliable websites suggest similar pre-formatted citations (see e.g. "Cite This Item" at the bottom of this LOC page). So, Question (#2): can pre-formatted citations be stored (or "generated on the fly" by request) in Wikidata items, easier to "call" (with a "subst:" template or whatever), or, possibly in a first step, transferable with old-fashioned copy-paste? --Francis Schonken (talk) 11:23, 20 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Isn't that exactly what the current template, if it were made to subst cleanly, would do? Pppery 02:36, 22 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
No, the proposal is to generate/store the formatted citation at Wikidata (so that it could be visualised there, i.e. as a proposed reference format, without visiting Wikipedia); The Cite Q template only visualises the formatted citation at en.Wikipedia, thus needing similar templates, each of them calling and arranging Wikidata properties in a similar procedure, i.e. doing the same work, when other WikiMedia projects want to use formatted citations: this question is about whether the code that performs the formatting can be run centrally, at Wikidata, instead of on each WikiMedia project separately: seems like an economy of resources for doing essentially the same job (and less endless discussion about the template at en.Wikipedia). --Francis Schonken (talk) 05:53, 24 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
So, instead of writing one template that can be copied once to each language Wikipedia that wants it, you propose asking editors on every language Wikipedia to go to another site (Wikidata) each time they want a citation, track down the citation they want, and then manually copy-and-paste it back into their own Wikipedia. Yeah, I can really see that gaining traction. --RexxS (talk) 14:31, 24 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
No this "question" is not about what I "want" (what I want is already expressed in my !vote below). The question is about exploring a route. That route seems to have some advantages:
  1. would be available immediately, to all WikiMedia projects, whether or not they have any sort of citation templates implemented;
  2. would be available before the cite Q template is translated/reprogrammed to the local format(s) of citation templates, for the WikiMedia projects that have any (the local variants of the cite Q template may take some time to develop, plus the preliminary period of developing one that would be ready to be exported to other languages might still take a lot of time too);
  3. and other advantages already intimated above (the cite Q template may become considerably simpler to develop etc), and a new one per your comment: rather invites to go visit the Wikidata item before using it as a source. It is a questionable habit to use something as a source which you have never seen. For instance, this morning I updated Johann Sebastian Bach: His Life, Art, and Work (Q19231225), and as a consequence it generates an error when used in a Cite Q template – which apparently can't handle books published in more than one edition: it seems easier to implement a "select an edition" feature before generating the formatted citation at Wikidata than via an immensely complex Cite Q template.
Reason enough to explore the route imho, even if, I'm sure, it may not all be advantages. --Francis Schonken (talk) 15:29, 24 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
I've fixed Q19231225. The problem was, you added metadata about editions to the item about the work; as though they were about the work. What you should have done - if you wanted to store metadata about editions - is to create items for the editions, add the metadata to those, and then add statements linking to the editions to the item about the work. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 17:58, 24 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Alas, no, I've reverted these Wikidata edits. They're about the same work (which has only one article in Wikipedia, that is in English Wikipedia, one source text, that is in German wikisource, and one commons category). The Wikidata item should present the international links available for this topic, it should not be written to please a template that only exists on en.Wikipedia (and in that case without linking to an English-language edition). --Francis Schonken (talk) 18:13, 24 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
The problem repeats of course for Johann Sebastian Bach: His Work and Influence on the Music of Germany (Q24969482):
Note that this book, when used as a reference in en.Wikipedia, usually doesn't relate to the original two-volume German version, but to the English three-volume translation (and usually not even the 1884–1885 first edition of that translation), e.g. from the Bach article:
As I said below: there are still too many issues to address to let this template into mainspace. --Francis Schonken (talk) 07:38, 25 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Given some of the alarmist comments above, one wonders how on Earth editors cope with the myriad current citation templates that work with a single ID parameter:

or indeed those with no ID parameter, such as:

and the very many others listed under Category:Specific-source templates, some of which have been in regular use for years, it seems that claims that such templates are a "fatally flawed design concept", or that there is consensus that "Citation data should be in the article where the citation is used, not somewhere else" are, in fact, bogus. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 14:47, 22 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Classic Tu quoque fallacious argument. We are discussing this template. Jytdog (talk) 15:08, 22 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Nice try at dismissing my argument, but as can be seen above, we are discussing editing behaviour, claims of consensus, precedence, and more. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 16:25, 22 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Andy Mabbett, if you look on the Category:Specific-source templates page it states They are intended to be substituted. That seriously nukes your argument. As for the cite(thing)|id=#, citing a named collection by an actual id number is vastly more reasonable than a completely unreadable citeQ template filled with an utterly random number. Alsee (talk) 10:27, 23 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Not necessarily. I created ((cite DANAS)) – one of the templates that Editor Pigsonthewing mentioned – in February 2014. The subst: text was added to the category with this edit in March 2016; apparently without discussion but also apparently because of frustration with the TfD system. I never intended ((cite DANAS)) to be substed because periodically (probably because some new squeaker ensign needs to show his boss that work is being done) the source website gets rearranged and breaks all of the links to DANAS.
—Trappist the monk (talk) 11:17, 23 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
"Nukes my argument"? It doesn't even tickle it with a feather. Some of these templates have four-figure transclusion counts (I haven't checked them all; some may be far higher still), and nothing in their documentation to say they should be Subst'd. Incidentally, a Wikidata QID very much is an "actual id number" - and they are used as such by many external bodies.. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 16:51, 23 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • So, with Cite Q, you have to either go to Wikidata, find the exact right version of the source you want to include (not easy in many cases), add the Q number to the template, and then add extras like the page number anyway, or you have to go to another article which uses the same reference (but how are you going to find one? You can't search enwiki for the name of the source any longer, as it is stored as "Cite Q number", not as "Jones and Smith, "the History of Whatchamacallit"), copy the reference (and change the page number and so on); without Cite Q, you need to find another article with the same source (like I said, much easier in that case), copy the reference, and change the page number and so on. I don't see where in your scenario the supposed benefit is coming from. (Mind you, I hate Visual Editor as well, but that has no impact on this whole discussion). Fram (talk) 14:20, 25 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]

"You can't search enwiki for the name of the source any longer, as it is stored as 'Cite Q number', not as 'Jones and Smith, the History of Whatchamacallit'" No, Fram, that's not true. Searching Wikipedia for the tile of a work cited using "Cite Q" will find the page on which that work is cited, even when Cite Q is the only way that text is included in the article. Wikipedia's search function searches the rendered text, not the source code. Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 22:12, 26 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]

You're right, that does work. I still don't see the benefit for duplication (copying one or the other is needed), but this aspect is less dramatic than I thought at least. Fram (talk) 04:46, 27 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
It's not a if we couldn't easily solve these. For example, the visual editor (if you like that) *can* be made to automatically search for e.g. the DOI, or even title, on Wikidata. Page numbers often exist in Wikidata; all that is probably needed is to extend the Cite Q template to also include them. With Cite Q and Wikidata, missing page numbers can even be more easily added, because they are only in one, structured, data storage rather than duplicated many times. Because page numbers may even change: when a paper is published "online first", it may not yet have a page number; once it gets printed, it will get actual pages, issue; and even the year may change. Again, having the data in a *single*, *structured* data store means we can easily fix this; rather than having to update several pages. Chire (talk) 10:23, 28 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
I utterly dislike VE... "Page numbers may change", yes, but then the ISBN, link, year of edition, ... normally change as well. There is no need to change a reference because something gets printed, reprinted, ... and the new reference would be a different Q-number anyway, so no way to automatically update that here (assuming that every instance of the old may be changed to the new would be rather dangerous). What you present is a) not a fix, and b) not the way Wikidata + CiteQ works. (And "page numbers often exist in Wikidata" seems a very optimistic statement. I have looked at many items before on Wikidata, and have now used the "random item" 50 times: I didn't find a single book, nor did I find a single encyclopedia article that used a book as a reference. There are books (which are used as references) created as items, but I doubt that any individual book pages are created as items, and that is what you would need to get the page number via Cite Q. Adding items per page of a book would significantly increase the number of items on Wikidata, but I think it would be a bridge too far even for them. Fram (talk) 11:39, 28 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
There are not only books, you know. Of course the Wikidata doesn't know which specific page you are going to cite. That is what ((Cite Q|...|page=123)) is for, cite a page of a book. But journal articles (and no, a "reprint" is not the same there as for books either!) are considered to be published when paginated and printed. See e.g. [9] for correctly citing early-view articles. But of course, once the article is in a printed version, we should update year, issue, number, and pages information, as the printed version is the preferred source/version of the article (usually, the DOI will remain unchanged, and redirect to the printed version; but that makes the online-first version often inaccessible. In fact, often the links on Wikipedia to such an article will the point to the printed version, with different page numbers etc. than given in Wikipedia, so we get a mismatch between the data here and the link). But it is considered to be the same article as before (and the contents are not supposed to change).
I've added support to Cite Q for "pages" (as I'm not a template expert, and Mediawiki templates are horrible, I didn't do it entirely correct, but that was quickly fixed). Example (note the page numbers are 1-15; this is supposed to be present for journal citations): P. Ashwood; S. Wills; J. Van de Water (9 May 2006). "The immune response in autism: a new frontier for autism research". Journal of Leukocyte Biology. 80 (1): 1–15. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.329.777. doi:10.1189/JLB.1205707. ISSN 0741-5400. PMID 16698940. Wikidata Q22241718. ((Cite Q|Q22241718)). So Cite Q does currently support both: explicit page-within-a-book use (by adding the page= attribute; but being able to reuse all the book metadata), as well as the pages as used with journal publications that are the same on every use and shouldn't be copied into every article source code.
But it's not just that. There are many more things where the wikidata approach is beneficial. For example, an author may get a Wikipedia article at some point. With Wikidata, these link to the authors Wikipedia article will appear automatically on all Cite Q citations. With the manual templates, you have to edit the authorlink= fields whenever you create an author article. Wikidata is also working hard to link various databases, so you get PubMed IDs, DOIs, CiteseerX, etc. that you would all have to manually look up every time. Chire (talk) 16:11, 28 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Queries[edit]

I have three simple queries relevant to the discussion above:

  1. Is there a list which shows the most popular citations? I mean by number of pages on which it is being used. If not, can such a list be prepared? How?
  2. Can someone please refer me to the list of explicitly non-RS like I was told that Gyan publications are non-RS for history articles. If such a list is not there, how can we get such a list? Also how to get a list of pages on which such refs are cited??
  3. How does wikipedia (in current regime) rank / rate references? How can a new editor know about the reliability of a random source for a particular article?

These questions, if answered, might help in bringing clarity to the above discussion. -- Pankaj Jain Capankajsmilyo (talk · contribs · ) 06:25, 22 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]

To 1: There was some work at the hackathon with Crossref Event data, and they analyze the DOIs most referenced in Wikipedia (this does neglect publications without a (Crossref) DOI etc.). The most referenced DOI found https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-11-1633-2007 is used more than 500.000 times across Wikipedia, mainly as a source for some climate data. Other DOIs are also used often (thousands or hundreds times) in Wikipedia. Etherpad with some notes is here: https://etherpad.wikimedia.org/p/WikiCite17Day3EventData --Zuphilip (talk) 18:54, 22 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Alas no, doesn't solve (quoting from above):

A Wikipedia article on a book would usually discuss significant revised editions, first publication of an English translation, etc (i.e. without creating a separate article on each printed or otherwise published version), thus its Wikidata counterpart should probably better not be about a single edition of the book, but about the work as a whole, whatever outward form it may have taken throughout time – otherwise the Wikidata item linked from a Wikipedia page is disconnected from the latter (i.e., speaking about a different topic: the work in Wikipedia, one single edition in the Wikidata item). This includes that other-language Wikipedias would most likely use a language-version in their own language when using the book as a reference, so there is no reason to keep that version out of the Wikidata item, lest one would lose the connection between the Wikipedia articles on the same book in Wikipedias of different languages (thus forfeiting one of the primary goals of Wikidata).

Mark the forfeiting one of the primary goals of Wikidata part. --Francis Schonken (talk) 09:54, 25 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Which only applies if the other language has its own edition to quote from. But more often than not, one version is used as reference on many language editions. Agathoclea (talk) 10:26, 25 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Example: the Falsifiability#References section currently contains:
The Wikidata item for this book is The Logic of Scientific Discovery (Q1868040) – calling the book as a reference with the Cite Q template results in:
The ISBN is of course wrong for the 1934 first edition (long before ISBN numbers were assigned to books): the ISBN refers to a 21st-century print, quite likely with page numbers different from the first edition. The OCLC also refers to the 21st-century print. Anyhow, all of the elements in the Q-based citation (apart from the author link) refer to different (20th- and 21st-century) German-language editions of the book.
One of the basic assets of the Wikidata item is that it connects en.Wikipedia's The Logic of Scientific Discovery to articles on the same book in other-language Wikipedias, e.g. de:Logik der Forschung in German Wikipedia.
I don't see, with the current underlying technology/programming, how that basic function of the Wikidata item can be preserved, and still extract a meaningful Cite Q citation from it, that is: meaningful for en.Wikipedia which of course usually would use an English-language version of the book in citations (as illustrated above for the Falsifiability article).
See also the policy-level recommendations in WP:RSUE: "...English-language sources are preferred over non-English ones when available and of equal quality and relevance...", which would make the mainspace use of the current version of the Cite Q template for this book at least a little bit against policy (unless when the English translation of Popper's book would be of poor quality, which I don't suppose to be the case here). --Francis Schonken (talk) 11:50, 25 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
@Narky Blert, Pigsonthewing, and Mike Peel: This isn't the template causing the problem. The so-called "error" is produced by ((Wikidata)) which supplies references to ((infobox telescope)). Check:

References

Module:Wd (lines 639–706) has to check whether an author's name returned from Wikidata can be linked to an article on English Wikipedia. So it examines the object representing Arthur Berry, which it discovers is a dab page, so doesn't link it. However, the act of checking creates a link - see MW:Extension:Scribunto/Lua reference manual#mw.title.new: "The title referenced will be counted as linked from the current page." That's part of the way that the MediaWiki software works, so the solutions are to either file a phabricator report and ask for that behaviour to be changed, or to modify DPL bot to ignore these false positives. Hope that helps. --RexxS (talk) 22:38, 26 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]

@RexxS: In cases like this where the reference is in a different Wikidata entry, ((Wikidata)) passes the references through ((Cite Q)). I've resolved this specific issue by editing Cite Q's module code. I think the code you point to in Module:Wd doesn't include the check to see if a page with the same name as the text exists. Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 22:42, 26 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
I've given you the lines in Module:Wd where the code gets a label. The call to mw.title on line 690 can create a link from the page where the code runs to the page being checked, as can that on line 2454. I've said before that getting references is fraught with problems, many of which will not be obvious. --RexxS (talk) 23:02, 26 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
"The so-called "error" is produced by..."
I have no interest in what produces the error. It isn't a "so-called error" – it's an error. It needs to be fixed. Narky Blert (talk::::) 01:58, 27 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
It was of sufficent interest to you for you to give it as your sole reason for calling for the template's deletion; based on what is now shown to be an incorrect understanding of the cause of the error: "In each case, the template had generated a link to a DAB page which was then picked up as an error". Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 09:32, 27 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
It was an error (an incorrect inclusion in whatlinkshere), and it was caused by the use of the template (and hopefully solved by changing Module:CiteQ[10]). There are e.g. more than 50 pages currently linking to Lois Reynolds[11] or Daphne Christie[12], even though in reality no pages link there. This is caused by her inclusion in many cites generated by the CiteQ template. Fram (talk) 09:55, 27 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
I referred to it as "a so-called error" because it's not an error. It works exactly as expected. If a name like Arthur Berry is a dab page (which it is), then we need to check for that and not include the link. Checking produces the "What links here" that DPLbot picks up. The error, if any, is either in DPLbot's inability to distinguish between a check and a genuine link, or in MediaWiki software's implementation of the mw.title library that creates the effect. There most certainly is not an error in the code that uses that library correctly. None of this is any reason to get the torches and pitchforks out over any template/module that implements the MediaWiki software accurately. --RexxS (talk) 14:37, 27 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Can you give other examples of pages not actually linked but still included in a "linked" list? As far as I am concerned, when I encounter a page listed as "linked" which isn't actually linked, this is an error, no matter if you expect this to work in this illogical way or not. Fram (talk) 14:52, 27 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
They are not common, and I have no way of searching for them, but I can manufacture a contrived one. If I wanted to find the name of the doctoral advisor (P184) of Johannes Theodor Schmalhausen (Q1765161), I could use ((#invoke:WikidataIB |getValue |qid=Q1765161 |P184 |fetchwikidata=ALL |onlysourced=no)) in Johannes Theodor Schmalhausen, perhaps indirectly in an infobox. That would give Andrey Beketov Edit this on Wikidata which isn't linked because English Wikipedia has no article on Andreï Beketov. The only way to determine whether an article exists is to use either the MediaWiki mw.title library or the expensive parser call ((#ifexists:)) (which does the same thing). If someone now made a dab page titled "Andreï Beketov" (just an example - I said this was contrived), a link would be made by the MediaWiki software and show up at "What links here" for Andreï Beketov the dab page, even though that dab page is never actually linked from Johannes Theodor Schmalhausen. Now, I expect this to happen, so I don't see it as an error, i.e. something went wrong. I accept that you may wish to consider even expected behaviour to be an "error", if the expected behaviour is ... well, unexpected. Cheers --RexxS (talk) 16:01, 27 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
I don't care too much about the semiotics: as far as I'm concerned "difference in expectations", "output perceived as erroneous" and "flawless software and template coding (meaning: those managing the code won't change a thing)" may all be correct or incorrect (I don't care), but one thing should be crystal clear by now... not ready for Wikipedia's mainspace. Maybe those having the coding under their wings could take in the average content editors' expectations; maybe the content editors could speak about "something which I subjectively experience as an error" instead of flatout calling it an error etc.; but I propose to keep that mutual finetuning of the description of the issue out of Wikipedia mainspace: the next step, after the issue is understood exactly the same at all sides, could be some improvement in the coding, or change in the content of Wikidata items (what do I know what would work best), also kept out of mainspace, after which some experimentation and trials could take place, also out of mainspace, until everyone agrees "expectations" are met. --Francis Schonken (talk) 16:31, 27 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Just to note that I've tracked down the ifexist issue to a bug report filed in 2007(!) - see phab:T14019. This is a very long-running issue that is not directly related to this template (particularly with the trimmed code). Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 00:35, 29 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
@RexxS: Your example is not contrived. Andrei Beketov is a ((hndis)) page in Russian Wiki. Johannes Theodor Schmalhausen's doctoral advisor was Andrei Beketov [ru]. This sort of thing is as easy as pie to sort out if there's a proper redlink rather than a half-arsed link to Wikidata. Narky Blert (talk) 02:22, 30 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
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The result of the discussion was delete. Plastikspork ―Œ(talk) 13:24, 22 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]

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