HRWiki talk:Standards

From Homestar Runner Wiki

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
(Sig standards: my opinions)
(could be dealt with in a similar manner to voice only listings (i meant to reply to this days earlier))
 
(includes 544 intermediate revisions)
Line 1: Line 1:
-
== REALLY External Links? ==
+
{{Standards Talk Archive}}
-
I can't find anything about this in the user guide.. but you know in the external links section of writeups, and in other places, how it puts that icon after the link (a blue box with an arow coming out)? To me, that essentially says "The link will open up in a new window" as well as "The link goes offsite". I've seen many websites (including every website I've built.. [http://www.lightsecond.com lightsecond.com], [http://www.bend.com bend.com]) that have the convention that if the link goes offsite, it should do so in a new window. Can/should we do the same here?<BR>
+
-
[[User:MetaStar|MetaStar]] 20:47, 25 Sep 2004 (MST)
+
-
:I'm voting against it. Opening a link in a new window is almost pretentious, as if the site you are on should have the power to not let you leave. Modern browsers like Firefox will let you open a link in a new tab when you want to go elsewhere by middle-clicking your mouse, and users are used to doing that when they want to stay on the current site. Furthermore, Firefox by default doesn't open new window links in new tabs, which annoys me to no end.  I would say that an offsite link should behave like a normal link, so as not to confuse the user, and that opening a link in a new window should be a perogative of a web application that has a good reason for not taking you offsite.  An example of this would be Hotmail, which opens links in a new window to keep you logged in unless you explicity log out.  Most users of this site won't be logged in, and they'll be expecting the wiki to behave like like a normal website.  So I saw leave it the way it is, and let the user control where his links pop up.  If the icon is confusing, change the icon. [[User:Render|Render]]
+
== Tradition is not necessarily policy ==
-
What about if it's a logged-in-user user preference?  And of course this all pre-supposes that such fancies are possible in MediaWiki, which I dunno :)  Anyway I have yet to understand tabs since they always open underneath the current page.. they make me think of icky popunders. (Do you know of any good tabbed-browsing-for-dummies like faq on the 'net? I'd read that ;)<BR>
+
-
[[User:MetaStar|MetaStar]] 22:21, 25 Sep 2004 (MST)
+
-
:User-configurable preferences are always good. Any admins know if this is possible in MediaWiki without a major overhaul? (As for tabs, I suppose it's just one of those things that just sort of grows on you. I like the pop-under effect because it lets me open interesting links for deferred viewing while I continue reading the page I'm on.) [[User:Render|Render]]
+
-
== Bold Punctuation? ==
+
After a [http://www.hrwiki.org/index.php?title=fan_club&diff=573498&oldid=573494&rcid=531292 bit of confusion] recently, i wanted to flesh out a certain topic a bit more. That topic is the issue of people assuming that tradition is policy, and favoring tradition where something else makes sense. I probose a new heading under General that will hopefully describe some of this. Here's what i have so far:
-
I like how this is coming along, Jones. One question, though: haven't we always placed the colon outside the bold tags, as in "'''THE CHEAT''':"? I guess I don't mind it either way, as long as we are adhering to a standard, but are there rules to this sort of thing? I remember being taught in school that punctuation should never be bold. &mdash; {{User:JoeyDay/sig}} 09:43, 21 Sep 2004 (MST)
+
Sometimes, traditions will develop and people will tend to always do something in a certain way. However, if there is a reason why doing it differently is better, there is no reason to stick with tradition merely for the sake of tradition. For example, if there is an external link that goes to Wikipedia, but a distinctly more informative article on the topic is available elsewhere, there is no reason to favor Wikipedia's.
-
:Er, I thought we did it the other way around. And since the colon is part of the character "declaration" (rather than part of the dialogue), it seems more natural to have it bold as well. -- [[User:InterruptorJones|InterruptorJones]] 10:00, 21 Sep 2004 (MST)
+
I can also think of another example which is the tradition of piping links to avoid redirects, where in most cases, it makes sense to just let the redirect handle the link. If anyone has any thoughts on this, or more examples of this type of thing, or ways to reword this to make it better or make it include more examples, i'm all ears. {{User:DeFender1031/sig}} 19:09, 2 July 2008 (UTC)
 +
:I agree wholeheartedly that tradition and consistency should not trump functionality or reasonable sense.  That being said, perhaps in some cases where there's ambiguity, we should set a hard standard one way or the other. The pipe vs. redirect thing which has recently reemerged, is one of those cases, IMO.  I, for one, support piping in the case of a redirect.  The reason:  The pipe only adds extra text to the edit page, which the casual reader will never see, whereas a redirect adds a very obvious "redirected from X" to the actual article.  Thoughts? -[[Special:Contributions/132.183.138.199|132.183.138.199]] 20:33, 21 January 2009 (UTC)
 +
::I think that pipes are ugly, whereas "redirected from x" can be helpful. Personally, i think it makes sense for most cases that if i click on a link that says one thing and i get a page with a different title, that the page explains why. {{User:DeFender1031/sig}} 21:48, 21 January 2009 (UTC)
 +
:::Personally, I feel that redirects are mostly useful for searches, rather than links on a page.  If you know what the correct link is, why not use it?  More over, there are a number cases where pipes are preferred method of linking [[Homestar Runner (body of work)]] comes to mind, since it's necessary to have the distinction on the page title, but it'd never appear that way in the article. [[Cool Shades]] is another one that gets linked by [[Street Fighter|pipes]] since the article now encompasses all eyewear.  Perhaps pipes should be minimized (especially when there are capitalization differences), but they can not be removed all together. {{User:Wbwolf/sig}} 22:10, 21 January 2009 (UTC)
 +
::::''See also [[HRWiki talk:Standards/Archive 3#(Don't Fear) The Redirect|(Don't Fear) The Redirect]] above.''
-
::Okay, I've been looking around the web (but [[User:Tom|Tom]] is better at Googling than I am) and I can't find anything about whether or not punctuation should be bold. I think it looks more consistent to have the colon in bold. I just wanted to be sure that was the right thing. Carry on. &mdash; {{User:JoeyDay/sig}} 10:26, 21 Sep 2004 (MST)
+
== Glitches ==
-
:::I've always bolded the colon. [[User:Hobophobic|<nowiki>~</nowiki>Hobo]]
+
-
:Think about it the inverse way. What if you were being asked to bold the dialog instead of the character name? Would you then bold the colon as well? The colon would still have a space before the dialog started so that would look pretty silly: "THE CHEAT''': Meh!'''". so I think you should do with the colon what you do with the character name, not what you do with the dialog. :)
+
-
:[[User:MetaStar|MetaStar]] 20:19, 25 Sep 2004 (MST)
+
-
== Cast (in order of appearance) vs Featuring/Features ==
+
I hope I wasn't '''too''' bold by changing the definition of Glitches.  I think that the wording of the previous definition really did not include the majority of things that actually get listed under that heading.  It used to be
 +
<blockquote>Similar to Goofs, but limited to mistakes in the Flash software.</blockquote>
 +
And I changed it to
 +
<blockquote>Similar to Goofs, but limited to mistakes made by the Brothers Chaps in the usage of the Flash software or shortcomings of the Flash software itself.</blockquote>
 +
The former definition made it sound as if the mistake had to be in the ''Flash software itself'' to fit the category of Glitch, which is obviously not the way it's used around here. {{User:GreenHelmet/sig}} 04:38, 14 July 2008 (UTC)
-
I was thinking, for pages for things like early Strong Bad Emails and anything else where only one character appears, it seems kind of redundant to add the "in order of appearance" part since only one character appears. For SBemail#1, I just put "Cast" but even this seems a bit improper as a cast is generally referring to "The actors in a play, movie, or other theatrical presentation," not just one actor. I thought "Featuring" or something like that would be more appropriate... I feel like I'm rambling. [[User:Hobophobic|<nowiki>~</nowiki>Hobo]]
+
== May I copy these Standards to another wiki? ==
-
:I guess I don't have an opinion on this one. Certainly "(in order of appearance) is superflouous for one-character toons, but beyond that I don't much care. Anybody else? -- [[User:InterruptorJones|InterruptorJones]] 11:41, 21 Sep 2004 (MST)
+
Hi guys, remember me? :I've started a new wiki that I'm loosely modeling after the structure of this one, and I'd like to adopt these standards and just direct copy/paste them into a similar Manual of Style or Standards page on that wiki. This will save me a lot of time and make it easier for me to start getting more people involved.  I will, of course, remove references to HRWiki and adapt the standards to my wiki as appropriate (removing sections that don't apply, etc.).
-
::To me, "Featuring" would make the most sense for one-character toons [[User:Hobophobic|<nowiki>~</nowiki>Hobo]]
+
If you're interested, the wiki I'm working on (just created yesterday and still very much under construction) is [http://redgreen.wikia.com The Red Green Wiki].  If you're a fan of that show, I invite you to drop by and help out! :)
-
:::Yeah, for a one character toon I like the word "Featuring". &mdash; {{User:JoeyDay/sig}} 12:55, 21 Sep 2004 (MST)
+
Thanks guys. {{User:KieferSkunk/sig}} 01:38, 6 December 2008 (UTC)
 +
:Hey, KieferSkunk, how ya been? I don't think you need to ask, but thanks for doing so anyway. Feel free to rip us off! (I mean, we ''totally'' didn't rip off Wikipedia when we first set up this site.) I think under our Creative Commons license, you're supposed to give us credit or something, but who's gonna know if you ignore that part. Keep on tranglin'! &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 01:52, 6 December 2008 (UTC)
-
::::But what about the meaning of the word "featuring"? Didn't [[cheatday]] feature The Cheat?  I'd think using that word for some emails and "cast" for others would be misleading. Or at the very least, confusing.  I'm thinking that leaving off the "in order of appearance" for toons with only one character would work well enough.  --  [[User:Tom|Tom]] 14:24, 21 Sep 2004 (MST)
+
::Cool! Thanks. :) {{User:KieferSkunk/sig}} 02:10, 6 December 2008 (UTC)
-
:I'm with Tom on this. Brevity good, "featuring" bad ;)  I know on albums and song titles they say "song, by Rapper, feat. other guys".. but it isn't feat. Rapper. I'm also selfishly hoping the word "featuring" can be ostricised for long enough to easily convert things.
+
-
:A quick look at a thesaurus suggests to me we could say "Starring: Strong Bad" but I'd also listen to other bright idears
+
-
:[[User:MetaStar|MetaStar]] 20:28, 25 Sep 2004 (MST)
+
-
== SB email reference. ==
+
== Raw characters vs HTML entities ==
-
I have been using the following styles when referencing a Strong Bad Email depending on the context.  
+
Based on a discussion on [[Talk:Compé]], I think we need to bring this up again. Our current policy of using HTML entities for everything outside ASCII is basically just tradition at this point... there's not really any actual reason to keep it that I can see. It only came about because twice the wiki's had problems during upgrades that broke on Unicode characters... once when we moved from WikkiTikkiTavi to MediaWiki, and once on one of the earlier upgrades (I think [http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Release_notes/1.5 1.5], when UTF-8 support became mandatory... the wiki was already being served as UTF-8, but something backend thought it was still Latin-1, so all the pages got mis-read as Latin-1 during the upgrade, and double-encoded as UTF-8). Both of which wouldn't have happened if we were using only HTML entities at the time. Also, there was the occasional edit that would convert non-ASCII or non-Latin-1 characters to something else... from browsers where simply clicking "edit" and then "save" without changing anything would still mess up on those characters. So HTML entities became the Standard&trade;... and I think I was one of the people pushing for it to stay that way.
-
<pre>in the email "[[the facts]]"</pre>
+
But all those pitfalls have long gone away... MediaWiki has gone through 10 major versions since the mixup, and we've never had an encoding problem during an upgrade since... it's stable now. And I can't remember the last time I saw an edit that accidentally broke a Unicode character, it'd have to be years ago. I can't think of a single browser in current use which has problems with UTF-8 (noone's going to be reading "Compé" as "Comp&Atilde;&copy;", which is the usual fate for non-UTF-8-comprehending programs)... and while I can think of [[Wikipedia:Lynx (web browser)|one browser]] that has troubles with characters outside Latin-1, which would automatically convert them if you tried to edit a page... it's not in any way in common use. And even if an editor does come along and break all the Unicode characters on a page, it happens few and far between enough that it would be less effort to just fix it when it happens, rather than trying to prevent it from happening.
-
<pre> in the Strong Bad Email: [[the facts]] </pre>
+
And really, the only place where raw characters and HTML entities differ is on the "edit" page... everywhere else, they behave the same... so that's the only place we need to look at. And in that edit page, the entities are ugly and hard to read... and raw characters can potentially cause problems in very rare situations that are getting rarer as time goes on. And I really do think the latter is rare enough that the former outweighs it. And I think that's been the case for some time, we just never noticed, because of the inertia of tradition.
-
<pre>==Complete Filmography==
+
Now, I will make one exception to this... and that's dashes. It's much easier to tell the difference between <code>&amp;mdash;</code> and <code>&amp;ndash;</code> than &mdash; and &ndash; (especially in the fixed-width font used in the textarea in the edit screen, where they're more like <code>&mdash;</code> and <code>&ndash;</code>), so it's easier to keep them standardised as entities. Other symbols, like <code>&amp;trade;</code> and <code>&amp;frac12;</code> I'm on the fence about. But letters, especially in the middle of words, like <code>Comp&amp;eacute;</code>, I definitely think are better as raw Unicode characters.
-
* Email: [[duck pond]]</pre>
+
-
My goal is to make it clear that we are refering to the title of something.
+
Note that I'm not recommending that we go through all the pages and replace the entities with actual characters... I don't think it matters that much. Just that we go from "HTML Entities Forever!" to "whatever's there is good"... if something's already there with entities, that's fine, if it's with raw characters, that's fine too... neither case really warrants zealously changing from one to the other. But if someone wants to go through a page and replace all the entities with characters for some reason, then that's their time to waste, and I've got no problem with letting them do it. But I do think we should at least lean towards raw characters over entities for new pages.
-
Otherwise one could get a sentance like,
+
-
[[Pom Pom]] kicked [[Strong Bad]] in the head in [[pom pom (email) | Pom Pom]].
+
But that's my two cents... in as much as that phrase can be applied to 5 paragraphs of rambling... Who else has an opinion? {{User:Phlip/sig}} 10:28, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
 +
:Phlip and I discussed this yesterday. When I brought it up, I said, "<code>Comp&amp;eacute;</code> is really no better than straight-up <code>Compé</code>. Yes, back in the day it might have been a problem, but browsers almost uniformly get it right these days. Even when they don't, there are technical safeguards to prevent problems. The best proof I have of this is that there are never any problems with using <code><nowiki>{{User:Heimstern Läufer/sig}}</nowiki></code>." I strongly support the exception for dashes. I also don't mind entities for non-alphabetic characters, because it's often easier to enter them that way than to find the actual character, but whatever works is fine with me. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 15:53, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
 +
::I was going to bring up that I did find an instance of a unicode character being accidentally broken... but, now that you mention it, it was four years ago, from a user that hasn't been seen in over a year, and it was a rarer character than "&eacute;". I will say that I'm likely to have trouble ''remembering'' how to type the "&eacute;" character without copy/pasting or using the HTML entity (I know what an acute accent is, so remembering "<code>&amp;eacute;</code>" is a lot easier for me.) It's quicker for me to just use the form I know over something I'd constantly have to look up, even if it is five keystrokes more in practice. --{{User:Jay/sig}} 18:40, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
 +
:::As long as the database for this wiki is in UTF-8, I'm sure we're good with using é. In fact, if we use "é" more often, we'll probably save some kilobytes by the time the Compé is obsolete. We can always put a notice on the talk page listing the key combinations for various operating systems to insert "é". I also agree with continuing the use of <code>&mdash;</code>, as Courier/Courier New makes it hard to tell the difference between an em dash, en dash, and just a plain dash. Using entities for other special characters we might want to keep strict, as some of the characters might not be supported in UTF-8, but UTF-16, and could result in bugs. But I'm not too sure what I'm talking about when I say that. I'm still a little confused with how UTF-8 handles UTF-16 attempted characters and whatnot. Oh, I'm just going to far.:P --[[Special:Contributions/76.224.216.122|76.224.216.122]] 18:07, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
 +
::::It seems that that the page is still "pro-entity" for non-Latin-1 characters. Should this be changed? [[I'm]] can't confidently determine the conclusion of this conversation. {{User:Soiled Bargains/sig}} 00:21, 30 September 2011 (UTC)
 +
===mdash vs. ndash===
 +
I would like to revisit this topic, specifically regarding <code>&amp;mdash;</code> and <code>&amp;ndash;</code>.  I understand the difficulty in telling these apart in text: I often run into that problem myself. And in many cases, <code>&amp;mdash;</code> is readable by itself on lists.  However, I find that in some cases, particularly those where the dash is attached to one or two words, it is harder to parse the source code.  To resolve that I came up with a compromise: I created an <code>&amp;mdash;</code> template {{t|-}} that should be easy to type, distinguishable from the regular dash, and still easy to read in text.  {{p|l=http://www.hrwiki.org/w/index.php?title=HRWiki:Sandbox&diff=735970&oldid=735489&rcid=698527 Click here}} for a sandbox test.  Opinions are most welcome!  If this is acceptable, perhaps we could unleash a bot or two on the main namespace? --[[User:Stux|Stux]] 13:44, 6 April 2013 (UTC)
 +
:I don't actually find the entity style hard to read, though I have no problem with using {{t|-}} instead for lists. Still covers all the basic requirements discussed above. {{User:DeFender1031/sig}} 17:36, 25 February 2017 (UTC)
 +
::I, personally, find it a little bit easier to read the list code (or the code in general) when using the template.  HTML escape codes seem to blend into the word for me.  In any case, a better system just occurred to me (especially after learning from you that ndashes and hyphen-minuses are different things!).  Instead of just using {{tl|-}}, we could create 3 or 4 templates (I checked wikipedia and they do something similar):
 +
::*<code>{{tl|-}}</code>: this template would be repurposed to place an <code>&amp;ndash;</code> in text.  Oddly enough wikipedia [[Wikipedia:Template:-|uses it]] as shorthand for the {{tl|clear}} template.
 +
::*<code>{{tl|--}}</code>: this would be the new <code>&amp;mdash;</code> in text.  This is the same as [[Wikipedia:Template:--|in wikipedia]].
 +
::*<code><nowiki>{{---}}</nowiki></code>: this could be used for wider dashes.  Wikipedia [[Wikipedia:Template:---|does something similar]].  However, there likely won't be a use for it here.
 +
::*<code><nowiki>{{----}}</nowiki></code>: This is actually used by [[Wikipedia:Template:----|wikipedia]] to insert four consecutive hyphen-minuses since the wiki code uses that for horizonal bars iirc.  Using <code><nowiki><</nowiki>nowiki<nowiki>></nowiki></code> tags would do the same thing but with more typing.  I haven't seen a need for that template here.
 +
::The template is only used in two main space pages, so it would be easy to switch over (unless people really, really, really want to use straight up <code>&amp;mdash;</code> tags in the code and scrap the template.) --[[User:Stux|Stux]] 18:52, 25 February 2017 (UTC)
 +
:::Hi all, I finally went ahead with the plan I outlined above and created a {{tl|--}} template (for <code>&amp;mdash;</code>) and updated the {{tl|-}} template to yield an <code>&amp;ndash;</code>. I also updated all existing articles that used the original template ({{tl|-}}) so they would use the new one ({{tl|--}}).  I'm hoping these templates will find more use on the wiki.  Please let me know if there are any issues or questions. {{--}}[[User:Stux|Stux]] 03:07, 8 April 2018 (UTC)
 +
::::I don't understand the purpose of these templates. For one thing, we almost never use <code>&amp;ndash;</code> on this wiki, so I don't think we need a template for it. It would be like creating a template exclusively for the £ symbol. That symbol may be used once or twice on the wiki, but not enough for its own template. Secondly, {{t|--}} is only one character less than <code>&amp;mdash;</code>, so there's not much of a difference there. Not to mention, many of the users here (as far as I'm aware) are more used to typing <code>&amp;mdash;</code>. It's muscle memory to me at this point, so changing it would likely cause more problems than it solves. Also, nearly all of the pages use <code>&amp;mdash;</code>, so we would likely have to get a bot to change almost every article on the wiki, and I don't exactly see why that's preferrable. {{User:Gfdgsgxgzgdrc/sig‎}} 22:19, 27 October 2018 (UTC)
 +
:::::In my opinion, we should either use <code>&amp;mdash;</code> or just plain <code>—</code>. Preferably the former, since it doesn't require any copy/pasting or fancy typing. {{User:Gfdgsgxgzgdrc/sig‎}} 06:25, 18 May 2019 (UTC)
 +
::::::Ooops! Sorry I never got around to answering your questions.  I probably stashed this page in a TODO list somewhere and forgot about it!  Anyway, in no specific order, here are the reasons I have for preferring to use these templates (that is, if you don't want to or for some strange reason can't use the Unicode text directly):
 +
::::::* '''Memorization''': which is easier to remember? <code>&amp;mdash;</code> or <code>{{tl|--}}</code>? For those who are used to wiki syntax I say that the template format is a lot easier to remember!
 +
::::::* '''Readability of source''': (This is more subjective) In my personal opinion the wiki source is easier to read when you have something that looks like dashes instead of a whole bunch of escape codes. If you look at {{p|l=http://hrwiki.org/w/index.php?title=Michael_Jackson&diff=776877&oldid=776876 this diff}} you'll see what I'm talking about.
 +
::::::* '''Organization''': This refers more to the mdash vs ndash thing, but I think, the wider the dash, the more hyphens should be used to represent it.  So the mdash uses more hyphens than the ndash.  And why do we even have an ndash template?  Sure, ndash is less widely used, but as this discussion established, it's a different character from the hyphen-minus. And if memory serves me correctly, I *think* it's being used somewhere in this wiki.  So if it's needed the template is available for use.
 +
::::::Anyway, that is my rationale for creating and using the templates (primarily the "Memorization" and "Readability" arguments).  In general, I don't think there is any detriment to having the templates even if they're not used, and their use, to me, can only be beneficial.  --[[User:Stux|Stux]] 15:52, 18 May 2019 (UTC)
 +
:::::::Okay, that makes sense. I didn't really think about the memorization or readability aspects of the templates. Thanks! {{User:Gfdgsgxgzgdrc/sig‎}} 18:52, 18 May 2019 (UTC)
-
Not clear at all. Should this reference be standardized?
+
== Policy regarding Poker Night at the Inventory ==
-
-[[User:Drhaggis|Drhaggis]] 11:47, 21 Sep 2004 (MST)
+
-
:It wouldn't hurt to standardize it since I see all sorts of different usages all over. However, I tend to put the quotation marks inside the link like this: <nowiki>[[the facts|"the facts"]]</nowiki>, which yields [[the facts|"the facts"]]. Looks better to me, but I'd like to hear others' opinions. -- [[User:InterruptorJones|InterruptorJones]] 11:54, 21 Sep 2004 (MST)
+
Telltale's yet-to-be-released game, Poker Night at the Inventory, is unique in the fact that it takes four characters from different worlds and puts them in the same room. This could pose a problem for our wiki, however. As the game isn't in the HR universe and includes characters from other games, there are some aspects of the game that need not be mentioned on the site. As it stands right now, however, our policy on what should be mentioned about this game is rather vague. I can see this becoming a problem down the road when the game is released; some users might find content HRWiki-worthy, while others might not. For instance: Should Max have his own article? Should his dialogue be listed here? It might start a few edit wars. In my opinion, a line should be drawn that clearly defines what should and should not be included on the wiki in instances like this game, before the game comes out. Does anybody else share my opinion, or am I making a mountain out of a molehill? --{{User:DENNIS/sig}} 00:55, 4 September 2010 (UTC)
-
::I don't think  having the leading "Strong Bad Email" is needed.  But that's me.  What about readers who don't know the emails?  But then, if we started putting "in the email, [[sibbie]]", would we also need to start using that for toons and shorts as well, as in "in the toon, [[Where's The Cheat?]]" and "in the short [[Experimental Film]]"?  Hmm.  I'd also like to hear some other' input.
+
== Spaces ==
-
::Though I do like having the Filmography listings standardized. Very good.  --  [[User:Tom|Tom]] 12:34, 21 Sep 2004 (MST)
+
-
:::I will third the opinion that quotes should be around the title of a toon or email when it is being used in a sentence (as opposed to a bulleted list of related items such as that found on the SBEmail page). I'm not sure which I like better. Putting them outside the link would be easier on my poor typing finders, but putting them inside the link does look nicer. Just my two cents for what it's worth. Should we start a decision poll on the Forum? Not sure we need the leading "in the email, 'whatever'". I think we can just say, "in [[the facts|'the facts']]." As long as it's in quotes you know it's a toon or an email as opposed to it being a character as in Drhaggis' example. &mdash; {{User:JoeyDay/sig}} 12:41, 21 Sep 2004 (MST)
+
It's been a while since I've done work with transcripts, but I feel like I've come across a lot of description/action statements that use formal two space sentence spacing, whereas I've seen many others that only use one space. I don't know whether or not this is something the transcribers are doing, or whether or not it's an unmentioned part of our standards. I can see why double spacing is being applied, as the text is displayed in italics and in some cases could be hard to follow. However, I don't really see that much of a difference, and I'd like to know whether this is something that could become a standard, if something needs to get set straight, or if I'm just being ''too'' picky, haha. {{User:Soiled Bargains/sig}} 23:09, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
 +
:It      doesn't    matter  how              many spaces        you    put  in  the edit    window,  it  always    displays  as  just    one space.   (Click    edit  to see    what I      mean.) The only way to get it to display more than one space is to use a nonbreaking space (like &nbsp; this) or CSS styles, which we only do in rare cases. Most of the time it makes no difference how many spaces you enter, and whether you should enter one or two after a sentence depends largely on your own preference. Some people find it easier to read the text when there's two spaces after a sentence in a fixed-width font (as in the edit window). I personally always just use one. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 00:18, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
 +
::Ah, you see, I forgot that about MediaWiki. Looks like I'm still not reacquainted with this place yet, haha. Thanks! {{User:Soiled Bargains/sig}} 00:28, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
 +
:::To clarify, it's not MediaWiki per se but rather how your browser interprets HTML. If you view the HTML source you'd see those spaces are still in there. It's your browser that doesn't display them in the final text. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 00:33, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
 +
::::See what I mean? {{User:Soiled Bargains/sig}} 01:09, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
-
::For me, having the quotes in the brackets is unnecessary piping. We should also be adding quotes around unlinked toon titles. -[[User:Drhaggis|Drhaggis]] 15:02, 21 Sep 2004 (MST)
+
== Tables ==
 +
=== <code>id</code>s ===
 +
As some of you may have noticed, yesterday I began work on a new standard for tables. My experience with editing this wiki has led me to the conclusion that a lot of them were hastily made back in the early  MediaWiki days, and that possibly newer tables have been based on these. My number one complaint however is that we have inconsistent <code>id</code> attributes all over the place. I decided to take it upon myself to create a format <code>id</code>s so that future table-based articles would validate and be less likely to conflict with other <code>id</code>s across the wiki. But now I've realized that this is probably something we should discuss, as I've realized that my proposal needs improvement that I myself am not confident of making. I'd like others opinions on what the format should be. Fortunately, I've discovered that spaces and other characters are escaped automatically in ways that comply with the W3C's standards. Umm, I need to get this posted, so I'll just stop here. Your thoughts? {{User:Soiled Bargains/sig}} 19:58, 20 December 2010 (UTC)
 +
:It's dot com said we should just handle table <code>id</code>s as we do for links to sections. This makes sense seeing that illegal characters are escaped by MediaWiki. My only thing to add is that any if an anchor starts with an illegal character, its escaped anchor name will start with a <code>.</code>, which will make it illegal anyway (like the section on [[Thorax Corporation]] [http://validator.w3.org/check?uri=http://www.hrwiki.org/w/index.php%3Ftitle%3DThorax_Corporation%26oldid%3D716746&charset=(detect+automatically)&doctype=Inline&group=0 that starts with 'Juwanna Mann']). {{User:Soiled Bargains/sig}} 21:49, 23 January 2011 (UTC)
 +
::What I said was that the IDs should exactly match the content of the most important column in a table ([[Xeriouxly Forxe Character Variations]] is a good example), which makes pretty and intuitive links. We don't need to worry about special characters and the like, because MediaWiki handles them automatically. The exception would be for things like the weeklies, which use numbers, but we already have a consistent style for those. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 22:26, 23 January 2011 (UTC)
-
== Since when do we not transcribe easter eggs? ==
+
=== Styles ===
-
I personally think easter eggs ''should'' be transcribed. We can't hardly bill ourselves as a definitive knowledge-base of all things Homestar if we don't have transcripts of the easter eggs. Yes, it would ruin the surprise, but so does everything else on our site! The whole reason for a transcript is for people to understand what the characters are saying. If I can't make out what Strong Sad is saying in some-such easter egg, I'd like to be able to find it on the site and read what other people think/know he's saying. &mdash; {{User:JoeyDay/sig}} 13:37, 22 Sep 2004 (MST)
+
While I've said that tables are an inconsistent mess, they're also a stylistic inconsistent mess. I've given tables the <code>wikitable</code> class occasionally, and the only reason I do that is so that we can have the styles for all of the tables in one place: the CSS for the site. However, are there any changes to the styles we should do now? Should we make the table width 100%? Make table headers darker? Should we create some sort of <code>hrwikitable</code> class instead? I'm just downright unsure. {{User:Soiled Bargains/sig}} 21:49, 23 January 2011 (UTC)
 +
:I don't think this is a pressing issue given the current rate of updates. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 22:26, 23 January 2011 (UTC)
-
:Okay, fair enough. So we need a standard for transcribing them. Any ideas? -- [[User:InterruptorJones|InterruptorJones]] 13:50, 22 Sep 2004 (MST)
+
== Standards for gags/jokes ==
 +
Should we create standards for the appearance for articles about inside jokes/running gags, or should we still handle them de facto style? {{User:Soiled Bargains/sig}} 21:49, 23 January 2011 (UTC)
 +
:Is this broken? (If you say yes please give examples.) Would the pages actually benefit from some kind of standardization, or do we have different styles simply because not all running gags are the same? &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 22:26, 23 January 2011 (UTC)
 +
::Um... I'm not too sure. Maybe, maybe not. But here are a few things that I think are worth considering:
 +
:::*Some articles have the appearances section written incorrectly compared to our currently de facto. I've seen (and corrected) this with {{p|l={{fullurl:Dan|diff=prev&oldid=602817}} Dan}}, {{p|l={{fullurl:Toilets|diff=prev&oldid=683823}} Toilets}}, and more recently {{p|l={{fullurl:Greg|diff=prev&oldid=634666}} Greg}}. New articles concerning gags/jokes (unless written in haste/based off of a badly written article) aren't really a problem nowadays.
 +
:::*When a reference is in an Easter egg, it will either be labeled in parenthesis before the em dash ("(Easter egg)"), or put after the em dash ("In an easter egg..."). I'm going to be lazy and pass on giving examples, but my next point is similar and has a few. I assume we put "(Easter Egg)" before the em dash.
 +
:::*When a reference is in the DVD commentary, well... I've seen that done a {{p|l={{fullurl:Greg|oldid=717246}} few}} (the show) {{p|l={{fullurl:Wrestleman|oldid=714414}} different}} (TGS10) {{p|l={{fullurl:Wrestleman|oldid=717167}} ways}} (narrator). I assume we put "(DVD Commentary)" without linking it before the em dash.
 +
:::*There have been recent articles like [[Stanley Kubrick]] that use "References" instead of "Appearances", and then there are articles like [[Monkey Island]] that use both, using Appearances for physical appearances of the work in question, and References for just mentions. Should it work like this?
 +
::{{User:Soiled Bargains/sig}} 23:38, 23 January 2011 (UTC)
-
::I liked having the short transcript under the bulleted item, but that does get bulky. Let me play around with some ideas and get back to you. &mdash; {{User:JoeyDay/sig}} 14:24, 22 Sep 2004 (MST)
+
== Running time standard wording ==
-
:::I took this claim against transcription of EE, was for cases when the egg would be detailed on another page. Such as in the case of a game, or the introduction of another characeter. -[[User:Drhaggis|Drhaggis]] 19:02, 22 Sep 2004 (MST)
+
When listing the official time (usually when it's wrong), it is more factual to use (actual) or ([[TV Time Toons Menu]])? Or should you only use the latter when the menu is correct? - {{User:Catjaz63/sig}} 23:14, 3 December 2015 (UTC)
 +
:There seem to be a few precedents, based on [[Special:Whatlinkshere/TV Time Toons Menu]]:
 +
:*[[Cheat Commandos (toon)]], [[Trogdor Con '97|TrogdorCon '97]], [[Happy Hallow-day]], [[business trip]], [[fan club]], [[shapeshifter]], [[Fan Costumes '08]], [[Dangeresque: Puppet Squad]], [[79 Seconds Left]] (with slight variation) and [[Halloween Safety]] all use "#:## [[TV Time Toons Menu|official]], #:## actual", as did [[Which Ween Costumes?]] before it was edited yesterday.
 +
:*The [[The House that Gave Sucky Treats|three]] [[3 Times Halloween Funjob|Halloween]] [[Halloween Potion-ma-jig|toons]] with [[:Category:Toons with Dialogue Alternatives|dialogue alternatives]] use "#:## ([[TV Time Toons Menu]]), #:## (Combined) (Actual)"
 +
:*[[I Killed Pom Pom]] uses "#:## ([[TV Time Toons Menu]]), #:## ([[YouTube]])". The toons menu time seems correct or close enough so I think that qualifier should be removed.
 +
:*[[sbemail206]] has "#:## (official), #:## (actual)".
 +
:*[[The House That Gave Sucky Tricks]] has "#:## ([[TV Time Toons Menu]]), #:## (Actual), #:## ([[YouTube]])".
 +
:I'm not sure why some have parentheses and others don't. Or why some are capitalized. But I think "actual" should be used for the real running time only if the official time is noticeably off, with "[[TV Time Toons Menu|official]]" alongside it for the running time that appears on the Toons menu. Otherwise the time for the main site's version of the toon doesn't need a qualifier. {{User:Mee/sig}} 18:04, 4 December 2015 (UTC)
 +
::And by "only if the official time is noticeably off" hopefully you mean off by 1 second or more! ;) Btw, I think using "[[TV Time Toons Menu|official]]" when referring to the [[TV Time Toons Menu]] itself is fine as a standard (notice that we still link to the toon menu itself.  I like the parentheses too. Hmmmm.  A formatting template could be built... *gears start spinning* --[[User:Stux|Stux]] 21:21, 4 December 2015 (UTC)
 +
:::That seems like a good idea. The elements "combined", "official" and "actual" should probably be uncapitalized. Perhaps "official site" or "main site" as a contrast for "YouTube" could be used with cases like I Killed Pom Pom above. {{User:Mee/sig}} 21:48, 4 December 2015 (UTC)
-
::::I thought we always did transcribe them.  And the unwritten rule has always been this: If the egg is "clickable", that is, the user has to do something to cause the egg, it goes in the "Easter Egg" section.  If the egg does not require any action on the part of the user, besides them just sitting in front of their computer a little longer, it goes in the Transcript.  I'm pretty sure that's what everybody does anyway, but I just want to make it clear.  --  [[User:Tom|Tom]] 19:08, 22 Sep 2004 (MST)
+
== Linking to articles with disambiguation in the page title ==
-
::What about creating subheadings (i.e. <tt><nowiki>===cheatsa===</nowiki></tt>) before each easter egg transcript in the Easter Eggs section? That would make things clearer. (I'm thinking something like:)
+
{{p|l=http://hrwiki.org/w/index.php?title=Jurvy-Skat&curid=18745&diff=777714&oldid=777337&rcid=740575 This edit}} raises a question: How should "Toon Name (video)" pages (like [[Sketchbook (video)]] and [[Trogdor!! The Board Game (video)]]) be listed in pages? "[[Toons|Toon Name (video)]]", or "[[Toons|Toon Name]] Video"?
-
<pre>
+
I don't really have an opinion (possibly leaning ''slightly'' toward "[[Toons|Toon Name]] Video"). {{User:Gfdgsgxgzgdrc/sig‎}} 07:04, 17 August 2018 (UTC)
-
===Homestar===
+
:I kind of agree.  The parens are just internal to the wiki to distinguish pages. -[[Special:Contributions/174.62.238.201|174.62.238.201]] 12:53, 17 August 2018 (UTC)
-
'''Click on the word "Homestar" to see Homestar crying.'''
+
::In running text the parenthetical material should be hidden (and referred to using additional words, or not, as the case may be). The part in parentheses is not part of the actual title; we include it only because we have to. In tables and lists, however, I'd favor listing the page title exactly as it is, since those sections are more for reference and less for reading. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 14:43, 17 August 2018 (UTC)
-
''{Homestar is still bawling.}''
+
== Retroactive names in transcripts ==
 +
{{p|l=http://hrwiki.org/w/index.php?title=Peasant%27s_Quest_Preview&curid=890&diff=777715&oldid=777710&rcid=740576 This edit}} raises a question: Should retroactive names (using a character's name in an early transcript before their name is revealed) be allowed in transcripts?
-
'''HOMESTAR''': Ohh, Tenderfoot! Can you tell me what to do
+
I think retroactive names ''should'' be allowed. It makes things a lot more convenient for the reader, and it's not like anyone's going to be reading these transcripts in order. Plus, if the person is browsing the wiki, chances are they're aware of the character's name. If [[Baron Darin Diamonocle]] is the title of his wiki page, he should be called that in all his transcripts too. {{User:Gfdgsgxgzgdrc/sig‎}} 07:04, 17 August 2018 (UTC)
-
with myself? I feel like I'm at a crossroads, and there's like,
+
:Note that [that edit] was reverted. -[[Special:Contributions/174.62.238.201|174.62.238.201]] 12:53, 17 August 2018 (UTC)
-
a Denny's on one corner, and an IHOP on the other!
+
::By an Anonny whose only edit has been that revert, no less. {{User:RickTommy/sig}} 13:00, 17 August 2018 (UTC)
 +
:::That's beside the point. It could be an active user who just happened to make an edit from that IP. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 14:45, 17 August 2018 (UTC)
 +
::::{{p|l={{FULLURL:bottom 10|diff=788636&oldid=788633}} Another edit was made}} regarding retroactive names. Does anyone else have an opinion? {{User:Gfdgsgxgzgdrc/sig‎}} 23:27, 31 December 2019 (UTC)
 +
:::::I lean toward not using retroactive names. The events in each toon and from one toon to the next happen in an order, and I think it's fine to preserve that in the transcript. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 23:38, 31 December 2019 (UTC)
 +
::::::I agree, the transcripts should reflect the progression of the homestar universe as it was created rather than applying later information retroactively. {{User:DeFender1031/sig}} 01:30, 1 January 2020 (UTC)
-
''{Homestar is kneeling over the Tenderfoot drawing.}''
+
== @StrongBadActual Dates ==
-
'''HOMESTAR''': Can you give me some sound financial advice?
+
Long ago, it was [[HRWiki:Main Page Talk Archive 46#Dating @Strongbadactual references|decided]] that the format of Tweets in lists should be "[[@StrongBadActual]] &mdash; January 1, 1970". {{p|l=http://hrwiki.org/w/index.php?title=Trains&curid=58342&diff=779281&oldid=779197&rcid=742149 Recently}}, {{p|l=http://hrwiki.org/w/index.php?title=Gumption&curid=58349&diff=779284&oldid=779267&rcid=742152 however}}, it seems to no longer be the case. So, how should Tweets be listed? {{User:Gfdgsgxgzgdrc/sig‎}} 19:55, 5 October 2018 (UTC)
 +
:What all are the choices and what would be your preference? &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 21:03, 5 October 2018 (UTC)
 +
Here is a list of choices. Feel free to discuss other options, as there is probably a near-infinite number of possibilities. This list is mainly just for convenience.<br>
 +
Also, the old version lacked a link to the Tweet's wiki section, so I added them in each choice.
 +
*[[@StrongBadActual]] &mdash; [[@StrongBadActual Tweets 2018#949767712670089217|January 6, 2018]] &mdash; The old version.
 +
*[[@StrongBadActual]] Tweet from [[@StrongBadActual Tweets 2018#949767712670089217|January 6, 2018]] &mdash; A sentence.
 +
*Tweet from [[@StrongBadActual]] on [[@StrongBadActual Tweets 2018#949767712670089217|January 6, 2018]] &mdash; A longer sentence.
 +
*[[@StrongBadActual]] ([[@StrongBadActual Tweets 2018#949767712670089217|6 January 2018]]) &mdash; With parentheses instead of an em dash.
 +
*[[@StrongBadActual]] &#91;[[@StrongBadActual Tweets 2018#949767712670089217|6 January 2018]]&#93; &mdash; With brackets instead of an em dash.
 +
*[[@StrongBadActual]]: [[@StrongBadActual Tweets 2018#949767712670089217|6 Jan 2018]] &mdash; With a colon instead of an em dash.
 +
The date format can be changed as well. (Jan 6 2018, 6 Jan 2018, January 6th, 2018, etc.) Personally, I'm leaning toward the parentheses, with the Jan 6 2018 format. {{User:Gfdgsgxgzgdrc/sig‎}} 22:38, 5 October 2018 (UTC)
 +
:I support the parentheses format, with <s>either</s> 6 Jan 2018 <s>or Jan 6 2018</s>. {{User:SRMX12/sig}} 01:50, 6 October 2018 (UTC)
 +
::Jan 6 2018 is an improper format so it should not be on the table. If you want to go comma-less, either 6 Jan 2018 or 6 January 2018 is acceptable. An ordinal number (6th) is also not proper for tabular material and shouldn't be considered. For the listing, I support parentheses, brackets, or a colon. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 02:09, 6 October 2018 (UTC)
 +
:::All right, changing my vote to @StrongBadActual (6 Jan 2018). I still support parentheses, because that's also how we document DVD commentaries and Easter eggs. Brackets are hardly used on the wiki, and I guess a colon would be fine too. {{User:Gfdgsgxgzgdrc/sig‎}} 21:27, 6 October 2018 (UTC)
 +
::::I'm not sure which format I prefer but I wanted to point out that since we also have an [[@strongbadactual (Instagram)|@StrongBadActual Instagram Account]] we should always include the word "Tweet" in the entry.  The format can then be adapted to say "Instagram" when such posts need to be referenced. --[[User:Stux|Stux]] 21:50, 6 October 2018 (UTC)
 +
:::::Changing my vote again. [[@StrongBadActual]] Tweet ([[@StrongBadActual Tweets 2018#949767712670089217|6 Jan 2018]]) and [[@strongbadactual (Instagram)|@strongbadactual]] Instagram post ([[@StrongBadActual Tweets 2018#949767712670089217|6 Jan 2018]]). {{User:Gfdgsgxgzgdrc/sig‎}} 22:18, 6 October 2018 (UTC)
-
''{Homestar is laying on the ground again.}''
+
== Basic Articles ==
-
'''HOMESTAR''': Tenderfoot, can you help advise me on my future?
+
This helpful section was added to the page, and reverted twice (by the same user) because:
-
</pre>
+
#{{p|l=http://hrwiki.org/w/index.php?title=HRWiki:Standards&curid=1892&diff=779794&oldid=779793&rcid=742661 There was no discussion}}, even though that isn't necessary for a simple addition to the page.
 +
#{{p|l=http://hrwiki.org/w/index.php?title=HRWiki:Standards&curid=1892&diff=779799&oldid=779798&rcid=742666 It was added by an anonny}}, which matters 0%.
 +
These reasons don't really seem relevant, and I think the section should '''stay'''. But to avoid participating in an edit war, I decided to start up a discussion here. So, what do you guys think? {{User:Gfdgsgxgzgdrc/sig‎}} 22:36, 27 October 2018 (UTC)
 +
:On most every Wiki, discussion is ''always'' required for major changes to these kinds of pages. I wouldn't call that change "simple" with a straight face. Also, since my edit summary got cut off, I should also mention that it was added - dare I say it? - well past the Wiki's height of activity. {{User:RickTommy/sig}} 22:49, 27 October 2018 (UTC)
 +
::Considering how long the page is already, I wouldn't quite call it a major change. It only affects a small portion of the page. And yes, it was added past the wiki's height of activity. But - dare I say it? - why does that even matter? We can't just delete useful parts of the wiki just because it used to be more active. By that logic, we might as well delete the entire wiki. It still exists well past its height of activity. I still say we should keep that section. {{User:Gfdgsgxgzgdrc/sig‎}} 04:12, 28 October 2018 (UTC)
 +
:::This happened again, by the same user. I would advise that user to refrain from continuing the behavior. The section is 100% valid, 100% accurate, and 100% something that was missing from the page before now, and belongs there. Please, stop. {{User:DeFender1031/sig}} 15:08, 6 November 2018 (UTC)
 +
::::Again, do you guys agree of your own accord? Also, like I said, this is the kind of page that requires discussion for such additions. Besides, don't we already have something like that on another page? {{User:RickTommy/sig}} 19:45, 6 November 2018 (UTC)
 +
:::::How are you confused on this point? Here is what has been said so far: "This helpful section" "should stay"; "the section is 100% valid" and "accurate"; it "was missing" and "belongs there." These are not ambiguous statements. There's no one-size-fits-all way to add content to a wiki. Sometimes it's good to have discussion; other times it's good to just be bold. Even in cases where it might have been better to discuss first, once the content is there, if it is judged to be good, there's no reason to remove it just because we didn't talk about it first, or just because it came from an anonymous source. Even if you think that's wrong and that a discussion is ''required'', this thread has become a discussion after the fact, and the consensus is that it's good information. So stop removing it on procedural grounds. They have no merit.
 +
:::::As for your assertion that we might have something like this content elsewhere, that ''could'' be a discussion worth having. We don't want to duplicate information (or at the very least we want to have a good reason to do so), after all. But to have that discussion, you would actually need to link to where we already have it. Don't remove it outright from this page on some vague hunch. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 20:29, 6 November 2018 (UTC)
-
Anybody with me? --[[User:oddtodd|oddtodd]] 11:17, 20 Nov 2004 (MST)
+
== Linking to disambiguations ==
-
== Format for Lyrics ==
+
The guideline is that disambiguations shouldn't be linked to, and for the most part, I agree. For example, [[Gary]] can refer to multiple characters, so the specific Gary should be linked to instead of the disambiguation. There are some disambiguations, however, that don't refer to separate things, but seperate versions of the same thing (mainly [[Homestar Runner 20th Anniversary Show]]). Some users, such as myself, think linking to this disambiguation is preferable to linking to both. Other users disagree, due to the reasoning that "disambiguations shouldn't be linked to", even though that rule doesn't make sense in this scenario. What should be the standard? {{User:Gfdgsgxgzgdrc/sig‎}} 02:44, 22 January 2019 (UTC)
 +
: While I wouldn't say never, in general I think we should avoid linking to disambiguation pages if practical. The question whether your specific example should be an exception. I would lean toward no. That doesn't mean that there isn't a way to make this into one link. Perhaps the content could be combined into one page. Do we really need two? (I'm not intimately familiar with those pages so I'm actually asking.) If we really need two pages, perhaps a container article [[Homestar Runner 20th Anniversary Shows]] with a general write-up of the events could be made with links to the individual pages. Or we could just live with two links on whatever page is referring to this. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 03:00, 22 January 2019 (UTC)
-
Song lyrics are inconsistently styled throughout the site.  I propose that we embed lyrics in &lt;pre&gt; tags, so that they show up inside of a box the same way that the transcribed text of the Strong Bad emails do. Thoughts? [[User:Render|Render]]
+
== Disambiguation Links on Toon Pages ==
-
:Seconded. --[[User:Upsilon|Upsilon]]
+
-
::Seconded. -[[User:flatluigi|flatluigi]]
+
-
== Forward references ==
+
Should the {{t|about}} and {{t|for}} templates go below the toon category ([[Rap Song]]) or above it ([[Crazy Cartoon]] and [[Everybody to the Limit]])? {{User:Gfdgsgxgzgdrc/sig‎}} 03:21, 19 July 2019 (UTC)
 +
:Holy crap! That is a good question! This, I'm sure, is something that has not seriously been considered not the least because it should be fairly rare.  Nevertheless, this is probably something that should go in the Standards once something has been decided.  At least for the purpose of maintaining aesthetics.  As for where it should go? I'm not sure, I have no clear preference. Both ways look fine to me. The only minor detail that might sway things one way or another might be that most users will expect the navigation buttons to remain near the top.  Thus the [[Rap Song]] format might be preferable. --[[User:Stux|Stux]] 21:03, 1 August 2019 (UTC)
 +
::I personally prefer the disambiguation notice to be at the very top of the page. I like to see italics before bold, and I also like to check to make sure I'm looking at the right page before I dive in. But that's one anony's preference. -- [[Special:Contributions/68.37.43.131|68.37.43.131]] 21:08, 1 August 2019 (UTC)
 +
:::I slightly agree with one anonny's preference. For the reasons he stated, plus it's nice to have all the toon information together, and it doesn't break the spacing of image and navigation buttons. A disambiguation link seems like the sort of thing that should go at the very top of pages. {{User:Gfdgsgxgzgdrc/sig‎}} 22:16, 5 August 2019 (UTC)
 +
::::I too prefer to see it above. My reasons are similar, the wiki navigation is all before the toon info and navigation, and disambiguation is a form of wiki navigation (i.e. letting you know what page you're on in ambiguous cases and letting you navigate to the correct one if you're not). I think disambig absolutely belongs before toon nav. {{User:DeFender1031/sig}} 22:21, 5 August 2019 (UTC)
-
[[dragon]] has a link to [[guitar]].  Should [[guitar]] have a link to [[dragon]]?
+
== Interviews on defunct sites ==
-
:Chronology on the official site shouldn't affect what can link to what in the wiki.  If a link to a future email is interesting and relevant, I don't see why it shouldn't be included. [[User:Render|Render]]
+
-
== Category pages ==
+
As I [[HRWiki:WikiGnome|clean up]] various pages on the site I'm finding that many cited interviews and links are dead and gone (especially since many are over a decade old now). For instance, the [[Strong Bad Email]] page prominently cites [https://web.archive.org/web/20090517084725/http://omgnintendo.blogfaction.com/article/108144/one-year-of-wiiware-matt-and-mike-chapman-on-strong-bads-cool-game-for-attractive-people/ an OMG Nintendo blog interview] - a site that went under in 2011, with none of its content currently hosted anywhere on the 'net. Typically with [[Interviews and Public Appearances|interview pages]] it seems that the wiki's practice is to only summarize the interview and link to it, unless express permission is granted from the original host/author. However it obviously becomes much harder to contact relevant parties if the site is dead as a doornail, and any contemporaneous info is often nonexistent or irrelevant.
-
Currently Category pages, such as [[:Category:Strong Bad Email]] or [[:Category:1936]] only contain text such as "These articles are all Strong Bad Emails.", and all the substance on that topic is contained in a separate page.  Would it make more sense to move all of the substance to the Category page, and turn the actual [[Strong Bad Email]] or [[1936]] page into a mere redirect to the Category?  Once and Only Once etc, since it would also provide the listing of everything in the Category underneath. -- [[User:thejesterx|thejesterx]] 21:47, 6 Oct 2004 (MST)
+
Would it be considered kosher to mirror the text of an interview onto the wiki? Perhaps a rule of thumb (e.g. "if the site has been down for more than X years ''and'' there is no mirror") for archiving content? Or should it be left at linking to the archive.org version of the page? —{{User:Bleu Ninja/sig}} 21:34, 27 September 2019 (UTC)
 +
:I think if it really is ''nowhere'' else (except archive.org, is that what you're saying?), then there's really no problem putting it here. Nobody involved in those old sites is likely to object, and if they did, we'd simply take it down. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 22:14, 27 September 2019 (UTC)
 +
::Makes sense to me. (and yes, archive.org is the only remainder of that post) --{{User:Bleu Ninja/sig}} 22:26, 27 September 2019 (UTC)
-
:No, I don't think so. The Strong Bad Email page has a lot of information that wouldn't fit in the category page, and it's a lot easier to link to a regular page (<nowiki>[[Strong Bad Email]] vs. [[:Category:Strong Bad Email|Strong Bad Email]]) than a category. Categories should just be categories, not articles. ~~~
+
== Interview transcripts - should we correct spelling? ==
-
</nowiki>
+
As I'm cleaning up older interview pages, I noticed inconsistent correction of interviewer's spelling, capitalization, grammar, etc.
-
== Character pictures ==
+
For example, [https://web.archive.org/web/20020623163502/http://www.wtfiml33t.com/viewarticle.php?artid=59&page=1 the wtfiml33t interview] {{inlinecontentwarning}} on the original site read like this:
-
Now we use thumbnails for toon screenshots - should we do the same for character images? I assume we should, but I thought I'd better verify since it's not made clear anywhere. --[[User:Upsilon|Upsilon]]
+
<blockquote>'''Stephan:''' State your name for the record please<br>
-
:'''EDIT:''' According to the projects page (drawn to my attention by [[User:spblat|spblat]]), "we need to comb the entire wiki changing full-sized images to thumbnails". This pretty much answers my question. --[[User:Upsilon|Upsilon]]
+
'''Mike Chapman:''' Mike Chapman!!<br>
 +
'''Stephan:''' how long has homestarrunner.com been up<br>
 +
'''Mike Chapman:''' since January of 2000. A nice clean starting point.</blockquote>
-
I guess it's my turn to have some fun.  I've noticed that a lot of the filmography category styles are different.  I'm going to go around changing them so they're a bolded debut and any complete list says "complete filmography".  Otherwise, it will just say filmography.  Is this ok? [[User:SparkPlug|SparkPlug]] 04:21, 17 Aug 2005 (UTC)
+
In the [[l33t Interview]] article, the wiki cleans up punctuation and capitalization:
-
== Easter Egg Transcribing Part 2 ==
+
<blockquote>'''STEPHAN:''' State your name for the record, please.<br>
 +
'''MIKE CHAPMAN:''' Mike Chapman!<br>
 +
'''STEPHAN:''' How long has homestarrunner.com been up?<br>
 +
'''MIKE CHAPMAN:''' Since January of 2000. A nice clean starting point.</blockquote>
-
OK, since I've heard conflicting ideas on the wiki on whether or not Easter Eggs should be transcribed or not, can we finally get some sort of official, definitive yes/no on this? There's both the discussion on this page, the actual Standards page itself, and the discussion page for [[extra plug]] to take into consideration as to my confusion concerning it. I'm asking about this since, while I took the conversation on this page and in [[extra plug]] to mean Easter Eggs are expected to be transcribed now, some Easter Egg transcriptions are now being removed (see, for example, [[Where the Crap Are We?]].) --[[User:TheNintenGenius|TheNintenGenius]] 12:00, 18 Oct 2004 (MST)
+
The [https://web.archive.org/web/20030130071113/http://rundevilrun.com/ezine/interviews/hsrunner/ Run Devil Run] interview has a few typos (notably "Strongbad", but "cartoon network" is not capitalized elsewhere):
-
:This site aims to preserve so much other minutiae about Homestar Runner that I can’t imagine where the policy to not transcribe easter eggs came from.  Are we trying to reduce spoilers?  In that case, all of the transcripts are also inappropriate.  I say we transcribe eggs in the easter eggs section where they are clearly marked and can be skipped by those who want to discover them on their own. [[User:Render|Render]]
+
-
:I was the one who deleted the Where the Crap Are We? egg transcript. I've probably removed a couple of others as well, because I wasn't aware that we ''should'' be transcribing eggs. Sorry about that. (I assume we ''are'' now giving egg transcripts?) --[[User:Upsilon|Upsilon]]
+
<blockquote>C>_Did you ever have any idea Strongbad would receive the level of popularity that he has?</blockquote>
-
::Yes, we are now transcribing easter eggs. I believe I caused the confusion. Sorry 'bout that. [[User:InterruptorJones|<nowiki></nowiki>]]<small>&mdash;&nbsp;[[User:InterruptorJones|InterruptorJones]]</small>[[<nowiki></nowiki>]]
+
In [[Run Devil Run Interview|the article]], only the "speaker's name in all-caps, bolded, followed by a colon" formatting is changed, the actual content is unedited:
-
::FYI: In the other "Easter Egg Transcribing" section, I proposed a format to transcribe easter eggs with in order to reduce clutter. --[[User:oddtodd|oddtodd]] 11:21, 20 Nov 2004 (MST)
+
<blockquote>'''NEUTRON:''' Did you ever have any idea Strongbad would receive the level of popularity that he has?</blockquote>
-
== Thumbnails vs full-size images? ==
+
So which is correct? Perhaps we ought to add a disclaimer "the following interview has been edited for clarity" or "spelling and punctuation are presented as-is from the original article"/"[sic]". --{{User:Bleu Ninja/sig}} 16:27, 30 July 2021 (UTC)
 +
:Generally speaking, I think it's fine to {{p|l=http://www.hrwiki.org/w/index.php?title=Stinkoman_20X6_Level_10&diff=prev&oldid=792027 edit interviews for clarity}}, especially if the original was a transcription of speech and the transcriber was sloppy about it. If the original was more written than spoken (I'm not sure how to describe this, or whether it even applies to any of these articles), then I would tend to leave those articles as is. I'm not a big fan of visible ''sic''s. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 02:09, 31 July 2021 (UTC)
 +
::That makes sense. Generally I can't infer from a transcript if an interview was over phone/voice or text/email unless there are "(laughs)" or things like that. I tend to agree on [sic]s, they're best for comments<!-- like this --> rather than visible on the page. I think leaving them as-is is fine, then; unless it's becoming unreadable. --{{User:Bleu Ninja/sig}} 03:17, 31 July 2021 (UTC)
-
I read [[HRWiki:Projects|here]] that we should be focused on using thumbnails instead of full size images.  I've been doing this on some, but I don't want to go nuts before I know I'm not messing things up.  Are there any cases where full size screenshots [[Homsar Main Page|(like this)]] should be preserved?  -- [[User:spblat|spblat]] 7:13 PM 23 Oct 2004 (later) foo. Answered my own question. looks like full speed ahead--the standards page is quite clear on this.
+
== Standards for birth/death dates in costume explanations ==
-
== Places ==
+
A lot of the characters' [[Halloween Costumes]] are real people, and it can be a bit tricky determining what information is relevant enough to fit on the explainer pages. I've noticed inconsistency on whether or not birth and/or death dates and years are included when discussing real-life figures. For example:
-
Should we start adding "'''Places (in order of apperance)'''" on toon pages? I think it would be helpful to new-comers, as well as everyone else.  &rarr;''<small><tt>[[User:FireBird|<font color=green>FireBird</font>]]</tt></small>''
+
[[Homestarloween Party Costumes]]
 +
* Flavor Flav: no dates (alive)
 +
* Kurt Cobain: no dates (deceased)
 +
* Carmen Miranda: birth and death years only
 +
* Gorbachev: birth date (alive)
 +
[[Happy Hallow-day Costumes]]
 +
* Mario Batali: no dates (alive)
 +
* Frida Kahlo: birth and death dates
 +
* Queen Latifah: birth date (alive)
 +
[[The House That Gave Sucky Tricks Costumes]]
 +
* David Lee Roth: no dates (alive)
 +
* André 3000: no dates (alive)
 +
* Chuck Barris: birth and death years only
-
== Wikilinks in transcript dialogue ==
+
There's not a noticeable trend to how these are treated, though it is somewhat more common for a person's description to include dates if they are deceased. In my opinion, for the purposes of this wiki it's better to simply reference the years/decades/era they were most well-known (e.g. Miranda performing from 1930s-50s, Gorbachev as head of state 1988-1991, Cobain as lead singer and guitarist of Nirvana 1987-1994) and simply indicate that a person is deceased by using past tense to describe them. --{{User:Bleu Ninja/sig}} 19:58, 2 March 2022 (UTC)
-
:''There should never be links in dialogue or email sections.''
+
== Formatting tracklists on album articles ==
-
I'm not so sure about this rule. Certainly we shouldn't create links willy-nilly. But when Strong Bad asks, "Did the [[Wikipedia:quadratic formula|quadratic formula]] explode?", it'd be nice to just link the words "quadratic formula" than to have to propose a whole fun fact about it (which is often not that much fun). - [[User:furrykef|[[User:furrykef|furrykef]] ([[User_talk:furrykef|Talk at me]])]] 01:03, 25 Nov 2004 (MST)
+
I've noticed a discrepancy in how we format the track listing on album articles:
 +
*[[Strong Bad Sings and Other Type Hits]] and [[Trogdor!! The Board Game Rulebook EP]] have '''the song name in bold''' and ''the artist italicized''.
 +
*[[Homestar Runner Original Soundtrack]] (all three volumes), [[Degradest Hits]], and [[Dangeresque: The Roomisode Triungulate Soundtrack]] do not format the song names in any way. Notably, every track on HSROST and DH is by the same artist.
 +
I'm not sure where the bold/italic formatting came from. In most listings of song information, the practice is either to put the song title "in quotes" (this is {{w|WP:TRACKLISTING|Wikipedia's policy}}, see tracks formatted as {{w|Grease: The Original Soundtrack from the Motion Picture|tabled}} or {{w|Dirty Dancing (soundtrack)|list}} as examples) or to not apply any special formatting to either song title or artist name (this is done [https://www.discogs.com/release/499618-Strong-Bad-Strong-Bad-Sings-And-Other-Type-Hits on Discogs], and is common across music streaming platforms). I think quotes could be useful, as we sometimes append information to a song's title {{--}} (hidden track) for instance {{--}} which can add ambiguity when some songs have parentheticals in their names ([[Everybody to the Limit (Live)]], [[Peasant Spawning (is Confusion)]]). Quotes or no, I think we should lose the bold/italic formatting in the first two articles. --{{User:Bleu Ninja/sig}} 17:48, 30 July 2024 (UTC)
-
:Nah. I'd like to keep it as it is. &rarr;[[User:FireBird|''<small><tt>[[User:FireBird|<font color=green>FireBird</font>]]</tt></small>'']]
+
== Cast (in order of appearance) ==
-
== Splitting Fun Facts ==
+
What is the policy in case a character is heard before he is seen, and other characters appear before him, but he does end up making an appearance? In [[Decemberweenvent Calendar (2022 Revisited)]], Strong Bad says the first spoken line, but he is not seen in the toon before Strong Mad and Strong Sad are, so there is some discrepancy about which order the characters should be listed in. I'm not immediately sure if there is a precedent for this happening outside of [[Marzipan's Answering Machine]], but it wouldn't surprise me if it has happened before. {{User:The Knights Who Say Ni/sig}} 05:22, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
-
 
+
:I'm not sure about that exact kind of precedent existing either, but there's a similar precedent in the fact that, as compared with visual appearances, many if not all "(voice only)" appearances are listed by the same standard and in the same order. By that token, I think going by the character's first appearance in any form, whether that be audio or visual, would make the most sense. {{User:DEIDATVM/sig}} 20:27, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
-
I have an idea for splitting the Fun Facts section into multiple smaller segments - so, if we can't get rid of the now-customary influx of "facts", we can at least split them up. I put my proposed edit (which is open for debate!) at 'link deleted'. --[[User:Jay|Jay]] 03:44, 7 Jan 2005 (MST)
+
-
 
+
-
:Sounds interesting and well thought out, but I think we might want to wait for the dust to settle from this whole star thingy before we start to shake things up any more.[[User:Tom|<nowiki></nowiki>]]  --  [[User:Tom|Tom]] 21:02, 7 Jan 2005 (MST)
+
-
 
+
-
::Strangely enough, it was the whole star thing that caused me to bring it up in the first place (though I'd been toying with the idea for a while.) --[[User:Jay|Jay]] 00:07, 8 Jan 2005 (MST)
+
-
 
+
-
:::I was bored at work and started segmenting some of the [[some kinda robot|Strong]] [[i she be|Bad]] [[butt IQ|Emails]]. For now I'm not doing any more in the interest that the Wiki should decide on one standard for the fun facts; otherwise I'm just opening up a can of worms that doesn't need to be touched. [[User:Kamek|Kamek]] 10:19, 11 Jan 2005 (MST)
+
-
 
+
-
::::Since I had to remove the subpages, I moved the proposed changes and example to [[User_talk:Jay|my talk page]]. Nothing changed, really. PS. I like the "Fast Forward" category name (used in [[some kinda robot]] by Kamek) over my somewhat lame "To be continued..." --[[User:Jay|Jay]] 13:06, 11 Jan 2005 (MST)
+
-
 
+
-
:::::Well, if the two of you want to tackle this, I don't really see any reason why you shouldn't. I'll try to help when I can. -- [[User:AgentSeethroo|AgentSeethroo]]
+
-
 
+
-
::::::I'll go ahead and continue with the refactoring of the Fun Facts. The way I see it is that if something isn't done about it, nothing will get done at all. For the most part I'll try to stick to your proposed standards, Jay. I might add or remove categories if necessary. [[User:Kamek|Kamek]] 17:59, 11 Jan 2005 (MST)
+
-
 
+
-
:::::::I think the fun facts layout should be as following:
+
-
<pre>
+
-
== Fun Facts ==
+
-
=== Trivia ===
+
-
Interesting facts about the toon or e-mail.
+
-
=== References ===
+
-
Interesting references to other things outside Homestar Runner.
+
-
=== References To Other Cartoons ===
+
-
References to other cartoons.
+
-
=== References By Other Cartoons ===
+
-
References that other cartoons have made to this toon or e-mail.
+
-
</pre>
+
-
:::::::I realize that this is roughly what is already being done, but I think the sections should be reworded.
+
-
 
+
-
:::::::And what about this "gold star" thing? Is it going to happen, or are we going to trash it? Have we even decided yet? &rarr;[[User:FireBird|''<small><tt>[[User:FireBird|<font color=green>FireBird</font>]]</tt></small>'']]
+
-
 
+
-
As you've probably noticed, I've split all the sbemails and TGS8. The Fun Facts heading is still there, but everything is in subcategories now. The only complaints I got were one person who didn't like me splitting the emails with very few facts - which I have explained (on my talk page) - and another who didn't like the category name "Fast Forward" (because it was too ambiguous) but didn't offer anything better. (Of course, I'd gladly delete the Fast Forward subcategory and every last Fun Fact within it, except that most people don't seem to agree that this is a good idea.) Is everyone okay with this being a permanent change? Any complaints about the splitting itself, rather than the format? Should we update the Standards? --[[User:Jay|Jay]] 19:57, 18 Jan 2005 (MST)
+
-
 
+
-
=== Real-World References? ===
+
-
Is just me, or do we need better name for "Real-World References"? The name isn't very accurate when we add facts about other fiction. I suggest "Outside References" or "Cultural References". --[[User:Trogga|Trogga]] 15:02, 11 Apr 2005 (MDT)
+
-
: On the one hand, I think you're on to something when you say that "Cultural" might be a better term. On the other hand... well, you'd have to go through a LOT of articles to fix it... --[[User:Jay|Jay]] 15:16, 11 Apr 2005 (MDT)
+
-
 
+
-
That's why we [[HRWiki:Projects|Projects]], my friend. --[[User:Trogga|Trogga]] 07:41, 13 Apr 2005 (MDT)
+
-
 
+
-
=== Running Gags Section ===
+
-
As you may have seen in a recent STUFF'd fun fact, there have been mixed reactions about letting "This is another instance pof The Cheta's head exploading" be a fun fact, so I'm thinking we should have a Running Gags section for fun facts. WHat do you guys think?
+
-
 
+
-
:Nah. {{User:FireBird/sig}} 15:58, 6 Jul 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
::C'mon, FireBird, give us a little more than a one-word response. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]]
+
-
 
+
-
:The vote to accept is currently 18&ndash;2, and I think the two decliners mistook a running gag for an ''n''th instance of something or a common event. As for listing the running gags, I don't have a problem with keeping them in Inside References, since that's what they are. But they should definitely be documented ''somewhere'', at the very least so that they can link to the Running Gags page. I will keep an open mind on this idea for now. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 16:02, 6 Jul 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
:Mentioning them in Inside References I feel would be the best idea, but I'm fully against a full category for them. {{User:FireBird/sig}} 16:07, 6 Jul 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
I also agree with that, I was just surprised when it was STUFF'd. - [[User:Ju Ju Master|Ju Ju Master]] 17:09, 6 Jul 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
I would like to pop in my say on this:  As a relative new-comer to the wiki, one who has been here for a while but is yet to make an account, I think that having a Fun-Facts split section for Running Gags would be good, and if it isn't, ''it couldn't do any harm.'' -[[User:Ariamaki|Ariamaki]] July 7th, 4:11 AM est.
+
-
 
+
-
:Creating a page with a bunch of keyboard mashings wouldn't do any harm, either, but we delete it anyway. Adding a new Fun fact that is poor in grammar wouldn't do any harm, but we fix it anyway. Of course it wouldn't do harm, but some just don't like the idea of it. {{User:FireBird/sig}} 13:45, 7 Jul 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
Running gags don't appear in great numbers, so we would probably just have one fun fact in the section.  If any.  [[User:Rogue Leader|Rogue Leader]]
+
-
 
+
-
* I am all for it, it sounds like a great idea. [[User:Total Spaceship Guy3|Total Spaceship Guy3]] 20:47, 7 Jul 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
== Err... Why was my edit reverted? ==
+
-
 
+
-
Internet (as in ''the'' Internet; the one Homestar Runner is on) is a proper noun and should thus be capitalized. See [[Wikipedia:Internet]]. --[[User:Uh! Bob|<sub><tt>'''''Úħ¡ βøв'''''</tt></sub>]] 20:38, 27 Mar 2005 (MST)
+
-
:Forgot to mention that Flash (as in Macromedia Flash; the format that most Homestar Runner content is in) should also be capitalized, yet the F goes uncapitalized on many pages. --[[User:Uh! Bob|<sub><tt>'''''Úħ¡ βøв'''''</tt></sub>]] 20:40, 27 Mar 2005 (MST)
+
-
 
+
-
::Good question about the "I" in Internet.  I'm not really sure, you might want to ask over on InterruptorJones's [[User talk:InterruptorJones|talk page]].  As for the "F" in Flash, that's a good point.  I change it when I see it, and I've updated the page to note the capital.[[User:Tom|<nowiki></nowiki>]]  --  [[User:Tom|Tom]] 00:16, 28 Mar 2005 (MST)
+
-
 
+
-
:::I realize this discussion was held months ago, but when I read this just now it reminded me of an article on Wired.com almost a year ago: ''[http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,64596,00.html It's Just the 'internet' Now]''. They make a lot of good points in there. Macromedia Flash is certainly a formal product name, but "internet" is no different from "radio" or "television". The internet isn't a product, it's a medium. It isn't a proper noun, it's just a noun. In fact, the Wikipedia:Internet article does mention the shift away from capitalizing in the [[Wikipedia:Internet#Naming_conventions|naming conventions]] section. &mdash; {{User:JoeyDay/sig}} 19:19, 11 Aug 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
::::Yeah, that article has [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Internet&diff=20792770&oldid=11598610 come a long way] [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Internet&oldid=11598610 since March].  I'd think that being a knowledge base we'd tend to use it in the formal sense though.  Is that right?[[User:Tom|<nowiki></nowiki>]]  --  [[User:Tom|Tom]] 22:37, 11 Aug 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
==Duration vs. Running Time==
+
-
I've noticed that, at least for [[Strong Bad Email]] pages/transcripts, the note about how long it is is inconsistent.  Some pages use "Duration," others use "Running Time."  Not that it's really that big of a deal, but which one would be better to use?  (I vote "Running Time.")&mdash;[[User:StrongstarRunbad|StrongstarRunbad]] 09:14, 30 Mar 2005 (MST)
+
-
 
+
-
== Template to simplify Cast & Filmography ==
+
-
 
+
-
I've made a template, [[:Template:Film]], that can be used for Cast lists in toon pages.  It automatically adds the page to the character's Filmography category, so you don't need to explicitly add the filmography category at the bottom of the page.  For example, for [[rampage]]:
+
-
 
+
-
<pre>
+
-
'''Cast (in order of appearance):''' {{Film|Strong Bad}},
+
-
{{Film|Strong Mad}}, {{Film|The King of Town}},
+
-
{{Film|Homestar Runner}}, {{Film|Coach Z}}, {{Film|The Cheat}},
+
-
{{Film|Strong Sad}}, {{Film|Marzipan}}, {{Film|Homsar}}
+
-
</pre>
+
-
 
+
-
Replaces:
+
-
 
+
-
<pre>
+
-
'''Cast (in order of appearance):''' [[Strong Bad]], [[Strong Mad]],
+
-
[[The King of Town]], [[Homestar Runner]], [[Coach Z]],
+
-
[[The Cheat]], [[Strong Sad]], [[Marzipan]], [[Homsar]]
+
-
 
+
-
...
+
-
 
+
-
[[Category: Strong Bad Filmography]][[Category: Strong Mad Filmography]]
+
-
[[Category: The King of Town Filmography]] [[Category: Homestar Runner Filmography]]
+
-
[[Category: Coach Z Filmography]] [[Category: The Cheat Filmography]]
+
-
[[Category: Strong Sad Filmography]] [[Category: Marzipan Filmography]]
+
-
[[Category: Homsar Filmography]]
+
-
</pre>
+
-
 
+
-
It seems to simplify things.  What do people think?
+
-
-- [[User:thejesterx|thejesterx]] 09:24, 27 Apr 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
== Similar template for Computer in SBEmails ==
+
-
 
+
-
I noticed that SBEmail pages don't specify the computer the email was received on, they merely show it in the relevant category at the bottom.  I made a similar template, [[:Template:Comp]] to specify the computer Strong Bad used to receive the email, and automatically put it in the category for that computer. For example, in [[rampage]]:
+
-
<pre>{{Comp|Lappy 486}}</pre>
+
-
Which displays: '''Computer:''' [[Lappy 486]], and puts the page in the [[:Category:Lappy 486 Emails]] category.  Anyone think this is a good idea, or is this info unnecessary?
+
-
-- [[User:thejesterx|thejesterx]] 09:31, 27 Apr 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
== Image Standards ==
+
-
 
+
-
With the recent makeover of [[Characters]] and [[Items]], the need for better headlines and captiones of images has grown strong. [[User:Homestar Coder|Homestar Coder]] and [[User:E.L. Cool|myself]] begone to change those systematically, but to what? All the pictures already changed, like [[:Image:homestar.PNG|this one]] used the following standard:
+
-
 
+
-
<pre>
+
-
'''[[artical name]]''' (from [[toon this image was taken from]])
+
-
</pre>
+
-
 
+
-
For cases with images of more than one character, artical of place it was taken from, all the appropriate links should be made, and the most important ones should be '''bolded'''. If this standard is fine with everybody, than I think it need to be added to the standard page. {{User:E.L. Cool/sig}} 14:12, 17 Sep 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
== Easter Eggs ==
+
-
 
+
-
Should it be a standard to differentiate between easter eggs that occur during the toon and easter eggs that occur at the end of the toon? --[[User:Ace00899|Ace00899]] 02:27, 13 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
:They ''should'' already be listed in chronological order and have descriptions about where to find them, like early in the toon or at the end. A better, more pertinent question is, are we going to start listing so-called waiting eggs (those things that happen seconds after the Paper comes down) in the Easter egg section? &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 05:37, 16 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
== More general "out of the frame" rule proposal ==
+
-
 
+
-
I've seen a lot of fun facts floating around that to me seem analogous to the outside-the-frame facts that we usually delete with a vengeance. Most of them involve a seek bar in some way, or using the right-click menu (by viewing the swf directly or on pages that don't have it disabled). I suggest that the standards for glitches be changed to include something like:<blockquote>Glitches which occur in such a way that they cannot be seen during normal viewing (for example they happen outside the frame, or need a seek bar) are usually '''not''' notable. However if something happens that can only be accessed in this way, but is intentional, or otherwise adds something to the article, then it should be mentioned as a Remark.</blockquote>Probably would need some rewording before (and if) becoming official, but it gets my point across... the idea is that this would remove all the facts like:
+
-
*(The canonical) If you view the flash file, String Bad has no body, just a head!
+
-
*If you use a seek bar to skip some initialisation, things aren't initalised properly (such as the "Undefined.Undefined" level in [[Stinkoman 20X6]])
+
-
*Anything involving RMB->Pause or RMB->Play
+
-
*Anything involving the Stinkoman 20X6 Cheat Program, or any other tool that makes things happen in ways they weren't intended to.
+
-
However it would still allow facts like:
+
-
*Moving the mouse over "Store" lots and then over "Downloads" doesn't work properly on [[Main Page 22]] (uses only the controls avaliable in the flash file itself, so comes under "normal viewing")
+
-
*The moustacioed Homestar in [[Senorial Day]] (clearly intentional)
+
-
*The dancing headless Homestar in [[mile]] ("otherwise adds something to the article")
+
-
It probably needs rewording, such specifying what "normal viewing" and "adds something to the article" mean, but the spirit of the proposal is there, even if the letter is imperfect. Your thoughts? {{User:Phlip/sig}} 13:16, 15 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
== Standardize "The Cheat Noises" ==
+
-
 
+
-
My attention was drawn to [[Lookin at a Thing in a Bag]] by an anonny disagreeing with another over what it sounded like The Cheat was saying. Now I've seen in various transcript edits a trend to "not put words in The Cheat's mouth" and simply transcribe as "The Cheat noises." This is ''not'' universally implemented, though; there are lots and lots of instances of things like ''{The Cheat squeaks, it sounds like...}''. I'm not sure I'd advocate reducing everything to "The Cheat noises;" in some instances his noise really sounds strikingly like some phrase, enough to note; also variations such as "The Cheat noises in the affirmative" or "The Cheat squeaks softly" ([[lady...ing]]) are good. But we seriously need to fix some.<br>
+
-
Also, should they be:<br>
+
-
'''THE CHEAT:''' ''{The Cheat noises}'' ... or simply insert it within the flow of other characters' dialogue?
+
-
 
+
-
Oh, and one other thing: the colon is bold along with the name, as above, right? That needs to be changed on [[Lookin at a Thing in a Bag]] too. &mdash;[[User:AbdiViklas|AbdiViklas]] 00:56, 16 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
:Almost all of the cases should be "The Cheat noises" or "The Cheat squeaks" or similar. I do believe that there does exist that tiny fraction where it actually sounds like he's saying something. But these cases are quite rare. Also notable are the instances where he was translated courtesy of the "Learn to Speak The Cheat" Easter egg. I like when we can add something to indicate his mood or tone of voice, as you mentioned. Finally, other characters get their own line of text when they speak. Why not The Cheat? &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 01:14, 16 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
::Cool. If no one objects, I'll make this my little project. &mdash;[[User:AbdiViklas|AbdiViklas]] 01:16, 16 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
:::Also, when the colons aren't bold faced, that's an error of the transcriber. The colons need to be boldfaced. - {{User:Joshua/sig}}
+
-
::::Thanks! I'm doing that too as I encounter them. &mdash;[[User:AbdiViklas|AbdiViklas]] 01:47, 16 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
== Ignored Rule ==
+
-
<blockquote>If a character does something while speaking a line of dialogue, or if more description is needed for their manner of speaking or inflection (e.g. if they're singing or whispering) the action ('''if it is not too long to describe in a few words''') can be enclosed in curly braces — { } — and made italic, like this: {goes to the refrigerator}. Note that the curly braces themselves are also italic. Short actions like these do not need to be proper sentences.</blockquote>
+
-
 
+
-
The bold rule is probably one of the most ignored rules ever. Go through the various transcripts and you'll see tons of examples of long in-dialogue actions, some of which don't even relate to the speaker. This problem needs to be fixed, but it's way too big for me to do alone. ([[modeling|Here]] is an extreme example of this problem.) - {{User:Joshua/sig}} 14:18, 17 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
:I put this in projects, because that's probably where it belongs. - {{User:Joshua/sig}} 14:54, 17 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
::That's fine, but does anybody read that page? You should delete it from either here or there, to avoid duplicating the discussion. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]] 15:04, 17 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
:::I'm not sure. It ''belongs'' in Projects, but I don't think anyone reads that page either, because it is so outdated, and many of the projects aren't done. - {{User:Joshua/sig}} 15:29, 17 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
== Sig standards ==
+
-
 
+
-
I realize it's partly my fault for teaching people how to use templates for their sigs and adding an icon to my own sig, but things are starting to really get out of hand. For starters, I propose we restrict images to one 16 x 16 image per sig. If enough people are against images altogether, I don't mind complying and removing my image. Secondly, I think we should prohibit <code>sup</code> and <code>sub</code> tags in sigs altogether. Third, should we have restrictions on the number of colors people are allowed to use in their sigs, or should we prohibit colors all together? Fourth, should we restrict length? I'm not sure how we could police this one since length depends mostly on a person's username. Just some ideas. Talk amongst yourselves. &mdash; {{User:JoeyDay/sig}} 23:13, 19 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
:Just for reference, I'd like to point out the Fanstuff Wiki encountered a similar problem a while back. Information can be found [[HRFWiki:Too Long Clanky|here]], along with a link to the rules that were made regarding it. - {{User:Joshua/sig}} 01:55, 21 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
===Image===
+
-
*Don't mind them, as long as they're small. And even though I like H*C's cat, I think the images should be static, not animated. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]]
+
-
*A small one. one that do not highens the line above it in normal text. {{User:E.L. Cool/sig}} 23:36, 19 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
*Keep it to < 16px. Larger images get out of hand. &mdash; {{User:Lapper/sig}} 23:54, 19 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
*I like a small image in a sig; it makes people quickly identifiable. I would propose a guideline of 20x20 instead of 16x16. JoeyDay's sig icon is 19px high and it looks just fine to me. Personally I don't mind animated images ;) but if they annoy other people then we could disallow them. {{User:Homestar Coder/sig}} 18:53, 20 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
*20 pixels is fine. Animated images, to me, are fine now, but may have a tendency to get out of hand in the future. I think that animated gifs should be turned into png versions, so that the image is preserved, but it doesn't get distracting.
+
-
* Oh, I didn't realize my image was that big. I revise my original proposal. 20 x 20 should be good. &mdash; {{User:JoeyDay/sig}} 22:06, 20 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
* I think images are fine as long as they don't stretch the line of text too high and low. Animated ones don't bug me, as long as they aren't flashy. (For example, H*C's pic is fine to me.) - {{User:Joshua/sig}} 02:00, 21 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
* Animated ones are fine. Just limit one image per sig, and limit size (maybe something from 20 to 30 pixels).
+
-
 
+
-
===Remove sup/sub===
+
-
*Agree. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]]
+
-
*Don't mind. {{User:E.L. Cool/sig}} 23:36, 19 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
*They interfere with above/below text. Remove. &mdash; {{User:Lapper/sig}} 23:54, 19 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
**What browser are you using? My sig doesn't affect line spacing for me... {{User:Phlip/sig}} 00:46, 20 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
***It isn't necessarily that the line spacing is affected, just that they crowd the line above or below. At least, that's how they show up on mine. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]]
+
-
****Actually, on mine, Phlip, I use [http://www.apple.com/macosx/features/safari.html Safari], and to me the spacing in this <nowiki><h3></nowiki> is normal except for the line where your sig is. &mdash; {{User:Lapper/sig}} 21:09, 20 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
*****Could you look at [http://www.hrwiki.org/index.php?title=HRWiki:Sandbox&oldid=179011 this] (permanant link to the current Sandbox, since it could very well change soon) to see which lines have the spacing messed up? Are the ones faked with &lt;span&gt; ok? If they are, I'll change my sig to use them instead... {{User:Phlip/sig}} 22:29, 20 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
******I seriously don't see anything wrong with them.  We should have a limit to the number of characters in the tags though. {{User:Rogue Leader/sig}} 22:39, 20 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
******Every line in that example sandbox page has extra padding either above or below in Firefox. What browser are you using Phlip? &mdash; {{User:JoeyDay/sig}} 23:08, 20 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
*******Firefox. And they all look fine to me (well, if you're being picky, there's maybe 1px here or there, but nothing that you'd notice in flowing text... and some of that is probably rounding errors anyway...[http://members.lycos.co.uk/phlipping/subsup.png]) {{User:Phlip/sig}} 00:02, 21 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
********All the line spacing looks (mostly) uniform to me. My point earlier was not that the spacing is messed up by the sup/sub, but that the sub from one line often collides with the sup from another. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]]
+
-
*Sups and subs don't bother me at all. - {{User:Joshua/sig}} 02:00, 21 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
**Agreed. Allow sups and subs. {{User:Rainer/sig}} 10:39, 21 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
===Colors===
+
-
*Do not prohibit. Neutral about whether there should be a limit on the number of colors. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]]
+
-
*Limit to 3 or 4 colors. differant tones of the same color (i.e. dark green and light green) count as one color. {{User:E.L. Cool/sig}} 23:36, 19 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
*Colors should clearly contrast with the white background. (i.e. Bright yellow should not be allowed) &mdash; {{User:Lapper/sig}} 23:54, 19 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
*No limit on colors unless signature is unreadable on white. {{User:Homestar Coder/sig}} 18:54, 20 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
**Speaking of that, some people have tried using backgrounds other than white. We should insist on white backgrounds with no borders. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]]
+
-
***I agree. Before you (or someone) interfered, [[User:GWR 2004]]'s signature was a bit out of hand with borders. &mdash; {{User:Lapper/sig}} 21:09, 20 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
**No borders, no special backgrounds, no unreadable or otherwise annoying colors. Other than that, I'm fine with them. - {{User:Joshua/sig}} 02:00, 21 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
*Do not prohibit, but no annoying colours. If someone feels that the colours in someone's sig are annoying, they can advise that person on their user talk page.
+
-
 
+
-
===Length restrictions===
+
-
*Agree. Some of these sigs are three and four times the length of the user's name. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]]
+
-
*Need to find a way to calculate how much is too much. {{User:E.L. Cool/sig}} 23:36, 19 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
*No longer than the number of characters in the entire user name, plus a few. &mdash; {{User:Lapper/sig}} 23:54, 19 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
::This is the problem. how many is a few? {{User:E.L. Cool/sig}} 23:59, 19 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
:::I personally think Lapper's is the perfect maximum length after the user name. &mdash; [[User:It's dot com|It's dot com]]
+
-
 
+
-
::::I'd say a good standard to use would be the length of a timestamp.  I count 29 characters there.  Maybe a little shorter would work.  20 or 25 maybe?.[[User:Tom|<nowiki></nowiki>]]  --  [[User:Tom|Tom]] 01:11, 20 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
::::Also, see [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia:Sign your posts on talk pages#Customizing your signature]] for some ideas.[[User:Tom|<nowiki></nowiki>]]  --  [[User:Tom|Tom]] 01:13, 20 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
:::::There's also the problem with people using large fonts to make their sig much wider than it should be with only their name. {{User:Homestar Coder/sig}} 18:55, 20 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
::::I agree with Tom on that one. 20 characters should be the absolute longest. Besides, usernames themselves longer than 20 characters are somewhat rediculous. &mdash; {{User:Lapper/sig}} 21:09, 20 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
:::::I don't think we should measure any length restriction in characters, rather in pixels on a "normal" display. This is because (1) the fonts are proportional (2) someone can always use <tt>style="font-size:10000%"</tt> or something, (3) this will also take into acount the image icon thingies. {{User:Phlip/sig}} 22:40, 20 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
* The fanstuff uses ''Username + 6 large characters or 12 small characters'', images counting as large characters. That works for me. - {{User:Joshua/sig}} 02:00, 21 October 2005 (UTC)
+
-
 
+
-
**Yep, the rules regarding sig lengths (which was the main reason why those rules were introduced to the fanstuff wiki, because some sigs were a whole line) at the fanstuff wiki should work fine here. Also, text larger than "normal" size (the default size that the wiki uses) should be the limit of how big you can have the text in your sig. {{User:Rainer/sig}} 10:39, 21 October 2005 (UTC)
+

Current revision as of 20:27, 10 January 2025

Current | Archive 1 (1-20) | Archive 2 (21-40) | Archive 3 (41-60)


Contents

[edit] Tradition is not necessarily policy

After a bit of confusion recently, i wanted to flesh out a certain topic a bit more. That topic is the issue of people assuming that tradition is policy, and favoring tradition where something else makes sense. I probose a new heading under General that will hopefully describe some of this. Here's what i have so far:

Sometimes, traditions will develop and people will tend to always do something in a certain way. However, if there is a reason why doing it differently is better, there is no reason to stick with tradition merely for the sake of tradition. For example, if there is an external link that goes to Wikipedia, but a distinctly more informative article on the topic is available elsewhere, there is no reason to favor Wikipedia's.

I can also think of another example which is the tradition of piping links to avoid redirects, where in most cases, it makes sense to just let the redirect handle the link. If anyone has any thoughts on this, or more examples of this type of thing, or ways to reword this to make it better or make it include more examples, i'm all ears. — Defender1031*Talk 19:09, 2 July 2008 (UTC)

I agree wholeheartedly that tradition and consistency should not trump functionality or reasonable sense. That being said, perhaps in some cases where there's ambiguity, we should set a hard standard one way or the other. The pipe vs. redirect thing which has recently reemerged, is one of those cases, IMO. I, for one, support piping in the case of a redirect. The reason: The pipe only adds extra text to the edit page, which the casual reader will never see, whereas a redirect adds a very obvious "redirected from X" to the actual article. Thoughts? -132.183.138.199 20:33, 21 January 2009 (UTC)
I think that pipes are ugly, whereas "redirected from x" can be helpful. Personally, i think it makes sense for most cases that if i click on a link that says one thing and i get a page with a different title, that the page explains why. — Defender1031*Talk 21:48, 21 January 2009 (UTC)
Personally, I feel that redirects are mostly useful for searches, rather than links on a page. If you know what the correct link is, why not use it? More over, there are a number cases where pipes are preferred method of linking Homestar Runner (body of work) comes to mind, since it's necessary to have the distinction on the page title, but it'd never appear that way in the article. Cool Shades is another one that gets linked by pipes since the article now encompasses all eyewear. Perhaps pipes should be minimized (especially when there are capitalization differences), but they can not be removed all together. wbwolf (t | ed) 22:10, 21 January 2009 (UTC)
See also (Don't Fear) The Redirect above.

[edit] Glitches

I hope I wasn't too bold by changing the definition of Glitches. I think that the wording of the previous definition really did not include the majority of things that actually get listed under that heading. It used to be

Similar to Goofs, but limited to mistakes in the Flash software.

And I changed it to

Similar to Goofs, but limited to mistakes made by the Brothers Chaps in the usage of the Flash software or shortcomings of the Flash software itself.

The former definition made it sound as if the mistake had to be in the Flash software itself to fit the category of Glitch, which is obviously not the way it's used around here.  Green Helmet 04:38, 14 July 2008 (UTC)

[edit] May I copy these Standards to another wiki?

Hi guys, remember me? :) I've started a new wiki that I'm loosely modeling after the structure of this one, and I'd like to adopt these standards and just direct copy/paste them into a similar Manual of Style or Standards page on that wiki. This will save me a lot of time and make it easier for me to start getting more people involved. I will, of course, remove references to HRWiki and adapt the standards to my wiki as appropriate (removing sections that don't apply, etc.).

If you're interested, the wiki I'm working on (just created yesterday and still very much under construction) is The Red Green Wiki. If you're a fan of that show, I invite you to drop by and help out! :)

Thanks guys. — Image:kskunk_fstandby.gif KieferSkunk (talk) — 01:38, 6 December 2008 (UTC)

Hey, KieferSkunk, how ya been? I don't think you need to ask, but thanks for doing so anyway. Feel free to rip us off! (I mean, we totally didn't rip off Wikipedia when we first set up this site.) I think under our Creative Commons license, you're supposed to give us credit or something, but who's gonna know if you ignore that part. Keep on tranglin'! — It's dot com 01:52, 6 December 2008 (UTC)
Cool! Thanks. :) — Image:kskunk_fstandby.gif KieferSkunk (talk) — 02:10, 6 December 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Raw characters vs HTML entities

Based on a discussion on Talk:Compé, I think we need to bring this up again. Our current policy of using HTML entities for everything outside ASCII is basically just tradition at this point... there's not really any actual reason to keep it that I can see. It only came about because twice the wiki's had problems during upgrades that broke on Unicode characters... once when we moved from WikkiTikkiTavi to MediaWiki, and once on one of the earlier upgrades (I think 1.5, when UTF-8 support became mandatory... the wiki was already being served as UTF-8, but something backend thought it was still Latin-1, so all the pages got mis-read as Latin-1 during the upgrade, and double-encoded as UTF-8). Both of which wouldn't have happened if we were using only HTML entities at the time. Also, there was the occasional edit that would convert non-ASCII or non-Latin-1 characters to something else... from browsers where simply clicking "edit" and then "save" without changing anything would still mess up on those characters. So HTML entities became the Standard™... and I think I was one of the people pushing for it to stay that way.

But all those pitfalls have long gone away... MediaWiki has gone through 10 major versions since the mixup, and we've never had an encoding problem during an upgrade since... it's stable now. And I can't remember the last time I saw an edit that accidentally broke a Unicode character, it'd have to be years ago. I can't think of a single browser in current use which has problems with UTF-8 (noone's going to be reading "Compé" as "Compé", which is the usual fate for non-UTF-8-comprehending programs)... and while I can think of one browser that has troubles with characters outside Latin-1, which would automatically convert them if you tried to edit a page... it's not in any way in common use. And even if an editor does come along and break all the Unicode characters on a page, it happens few and far between enough that it would be less effort to just fix it when it happens, rather than trying to prevent it from happening.

And really, the only place where raw characters and HTML entities differ is on the "edit" page... everywhere else, they behave the same... so that's the only place we need to look at. And in that edit page, the entities are ugly and hard to read... and raw characters can potentially cause problems in very rare situations that are getting rarer as time goes on. And I really do think the latter is rare enough that the former outweighs it. And I think that's been the case for some time, we just never noticed, because of the inertia of tradition.

Now, I will make one exception to this... and that's dashes. It's much easier to tell the difference between &mdash; and &ndash; than — and – (especially in the fixed-width font used in the textarea in the edit screen, where they're more like and ), so it's easier to keep them standardised as entities. Other symbols, like &trade; and &frac12; I'm on the fence about. But letters, especially in the middle of words, like Comp&eacute;, I definitely think are better as raw Unicode characters.

Note that I'm not recommending that we go through all the pages and replace the entities with actual characters... I don't think it matters that much. Just that we go from "HTML Entities Forever!" to "whatever's there is good"... if something's already there with entities, that's fine, if it's with raw characters, that's fine too... neither case really warrants zealously changing from one to the other. But if someone wants to go through a page and replace all the entities with characters for some reason, then that's their time to waste, and I've got no problem with letting them do it. But I do think we should at least lean towards raw characters over entities for new pages.

But that's my two cents... in as much as that phrase can be applied to 5 paragraphs of rambling... Who else has an opinion? --phlip TC 10:28, 5 August 2009 (UTC)

Phlip and I discussed this yesterday. When I brought it up, I said, "Comp&eacute; is really no better than straight-up Compé. Yes, back in the day it might have been a problem, but browsers almost uniformly get it right these days. Even when they don't, there are technical safeguards to prevent problems. The best proof I have of this is that there are never any problems with using {{User:Heimstern Läufer/sig}}." I strongly support the exception for dashes. I also don't mind entities for non-alphabetic characters, because it's often easier to enter them that way than to find the actual character, but whatever works is fine with me. — It's dot com 15:53, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
I was going to bring up that I did find an instance of a unicode character being accidentally broken... but, now that you mention it, it was four years ago, from a user that hasn't been seen in over a year, and it was a rarer character than "é". I will say that I'm likely to have trouble remembering how to type the "é" character without copy/pasting or using the HTML entity (I know what an acute accent is, so remembering "&eacute;" is a lot easier for me.) It's quicker for me to just use the form I know over something I'd constantly have to look up, even if it is five keystrokes more in practice. --Jay (Gobble) 18:40, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
As long as the database for this wiki is in UTF-8, I'm sure we're good with using é. In fact, if we use "é" more often, we'll probably save some kilobytes by the time the Compé is obsolete. We can always put a notice on the talk page listing the key combinations for various operating systems to insert "é". I also agree with continuing the use of , as Courier/Courier New makes it hard to tell the difference between an em dash, en dash, and just a plain dash. Using entities for other special characters we might want to keep strict, as some of the characters might not be supported in UTF-8, but UTF-16, and could result in bugs. But I'm not too sure what I'm talking about when I say that. I'm still a little confused with how UTF-8 handles UTF-16 attempted characters and whatnot. Oh, I'm just going to far.:P --76.224.216.122 18:07, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
It seems that that the page is still "pro-entity" for non-Latin-1 characters. Should this be changed? I'm can't confidently determine the conclusion of this conversation. Soiled Bargains (talk|ctrb) 00:21, 30 September 2011 (UTC)

[edit] mdash vs. ndash

I would like to revisit this topic, specifically regarding &mdash; and &ndash;. I understand the difficulty in telling these apart in text: I often run into that problem myself. And in many cases, &mdash; is readable by itself on lists. However, I find that in some cases, particularly those where the dash is attached to one or two words, it is harder to parse the source code. To resolve that I came up with a compromise: I created an &mdash; template {{-}} that should be easy to type, distinguishable from the regular dash, and still easy to read in text. Click here for a sandbox test. Opinions are most welcome! If this is acceptable, perhaps we could unleash a bot or two on the main namespace? --Stux 13:44, 6 April 2013 (UTC)

I don't actually find the entity style hard to read, though I have no problem with using {{-}} instead for lists. Still covers all the basic requirements discussed above. — Defender1031*Talk 17:36, 25 February 2017 (UTC)
I, personally, find it a little bit easier to read the list code (or the code in general) when using the template. HTML escape codes seem to blend into the word for me. In any case, a better system just occurred to me (especially after learning from you that ndashes and hyphen-minuses are different things!). Instead of just using {{-}}, we could create 3 or 4 templates (I checked wikipedia and they do something similar):
  • {{-}}: this template would be repurposed to place an &ndash; in text. Oddly enough wikipedia uses it as shorthand for the {{clear}} template.
  • {{--}}: this would be the new &mdash; in text. This is the same as in wikipedia.
  • {{---}}: this could be used for wider dashes. Wikipedia does something similar. However, there likely won't be a use for it here.
  • {{----}}: This is actually used by wikipedia to insert four consecutive hyphen-minuses since the wiki code uses that for horizonal bars iirc. Using <nowiki> tags would do the same thing but with more typing. I haven't seen a need for that template here.
The template is only used in two main space pages, so it would be easy to switch over (unless people really, really, really want to use straight up &mdash; tags in the code and scrap the template.) --Stux 18:52, 25 February 2017 (UTC)
Hi all, I finally went ahead with the plan I outlined above and created a {{--}} template (for &mdash;) and updated the {{-}} template to yield an &ndash;. I also updated all existing articles that used the original template ({{-}}) so they would use the new one ({{--}}). I'm hoping these templates will find more use on the wiki. Please let me know if there are any issues or questions. —Stux 03:07, 8 April 2018 (UTC)
I don't understand the purpose of these templates. For one thing, we almost never use &ndash; on this wiki, so I don't think we need a template for it. It would be like creating a template exclusively for the £ symbol. That symbol may be used once or twice on the wiki, but not enough for its own template. Secondly, {{--}} is only one character less than &mdash;, so there's not much of a difference there. Not to mention, many of the users here (as far as I'm aware) are more used to typing &mdash;. It's muscle memory to me at this point, so changing it would likely cause more problems than it solves. Also, nearly all of the pages use &mdash;, so we would likely have to get a bot to change almost every article on the wiki, and I don't exactly see why that's preferrable. Gfdgsgxgzgdrc 22:19, 27 October 2018 (UTC)
In my opinion, we should either use &mdash; or just plain . Preferably the former, since it doesn't require any copy/pasting or fancy typing. Gfdgsgxgzgdrc 06:25, 18 May 2019 (UTC)
Ooops! Sorry I never got around to answering your questions. I probably stashed this page in a TODO list somewhere and forgot about it! Anyway, in no specific order, here are the reasons I have for preferring to use these templates (that is, if you don't want to or for some strange reason can't use the Unicode text directly):
  • Memorization: which is easier to remember? &mdash; or {{--}}? For those who are used to wiki syntax I say that the template format is a lot easier to remember!
  • Readability of source: (This is more subjective) In my personal opinion the wiki source is easier to read when you have something that looks like dashes instead of a whole bunch of escape codes. If you look at this diff you'll see what I'm talking about.
  • Organization: This refers more to the mdash vs ndash thing, but I think, the wider the dash, the more hyphens should be used to represent it. So the mdash uses more hyphens than the ndash. And why do we even have an ndash template? Sure, ndash is less widely used, but as this discussion established, it's a different character from the hyphen-minus. And if memory serves me correctly, I *think* it's being used somewhere in this wiki. So if it's needed the template is available for use.
Anyway, that is my rationale for creating and using the templates (primarily the "Memorization" and "Readability" arguments). In general, I don't think there is any detriment to having the templates even if they're not used, and their use, to me, can only be beneficial. --Stux 15:52, 18 May 2019 (UTC)
Okay, that makes sense. I didn't really think about the memorization or readability aspects of the templates. Thanks! Gfdgsgxgzgdrc 18:52, 18 May 2019 (UTC)

[edit] Policy regarding Poker Night at the Inventory

Telltale's yet-to-be-released game, Poker Night at the Inventory, is unique in the fact that it takes four characters from different worlds and puts them in the same room. This could pose a problem for our wiki, however. As the game isn't in the HR universe and includes characters from other games, there are some aspects of the game that need not be mentioned on the site. As it stands right now, however, our policy on what should be mentioned about this game is rather vague. I can see this becoming a problem down the road when the game is released; some users might find content HRWiki-worthy, while others might not. For instance: Should Max have his own article? Should his dialogue be listed here? It might start a few edit wars. In my opinion, a line should be drawn that clearly defines what should and should not be included on the wiki in instances like this game, before the game comes out. Does anybody else share my opinion, or am I making a mountain out of a molehill? --DENNIS T/C 00:55, 4 September 2010 (UTC)

[edit] Spaces

It's been a while since I've done work with transcripts, but I feel like I've come across a lot of description/action statements that use formal two space sentence spacing, whereas I've seen many others that only use one space. I don't know whether or not this is something the transcribers are doing, or whether or not it's an unmentioned part of our standards. I can see why double spacing is being applied, as the text is displayed in italics and in some cases could be hard to follow. However, I don't really see that much of a difference, and I'd like to know whether this is something that could become a standard, if something needs to get set straight, or if I'm just being too picky, haha. Soiled Bargains (talk|ctrb) 23:09, 16 December 2010 (UTC)

It doesn't matter how many spaces you put in the edit window, it always displays as just one space. (Click edit to see what I mean.) The only way to get it to display more than one space is to use a nonbreaking space (like   this) or CSS styles, which we only do in rare cases. Most of the time it makes no difference how many spaces you enter, and whether you should enter one or two after a sentence depends largely on your own preference. Some people find it easier to read the text when there's two spaces after a sentence in a fixed-width font (as in the edit window). I personally always just use one. — It's dot com 00:18, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
Ah, you see, I forgot that about MediaWiki. Looks like I'm still not reacquainted with this place yet, haha. Thanks! Soiled Bargains (talk|ctrb) 00:28, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
To clarify, it's not MediaWiki per se but rather how your browser interprets HTML. If you view the HTML source you'd see those spaces are still in there. It's your browser that doesn't display them in the final text. — It's dot com 00:33, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
See what I mean? Soiled Bargains (talk|ctrb) 01:09, 17 December 2010 (UTC)

[edit] Tables

[edit] ids

As some of you may have noticed, yesterday I began work on a new standard for tables. My experience with editing this wiki has led me to the conclusion that a lot of them were hastily made back in the early MediaWiki days, and that possibly newer tables have been based on these. My number one complaint however is that we have inconsistent id attributes all over the place. I decided to take it upon myself to create a format ids so that future table-based articles would validate and be less likely to conflict with other ids across the wiki. But now I've realized that this is probably something we should discuss, as I've realized that my proposal needs improvement that I myself am not confident of making. I'd like others opinions on what the format should be. Fortunately, I've discovered that spaces and other characters are escaped automatically in ways that comply with the W3C's standards. Umm, I need to get this posted, so I'll just stop here. Your thoughts? Soiled Bargains (talk|ctrb) 19:58, 20 December 2010 (UTC)

It's dot com said we should just handle table ids as we do for links to sections. This makes sense seeing that illegal characters are escaped by MediaWiki. My only thing to add is that any if an anchor starts with an illegal character, its escaped anchor name will start with a ., which will make it illegal anyway (like the section on Thorax Corporation that starts with 'Juwanna Mann'). Soiled Bargains (talk|ctrb) 21:49, 23 January 2011 (UTC)
What I said was that the IDs should exactly match the content of the most important column in a table (Xeriouxly Forxe Character Variations is a good example), which makes pretty and intuitive links. We don't need to worry about special characters and the like, because MediaWiki handles them automatically. The exception would be for things like the weeklies, which use numbers, but we already have a consistent style for those. — It's dot com 22:26, 23 January 2011 (UTC)

[edit] Styles

While I've said that tables are an inconsistent mess, they're also a stylistic inconsistent mess. I've given tables the wikitable class occasionally, and the only reason I do that is so that we can have the styles for all of the tables in one place: the CSS for the site. However, are there any changes to the styles we should do now? Should we make the table width 100%? Make table headers darker? Should we create some sort of hrwikitable class instead? I'm just downright unsure. Soiled Bargains (talk|ctrb) 21:49, 23 January 2011 (UTC)

I don't think this is a pressing issue given the current rate of updates. — It's dot com 22:26, 23 January 2011 (UTC)

[edit] Standards for gags/jokes

Should we create standards for the appearance for articles about inside jokes/running gags, or should we still handle them de facto style? Soiled Bargains (talk|ctrb) 21:49, 23 January 2011 (UTC)

Is this broken? (If you say yes please give examples.) Would the pages actually benefit from some kind of standardization, or do we have different styles simply because not all running gags are the same? — It's dot com 22:26, 23 January 2011 (UTC)
Um... I'm not too sure. Maybe, maybe not. But here are a few things that I think are worth considering:
  • Some articles have the appearances section written incorrectly compared to our currently de facto. I've seen (and corrected) this with Dan, Toilets, and more recently Greg. New articles concerning gags/jokes (unless written in haste/based off of a badly written article) aren't really a problem nowadays.
  • When a reference is in an Easter egg, it will either be labeled in parenthesis before the em dash ("(Easter egg)"), or put after the em dash ("In an easter egg..."). I'm going to be lazy and pass on giving examples, but my next point is similar and has a few. I assume we put "(Easter Egg)" before the em dash.
  • When a reference is in the DVD commentary, well... I've seen that done a few (the show) different (TGS10) ways (narrator). I assume we put "(DVD Commentary)" without linking it before the em dash.
  • There have been recent articles like Stanley Kubrick that use "References" instead of "Appearances", and then there are articles like Monkey Island that use both, using Appearances for physical appearances of the work in question, and References for just mentions. Should it work like this?
Soiled Bargains (talk|ctrb) 23:38, 23 January 2011 (UTC)

[edit] Running time standard wording

When listing the official time (usually when it's wrong), it is more factual to use (actual) or (TV Time Toons Menu)? Or should you only use the latter when the menu is correct? - Catjaz63 23:14, 3 December 2015 (UTC)

There seem to be a few precedents, based on Special:Whatlinkshere/TV Time Toons Menu:
I'm not sure why some have parentheses and others don't. Or why some are capitalized. But I think "actual" should be used for the real running time only if the official time is noticeably off, with "official" alongside it for the running time that appears on the Toons menu. Otherwise the time for the main site's version of the toon doesn't need a qualifier. DEI DAT VMdatvm center\super contra 18:04, 4 December 2015 (UTC)
And by "only if the official time is noticeably off" hopefully you mean off by 1 second or more! ;) Btw, I think using "official" when referring to the TV Time Toons Menu itself is fine as a standard (notice that we still link to the toon menu itself. I like the parentheses too. Hmmmm. A formatting template could be built... *gears start spinning* --Stux 21:21, 4 December 2015 (UTC)
That seems like a good idea. The elements "combined", "official" and "actual" should probably be uncapitalized. Perhaps "official site" or "main site" as a contrast for "YouTube" could be used with cases like I Killed Pom Pom above. DEI DAT VMdatvm center\super contra 21:48, 4 December 2015 (UTC)

[edit] Linking to articles with disambiguation in the page title

This edit raises a question: How should "Toon Name (video)" pages (like Sketchbook (video) and Trogdor!! The Board Game (video)) be listed in pages? "Toon Name (video)", or "Toon Name Video"?

I don't really have an opinion (possibly leaning slightly toward "Toon Name Video"). Gfdgsgxgzgdrc 07:04, 17 August 2018 (UTC)

I kind of agree. The parens are just internal to the wiki to distinguish pages. -174.62.238.201 12:53, 17 August 2018 (UTC)
In running text the parenthetical material should be hidden (and referred to using additional words, or not, as the case may be). The part in parentheses is not part of the actual title; we include it only because we have to. In tables and lists, however, I'd favor listing the page title exactly as it is, since those sections are more for reference and less for reading. — It's dot com 14:43, 17 August 2018 (UTC)

[edit] Retroactive names in transcripts

This edit raises a question: Should retroactive names (using a character's name in an early transcript before their name is revealed) be allowed in transcripts?

I think retroactive names should be allowed. It makes things a lot more convenient for the reader, and it's not like anyone's going to be reading these transcripts in order. Plus, if the person is browsing the wiki, chances are they're aware of the character's name. If Baron Darin Diamonocle is the title of his wiki page, he should be called that in all his transcripts too. Gfdgsgxgzgdrc 07:04, 17 August 2018 (UTC)

Note that [that edit] was reverted. -174.62.238.201 12:53, 17 August 2018 (UTC)
By an Anonny whose only edit has been that revert, no less. RickTommy (edits) 13:00, 17 August 2018 (UTC)
That's beside the point. It could be an active user who just happened to make an edit from that IP. — It's dot com 14:45, 17 August 2018 (UTC)
Another edit was made regarding retroactive names. Does anyone else have an opinion? Gfdgsgxgzgdrc 23:27, 31 December 2019 (UTC)
I lean toward not using retroactive names. The events in each toon and from one toon to the next happen in an order, and I think it's fine to preserve that in the transcript. — It's dot com 23:38, 31 December 2019 (UTC)
I agree, the transcripts should reflect the progression of the homestar universe as it was created rather than applying later information retroactively. — Defender1031*Talk 01:30, 1 January 2020 (UTC)

[edit] @StrongBadActual Dates

Long ago, it was decided that the format of Tweets in lists should be "@StrongBadActual — January 1, 1970". Recently, however, it seems to no longer be the case. So, how should Tweets be listed? Gfdgsgxgzgdrc 19:55, 5 October 2018 (UTC)

What all are the choices and what would be your preference? — It's dot com 21:03, 5 October 2018 (UTC)

Here is a list of choices. Feel free to discuss other options, as there is probably a near-infinite number of possibilities. This list is mainly just for convenience.
Also, the old version lacked a link to the Tweet's wiki section, so I added them in each choice.

The date format can be changed as well. (Jan 6 2018, 6 Jan 2018, January 6th, 2018, etc.) Personally, I'm leaning toward the parentheses, with the Jan 6 2018 format. Gfdgsgxgzgdrc 22:38, 5 October 2018 (UTC)

I support the parentheses format, with either 6 Jan 2018 or Jan 6 2018. Lira (talk) 01:50, 6 October 2018 (UTC)
Jan 6 2018 is an improper format so it should not be on the table. If you want to go comma-less, either 6 Jan 2018 or 6 January 2018 is acceptable. An ordinal number (6th) is also not proper for tabular material and shouldn't be considered. For the listing, I support parentheses, brackets, or a colon. — It's dot com 02:09, 6 October 2018 (UTC)
All right, changing my vote to @StrongBadActual (6 Jan 2018). I still support parentheses, because that's also how we document DVD commentaries and Easter eggs. Brackets are hardly used on the wiki, and I guess a colon would be fine too. Gfdgsgxgzgdrc 21:27, 6 October 2018 (UTC)
I'm not sure which format I prefer but I wanted to point out that since we also have an @StrongBadActual Instagram Account we should always include the word "Tweet" in the entry. The format can then be adapted to say "Instagram" when such posts need to be referenced. --Stux 21:50, 6 October 2018 (UTC)
Changing my vote again. @StrongBadActual Tweet (6 Jan 2018) and @strongbadactual Instagram post (6 Jan 2018). Gfdgsgxgzgdrc 22:18, 6 October 2018 (UTC)

[edit] Basic Articles

This helpful section was added to the page, and reverted twice (by the same user) because:

  1. There was no discussion, even though that isn't necessary for a simple addition to the page.
  2. It was added by an anonny, which matters 0%.

These reasons don't really seem relevant, and I think the section should stay. But to avoid participating in an edit war, I decided to start up a discussion here. So, what do you guys think? Gfdgsgxgzgdrc 22:36, 27 October 2018 (UTC)

On most every Wiki, discussion is always required for major changes to these kinds of pages. I wouldn't call that change "simple" with a straight face. Also, since my edit summary got cut off, I should also mention that it was added - dare I say it? - well past the Wiki's height of activity. RickTommy (edits) 22:49, 27 October 2018 (UTC)
Considering how long the page is already, I wouldn't quite call it a major change. It only affects a small portion of the page. And yes, it was added past the wiki's height of activity. But - dare I say it? - why does that even matter? We can't just delete useful parts of the wiki just because it used to be more active. By that logic, we might as well delete the entire wiki. It still exists well past its height of activity. I still say we should keep that section. Gfdgsgxgzgdrc 04:12, 28 October 2018 (UTC)
This happened again, by the same user. I would advise that user to refrain from continuing the behavior. The section is 100% valid, 100% accurate, and 100% something that was missing from the page before now, and belongs there. Please, stop. — Defender1031*Talk 15:08, 6 November 2018 (UTC)
Again, do you guys agree of your own accord? Also, like I said, this is the kind of page that requires discussion for such additions. Besides, don't we already have something like that on another page? RickTommy (edits) 19:45, 6 November 2018 (UTC)
How are you confused on this point? Here is what has been said so far: "This helpful section" "should stay"; "the section is 100% valid" and "accurate"; it "was missing" and "belongs there." These are not ambiguous statements. There's no one-size-fits-all way to add content to a wiki. Sometimes it's good to have discussion; other times it's good to just be bold. Even in cases where it might have been better to discuss first, once the content is there, if it is judged to be good, there's no reason to remove it just because we didn't talk about it first, or just because it came from an anonymous source. Even if you think that's wrong and that a discussion is required, this thread has become a discussion after the fact, and the consensus is that it's good information. So stop removing it on procedural grounds. They have no merit.
As for your assertion that we might have something like this content elsewhere, that could be a discussion worth having. We don't want to duplicate information (or at the very least we want to have a good reason to do so), after all. But to have that discussion, you would actually need to link to where we already have it. Don't remove it outright from this page on some vague hunch. — It's dot com 20:29, 6 November 2018 (UTC)

[edit] Linking to disambiguations

The guideline is that disambiguations shouldn't be linked to, and for the most part, I agree. For example, Gary can refer to multiple characters, so the specific Gary should be linked to instead of the disambiguation. There are some disambiguations, however, that don't refer to separate things, but seperate versions of the same thing (mainly Homestar Runner 20th Anniversary Show). Some users, such as myself, think linking to this disambiguation is preferable to linking to both. Other users disagree, due to the reasoning that "disambiguations shouldn't be linked to", even though that rule doesn't make sense in this scenario. What should be the standard? Gfdgsgxgzgdrc 02:44, 22 January 2019 (UTC)

While I wouldn't say never, in general I think we should avoid linking to disambiguation pages if practical. The question whether your specific example should be an exception. I would lean toward no. That doesn't mean that there isn't a way to make this into one link. Perhaps the content could be combined into one page. Do we really need two? (I'm not intimately familiar with those pages so I'm actually asking.) If we really need two pages, perhaps a container article Homestar Runner 20th Anniversary Shows with a general write-up of the events could be made with links to the individual pages. Or we could just live with two links on whatever page is referring to this. — It's dot com 03:00, 22 January 2019 (UTC)

[edit] Disambiguation Links on Toon Pages

Should the {{about}} and {{for}} templates go below the toon category (Rap Song) or above it (Crazy Cartoon and Everybody to the Limit)? Gfdgsgxgzgdrc 03:21, 19 July 2019 (UTC)

Holy crap! That is a good question! This, I'm sure, is something that has not seriously been considered not the least because it should be fairly rare. Nevertheless, this is probably something that should go in the Standards once something has been decided. At least for the purpose of maintaining aesthetics. As for where it should go? I'm not sure, I have no clear preference. Both ways look fine to me. The only minor detail that might sway things one way or another might be that most users will expect the navigation buttons to remain near the top. Thus the Rap Song format might be preferable. --Stux 21:03, 1 August 2019 (UTC)
I personally prefer the disambiguation notice to be at the very top of the page. I like to see italics before bold, and I also like to check to make sure I'm looking at the right page before I dive in. But that's one anony's preference. -- 68.37.43.131 21:08, 1 August 2019 (UTC)
I slightly agree with one anonny's preference. For the reasons he stated, plus it's nice to have all the toon information together, and it doesn't break the spacing of image and navigation buttons. A disambiguation link seems like the sort of thing that should go at the very top of pages. Gfdgsgxgzgdrc 22:16, 5 August 2019 (UTC)
I too prefer to see it above. My reasons are similar, the wiki navigation is all before the toon info and navigation, and disambiguation is a form of wiki navigation (i.e. letting you know what page you're on in ambiguous cases and letting you navigate to the correct one if you're not). I think disambig absolutely belongs before toon nav. — Defender1031*Talk 22:21, 5 August 2019 (UTC)

[edit] Interviews on defunct sites

As I clean up various pages on the site I'm finding that many cited interviews and links are dead and gone (especially since many are over a decade old now). For instance, the Strong Bad Email page prominently cites an OMG Nintendo blog interview - a site that went under in 2011, with none of its content currently hosted anywhere on the 'net. Typically with interview pages it seems that the wiki's practice is to only summarize the interview and link to it, unless express permission is granted from the original host/author. However it obviously becomes much harder to contact relevant parties if the site is dead as a doornail, and any contemporaneous info is often nonexistent or irrelevant.

Would it be considered kosher to mirror the text of an interview onto the wiki? Perhaps a rule of thumb (e.g. "if the site has been down for more than X years and there is no mirror") for archiving content? Or should it be left at linking to the archive.org version of the page? — Bleu Ninja 21:34, 27 September 2019 (UTC)

I think if it really is nowhere else (except archive.org, is that what you're saying?), then there's really no problem putting it here. Nobody involved in those old sites is likely to object, and if they did, we'd simply take it down. — It's dot com 22:14, 27 September 2019 (UTC)
Makes sense to me. (and yes, archive.org is the only remainder of that post) -- Bleu Ninja 22:26, 27 September 2019 (UTC)

[edit] Interview transcripts - should we correct spelling?

As I'm cleaning up older interview pages, I noticed inconsistent correction of interviewer's spelling, capitalization, grammar, etc.

For example, the wtfiml33t interview The external website linked here contains offensive language and/or content. content warning on the original site read like this:

Stephan: State your name for the record please
Mike Chapman: Mike Chapman!!
Stephan: how long has homestarrunner.com been up
Mike Chapman: since January of 2000. A nice clean starting point.

In the l33t Interview article, the wiki cleans up punctuation and capitalization:

STEPHAN: State your name for the record, please.
MIKE CHAPMAN: Mike Chapman!
STEPHAN: How long has homestarrunner.com been up?
MIKE CHAPMAN: Since January of 2000. A nice clean starting point.

The Run Devil Run interview has a few typos (notably "Strongbad", but "cartoon network" is not capitalized elsewhere):

C>_Did you ever have any idea Strongbad would receive the level of popularity that he has?

In the article, only the "speaker's name in all-caps, bolded, followed by a colon" formatting is changed, the actual content is unedited:

NEUTRON: Did you ever have any idea Strongbad would receive the level of popularity that he has?

So which is correct? Perhaps we ought to add a disclaimer "the following interview has been edited for clarity" or "spelling and punctuation are presented as-is from the original article"/"[sic]". -- Bleu Ninja 16:27, 30 July 2021 (UTC)

Generally speaking, I think it's fine to edit interviews for clarity, especially if the original was a transcription of speech and the transcriber was sloppy about it. If the original was more written than spoken (I'm not sure how to describe this, or whether it even applies to any of these articles), then I would tend to leave those articles as is. I'm not a big fan of visible sics. — It's dot com 02:09, 31 July 2021 (UTC)
That makes sense. Generally I can't infer from a transcript if an interview was over phone/voice or text/email unless there are "(laughs)" or things like that. I tend to agree on [sic]s, they're best for comments rather than visible on the page. I think leaving them as-is is fine, then; unless it's becoming unreadable. -- Bleu Ninja 03:17, 31 July 2021 (UTC)

[edit] Standards for birth/death dates in costume explanations

A lot of the characters' Halloween Costumes are real people, and it can be a bit tricky determining what information is relevant enough to fit on the explainer pages. I've noticed inconsistency on whether or not birth and/or death dates and years are included when discussing real-life figures. For example:

Homestarloween Party Costumes

  • Flavor Flav: no dates (alive)
  • Kurt Cobain: no dates (deceased)
  • Carmen Miranda: birth and death years only
  • Gorbachev: birth date (alive)

Happy Hallow-day Costumes

  • Mario Batali: no dates (alive)
  • Frida Kahlo: birth and death dates
  • Queen Latifah: birth date (alive)

The House That Gave Sucky Tricks Costumes

  • David Lee Roth: no dates (alive)
  • André 3000: no dates (alive)
  • Chuck Barris: birth and death years only

There's not a noticeable trend to how these are treated, though it is somewhat more common for a person's description to include dates if they are deceased. In my opinion, for the purposes of this wiki it's better to simply reference the years/decades/era they were most well-known (e.g. Miranda performing from 1930s-50s, Gorbachev as head of state 1988-1991, Cobain as lead singer and guitarist of Nirvana 1987-1994) and simply indicate that a person is deceased by using past tense to describe them. -- Bleu Ninja 19:58, 2 March 2022 (UTC)

[edit] Formatting tracklists on album articles

I've noticed a discrepancy in how we format the track listing on album articles:

I'm not sure where the bold/italic formatting came from. In most listings of song information, the practice is either to put the song title "in quotes" (this is Wikipedia's policy, see tracks formatted as tabled or list as examples) or to not apply any special formatting to either song title or artist name (this is done on Discogs, and is common across music streaming platforms). I think quotes could be useful, as we sometimes append information to a song's title — (hidden track) for instance — which can add ambiguity when some songs have parentheticals in their names (Everybody to the Limit (Live), Peasant Spawning (is Confusion)). Quotes or no, I think we should lose the bold/italic formatting in the first two articles. -- Bleu Ninja 17:48, 30 July 2024 (UTC)

[edit] Cast (in order of appearance)

What is the policy in case a character is heard before he is seen, and other characters appear before him, but he does end up making an appearance? In Decemberweenvent Calendar (2022 Revisited), Strong Bad says the first spoken line, but he is not seen in the toon before Strong Mad and Strong Sad are, so there is some discrepancy about which order the characters should be listed in. I'm not immediately sure if there is a precedent for this happening outside of Marzipan's Answering Machine, but it wouldn't surprise me if it has happened before. The Knights Who Say Ni 05:22, 30 December 2024 (UTC)

I'm not sure about that exact kind of precedent existing either, but there's a similar precedent in the fact that, as compared with visual appearances, many if not all "(voice only)" appearances are listed by the same standard and in the same order. By that token, I think going by the character's first appearance in any form, whether that be audio or visual, would make the most sense. DEI DAT VMdatvm center\super contra 20:27, 10 January 2025 (UTC)
Personal tools