Plé úsáideora:Picapica/cartlann0507
Go ndéana a mhaith duit, a Phicapica! Measaím go bhfuil na iontrálacha tíreolaíochta seo níos easca a líonadh le sonraí cearta.
- Thank you, GB. If I understand you correctly, yes, that was my intention. If anyone would like to start up a few more country articles, even if it's only a stub-type sentence or two to begin with, I'd be happy to do the tables. (Sorry for all the Béarla, btw. Gabh mo leithscéal, but it's late, tá tuirse orm, and I don't want to show myself up!) -- Picapica 21:29, 25 Iúi 2004 (UTC)
GlobalWPSearch
[athraigh foinse]- Halló Picapica! Please take a look at Plé úsáideora:Lankiveil. Could you or Lankiveil make the templates? Thanks in advance. Best regards Gangleri | Th | T 23:21, 18 Aib 2005 (UTC)
- Sorry, G. I'd like to help ...if I only understood what all that is about! Looks well above my level of technical competence, in any case... -- Picapica 14:40, 22 Aib 2005 (UTC)
Formatting date categores
[athraigh foinse]A Phicaphica, a chara, For articles in Rang:Dátaí, please use the format "Rang:Dátaí|0301" for March 1st, etc., so that the dates appear chronologically (rather than alphabetically by month and then numberically by first digit of the day, which isn't helpful) when viewing the category's page. Thanks! --Angr/(comhrá) 19:42, 4 Bea 2005 (UTC)
- Have just noticed that I haven't been logged in, so have only just seen your message, A. -- My computer does that to me sometimes :(
- I understand your logic perfectly (though I would have appreciated it if you had mentioned what you find helpful before making the changes you have). Since what is useful to me -- at this midpoint in my project -- is to continue to have available to me the categorization scheme I started with, I am adding Rang:Míonna to the days-of-the-year articles. -- Picapica 21:49, 4 Bea 2005 (UTC)
A Phicapica, féach ar Vicipéid:Halla baile. Táimíd ag socrú don míliú alt sa Vicipéid Gaeilge - an bhfuil tuairim agat faoin alt sin? --Gabriel Beecham 22:42, 16 Mei 2005 (UTC)
Global WP Search
[athraigh foinse]I was reading your talk page... If we need to make a template, I'll be more than happy to help with the technical part. Someone just needs to translate! I'll put the template at Múnla:Ag an gCommons. Feel free to suggest language. Basteagh 00:22, 26 Mei 2005 (UTC)
- Done/Déanta. Others, please check mo chuid Gaeilge!
- While we're on technical questions, a Bhaistigh, I wonder if you could shed a little light on the question of uploading images (I'm an ignoramus in these matters). I feel that an Vicipéid is sorely deficient in illustrations at present. I notice, though, that none of the image pages I've looked at -- e.g. picture, left -- seem to have the free-to-use declarations of the sort I'm used to from the English-language and other Wikipedias. Is it OK simply to download an image from another-language Wp and then upload it to ga: with a straight statement of where it came from? -- Picapica 14:08, 26 Mei 2005 (UTC)
- Anything that constitues "Fair Use" in languages cannot be uploaded to Commons:, therefore, yes, download to your local drive and upload it here. Let me preface that by saying you should try to maintain the original image rather than translate it for when and if the license does become available. Basteagh 15:16, 26 Mei 2005 (UTC)
- GRMA, a Bh. -- but I'm a little perplexed by "anything... ...cannot" (Anything that constitues "Fair Use" in languages cannot be uploaded to Commons:).
- Did you mean to say that anything that constitutes Fair Use in other languages can be uploaded to Commons, or that Not everything that constitutes Fair Use in other languages can be uploaded to Commons? -- Picapica 15:25, 26 Mei 2005 (UTC)
- Nothing that constitutes "fair use" in any language may be uploaded to Commons. Everything on Commons must be Public Domain, GFDL, or Copyright usable. Basteagh 16:21, 26 Mei 2005 (UTC)
- OK, I get it.
- An Vicipéid seems to be throwing one of its periodic WikiWobblies at the moment, BTW (on this side of the pond, at least), so this is perhaps cyberspace's way of telling of me that now would be a good time to take a stroll down to an teach tábhairne... Beir bua! -- Picapica 16:31, 26 Mei 2005 (UTC)
Féilire
[athraigh foinse]Hi Picapica - I hope you don't mind if I change the calendars back to the template. It would only be once a year we would have to change the dates (and not by much). With the template, if someone goes to say "14 Márta", that date will be in bold, with links to the other days.
- Well
- (1) There already was a template for each month, with links which did exactly what you say, so I'm not too sure why you want this different one...?
- (2) The altered template which recently appeared
- (a) doesn't look very nice -- OK, that's just my taste, but much more importantly
- (b) it's an American calendar: starts each week on Sunday, when, even supposing we need to have a "this year's calendar" here, Day 1 = Monday is the European standard
- There's undoubtedly a place for a "this year's calendar in Irish" somewhere in an Vicipéid, but is it here, on the pages intended to give some general background information for each month, plus a "tabular index" for particular days in it? Personally, I find it a lot easier when doing calendar work to know that each line begins 1, 8, 15, 22, 29 rather than have to scan the box -- as with much of the "new-style" graphics that seems to be flooding into the Wikipedias it seems to be fashionable now to make everything as tiny as possible :(
- There's no reason, anyway, why templates for the days-in-the-month as index and days-in-the-month as calendar can't co-exist if you want to do a this-year's calendar as such.
- I'm also uncomfortable with having apparently uneditable things like ((Márta((CURRENTYEAR)))) - replace brackets with curly brackets - appear in what I write...! -- Picapica 16:54, 28 Mei 2005 (UTC)
- OK I see that the old calendar does the same but
- (a) The HTML table looks out of place and the DIV and new calendar style suits Wikipedia
- (b) That's no problem! All we have to do is move everything forward by one!
- At the minute, it's impossible to say what day it is of each year - all the current calendar is shows us the dates.
- The {{Márta2024 thing is simple enough. That points to Múnla:Márta2005 - (using curly brackets because it's a template, and CURRENTYEAR so we know it's 2005. This in turn links to Múnla:Márta2005Foinse.
- OK I see that the old calendar does the same but
Conchúr 04:54, 29 Mei 2005 (UTC)
- I understand what you're saying, but -- to take one example -- the page "Meitheamh" is not intended to be a leaf out of this year's calendar: it's meant to be an article about the month of June, covering such things as origin of the name, traditions associated with the month, climate and weather patterns, an appropriate image, etc. etc. I know it's all a bit vestigial at the moment, but that's what I hope the month articles will eventually become.
- What "looks out of place" and what "suits Wikipedia" are, of course, matters of opinion. And as for what the divil DIV may be when it's at home... I fear the techies are taking over the asylum: at least we old-time lunatics have been trying to add some content...
- I'd like to know how you get from curly ((Márta((CURRENTYEAR)))) to "Múnla:Márta2005Foinse". In other words: cad é foinse na Foinse? Where is this documented? At least with HTML we old fogies had some chance of contributing in true Wiki fashion.
- And why, when we go to Múnla:Márta2005Foinse, are we presented with a monstrosity that does not seem to be necessary at, to take a few examples,
- ca:Template:Juny
- da:Skabelon:JuniKalender
- lb:Template:KalennerJuni
- nl:Sjabloon:Juni
- pt:Predefinição:Calendário de Junho
- sv:Mall:JuniMånad
- all of which produce month blocks with the latest fashionable "look" which I can, nevertheless, edit.
- Though just what is wrong with the "look" of, e.g., fr:Juin and its template fr:Modèle:Juin I don't know! -- Picapica 12:09, 29 Mei 2005 (UTC)
- OK We can of course, leave out the year, and have it just as a notation of the days, like the way it is in yours. We can change the Irish one to any of the list of ones you posted (so that it retains the "look", but is editable) Or we can change it to the French way (it wasn't the colours or anything I don't like - it's the ugly border lines) How's this: Conchúr 14:18, 29 Mei 2005 (UTC)
Whoever it was above who said that the calendar format was "American" because it went from Sunday-to-Saturday and that "European" calendars always go from Monday-to-Sunday was incorrect and unsubstantiated. (European practice is not uniform.) The cultural convention here is Sunday-to-Saturday. This is what has been recorded in the CLDR (Cultural Locale Data Repository) by NSAI's subcommittee that deals with these matters. That means that Apple and Microsoft and Linux implementations will default to that for Irish. We really ought to revert to the previous format. Further, the short date formats are incorrect. In that sort of calendar presentation, only single letters D L M C D A S. Fixed-width two- or three-letter abbreviations are not appropriate for Irish, and there is a longer variable-width format for those. In any case we should revert to D-S, as L-D is not the norm here. Evertype 09:39, 3 Iúi 2005 (UTC)
Acht an Aontais[athraigh foinse]Ní earráid é Acht an Aontais. Tá an nath sin i bhfad níos minicí sa lá atá inniú ann - mar shampla, tá sé sa Foclóir Staire de chuid an Choiste Téarmaíochta - [1]. D'fhoilsíodh an tAcht um Athchóiriú an Dlí Reachtúil roimh a fhoilsíodh an Foclóir sin, agus is dócha go úsáidfeadh an Rannóg Aistriúcháin an téarma sin i láthair na huaire. Agus, ar ndóigh, níor fhoilsíodh an tAcht é féin as Gaeilge... --Gabriel Beecham 3 Iúil 2005 22:51 (UTC)
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