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872:) be worked into MoS, and the result is always a consensus against the idea, because MoS exists for ensuring quality and consistent and understandable content for the readers (and secondarily for reducing editorial conflicts about styling that content), but this sort of thing isn't styling the content, having no effect on what editors see, or any accessibility effect on editors or readers, possibly the only other reason we'd care about a code-formatting matter. There's just not a consensus to prefer one style over the other. To the extent anything in MoS would apply to this stuff, it would be
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876:: if there are two acceptable styles, don't arbitrarily change from one to the other. For my part, when I encounter messy lists, I normalize to which ever style already dominates in the page. If there is no clear "winner", and just a really random mess, I usually normalize to the spaced style as marginally more readable for editors. But only if making a more substantial improvement in the same edit.
1192:, that sounds like good advice that *should* be in a Knowledge policy or guideline that discusses comparison articles -- and perhaps already is. Similarly, I think I've read somewhere that: comparison articles should cite sources that actually compare things, and if no such sources can be found, then a stand-alone "comparison article" likely doesn't meet Knowledge's
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The spaces after the asterisks only affect the page size when opening the page or section for editing, and the contents of the edit window form a surprisingly small amount of the data that is served to your browser when you do that. So the addition or removal of a few spaces won't make any measurable
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There is no technical reason to prefer one over the other. The difference is only when editing using the source editor, and even then it is purely aesthetic. If you are coming across people who are routinely adding spaces where there were none before (or removing them), that is the sort of thing that
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test to check for multiple parameter values. And it should probably use an unbulleted list, since bulleted ones are unusual in infoboxes and waste space in them. The more general ingredients list lower in the i'box might sensibly use a bullet list, but it could be CSS kerned to waste less horizontal
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automatically forces a bulleted list for its main-alcohol parameters. Bulleted lists in infoboxes aren't unheard-of, though rare. However, that template forces a bullet even for single entrants, making the oxymoronic single-item list. Given there is no actual list created, should that template be
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You won't get consistency. First, there is no reason to either eliminate or to require them; second, most people simply won't care; and third, the sheer number of pages presently using (i) spaces; (ii) no spaces; (iii) either one indiscriminately means that the amount of work necessary to harmonise
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The outcome is the same, so I am wondering if there is any technical reason who one should be preferred over the other. Frankly, I would prefer to have a set house style and conform pages to it generally. It is annoying to copy lines to multiple relevant lists and to have to edit that space every
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entering its third year, I am exploring the idea of converting the list of topics from a table to a list, because most of the entries do not have a description. I wish to ask what format could I employ, taking into account the use of colons, dashes, and parentheses in the topic names?
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two-thirds of pages to match the other third would simply not be worth the bother. Remember that every edit creates a new version of a page and all old versions are preserved, so editing a 10,000-byte page to remove ten spaces doesn't decrease the database size by 10 bytes, it
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I work on a lot of disambiguation pages and name lists and alumni lists, which sometimes involves copying lines from, for example, a given name page to a surname page, or from a name page to an alumni list. These are typically bulleted lists, which may either be formatted as:
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the same. It is just an aesthetic thing and a kindness to the next editor – having a space after the asterisk helps visually when you are editing the source. Maybe the MOS could say something about that, but I don't see it as being important enough to be stated as policy —
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I just want consistency. If there is no reason to have the spaces, then eliminate them (they do affect the page size, which theoretically affects loading time). If there is a reason to have them, such as improved readability while editing, then require them.
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860:"Is it just to make it easier to parse the wikitext?" Yes. Some editors prefer it, and that's the only reason, but it's not a compelling reason to change the style. "Should we have a preference expressed in the MOS?" No, for
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Many
Knowledge articles have a title that begins with "Comparison of ...". Is there a Knowledge policy or guideline that specifically discusses such comparison articles? I hoped to find such a discussion when I went to
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I'm fine with having the space if someone can explain to me what purpose it serves. Is it just to make it easier to parse the wikitext? Should we have a preference expressed in the MOS?
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Yeah, I agree that looks odd. I'd say it should just be a plain wikilink in such a case, not a list. But ultimately you'll have to discuss that with the template authors.
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Eventually, it will get mostly standardized as whatever the visual editor is doing, which is (presently, but, if memory serves, not originally) adding a space.
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So I've just done a rudimentary bit of brainstorming, and I quickly realized this is a really easy—seemingly not previously addressed—itch to scratch. Behold,
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There are nonzero infobox situations where I'd just like to separate a bulleted list with headers thusly, even after slimming it down as appropriate. Unno.
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it by 9990 bytes for the page text, plus all the entries in the revision and link tables. Any intended net saving of space is always a net loss of space.
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1250:'s description of name-value or topic-value pairs, but I will defer to the experts here. The editor appears to have made hundreds of these edits. –
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reasons, and more in particular because people have repeatedly proposed this and several other forms of "coding standards" (like
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Thanks for the responses. I searched the MOS:PSEUDOHEAD page for "semicolon", which I should have done earlier, and I found
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The parser does not care about the space – you could have no space or five spaces and the HTML created by the parser is
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is certainly right that the old syntax they are fixing is not proper deflist syntax and likely produces invalid HTML.
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Knowledge talk:WikiProject Lists § Should
Template:Dynamic list be used in sections that also have Template:Main?
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Knowledge talk:WikiProject Lists § Should
Template:Dynamic list be used in sections that also have Template:Main?
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of
Knowledge's policy and guideline documents is available, offering valuable insights and recommendations.
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difference. When you save the edit, as GhostInTheMachine pointed out, the HTML created by the parser is
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What do you mean specifically? Can you point to an usage of the template where this is visible?
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procedure and is given additional attention, as it closely associated to the
English Knowledge
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Who is doing the comparing - you or your sources? If it's you, then you possibly fall foul of
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Every time you use a bulleted list without the space, a fairy dies. Your choice of course —
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guideline (but the same information may be OK as a subsection of the topic article).
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make a difference to the rendered output. But why would we want to do it anyway? --
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guidance on how to contribute to the development and revision of
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It's to make the wikitext more human-readable. The software parser doesn't care.
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Made that recommendation in the template documentation. We'll see if it sticks.
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Alas, I've been unable remember where I read that, hence the original question.
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Conversations about
Important Things#List of Important Conversations lessons
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category, which generally *do* already have sources doing the comparing.
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Right, of course. How is one meant to mix the two again, just open a
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For information on
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To answer your literal question: I'm often editing articles in the
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In that case, just using bold markup around the header line, like
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List of genocides § List ordering: Reverse or regular chronology
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List of genocides § List ordering: Reverse or regular chronology
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Is there perhaps some other
Knowledge policy or guideline that
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the same - here is the HTML from your original two examples:
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This seems like a pretty core use-case of definition lists.
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time to conform to the variations of individual pages.
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Bullet-space, or not bullet-space, that is the question
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Sure, easy-peasy. In the infobox's implementation at
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190:does not require a rating on Knowledge's
386:. If you wish to help, please visit the
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