Talk:Naming conventions

From Geohashing
Revision as of 21:08, 28 February 2012 by imported>Sandman (File names?)

Discussion

I would like to move a few pages around, to make them adhere to some simple to remember naming conventions. The following therefore is a suggestion, please feel free to discuss, add and comment. When there is enough of a consensus, ReletBot could do the dirty work. -- relet 15:35, 3 April 2009 (UTC)

I support both. I would have argued for book title capitalization, but the Wikipedia standard is reluctantly acceptable to me.

I also suggest avoiding words in page titles that have variant english spellings (e.g. ize/ise, our/or, and the doubled l in participles). So use "Travel" instead of "Travelling," for example. -Robyn 17:05, 3 April 2009 (UTC)

More support for the whole thing. That capitalization chaos is currently the worst thing about categori(z/s)ing. --Ekorren 21:22, 3 April 2009 (UTC)

You should think about changing the page templates provided in the help section to follow these conventions. For example, right now the category all new graticule pages are put in is "Inactive Graticules", if the template is used. --Meghan 15:22, 5 April 2009 (UTC)

Ah, thanks! Can I have a link please? :) I've changed it on Template:Expedition, but I didn't know the graticule template. -- relet 17:17, 5 April 2009 (UTC)
Creating a Graticule Page -Meghan 14:26, 6 April 2009 (UTC)

I have moved all achievement pages now that are listed in the appropriate categories. I know that I missed some - in that case please fix the categories, too. -- relet 18:51, 5 April 2009 (UTC)

While you're at it, the Gratuitous ribbon achievement probably shouldn't have "ahievement" in its category name. Suggest an alternative? -Robyn 18:44, 6 April 2009 (UTC)

Simply "gratuitous ribbon award"? -- Benjw 19:26, 6 April 2009 (UTC)

Georgia who?

Proposed on #geohashing: Would anyone object to adding United States or Canada to the appropriate pages and producing redirects from the current pages? This would make those page names longer, but would make them more similar to the graticule names of other pages. Note that just naming it City, United States or City, Canada won't work due to name collisions with popular place names. E.g. Portland, Oregon and Portland, Maine --aperfectring 23:40, 18 May 2009 (UTC)

I wouldn't vote for it. But if:
  • people legitimately want it because it's causing confusion or breaking programs or something, and
  • the reletbot doesn't start creating pages with default links including the country name
then I would reluctantly assent. But why? Couldn't you just create redirects from the super-long versions instead of saddling us with ridiculously long graticule names? It's bad enough typing [[Vancouver, British Columbia]] all the time without having to tack on Canada every time I make a link. I suppose it's all the fault of whoever it was who translated «Грузия» as "Georgia." Or of whoever named a state after an existing country without tacking on "New." Say, maybe we can get the Georgia, USA legislature to change the name of their state.
I vote for no changes unless there is a compelling reason to change the status quo, that can't be rectified by having disambiguations on just the two Georgias. Consistency for consistency's sake is not the best solution here. -Robyn 02:23, 19 May 2009 (UTC)
Oppose. I really like the "two-name" grat naming standard -- it gives you some information about the whereabouts (geographic or political) of the place without trying to stuff everything into the title. That's what the categories are for. And after all, the actual coordinates are only a click away. --starbird 03:35, 19 May 2009 (UTC)

File names?

There is definitely a naming convention for expedition pages, and there seems to be one fairly well in use for image files; it might be worth putting them here for new users to see. Or would there be a better place for it? -- Rhonda 16:12, 17 June 2009 (UTC)

I don't think that we need a full on naming convention for images, just having a "Many people have found this to work quite well" type of thing is probably best. I don't think most people know that a naming convention page even exists. I know I didn't for the longest time. If we do anything (whether it be suggestion, convention, or something else entirely), it should probably be in a place more public than this. --aperfectring 16:42, 17 June 2009 (UTC)
Actually, I do think we need a naming convention, for two reasons:
  • the category galleries, which are alphabetically sorted. If the pictures are named YYYY-MM-DD LAT LON Whatever, they actually sort nicely in, with the newest pictures at the end of the gallery, instead of some arbitrary place in the middle.
  • lower risk of namespace clashes (provided that many people seem to ignore warnings by default without even reading them)
This page is one place where the convention should be mentioned, probably not the only one.
--Ekorren 16:49, 17 June 2009 (UTC)
I agree with your point on the galleries, but that naming convention should only be placed on images for expeditions. Other images should have a different naming convention, which describes where they are used.
On ignoring warnings by default, that is a very bad practice which we should discourage. People likely got into that habit due to the image size limit, which is no longer in place. Now warnings should only appear when it is actually important. This is a user discipline issue, not solely a naming convention issue. Even with the naming convention most of us use, the "whatever" could easily collide (I usually just use an incrementing number), keeping this as something which needs to be addressed.
Lastly, I didn't mean to imply that it shouldn't appear here, because it should. I just meant that it also needs to be someplace more people will see it. --aperfectring 17:20, 17 June 2009 (UTC)
Ignoring warnings is probably a holdover from using Windows. I hear that it's even worse with Vista, that there are warnings for everything. I'm really not surprised that most people ignore warnings.
Putting a note about common practise for image naming on the upload form might help. -- Rhonda 18:00, 17 June 2009 (UTC)

I'm new to this and have just tried to rename some graticules in the Outer Hebrides, UK (renamed North Uist as South Uist; 59, -6 as Sula Sgeir; and 59, -5 as North Rona). I hope I've done this correctly and have renamed on the all graticules page too, but am unsure whether this is sufficient for it to be automatically updated elsewhere.... - please advise if I'm doing it wrong Sandman

I haven't run the automatic updater in a while, but I will try and look into that tomorrow! We haven't had any new graticule names for a good while. Cheers, -- relet 10:00, 28 February 2012 (EST)
Have also added Rockall to Atlantic Ocean (small rock between UK, Faroes and Iceland) - there was not a page for the graticule, but I added it to the all graticule oceans region category page Sandman