Jump to content

User:Chriscf

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.


Wikipedia:Babel
enThis user is a native speaker of the English language.
cyMae'r defnyddiwr 'ma yn siaradwr brodorol y Gymraeg.
en-3This user can contribute with an advanced level of English.
cy-3Fe all y defnyddiwr 'ma gyfrannu ar lefel uwchraddol y Gymraeg.
fr-2Cet utilisateur peut contribuer avec un niveau intermédiaire en français.
es-2Este usuario puede contribuir con un nivel intermedio de español.
de-1Dieser Benutzer hat grundlegende Deutschkenntnisse.
it-1Quest'utente può contribuire con un livello semplice di italiano.
ga-1Gaeilge de chaighdeán bunúsach ag an úsáideoir seo.
el-1Αυτός ο χρήστης μπορεί να συνεισφέρει σε βασικού επιπέδου ελληνικά.
sv-1Den här användaren har grundläggande kunskaper i svenska.
C-2This user is an intermediate C programmer.
BASIC-3This user is an advanced BASIC programmer.
SQL-2This user is an intermediate SQL programmer.
This user can program in JavaScript.
perl-0 This person shuns Perl at every opportunity.
PHP-2This user is an intermediate PHP programmer.
for-0 This user is too cool for Fortran programming.
Java-3This user is an advanced Java programmer.
DJ-2This user is an intermediate DJ.
vln-2This user is an intermediate violinist.
pno-3This user is an advanced pianist.
org-1This user is a novice organist.
harm-1This user is a novice harmonica player.
perc-2This user is an intermediate percussionist.
voc-1 Despite posessing perfect pitch, this person cannot sing for toffee.
BSThis user can speak Bullshit.
AmE-0 This person will not stand for American 'English' (common grammatical and spelling errors mistaken for dialect).
This user contributes using Linux.
This user contributes using Firefox.
This user is a mad scientist.
LJ This user believes LiveJournal is inhabited entirely by hormonal teenage girls.
This user has a sense of humour
They may employ such tools as pun, irony or satire without prior warning.

Philosophy

The journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
Generally, I find it useful to make a contribution that, while in itself small, leads to greater things. This includes things like creating substub articles in the knowledge that someone else knows better. Though, in doing this, I am mindful of not taking that first step when it's unlikely to get any further.

Licensing

I believe that multilicensing creates too much work for those intending to use bits of WP at a later date. Rather than making contrived arrangements for people to be able to integrate parts of WP into CC-licensed works, but only when you've cleared every word that you're including to make sure it wasn't added by someone who isn't multilicensing, and that it's also licensed into the particular flavour of CC code that you're using, etc., I am happy for people to use my contributions here under the GFDL, with the usual attributions (i.e. indicating that the page has come from Wikipedia, and including any boilerplate text).

This template appears to be broken when used with the customised Babel, so see {{NoMultiLicense}}.

However, should Wikimedia need to change its license, I will not stand in its way. The single-licence nature of my contributions will make changing to another licence easier, as it willo only require the consideration of one set of contributions under one licence.

Licensing rights granted to Wikimedia Foundation
I grant non-exclusive permission for the Wikimedia Foundation Inc. to relicense my text and media contributions, including any images, audio clips, or video clips, under any copyleft license that it chooses, provided it maintains the free and open spirit of the GFDL. This permission acknowledges that future licensing needs of the Wikimedia projects may need adapting in unforeseen fashions to facilitate other uses, formats, and locations. It is given for as long as this banner remains.


Wikipolitical stance

I am neither inclusionist nor deletionist, preferring instead to be commonsensist.

Inclusionists, when challenging a request for a page to be deleted, posit loose and flimsy reasoning, often with no ground in logic. Inclusionists will often vote keep on a VfD simply to make a point, without giving a solid reason - examples include "it's cool" or "I like them". Therefore hardcore inclusionists are devoid of common sense.

Deletionists often post VfDs for pages which only marginally fail to meet inclusion criteria, often a small enough gap that someone can bring it up to scratch. This is as opposed to those VfDs for articles which blatantly shouldn't be here. They often find the smallest fault in articles and insist they should be deleted. Unlike inclusionists, deletionists do have some common sense - it's just that often they don't realise it.

Then there are the hardcore mergists, whose ultimate goal is to merge and condense all of Wikipedia into a single article, all less than 32kB of course. Unfortunately, there is little room for common sense in this 32k, what with there being more important topics to take into consideration.

As a commonsensist, I stand for the following values:

  • Recognising the existence of bias
  • Wiki is not paper, though we are not unlimited
  • Something that may meet one or two criteria in deletion policy might not actually merit deletion. Similarly, something not meeting individual creiteria in deletion policy does not automatically merit inclusion.
  • Following from the previous point, if something can only pass a given test by relying on a technicality, it has de facto failed that test.

For all the pedants that keep weaseling around things by claiming that their activity is supported or not technically outlawed by Wikipedia policies, I offer this quote: "What is written down on Wikipedia is not the actual policy. It is a codification of the theory of it."

Wiki activity

As well as being a voice of commonsensism on VfD, I have committed random acts of Welsh on location articles, and am slowly on the way with articles covering the area of Cardiff. Fixed some random stuff related to the United Kingdom general election, 2005. Also look out for useful stubs which can be taken further.

Save often

An important principle to remember when making any large edits is to save your work often. There are a number of reasons for this.

  • When adding large amounts of information, if something goes wrong you have less work to do to fix things.
  • In the case of edit conflicts, you need to fiddle with the "stored" version that much less.
  • Increased edit-count is a side-effect. Make of that what you will (beware editcountitis).

Three Conflict Rule

Over the time I've been here, as anyone else who has been here any great length of time, I have experienced edit conflicts regularly. It can be very annoying to have inserted large amounts of text into an article in various points, only to have to reinsert them later. Having done this repeatedly, I have started working to a personal rule of thumb, which I call the "Three Conflict Rule".

In the case of encountering three consecutive edit conflicts on the same page without a successful edit, I will, without examining the changes in the new version, unilaterally replace the stored version with that which I had tried to apply.

The rationale for this is that my time is precious, just like everyone else's. I would rather spend it on adding information to an article, contributing to a discussion, or doing things In Real Life than resolving edit conflicts. So, if having tried to resolve the conflict twice I am presented with a third edit conflict, I will ignore it and insert my version. Someone else (maybe someone who hasn't just had to wade through three edit conflicts) can resolve it.