Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Java/Things you can do/to do: Difference between revisions
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:* d) Furthermore, after that we could put the {{tl|Compu-stub}} tag in all Java-related article pages NOT already quality-rated and ask [[User:TinucherianBot|TinucherianBot]] to auto-assess on the talk pages; that would give us a base Quality rating to start with.<br/>-- [[User:Alainr345|<span style="display:inline-block; position:relative; top:20px;"><font face="Times" color="#4590ff" size="2"><u><i> Alain R 3 4 5 </i></u><br/><font color="#ffb000"><sup>Techno-Wiki-Geek</sup></font></font></span>]] 02:00, 1 December 2009 (UTC)<br/><br/>
::Comment about 5) For me, in creating the Java WikiProject, there was to be a balance between 'bringing focus to the bettering of Java-related content on Wikipedia' AND 'the overhead of maintaining such a project'. The balance I found, apart from bringing up the Java Portal from scratch, was that 1) we would be a descendent project of WikiProject Computing (not a task force) 2) we would have our own 'banner' linking to the Java Project and the Java Portal and 3) we would stick to the WP1.0 stats management (the Quality-by-Importance matrix). Nothing original so far. Then, comes the decision of having, or not having, a specific Importance rating and/or a specific Quality rating (for Java-related articles) by the Java project. I therefore examined several other projects related or not to computing, and saw that they run the whole gamut in between having no specific ratings (for example, the Quebec project VS the Canada project) to having all specific ratings (for example, the Linux project VS the Computing project). I did think having Importance ratings was practical because that's a management issue for prioritizing articles and their rewriting. There remains the infamous Quality ratings. As I understand it, Quality rating is an editorial issue of Wikipedia, and in fact I never saw (so far) 2 projects giving a different Class. When they do, these differences get reconciled through inter-project discussions. By having NO specific 'class' parameter, the Java WikiProject can somewhat shortcut the 'paperwork' as was explained to me by my adopter SriMesh. Also, we
:::I know what you are trying to do and {{tl|WPBannerMeta}} and the WP1.0 stats bot doesn't work like that. {{tl|WikiProject Computing}}'s TF code for {{para|java}} will eventually go away and can't be depended on either (I just added it for transitional purposes since I saw many articles trying to use {{para|java}} with {{tl|WikiProject Computing}}. I've put in the bot request [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:Xenobot_Mk_V/requests&diff=prev&oldid=330740324] to get everything auto-assessed using the existing banners and stub templates. Once that is done we can weed out and re-tag articles that aren't within the project's scope (I noticed a few related to DVD manufacturers for example). After {{cl|Java articles by quality}} is fully populated, [[User:WP 1.0 bot]] will re-generate [[Wikipedia:Version 1.0 Editorial Team/Java articles by quality statistics]]. --[[User:Tothwolf|Tothwolf]] ([[User talk:Tothwolf|talk]]) 22:06, 9 December 2009 (UTC)
::::The thing about project independance is certainly a relevant argument. But I'm not sure you are talking about TF hooks in terms of your own taste or of a WP1.0 policy change... Could you flesh out your idea please. (Note: Auto-assessing before putting the Compu-stub tag in untagged articles only means we'll have to request the bot a second time, but if you like it, why not!)<br/>-- [[User:Alainr345|<span style="display:inline-block; position:relative; top:20px;"><font face="Times" color="#4590ff" size="2"><u><i> Alain R 3 4 5 </i></u><br/><font color="#ffb000"><sup>Techno-Wiki-Geek</sup></font></font></span>]] 22:29, 9 December 2009 (UTC)<br/><br/>
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