Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Tree of Life/Template union proposal

Note: I am working on a few mockups

Could you explain what you want to do in more detail

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Could you clarify what you are attempting to do as I don't quite follow you. Is the purpose to have the extra features which all TOL projects share, such as article assessment and importance, and then each project modifies for their own needs with text and an image, OR is it to only have one banner for all of these different projects? If it is the first where they will all share a common feature base, which each project modifies then I'm for it. If you want to replace all the different projects banners with one banner, then I don't think this is a good idea as I think it will stop people finding out about the various projects, and the projects themselves will loose their sense of community. Could you please expand what you mean. I couldn't quite understand from the examples you gave on the main page. Thanks, Mehmet Karatay 19:50, 6 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

I also would like some clarification. It may be a good idea to clear up talk page clutter (but most of Wikipedia:WikiProject Dinosaurs talk pages are uncluttered already, having never had an edit other than the talk page banner). However, I do worry about:
1. Recruitment. How many people interested in dinosaurs who would join WP:Dinosaurs will even realize there is a WikiProject Dinosaurs based on a "Tree of Life" banner?
2. The loss of the community feel within the WikiProjects. I don't see a whole lot of TOL participation down at the dinosaur level anyway. Firsfron of Ronchester 20:23, 6 June 2007 (UTC)Reply
As it is, it would list any applying subprojects on the template, as is the case for the templates with "workforces". If worse come to worse, people can easily be redirected to the most appropriate subproject from WP:TOL. It's not like WP:TOL doesn't already act as a "hub" for coordination between the subprojects. I do realize that some subprojects are more restricted/specific, but that doesn't seen to be an issue for, say, WikiProject Karnataka. Circeus 20:25, 6 June 2007 (UTC)Reply
Kinda selfish I guess, but I just don't see what this does for WP:DINO except make us less visible. WP:TOL should rightfully be called a "superproject" rather than WP:DINO (or WP:BIRD, WP:BANKSIA, etc.) be called a "subproject" of WP:TOL, I think. With the amount of effort that a half-dozen writers and another half-dozen artists have put into WP:DINO, we certainly don't see ourselves as a subproject. Certainly dinosaurs are a part of the Tree of Life, but we haven't received a huge amount of help from WP:TOL, to be honest. Sheep81 05:45, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply
I feel bad for saying this (because obviously a lot of thought, planning, and work has gone into this proposal), but I agree with Sheep. We never thought of ourselves as a "subproject", and we've worked a lot harder than several other full-fledged WikiProjects with a lot more members. I'm so proud of the work we've accomplished, with no more than six writers and four artists. There has been support from a few TOL people, but for the most part, we've been on our own. The banner we recently designed is so small on the prototype that you can't even see the picture on it clearly (it shows five dinosaurs, but you can't tell that now; they just look like four tiny splotches). And now we've become a sub-project of the Reptiles and Amphibians sub-project. I'll leave aside the observation that Reptilia is paraphyletic. Firsfron of Ronchester 06:20, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply
I agree. I'm not sure what combinig all these projects into one will accomplish. I rarely, if ever, see participants in other TOL projects working on WP:DINO, and I have to say I hardly ever contribute significantly to "sub-projects" i'm not a member of because they're outside my area of interest/expertise. I don't think combinging the projects will change this, so, I'm not clear on what you hope to accomplish. Dinoguy2 06:42, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply
To clarify, I didn't mean to imply that we have received NO help from WP:TOL. That is certainly not the case. I also did not mean to downplay the contributions of some of the less active editors who have toiled on our Project. However, it is not inaccurate to say that the vast majority of the massive amount of work has been done by only a handful of editors. We are very proud of our self-sufficiency, perseverance and independence, and to call WP:DINO a "subproject" and stick us at the very bottom of some other Project's banner is kind of insulting. I'm sure other Projects feel similarly even if they don't whine as much. :) Sheep81 07:28, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

Wow, Circeus, you've been busy! Excellent job, here. I had been wondering if that was possible, but I'm a template novice. I set up both WP:CPS and WP:PLANTS assessment/project templates. I haven't taken a look at the template script, but a few questions:

  1. Do we maintain the "needs-taxobox" and "needs-photo" etc. parameters for each WikiProject so that the categories remain project-specific? (Something like "plants-needs-taxobox=yes"?)
  2. How about logistically replacing existing templates? I've been trying to think of a way to allow BotanyBot to do it with AWB, but for the life of me with all the complicated changes, I don't think AWB will cut it. Can someone with a bot weigh in on how easy it would be to change these templates out?

If we can figure out those, I'd definitely support the simplification/unification. Oh, and one suggestion. I've noticed a lot of WikiProjects use "'''''{{PAGENAME}}''''' is within the scope of..." instead of the simple "This article..." since some of these templates invariably are applied to many non-article pages. Not a big issue, but a style I prefer. Cheers, --Rkitko (talk) 00:52, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

A good idea, but it would be nice if it reduced work for taggers. If the lowest major taxon info can be extracted from the taxobox on the article page instead of having to enter arthropod =yes insect=no etc. it would be idea. This may perhaps not be technically feasible, and in that case only the lowest taxon name and its taxon rank (class,family...) should be required rather than a series of yes, no entries. The project names should be internally picked based on the taxon provided. Shyamal 02:16, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply
I believe the default setting is "no" for the WikiProjects that support it. For example, I would only have to answer "yes" to "carnivorous plants" and "plants" for one of WP:CPS's articles. I wouldn't have to worry about answering "no" to the other parameters. And I don't think there's any way to extract information from the taxoboxes, especially since not all articles within our projects have or need taxoboxes. And some projects transcend taxonomic boundaries. I agree it's good to reduce complexity and I think Circeus has done the best job in doing so. Uniting all these templates will eventually reduce the amount of work and complexity. See the mockups that are provided for examples on the use of the template. Best, --Rkitko (talk) 05:23, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply
I agree with Sheep totally. We've worked darn hard to get to the place we're in. And not only do you want to make us almost invisible in what's already a project that needs new writers, but you have the ignorance to place us a subdivision of Reptiles?! Everyone knows that dinosaurs are catagorically not reptiles & I'm insulted by the insinuation. You cite the Military history template as an example of this new proposal working. Being a friend of Kirill Lokshin, the manager of that project, it'd be safe to say I'd know the difference between the two. Firstly, the Military History project was set up waay before it's various offshoots - many of the project under TOL have been active for years. Secondly, Military History has task forces, which were made specifically for the purpose of this kind of proposal - this proposal decrees that full fledged wikiprojects suddenly close shop & hide themselves. Now, a better idea would be to create a bunch of task forces (Possibly for the 5 Kingdoms; Plant, Animal, Fungi, Monera & Protista) & put them in place of the wikiprojects on this new template. Then, from those task forces, link to the main wikiprojects (IE, Task force animals could link to a number of wikiprojects such as Dinosaurs, Reptiles, Mammals etc etc). That way, real wikiprojects would still have their banners & rights, whilst TOL would still have a kind of unifying feature to it. Anyway, my vote is to not go through with this current proposal. Cheers, Spawn Man 12:18, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

article importance

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Would article importance be included in the new template? I can see this generating problems - For example, chitin might be of low importance to TOL generally, but of high importance to the insect WikiProject. Debivort 03:35, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

Yes, in the mockups that Circeus created, you can see that there are multiple parameters for importance (i.e. "importance=Low" for TOL and then "plants-importance=Mid" and perhaps "carnivorous-plants-importance=High"). It's something we use now in WP:BANKSIA and WP:CPS, which are subprojects of WP:PLANTS. We've been using such a system for a few months now and Circeus incorporated it into this template as well. Cheers, --Rkitko (talk) 05:17, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply
Importance, and the portals, are behind the "drop box", but they are there. Circeus 13:00, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

What if

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I think this solution while becoming standard across many projects is a worthy ideal. I wonder whether the nesting is in the wrong direction,

example say WP:Banksia Instead to the main WP tag being TOL The main tag should be WP Banksia with a reverse tree of Plants, then TOL. That indicates that WP:Banksia is the subjects focus project and that plants, and TOL are broader scope projects that support the subject area. Gnangarra 06:24, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

This, I think, is a better way to go about it. Dinoguy2 06:45, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply
Yes! That way, if a user is really excited about Banksia, they know to go first to WP:BANKSIA, and that the other projects are there for support. Sheep81 07:08, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply
I suppose we could build a supertemplate like this that would prioritize projects. A parameter would tell it to use WP:BANKSIA's template design/look, so that the template would look like the BANKSIA template, but would still be the supertemplate. Something like {{Tree of Life|project=Banksia|Australian-biota=yes|plants=yes|class=....}} and so on. That way it would still be incorporated in the supertemplate, but maintain the feel of the individual projects and avoid the problem stated above about community. It is able to be done that way. Thoughts? --Rkitko (talk) 07:24, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply
Sounds very promising! I think we'd like to see a mockup though. Most of us are not template gurus, sadly. Sheep81 07:29, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply
I very much like this idea, especially the thought of TOL being mentioned in each template, but the template being unique for each project. If it's feasible using one super template to save on work, then so much better! Mehmet Karatay 07:40, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply
instead of super templates getting over complex, I would have thought that the {{WP Banksia}} could just be modified to included the Plants, TOL tag lines and populate the plants. tol categories. This would also alleviate the need for a mass template replacement and allow for expansion into other non-tol projects like WP Australia.. Gnangarra 07:40, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply
True, {{WP Banksia}} already includes assessment information for WP:PLANTS, as does {{Carnivorous Plants}}, but the point of this endeavor, I think, is to compile all TOL projects into one template so that updates, if ever needed, can be done across the board. That may have some advantages and disadvantages. Another important aspect of it is that not all subproject articles will always be part of its parent projects. Perhaps it's more straightforward in WP:BANKSIA, but in WP:CPS, we have at least one article within the scope that is not a plant (Pameridea), so the super template could include parameters that would indicate that WP:CPS supports that article, though the ultimate project would be WP:ARTH. I know WP:BANKSIA has Dryandra Moth within its project's scope, but that is also not a plant. That's where the super template would be useful. --Rkitko (talk) 08:12, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply
As a side note, Pameridea is a prime example of inconsistent assessment. For a far more egregious one, see Talk:Dryococelus australis. Circeus 21:01, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

Example mockup

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Perhaps, for, say... Pinguicula moranensis.

{{Tree of Life
|project=carnivorous-plants
|class=FA
|tree-of-life=yes
|plants=yes
|carnivorous-plants-importance=Mid
|plants-importance=Low
|TOL-importance=Low
}}
 
Pinguicula moranensis is within the scope of WikiProject Carnivorous plants, an attempt to better organise information in articles related to carnivorous plants. For more information, visit the project page.
  FA This article has been rated as FA-Class on the quality scale.
 
This article is supported by WikiProject Plants.
 
This article is supported by WikiProject Tree of Life.
Categories involved

How about that? I was thinking, WP:BANKSIA may not be the best example for a framework, since it's at such a unique intersection of the TOL WikiProject hierarchy as well as the Australian WikiProjects. It's going to need two templates on the talk pages anyway for the Australian projects. But let's not forget it when we're discussing here. The above example for carnivorous plants works well. And indeed if the example grew in one of those countries that have a project "biota" parameter, that could be included as well. Is this kind of what you were thinking of? --Rkitko (talk) 07:59, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

Personally I think that is a LOT better. It shows where you can find the editors most likely to work on an article, and where you can go for supplementary support. Basically it is just an expanded WP: Carnivorous Plants banner. And all we would have to type would be the bit in the nowiki box once the template is made, right? Sheep81 08:12, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply
Right, unless you wanted to add additional parameters, such as the ones that WP:PLANTS uses, like "attention=yes", "needs-photo=yes", and "needs-taxobox=yes" (corresponding to Category:Plant articles needing attention, Category:Plant articles needing photos, and Category:Plant articles needing taxoboxes, respectively. These parameters could be expanded/collapsed to fit the super template so that a carnivorous plant article that needs a taxobox would be put in only the non-existent (as of now) Category:Carnivorous plant articles needing taxoboxes, which would be a subcat of Category:Plant articles needing taxoboxes so that we avoid overcategorization.) --Rkitko (talk) 08:22, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

Bottom up

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I mentioned this to Circeus, but I now think I should have mentioned it here too. I've already had this discussion on unifying project banners with respect to a different WikiProject, and have come to quite strongly oppose the idea of top-down unification, for the following reasons:

  1. The main purpose of the (visible part of the) banner is to advertise the project. The banner should therefore be as specific as possible, because people who visit an article like Stylidium turbinatum are far more likely to respond to an advertisement for WP:CPLANTS than WP:TOL.
  2. Unified templates quickly become a virtually unreadable mess of complicated template esoterica. They offend my instinct for modularity. A case in point: {{WP Australia}} is currently 82 kilobytes long!
  3. The argument that having a single banner for a entire subproject tree reduces banner clutter is incorrect. When an article belongs to multiple subprojects of a single parent project, having a single banner does reduce clutter. But when a subproject belongs to multiple parent projects, having a single banner increases banner clutter. e.g. in this case we would have to replace every WP:BANKSIA template with a WP:TOL header and a WP:AUS header. With this argument set aside, I'm not aware of any cogent argument in favour of a top-down banner system.

A bottom-up system seems to have none of these disadvantages. Hesperian 11:49, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

Actually, the WP:AUS "banner" I'd replace with the australian biota element. Australia is really the exception, not the rule. Although I still think some sets should be incorporated (i.e. mammals and subprojects, Arthropods and subprojects...), I'm having second thoughts, and will try not to argue in one direction or the other too much. Which won't be difficult since I will be away until at least Saturday *sigh*Circeus 13:02, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply
I agree with Hesperian here, again, for the resons they stated. On a side note, I didn't know what these funny looking plants outside my apartment door were called until reading all these examples of Banksia were brouht up, so never let it be said debates about Wikipedia esoterica are not educational ;) Dinoguy2 19:08, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

New proposal or start of additions to current one:

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As I've mentioned above in the first section ("Could you explain what you want to do in more detail"), I have created a possible new suggestion to a way to resolve the problem here. It may not be gold, but feel free to grow on it & add to it. I release my genius into the world. ;) Now, a better idea would be to create a bunch of task forces (Possibly for the 5 Kingdoms; Plant, Animal, Fungi, Monera & Protista - or more specific for the more popular subjects, such as Mammals, Birds, etc & Monera etc. This has been doen with Mil Hist with their topic groupings IE, WW1 task force, French Task force etc) & put them in place of the wikiprojects on this new template. Then, from those task forces, link to the main wikiprojects (IE, Task force animals could link to a number of wikiprojects such as Dinosaurs, Reptiles, Mammals etc etc). That way, real wikiprojects would still have their banners & rights, whilst TOL would still have a kind of unifying feature to it. So say on a single dinosaur article, it would have both the TOL template & the Wikiproject Dinosaur banner below it, & so on for other articles of different subject matter. This would satisfy most people, as it would 1)Leave current projects as is. 2)Give TOL some control & unity.

Another plan would be to link to TOL from each separate banner. EG, The Wikiproject Dinosaur banner would have their text & then attached to it in small writing or something "For an the overall project visit TOL" or soemthing better. Could work, but overall, I say "If it ain't broke, don't fix it." The current system is working for Wikiproject Dinosaurs - the question should be, "Why isn't it working for you?" Instead of trying to mix us up in your inactivity, sort yourself out on your own without making a site-wide shuffle up to initiate your TOL Dictatorship over all biological projects. ;) Anyway, cheers, Spawn Man 12:28, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

Erm.. *Shuffles feet slightly* I see my second proposal is very similar to the one just above 2 sections. Could work, but I think that defeats the original idea of making TOL head & the rest its slaves - now we're making TOL the minimal one & keeping the current projects bigger... Interesting... Reverse psychology maybe? Spawn Man 12:31, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply
Yes, it does subvert the original proposal, but I think it is a better idea for how diverse and separate many of the projects in ToL are. In addition, there are many editors who don't cross into the various species, and only a few who do. It also gives priority to the most specific Wiki Project, which is where potential editors interested in a subject are likely to go. Also, let's face it, not everyone who works in ToL was as taken aback as some of us to see dinos a subset of reptiles--simply because many people who work in taxonomy in one area, don't necessarily know anything about it in another area. I think a little template decluttering, that also shows users related areas, while highlighting the most specific is a good idea. What is the source research for the ToL logo, as I like it, and would like it to be used for the ToL template, but don't see the source research?
Also, let's get the taxonomy of related projects from the projects themselves as the people on Wikipedia most likely to be in the know, but I think this is a detail to be worked out later. In the meantime, we should remove dinos from reptiles and amphibians, if it hasn't been. A couple of the wiki projects have small and limited groups of editors, so these projects should be approached directly for discussion, if they have not already been, rather than waiting for a response from a ToL posting, this includes birds and cetaceans.
I think it's a good idea standardizing the appearance and size of the template, putting the most specific one, and including a link to ToL, and the major subcategory of ToL when there is one.
I don't think there's actually any attempt to make ToL dictatorship over all biological projects, as it's simply too complex, and too unknown. I think also there are only a couple of editors who look at biology from a ToL perspective anyhow, or a higher level of taxonomies, myself and Wereo, who's so enamored of the microscopic that dinos need never fear him. I have worked a bit in dinosaurs and think ya'll are just amazing--you have done a fabulous job at getting really excellent articles in your areas on Wikipedia. KP Botany 19:02, 5 August 2007 (UTC)Reply