BattleTechWiki talk:Project Characters

Revision as of 15:12, 26 August 2008 by Revanche (talk | contribs) (→‎References: initial)

I've noticed that the fictional people aren't currently categorized as "PeopleFictional", but rather just as "People'. It appears that the real people (Weisman, Keith, et al) are being categorized as "PeopleReal". Do we want to migrate all of the "People" to "PeopleFictional"? If so, I'll do that shortly. Bdevoe 12:01, 19 September 2007 (CDT)

This has already been discussed, albeit briefly, at BattleTechWiki:Administrators#Category:People. Scaletail 15:43, 19 September 2007 (CDT)
We should probably change the Project to be "People" and not "PeopleFictional" then. Bdevoe 16:54, 19 September 2007 (CDT)

People & Minor Characters

I didn't think to bring this up here until after I had started it, but I've created a category called Minor Characters, defined as those who have supporting or lesser roles in the BattleTech universe. I've linked to it (and back again) in the People category.

Question: might this be a good time to re-name the People Category to "Major Characters"? --Revanche (talk|contribs) 13:54, 15 August 2008 (CDT)

I created lists instead of leaving individual articles intact. Do you want to reopen the discussion of how to handle minor characters, Revanche, so that we have one, uniform way of handling them; or are you seeing them as a little more than one-line blurbs, but not quite as much as we might expect for a full article? --Scaletail 10:31, 16 August 2008 (CDT)
I'm not ready to take a stand on what (officially) defines a Major or Minor Character. As Justice Potter famously stated about obscenities: "...I know it when I see it...," and generally I read what we have about a person and decide if they were a one-shot (or similar) character, that will probably not recur or is probably not well known by either BT fans nor other in-universe fans. The way I envision it is: if they make a movie about the story that concerns this character, would the actor get any billing on the movie poster? As far as stub articles go: no, that doesn't figure into my reasoning. If someone started a stub-article on Victor Steiner-Davion, Stefan Amaris or even Natasha Kerensky, I'd still recognize that they are major characters (with currently minor articles).
Scaletail, I vaguely recall a discussion on lists versus articles (for minor characters). I personally would prefer articles on everyone, but I acknowledge that sometimes that would just not make sense. For example, in my impending article on the Brotherhood of Randis, I would like to link to each member ever identified in source material. However, as the writeups for many of those minor characters would be summed up as, "He died on Antallos, defending the Brotherhood's efforts to unearth a Star League cache," I can see why someone would much prefer seeing all names together and no such write-up being necessary. Sorry, I ramble. Is there a policy on this, yet? Or are we free to do both methods? --Revanche (talk|contribs) 21:35, 16 August 2008 (CDT)
I enshrined it at Policy:Notability, but there's nothing stopping anybody from reopening the discussion. --Scaletail 07:21, 17 August 2008 (CDT)
(took my discussion there) --Revanche (talk|contribs) 10:10, 17 August 2008 (CDT)
Scaletail, as to Major Characters: if we assume that Minor Character articles are not forbidden (and should be removed), how do you feel about re-naming the Peoples category to Major Characters? I'd be glad to change the individual articles, if you agree. --Revanche (talk|contribs) 10:10, 17 August 2008 (CDT)
It works for me since it will be much better. If we do that, then we also need to fix the sidebar. Since we will have no less than three categories for people (fictional or real), maybe we should switch that out to a short article that explains the system? --Scaletail 14:26, 17 August 2008 (CDT)
I can definitely do that, and thanks for reminding me of the Sidebar. To give this some time to percolate (as I believe Frabby may have some issues with the concept of dual (fictional character) categories), however, I'll be sure to add a note to the current fictional categories, bringing Users' attention to the real people category, as well. --Revanche (talk|contribs) 21:10, 17 August 2008 (CDT)
I've made some additons to the project page, in accordance with the recently passed proposal on additional character categories. --Revanche (talk|contribs) 11:29, 26 August 2008 (CDT)

Standards for Character Articles

A proposal was made and passed regarding developing standards for character articles, to include deltion in certain cases. The consensus was that the Project Biographies team would helm this process. Details:

Consensus: Proposal passes with the following directions:
  • The BattleTechWiki:Project Biographies team discuss and institute guidance as to what qualifies as an acceptable character article, to include formatting, referencing, categorization, dates and whatever other standards the team feels appropriate, with an emphasis on requiring references.
  • Character articles that do not meet these standards are to be flagged for either a) improvement or b) deletion.
  • Currently, character articles can only be deleted if the subject character cannot be verified by source.
  • Character articles that are flagged for deletion have a minimum period of time (advertised in the tag) that must be allowed before the deletion can occur.
  • The Editor assuming responsibility for the deletion of a character article will also assume responsibility for adding that character to the appropriate minor characters list (if the deletion occurred for a reason other than verifiability of the character's existance).
  • The standards developed by the Bios team, after an undetermined test period within the team's scope of articles, will become a basis for use throughout BTW.

This is a big project. Based on the above directives, I propose breaking this guidance project down into several categories for discussion, discussing the merits of each, instead of a broader picture. I'll take the liberty of creating those areas of discussion now.

Formatting

I define formatting as to what sections are included in an article. The basis I'm using right now (pre-discussion) is that an article has the following:

  • image - if one is not available, then no allowance should be made for it on the page ; a size standard needs to be set
  • intro - one to three lines to include:
    • summarizing why this person is notable (not to BTW, but who they are in the 'verse).
    • the character's name bolded
    • life dates immediately following the name. Formats would be in years only (if dates are known, they should be in the history section) and in the following styles: (b. 3009 - d. 3071) and (b. ? - d. ?).
  • History - with child-sections breaking up the person's life into eras, if an appropriate amount of data is available on the character
  • Personal Description - more than just a physical description, this can describe people's perceptions, the character's attitude or habits, hobbies, equipment, etc. Basically anything known that rounds out the character but doesn't fit into the History section.
  • Source Analysis - this would be an optional section. It can be used to describe the validity of a in-universe source (such as doubtful or debatable information from another shady character (such as Starling), an intentionally shady source product (i.e., Interstellar Players) or even something that may fall outside the official CBT canon, but is still from a licensed source (such as from Ronin! (Scenario pack)) or the animated television show). This section can be done from a analyst's perspective (ather than a biographer's), with acknowledgement that some data might be doubtful. It is not to become a discussion area, but refined on the talk page (if necessary). In otherwords, it speaks from one voice.
  • Notes - for anything either that doesn't fit into the History or Personal Description sections, or the adding Editor is unsure of how to add. If the latter case, following edits should be made to incorporate the material into appropriate sections. There should be no Trivia section; Notes is the closest that should come to this concept, but should itself be minimalized.
  • See Also - this section provides links to other articles that are major sources of further information. The section should not be a repeat of every wikilink already evident in the article.
  • References - should be included in every article, to prime the need for references. More details below, but the tag <references/> should be added immedately under the section title.
  • Categories - also discussed below.

Anyhow...that's what I see as necessary for formatting. Anything that I'm missing, or that needs to be included or debated? --Revanche (talk|contribs) 13:07, 26 August 2008 (CDT)

References

Thare are two ways we can expect to see references handled in a character article:

  1. the first is where an Editor just adds the book title (hopefully wikified) to the References section. This is fine for acceptance (of a new article), because at least the character's existance is easily verifiable. However it should be 'enhanced' with a bit more helpful data from a more experienced Editor...
  2. This method uses the <ref></ref> tags, so that the information appears under the References section.

The second method is the 'proper method' for referencing that material. However, it needs a bit more refinement than that.

  • Placing the references at the end of paragraphs, rather than in the paragraph. In my explorations in properly referencing material, I've found that references within the paragraph lead to a disjointed appearance within the paragraph and (sometimes) the need to replicate the same reference twice or more. I propose that the references all appear at the end of the paragraph. If the source is properly annotated, then anyone seeking to find the data in the source will only have to look thru the references listed at the paragraph and will find it within mere minutes of accumulating the source materials.
  • Every paragraph, with the possible exception of the intro, needs to have references following it. The reason for this is now all the data within that paragraph now has a clear source(s).
  • Use the Ref Name method when using a reference more than once. Scaletail taught me this method (guidance located here). In summary, when you have the same page of a book (as an example) being used more than once in the article, use <ref name=xxx></ref> for the first use of the reference, where xxx is any name you want. Thereafter, just use <ref name=xxx/> (note the / addition to close it out) at subsequent paragraphs. The advantages in this are twofold: it makes it easier than having to type out the whole reference again and it clears up the reference section, as the reference is listed only once, even if used numerous times.
  • Reference format: this one may actually be the area that involves the most discussion, as preferred methods may differ. For the recent articles I've been working on, I use the following format:
source name (wikilinked & italicized), page number, section title.
ex: The Fall of Terra (scenariobook), pp 7, "Gathering Storm".
Unlike other more literary sites, we generally have good documentation on publisher, date of printing, etc., on the source article to which the ref is linked. So, I propose just identifying the source material, give the page name and where on the page it can be found. A minimalist approach, I believe. If a section (in the source material) spans multiple pages, then give the range of pages (ex: pp 7-10). I believe this approach gives more than just the exact passage needed; it also provides the context from which the article is derived.--Revanche (talk|contribs) 14:12, 26 August 2008 (CDT)

Categories

Dates

Deletion Requirements

Tag Development