Difference between revisions of "QBWiki:Style Guide"
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::*Other activities whose seasons span multiple calendar years use agreed-upon single-year conventions for simplicity's sake. For example, the NFL season that began in September 2019 and concluded with the Super Bowl in February 2020 is called the "2019 NFL season," and a player who retired in that year is said to have played "through 2019" even if they participated in games in January 2020. The team that is playing in the NBA Finals this week against Milwaukee is the "2021 Phoenix Suns" even though their regular season started in December 2020. | ::*Other activities whose seasons span multiple calendar years use agreed-upon single-year conventions for simplicity's sake. For example, the NFL season that began in September 2019 and concluded with the Super Bowl in February 2020 is called the "2019 NFL season," and a player who retired in that year is said to have played "through 2019" even if they participated in games in January 2020. The team that is playing in the NBA Finals this week against Milwaukee is the "2021 Phoenix Suns" even though their regular season started in December 2020. | ||
::*Because this was a site convention in the past, many page titles and text references follow it already, most notably the various pages for things like "2019 Stanford" and most of the choices about which "players active in..." categories to use. It's more realistic to get people to use the existing plurality convention in the future than to expect anyone to actually go back and change thousands of references to the new style, and we should try to keep things consistent. [[User:Matt Weiner|Matt Weiner]] ([[User talk:Matt Weiner|talk]]) 12:06, 4 July 2021 (CDT) | ::*Because this was a site convention in the past, many page titles and text references follow it already, most notably the various pages for things like "2019 Stanford" and most of the choices about which "players active in..." categories to use. It's more realistic to get people to use the existing plurality convention in the future than to expect anyone to actually go back and change thousands of references to the new style, and we should try to keep things consistent. [[User:Matt Weiner|Matt Weiner]] ([[User talk:Matt Weiner|talk]]) 12:06, 4 July 2021 (CDT) | ||
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+ | :::I don't feel strongly about any of this, and I might not grok all the places it's relevant, but I think I like maximum explicitude, for example, "2004–2005 through 2007–2008" to indicate the years I was in high school. Regarding the naming of pages for team-years/program-years like "2019 Stanford", I think those pages usually focus on the results at national championships (which took place in the latter year), so those more or less work as-is. [[User:Jonah Greenthal|Jonah]] ([[User talk:Jonah Greenthal|talk]]) 18:26, 4 July 2021 (CDT) |
Revision as of 17:26, 4 July 2021
General
Both [[square braces]] and '''triple quotes''' work to bold the subject of a page - though some older pages use square braces, triple quotes is likely simpler.
Categories should appear at the bottom of the page. The c template is a shorthand for writing categories.
Player pages
Infobox
In general, most players should have infoboxes (opt-out). The ib template provides a convenient shorthand.
Years active
Players should have all their years active at a given institution listed in their infobox. This should include all years the player was active - for instance, if a player played for their school from the fall of 2018 to the spring of 2021, their infobox should say (2018-2021).
The "(highschool/middleschool) Player active in (year)" categories should be used as well. The year specified by this template is the end of the competition year, so the "Player active in 2014" categories indicates that a player was active in the 2013-2014 competition year. This distinction is outlined in each of the category pages.
The active, activehs, and activems templates are useful shorthands.
- The "2016 means 2015-2016 academic year" convention was definitely a formal rule on the wiki at some point, though it appears not to have survived one of the site transitions. I'm not married to it and if the final decision is to go the other way, that's what I'll use, but the older way seems to make sense for a few reasons and I'd like to have at least some discussion before everyone starts changing things to the new format:
- Academic years are what we care about because that is what quizbowl, an activity dependent on high school and college enrollment, is based on. The fact that someone was in school and played in 2015-2016 is important for establishing that person's timeframe; whether they played any tournaments in the calendar months of fall 2015 specifically is not, and finding this information in order to report dates accurately may be difficult or impossible for some people whose years of participation are otherwise known.
- In line with the above, reporting that, e.g., someone who played exclusively fall tournaments in the 2017-2018 academic year ended their career in "2017" creates an ambiguous situation as to which and how many academic years they played in, which again seems to be the thing we actually care about in recording these years at all.
- Other activities whose seasons span multiple calendar years use agreed-upon single-year conventions for simplicity's sake. For example, the NFL season that began in September 2019 and concluded with the Super Bowl in February 2020 is called the "2019 NFL season," and a player who retired in that year is said to have played "through 2019" even if they participated in games in January 2020. The team that is playing in the NBA Finals this week against Milwaukee is the "2021 Phoenix Suns" even though their regular season started in December 2020.
- Because this was a site convention in the past, many page titles and text references follow it already, most notably the various pages for things like "2019 Stanford" and most of the choices about which "players active in..." categories to use. It's more realistic to get people to use the existing plurality convention in the future than to expect anyone to actually go back and change thousands of references to the new style, and we should try to keep things consistent. Matt Weiner (talk) 12:06, 4 July 2021 (CDT)
- Academic years are what we care about because that is what quizbowl, an activity dependent on high school and college enrollment, is based on. The fact that someone was in school and played in 2015-2016 is important for establishing that person's timeframe; whether they played any tournaments in the calendar months of fall 2015 specifically is not, and finding this information in order to report dates accurately may be difficult or impossible for some people whose years of participation are otherwise known.
- The "2016 means 2015-2016 academic year" convention was definitely a formal rule on the wiki at some point, though it appears not to have survived one of the site transitions. I'm not married to it and if the final decision is to go the other way, that's what I'll use, but the older way seems to make sense for a few reasons and I'd like to have at least some discussion before everyone starts changing things to the new format:
- I don't feel strongly about any of this, and I might not grok all the places it's relevant, but I think I like maximum explicitude, for example, "2004–2005 through 2007–2008" to indicate the years I was in high school. Regarding the naming of pages for team-years/program-years like "2019 Stanford", I think those pages usually focus on the results at national championships (which took place in the latter year), so those more or less work as-is. Jonah (talk) 18:26, 4 July 2021 (CDT)