From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Useful links

Page history tools

I've noticed page histories tend to get cluttered with minor edits. Has anyone made a keyframe viewer for edit histories? This would identify stable versions of the page that remained unchanged (apart from small edits) for an extended period of time.

  • Manually tagging stable page versions might also work. Is this supported by MediaWiki?
  • Another approach would be to develop a Git-style blame tool for Wikipedia. The standard edit history "blame" tool links Wikiblame and Blame - XTools are certainly useful, allowing text strings to be traced back to their corresponding "keyframe" edits, but don't support Git-style blame, where the aim is to understand the provenance of each part of the page.

Searching https://www.google.com/search?q=github+wikipedia+blame found a few more useful references:

More generally, to find out what's going on with Wikimedia community-driven tech initiatives, see https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Community_Wishlist_Survey and https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Talk:Community_Tech.

And in fact, as of May 2023, WWT is a fantastic resource, and seems to work properly on the vast majority of pages (it stops working 20% of the way through negative binomial distribution, but that's a very long article). It would be nice if it worked on Wikipedia meta-pages ( MOS:MATH, Template:Math). Extending it to wikis for other languages was one of the top-voted proposals in the 2023 Community Wishlist Survey, and is currently being worked on, but wiki meta-pages aren't covered by the current work.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Useful links

Page history tools

I've noticed page histories tend to get cluttered with minor edits. Has anyone made a keyframe viewer for edit histories? This would identify stable versions of the page that remained unchanged (apart from small edits) for an extended period of time.

  • Manually tagging stable page versions might also work. Is this supported by MediaWiki?
  • Another approach would be to develop a Git-style blame tool for Wikipedia. The standard edit history "blame" tool links Wikiblame and Blame - XTools are certainly useful, allowing text strings to be traced back to their corresponding "keyframe" edits, but don't support Git-style blame, where the aim is to understand the provenance of each part of the page.

Searching https://www.google.com/search?q=github+wikipedia+blame found a few more useful references:

More generally, to find out what's going on with Wikimedia community-driven tech initiatives, see https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Community_Wishlist_Survey and https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Talk:Community_Tech.

And in fact, as of May 2023, WWT is a fantastic resource, and seems to work properly on the vast majority of pages (it stops working 20% of the way through negative binomial distribution, but that's a very long article). It would be nice if it worked on Wikipedia meta-pages ( MOS:MATH, Template:Math). Extending it to wikis for other languages was one of the top-voted proposals in the 2023 Community Wishlist Survey, and is currently being worked on, but wiki meta-pages aren't covered by the current work.


Videos

Youtube | Vimeo | Bing

Websites

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Encyclopedia

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Facebook