7 September 2006
The Working Man's Barnstar | ||
For updating all those references in the table at National Popular Vote Interstate Compact. Bravo! |
Publisher and accessdate are helpful and should be added, but I chose not to let that concern me too much in terms of a review. I have reviewed and passed this article as a GA. All of the issues from the first GAN have been addressed, and I can find only very minor issues to bring up - which I did on the talk page. Congrats, and keep up the good work! Reso lute 19:16, 17 July 2008 (UTC)
Hello KarlFrei! Thanks for your contributions to the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact page. I'm involved with a group NPVgrassroots.org, which is working to encourage the passage of the Pact, and we have found your page very useful. I'm interested in tracking key opponents of the bill in states where it's in play, and the NPVIC page is very helpful. Atmur01 ( talk) 22:50, 20 May 2017 (UTC)
You provided a fractional argument as an explicit counterexample to the Mertens conjecture (which the article previously said was unknown). What does such an argument mean? -- Tardis ( talk) 18:54, 8 April 2012 (UTC)
You are completely right, I misread the paper. What the authors actually use is a function h(y,T) which is guaranteed to be in the range of m(n) (to be precise, within lim inf m(n) and lim sup m(n)). Moreover, any value h(y,T) is known to be approximated arbitrarily closely and infinitely often by m(n). The argument I gave above for m is actually the argument y for h(y,T), and there is no explicit relationship to any specific n. I rewrote the article. Thanks! KarlFrei ( talk) 11:33, 10 April 2012 (UTC)
I don't know about the text file, but one easier way would be to group all the squares that make up each state. They were grouped at one point, and I ungrouped them so I could rearrange everything to make the whole thing more geographically accurate. Tweaking the shape of a discrete cartogram is actually a very addicting game... » Swpb τ • ¢ 04:54, 15 June 2012 (UTC)
hi.
so, you removed "scale per group" from the body of the documentation, as a piss-ant way to hide a bug. TBH, i don't like it - did you verify that this mode is never used? what happens with all the "dead code" that handles scale-per-group? i did not see this removed from the code itself.
true, this "scale-per-group" mode is not widely used, and not all other graphing tools support it (some do - i did not invent it on a complete whim).
but regardless of me not liking it, the more important thing is that you left scale-per-group in the documentation: you did remove the section with the example, but this parameter still exists in the table at the top of the doc, so at best, your change is only half baked. Module:Chart/doc#Scale per group is confusing and misleading - there is a sentence about this being removed, immediately followed by an example that has nothing to do with scale per group, with strange phrasing.
Also: currently, there are small number of articles that use chart with "scale per group": Economy of Iran, Pennsylvanian (train), and Empire Builder. something should be done for those articles - the last change to Module:Chart borked the charts in all three.
so, IMO, "someone" should do one of the following:
it would also be nice to leave some explanation in the talkpage: this module has some 45 interwikis, and since i wrote the initial version on enwiki, it's a fair assumption that some of them may update the code from enwiki - it's important to notify those other maintainers when a breaking change happens.
peace - קיפודנחש (aka kipod) ( talk) 22:44, 18 February 2020 (UTC)
Template:Dutch Senate elections has been nominated for merging with Template:Dutch elections. You are invited to comment on the discussion at the template's entry on the Templates for discussion page. Thank you. Julio974◆ ( Talk- Contribs) 18:55, 15 March 2022 (UTC)
7 September 2006
The Working Man's Barnstar | ||
For updating all those references in the table at National Popular Vote Interstate Compact. Bravo! |
Publisher and accessdate are helpful and should be added, but I chose not to let that concern me too much in terms of a review. I have reviewed and passed this article as a GA. All of the issues from the first GAN have been addressed, and I can find only very minor issues to bring up - which I did on the talk page. Congrats, and keep up the good work! Reso lute 19:16, 17 July 2008 (UTC)
Hello KarlFrei! Thanks for your contributions to the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact page. I'm involved with a group NPVgrassroots.org, which is working to encourage the passage of the Pact, and we have found your page very useful. I'm interested in tracking key opponents of the bill in states where it's in play, and the NPVIC page is very helpful. Atmur01 ( talk) 22:50, 20 May 2017 (UTC)
You provided a fractional argument as an explicit counterexample to the Mertens conjecture (which the article previously said was unknown). What does such an argument mean? -- Tardis ( talk) 18:54, 8 April 2012 (UTC)
You are completely right, I misread the paper. What the authors actually use is a function h(y,T) which is guaranteed to be in the range of m(n) (to be precise, within lim inf m(n) and lim sup m(n)). Moreover, any value h(y,T) is known to be approximated arbitrarily closely and infinitely often by m(n). The argument I gave above for m is actually the argument y for h(y,T), and there is no explicit relationship to any specific n. I rewrote the article. Thanks! KarlFrei ( talk) 11:33, 10 April 2012 (UTC)
I don't know about the text file, but one easier way would be to group all the squares that make up each state. They were grouped at one point, and I ungrouped them so I could rearrange everything to make the whole thing more geographically accurate. Tweaking the shape of a discrete cartogram is actually a very addicting game... » Swpb τ • ¢ 04:54, 15 June 2012 (UTC)
hi.
so, you removed "scale per group" from the body of the documentation, as a piss-ant way to hide a bug. TBH, i don't like it - did you verify that this mode is never used? what happens with all the "dead code" that handles scale-per-group? i did not see this removed from the code itself.
true, this "scale-per-group" mode is not widely used, and not all other graphing tools support it (some do - i did not invent it on a complete whim).
but regardless of me not liking it, the more important thing is that you left scale-per-group in the documentation: you did remove the section with the example, but this parameter still exists in the table at the top of the doc, so at best, your change is only half baked. Module:Chart/doc#Scale per group is confusing and misleading - there is a sentence about this being removed, immediately followed by an example that has nothing to do with scale per group, with strange phrasing.
Also: currently, there are small number of articles that use chart with "scale per group": Economy of Iran, Pennsylvanian (train), and Empire Builder. something should be done for those articles - the last change to Module:Chart borked the charts in all three.
so, IMO, "someone" should do one of the following:
it would also be nice to leave some explanation in the talkpage: this module has some 45 interwikis, and since i wrote the initial version on enwiki, it's a fair assumption that some of them may update the code from enwiki - it's important to notify those other maintainers when a breaking change happens.
peace - קיפודנחש (aka kipod) ( talk) 22:44, 18 February 2020 (UTC)
Template:Dutch Senate elections has been nominated for merging with Template:Dutch elections. You are invited to comment on the discussion at the template's entry on the Templates for discussion page. Thank you. Julio974◆ ( Talk- Contribs) 18:55, 15 March 2022 (UTC)