Hello, Arccosecant, and welcome to Wikipedia! Thank you for your contributions. I hope you like the place and decide to stay. Here are a few links to pages you might find helpful:
You may also want to complete the Wikipedia Adventure, an interactive tour that will help you learn the basics of editing Wikipedia. You can visit the Teahouse to ask questions or seek help.
I just took a look at your contributions, and I see that you spend a lot of time and effort toward reverting vandalism and cleaning up disruption on Wikipedia. I'm leaving you this barnstar to express my sincere and upmost appreciation for your excellent work, as it's the very least I could do in order to try and thank you. Reverting vandalism and disruption is a very thankless task to take on. Most editors who try to get into reverting disruption don't end up doing so for very long. They find that they can't handle the frequent insults, threats, and abuse that come their way as a result... You gotta have very thick skin at times, and you can't let any kind of jabs that are thrown at you get underneath it. This is why I appreciate your time and dedication toward removing vandalism so much. Keep up the great work, and if you continue to make good reverts, warn users for their disruption, and report repeat offenders - in a few months, I'll make you a rollbacker. Keep in touch, and please don't hesitate to reach out to me if you need any input, advice, or coaching with vandalism cleanup - and I'll be happy to help you. I've been patrolling recent changes on Wikipedia for over 9 years, so I can definitely help you if you need it. ;-) ~Oshwah~(talk)(contribs)21:45, 20 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
Hello! Voting in the 2020 Arbitration Committee elections is now open until 23:59 (UTC) on Monday, 7 December 2020. All eligible users are allowed to vote. Users with alternate accounts may only vote once.
The Arbitration Committee is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the Wikipedia arbitration process. It has the authority to impose binding solutions to disputes between editors, primarily for serious conduct disputes the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the authority to impose site bans, topic bans, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The arbitration policy describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail.
@3MohammedYasir12: I reverted your edits because they violated Wikipedia's Neutral Point of View guidelines. On Wikipedia, we write our articles using a neutral point of view, where we state facts about the person rather than praising or criticizing them. I'd encourage you to read over the linked policy, and then to redo your edits. Additionally, you should sign your comments by appending a space and then 4 tilde "~" characters to the end, which helps us know who made a comment. Welcome to Wikipedia by the way, and I hope you have a good time. — csc-115:19, 11 February 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Hi. Thank you for your recent edits. An automated process has detected that when you recently edited 1880 South Carolina gubernatorial election, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page Johnson Hagood. Such links are usually incorrect, since a disambiguation page is merely a list of unrelated topics with similar titles. (Read the FAQ • Join us at the DPL WikiProject.)
Regarding removal of edits, You claimed that "While not the main subject, the information is still relevant, and should not be removed." Additionally, you stated that "please do not remove hatnotes without good reason, as they are intended to point to other related subjects."
In regards to first point, it appears to me that this article focuses extremely heavily on the Jewish-christian messianic relationship. It appears that this extreme focus should be toned down.
With regard to 2nd revert, can you undo that because worked a bit on some changes. Will on my part undo that terminology from G-d to God. Please let me know when you do. Yaakov Wa. (talk) 21:19, 19 February 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Hi Arccosecant. After reviewing your request for "rollbacker", I have enabled rollback on your account. Keep in mind these things when going to use rollback:
Getting rollback is no more momentous than installing Twinkle.
If you no longer want rollback, contact me and I'll remove it. Also, for some more information on how to use rollback, see Wikipedia:Administrators' guide/Rollback (even though you're not an admin). I'm sure you'll do great with rollback, but feel free to leave me a message on my talk page if you run into troubles or have any questions about appropriate/inappropriate use of rollback. Thank you for helping to reduce vandalism. Happy editing! — Newslingertalk20:34, 21 February 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Hello. Your account has been granted the "pending changes reviewer" userright, allowing you to review other users' edits on pages protected by pending changes. The list of articles awaiting review is located at Special:PendingChanges, while the list of articles that have pending changes protection turned on is located at Special:StablePages.
Being granted reviewer rights neither grants you status nor changes how you can edit articles. If you do not want this user right, you may ask any administrator to remove it for you at any time.
Hi Arccosecant, let's do a one-month trial. Please review the relevant pages (listed above) and follow the instructions to the best of your ability while reviewing pending changes at Special:PendingChanges over the course of the next month. When the permission is about to expire, please submit a new request to have the permission instated permanently upon review. — Newslingertalk20:36, 21 February 2021 (UTC)[reply]
@174.49.170.94: Thank you for providing a source, though I will note that here at Wikipedia, a news article about the construction might be more appropriate. Feel free to reinstate your edits with the provided source. Also, on talk pages, you should sign your edits like this: "~~~~", and you shouldn't edit your old comments. Welcome to Wikipedia by the way, and if you plan to stick around, I'd suggest creating an account. — csc-105:28, 22 February 2021 (UTC)[reply]
I recently came across the message:
"
Hello, I'm Arccosecant. I noticed that you added or changed content in an article, Lake Wobegon, but you didn't provide a reliable source. It's been removed and archived in the page history for now, but if you'd like to include a citation and re-add it, please do so. You can have a look at the tutorial on citing sources. If you think I made a mistake, you can leave me a message on my talk page.
"
I am hereby leaving a message on your talk page. Your account correctly identified my edition included no citation; your account, however, identified incorrectly that such edition was adding new citable information. Please notify a reasoning human to read the archive and correct the mistake. Thanks.
And hello; greetings are cool. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 191.9.232.66 (talk) 05:18, 22 February 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Greetings, fellow human. The claim that {"the 'Lake Wobegon effect' only existed in 'western language societies'" was in the edited text} was an understandable interpretation. The text of my edition was accompanied by the explanation "Corrected prejudiced bias of over generalization from limited sample. More details of reasoning and references of evidence may be added." The change was made from a strong-belief claim (a species) to a more modest one (an ill-defined population). It happened amidst liberal (personal) research while reading a review of "The Geography of Thought" (by Richard Nisbett), in which a passage discussed it's views in relation to those of "WEIRDest People" (by Joseph Henrich). I didn't back up the more modest interpretation with sources for the available sources were (already) enough: more enough to the modest claim than to the grandiose one I corrected. My claim (in text) was not "exclusivity of smaller population instead of larger" as interpreted, but rather "data generalizable to smaller population rather of larger". No new source for there was no new data, nor quotation. More discussion on the matter may yet happen, but the already mentioned data do not support the stronger claim. That's why I edited it. Please revert the reversion. More info may even be added, if it seemed like the writing needed improvement. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 191.9.232.66 (talk) 07:25, 22 February 2021 (UTC)[reply]
The part where it says 50% Hanafi, 20% Sufism, 20% Wahhabism is misleading. Because most Sufis in China adhere to Hanafi jurisprudence, Sufism are not a jurisprudence. So it's wrong to separate Hanafi from Sufism. Think of Sufism as a dimension of Islam. For example, there's around 90 million members of Nahdlatul Ulama in Indonesia, that's around half of the Muslim population in Indonesia, but the catch is, Nahdlatul follows the Shafi'i jurisprudence but they're also Sufi orient.
Secondly, no Hui Muslims identify themselves as Wahhabi, so I removed 20% Wahhabism. Even the Saudis don't identify themselves as Wahhabi, it is actually blasphemous term to use because it is one of Allah's 99 names. It means the 'The Absolute Bestower'. You may say 'but it is named after a person'. But he was named Abd-Al-Wahhab which means servant of the absolute bestower.
There's a fundamentalist form of Islam in China that is equivalent to Wahhabism called Yihewani, but they adhere to Hanafi jurisprudence aswell.
So yeah, again. Sorry for not explaining it. So in conclusion Hui Muslims are predominantly Sunni who mostly follows Hanafi jurisprudence. This is the most accurate. — Preceding unsigned comment added by OghuzDynasty (talk • contribs) 01:56, 5 March 2021 (UTC)[reply]
@OghuzDynasty: Thanks for the explanation, and please remember to sign your posts. Please also note that using edit descriptions can help avoid situations like this, you're generally encouraged to always use them. — csc-101:59, 5 March 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Hello. I recently reverted an edit you accepted on the entry of Dog Day Afternoon. The reason is that I opened a request for comment on the talk page of the article about the very issue of the use of pronouns for that particular character. The article was protected to avoid the constant reversion of said pronouns. Now, I wanted to ask you if there is any sort of template only visible in the editing area to make the editors/the edit reviewers aware of the ongoing discussion on the talk page (somehow people seem to be more interested in arbitrarily changing the information rather than discussing our options). Thanks in advance.--GDuwenHoller!19:24, 12 March 2021 (UTC)[reply]
@GDuwen: I'd recommend asking for the page to be re-protected with a log entry explicitly mentioning the pronouns, since that shows up on the review interface, and potentially requesting an editnotice regarding the discussion. — csc-119:54, 12 March 2021 (UTC)[reply]
large deletion of criticism from Guardian Council article
Hello and apologies, I am new to wikipedia in fact just having created an account to send this message. I noted that there was a large deletion from the article on the Guardian Council - specifically the section entitled "Criticism", with no cause given - and you were the last person to have edited it before the deletion. I was tempted to try to reinstate the removed material but not knowing how to do so properly, I do not want to risk causing any mess in the article. Perhaps you could take a look at it?
Thank you,
Uhnyt Eiolog (talk) 01:22, 15 March 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for your attention to this page. You may be interested in my opinion that the latest edit that you reverted appeared to be either a copyright violation of some sort or plagiarism in addition to other reasons for previous reverts by you and me. This is because there are footnote numbers but no corresponding footnotes. For what it's worth. Donner60 (talk) 02:32, 28 March 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Hello. This is a message to let you know that one or more of your recent contributions did not appear constructive and has been reverted. Please take some time to familiarise yourself with our policies and guidelines. You can find information about these at our welcome page which also provides further information about contributing constructively to this encyclopedia. If you only meant to make test edits, please use your sandbox for that. If you think I made a mistake, or if you have any questions, you may leave a message on my talk page. Was funny the first few times, but please refrain from messing with AfD any further. Wouldn't want a WP:BEANS incident. —moonythedwarf (Braden N.) 02:14, 1 April 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Generally, there is no reason to report usernames with no edits whatsoever. Per WP:UAAI: "Wait until the user edits. Do not report a user that hasn't edited unless they are clearly a vandal. We do not want to welcome productive editors with a report at UAA, nor do we want to waste our time dealing with accounts that may never be used." The exceptions are obvious hate speech or names that attack a living person/Wikipedia editor, those are blockable even without any edits, but other run-of-the-mill violations such as names of organizations or products need not be reported unless and until they at least attempt to edit, and you should be able to clearly explain what the problem is if it is not immediately evident.
For whatever reason, every day dozens, if not hundreds of accounts are created that never make one single edit. It is our responsibility as admins to conscientiously review every report a user makes at UAA, so we have to check for contribs, deleted contribs, and tripping of the edit filter for every one of these reports, only to find out there's nothing there and therefore no problem to be solved. That's time that could be spent doing more productive things, but you basically obligate admins to do it by making such reports. Beeblebrox (talk) 01:24, 9 April 2021 (UTC)[reply]
That's what I get for not actually scrolling down like a sane person would do. I thought it was just a revert, indeed it may be a bug. My bad. I'll go make some coffee then talk to the Twinkle folks. Beeblebrox (talk) 20:16, 9 April 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Actually I think I see why it did that, it put it under the "April 2021" section header, trying to group warnings together. Useful when talking to a vandal or something, otherwise, not so much. Beeblebrox (talk) 20:20, 9 April 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Bashkortostan is among the early autonomous national republics of modern Russia. The autonomy of Bashkortostan (Bashkurdistan in that date) was proclaimed on November 15, 1917. The Agreement of the Central Soviet Power with the Bashkir Government on the Soviet Autonomous Bashkiria of March 20, 1919, regularized the foundation of Bashkir Soviet Republic. According to the Decree of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of June 14, 1922, Bashkortostan became the Autonomous Bashkir Socialist Soviet Republic. In the 2nd half of the 1920s Bashkortostan became the Bashkir Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. According to the Declaration of State Sovereignty of October 11, 1990, Bashkortostan became Bashkir Soviet Socialist Republic and since February 25, 1992, has the current name.[3]109.187.81.78 (talk) 02:10, 27 April 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Feedback request: Politics, government, and law request for comment
Hello, Chrs. Please check your email; you've got mail! It may take a few minutes from the time the email is sent for it to show up in your inbox. You can remove this notice at any time by removing the {{You've got mail}} or {{ygm}} template.
Ok cool, I was unclear that it may have been an attempted block evasion from someone here. The edits to your talk have been reverted and the block reinstated for another month. Thanks Scott Thomson (Faendalimas) talk19:26, 22 May 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Hi Arccosecant, I noticed your reversion of [edit], because I have just reverted a very similar change on the same page. But I wonder if there is any consensus about UK nationality - should English/Welsh/Scottish nationality be rolled up into UK nationality? Here in NZ, we don't have such problems :) Kiwipete (talk) 05:32, 23 May 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Do you feel that Blue's Clues is looking to indoctrinate children or is drag queen propaganda? That the new Cruella film could ruin a childhood with a "flamboyant gay character?"
If you disagree with those 3 statements undo your deletions. All I wrote is he writes inflammatory comments, and is Anti LGBTQIA. He does, and proudly is.
FoldArchives collapses archived talk page threads in order to reduce screen space
GoToTitle converts the page title into an input field for navigating to other pages
UserHighlighter adds highlighting to links to the userpages, talk pages, and contributions of administrators and other user groups as well as tooltips to indicate which groups a user is in
filterDiff: Adds a "Show changes" button to the filter editor.
filterNotes: Parses filter notes as wikitext (so links are clickable), and signs and dates new comments for you.
filterTest: Adds a "Test changes" button. Opens Special:AbuseFilter/test with what's currently in the edit form, not with what's saved in the database, so you don't have to copy-paste your changes.
Twinkle has a number of improvements, including that most watchlist defaults now make use of the new temporary watchlist feature. Other changes include rollbacks treating consecutive IPv6 editors in the same /64 range as the same user, adding a preview for shared IP tagging, a preference for watching users after CSD notification, and for sysops, the ability to block the /64 and link to a WP:RfPP request, and new copyright blocks default to indefinite.
Wikipedia:Shortdesc helper now v3.4.17, changes include minor fixes and preventing edits that don't change the description.
Joeytje50's JWB now version 4.1.0, includes the ability to generate page lists from the search tool, major updates to the handling of regular expressions, the storing of user settings, the addition of upload protection, and an option to skip pages that belong to a specific category, among other changes. See User:Joeytje50/JWB/Changelog for a full list of recent changes.
Wikipedia:User scripts/List has been revamped to make it easier to find scripts suited for your needs. If you know of a cool script that is missing on the list, or a script on the list that is no longer working, please edit the list or let us know on the talk page.
My apologies for this long-overdue issue, and if I missed any scripts. Hopefully going forward we can go back to monthly releases - any help would be appreciated. Thanks, --DannyS712 (talk) 13:04, 2 June 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Hi Arccosecant. Thank you for watching for vandalism on Draft:Phil De Luna. There seems to be a single anonymous editor that's been after it since it was created.
I was wondering if you know much about the AfC process and if there are admins who will look at listed drafts after they've been polished? The wait times are quite intimidating! Greenbound (talk) 01:19, 6 June 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Hello! Voting in the 2021 Arbitration Committee elections is now open until 23:59 (UTC) on Monday, 6 December 2021. All eligible users are allowed to vote. Users with alternate accounts may only vote once.
The Arbitration Committee is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the Wikipedia arbitration process. It has the authority to impose binding solutions to disputes between editors, primarily for serious conduct disputes the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the authority to impose site bans, topic bans, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The arbitration policy describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail.
Hello everyone, and welcome to the 22nd issue of the Wikipedia Scripts++ Newsletter. This issue will be covering new and updated user scripts from the past seven months (June through December 2021).
Got anything good? Tell us about your new, improved, old, or messed-up script here!
Featured script
LuckyRename, by Alexis Jazz, is this month's featured script. LuckyRename makes requesting file moves easier, and automates the many steps in file moving (including automatic replacement of existing usage). Give it a shot!
Updated scripts
SD0001: hide-reverted-edits has been updated to take into account changes in reversion tools like Twinkle and RedWarn.
ClaudineChionh: SkinSwitcher (a fork and update of Eizen's script) provides an options menu/toolbox/toolbar allowing users to view a given page in MediaWiki's default skins.
Wikipedia:User scripts/Ranking is a sortable table of Wikipedia's thousand-or-so most commonly used scripts; it includes their author, last modification date, installation count, and sometimes a short description.
Toolhub is a community managed catalog of software tools used in the Wikimedia movement. Technical volunteers can use Toolhub to document the tools that they create or maintain. All Wikimedians can use Toolhub to search for tools to help with their workflows and to create lists of useful tools to share with others.
draft-sorter sorts AfC drafts by adding WikiProject banners to their talk pages. It supersedes User:Enterprisey/draft-sorter, adding a few features and fixing some bugs.
BooksToSfn adds a portlet link in Visual Editor's source mode editing, in main namespace articles or in the user's Sandbox. When clicked, it converts one {{cite book}} inside a <ref>...</ref> tag block into an {{Sfn}}.
diffedit enables editing directly from viewing a diff "when, for instance, you notice a tiny mistake deep into an article, and don't want to edit the entire article and re-find that one line to fix that tiny mistake".
warnOnLargeFile warns you if you're about to open a very large file (width/height >10,000px or file size >100 MB) from a file page.
QuickDiff (by OneTwoThreeFall at Fandom) lets you quickly view any diff link on a wiki, whether on Recent Changes, contribs pages, history pages, the diff view itself, or elsewhere. For more information, view its page on Fandom.
talkback creates links after user talk page links like this: |C|TB (with the first linking to the user's contributions, and the latter giving the option of sending a {{talkback}} notice). It also adds a [copy] link next to section headers.
diff-link shows "copy" links on history and contributions pages that copy an internal link to the diff (e.g., Special:Diff/1026402230) to your clipboard when clicked.
auto-watchlist-expiry automatically watchlists every page you edit for a user-definable duration (you can still pick a different time using the dropdown, though).
generate pings generates the wikitext needed to ping all members of a category, up to 50 editors (the limit defined by MediaWiki).
share ExpandTemplates url allows for easy sharing of your inputs to Special:ExpandTemplates. It adds a button that, when clicked, copies a shareable URL to your exact invocation of the page, like this. Other editors do not need to have this script installed in order to access the URL generated.
show tag names shows the real names of tags next to their display names in places such as page revision histories or the watchlist.
ColourContrib color-codes the user contributions page so that pages you've edited last are sharply distinguished from pages where another editor was the last to edit the page.
All in all, some very neat scripts were written in these last few months. Hoping to see many more in the next issue -- drop us a line on the talk page if you've been writing (or seeing) anything cool and good. Filling in for DannyS712, this has been jp×g. Take care, and merry Christmas! jp×g07:30, 24 December 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Don't worry about restoring block notices - users are permitted to remove them as they wish. Declined unblock requests are a different matter - they have to stay, but if a blocked user wants to lose the block notice, that's up to them. Best GirthSummit (blether)00:52, 16 February 2022 (UTC)[reply]
I know what you mean! My general rule of thumb is just to let blocked users blank their talk pages, or even vent, unless they cross certain lines: I see pinging as harassment; hate speech of any kind is unacceptable in any context; and policy prohibits the removal of declined unblock notices. Other than that, I'm happy to let a blocked troll to remove my block notice, or even to call me an asshole if they want - reverting them kind of gives them the satisfaction of letting them know I've read what they wrote, if you know what I mean. The spirit of WP:RBI and WP:DENY is basically 'ignore them and they're more likely to go away'; I agree with that sentiment. Cheers GirthSummit (blether)19:23, 16 February 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Hello! Voting in the 2022 Arbitration Committee elections is now open until 23:59 (UTC) on Monday, 12 December 2022. All eligible users are allowed to vote. Users with alternate accounts may only vote once.
The Arbitration Committee is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the Wikipedia arbitration process. It has the authority to impose binding solutions to disputes between editors, primarily for serious conduct disputes the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the authority to impose site bans, topic bans, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The arbitration policy describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail.
Hi Chrs! You're receiving this notification because you were previously subscribed to the Feedback Request Service, but you haven't made any edits to the English Wikipedia in over six months.
In order to declutter the Feedback Request Service list, and to produce a greater chance of active users being randomly selected to receive invitations to contribute, you've been unsubscribed, along with all other users who have made no edits in six months.
You do not need to do anything about this - if you are happy to not receive Feedback Request Service messages, thank you very much for your contributions in the past, and this will be the last you hear from the service. If, however, you would like to resubscribe yourself, you can follow the below instructions to do so:
Decide which categories are of interest to you, under the RfC and/or GA headings.
Paste {{Frs user|Chrs|limit}} underneath the relevant heading(s), where limit is the maximum number of requests you wish to receive for that category per month.
Publish the page.
If you've just come back after a wikibreak and are seeing this message, welcome back! You can follow the above instructions to re-activate your subscription. Likewise, if this is an alternate account, please consider subscribing your main account in much the same way.
Note that if you had a rename and left your old name subscribed to the FRS, you may be receiving this message on your new username's talk page still. If so, make sure your new account name is subscribed to the FRS, using the same procedure mentioned above.
Hey, it's probably you and I that are edit conflicting each other on the 2023 speakers page. I've got the PBS feed up in my office, but if you've got a faster stream or internet connection, that's totally fine. Bkissin (talk) 18:04, 6 January 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Hello! Voting in the 2023 Arbitration Committee elections is now open until 23:59 (UTC) on Monday, 11 December 2023. All eligible users are allowed to vote. Users with alternate accounts may only vote once.
The Arbitration Committee is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the Wikipedia arbitration process. It has the authority to impose binding solutions to disputes between editors, primarily for serious conduct disputes the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the authority to impose site bans, topic bans, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The arbitration policy describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail.
New year, new scripts. Welcome to the 23rd issue of the Wikipedia Scripts++ Newsletter, covering around 39% of our favorite new and updated user scripts since 24 December 2021. That’s right, we haven’t published in two years! Can you believe it? Did you miss us?
Got anything good? Tell us about your new, improved, old, or messed-up script here!
User:Alexander Davronov/HistoryHelper has now become stable with some bugfixes and features such as automatically highlighting potentially uncivil edit summaries and automatically pinging all the users selected.
To a lesser extent, the same goes for User:PrimeHunter/Search sort.js. I wish someone would integrate the sorts into the sort menu instead of adding 11 portlet links.
Aaron Liu: Watchlyst Greybar Unsin is a rewrite of Ais's Watchlist Notifier with modern APIs and several new features such as not displaying watchlist items marked as seen (hence the name), not bolding diffs of unseen watchlist elements which doesn’t work properly anyways, displaying the rendered edit summary, proper display of log and creation actions and more links.
Alexis Jazz: Factotum is a spiritual successor to reply-link with a host of extra features like section adding, link rewriting, regular expressions and more.
User:Aveaoz/AutoMobileRedirect: This script will automatically redirect MobileFrontend (en.m.wikipedia) to normal Wikipedia. Unlike existing scripts, this one will actually check if your browser is mobile or not through its secret agent string, so you can stay logged in on mobile! Hooray screen estate!
Deputy is a first-of-its-kind copyright cleanup toolkit. It overrides the interface for Wikipedia:Contributor copyright investigations for easy case processing. It also includes the functionality of the following (also new) scripts:
User:Elominius/gadget/diff arrow keys allows navigation between diffs with the arrow keys. It also has a version that requires holding Ctrl with the arrow key.
Frequently link to Wikipedia on your websites yet find generating CC-BY credits to be such a hassle? Say no more! User:Luke10.27/attribute will automatically do it for ya and copy the credit to yer clipboard.
User:MPGuy2824/MoveToDraft, a spiritual successor (i.e. fork) to Evad37's script, with a few bugs solved, and a host of extra features like check-boxes for choosing draftification reasons, multi-contributor notification, and appropriate warnings based on last edit time.
/CopyCodeBlock: one of the most important operations for any scripter and script-user is to copy and paste. This script adds a copy button in the top right of every code block (not to be confused with <code>) that will, well, copy it to your clipboard!
m:User:NguoiDungKhongDinhDanh/AceForLuaDebugConsole.js adds the Ace editor (a.k.a. the editor you see when editing JS, CSS and Lua on Wikimedia wikis) to the Lua debug console. "In my opinion, whoever designed it to be a plain <textarea> needs to seriously reconsider their decision."
GANReviewTool quickly and easily closes good article nominations.
ReviewStatus displays whether or not a mainspace page is marked as reviewed.
SpeciesHelper tries to add the correct speciesbox, category, taxonbar, and stub template to species articles.
User:Opencooper/svgReplace and Tol's fork replaces all rasterized SVGs with their original SVG codes for your loading pleasures. Tell us which one is better!
ArticleInfo displays page information at the top of the page, directly below the title.
/HeaderIcons takes away the Vector 2022 user dropdown and replaces it with all of the icons within, top level, right next to the Watchlist. One less click away! There's also an alternate version that uses text links instead of icons.
Hello everyone, and welcome to the 24th issue of the Wikipedia Scripts++ Newsletter, covering all our favorite new and updated user scripts since 24 December 2021. Uh-huh, we're finally covering the good ones among the rest! Aren't you excited? Remember to include a link in double brackets to the script's .js page when you install the script, so that we can see who uses the script in WhatLinksHere! The ScriptInstaller gadget automatically does this. Aaron Liu (talk) 01:00, 1 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Got anything good? Tell us about your new, improved, old, or messed-up script here!
Making user scripts load faster by SD0001 is this month's featured script, which caches userscripts every day to eliminate the overhead caused by force-downloading the newest version of scripts every time you open a Wikipedia page. Despite being released in April 2021, our best script scouters have failed to locate it due to its omission from the US of L. For security reasons, the script only supports loading JavaScript pages.
Ahecht has created a fork of SiBr4/TemplateSearch, which adds the "TP:" shortcut for "Template:" in the search box, and updated it to be compatible with Vector 2022.
AquilaFasciata/goToTopFast is a much faster fork of the classic goToTop script that also adds compatibility for Minerva and Vector 2022.
Without caching. Each script takes 400–500ms. A particularly large script takes 1.11 s! Internet download speed is 50 Mbps.With caching enabled. Each script takes just 1-2 ms to load.
To a lesser extent, the same goes for PrimeHunter/Search sort. I wish someone would integrate the sorts into the sort menu instead of adding 11 portlet links.
Dragoniez/SuppressEnterInForm stops you from accidentally submitting anything due to pressing enter while in the smaller box, and works on almost anything... except the InputBox element itself, used in subscription lists and the Signpost Crossword! Oh, the humanity!
Doǵu/Adiutor(pictured) provides a nice, integrated interface to do some twinkley tasks such as copyvio detection, CSD tagging, and viewing the most recent diff.
Eejit43 has quite the aesthetically pleasing scripts, all made in TypeScript.
/afcrc-helper is a replacement for the unmaintained Enterprisey/AFCRHS and processes Redirects for Creation and Categories for Creation requests.
/ajax-undo stops the "undo" button from taking you to another page while providing a text box to provide a reason for the revert.
/redirect-helper(pictured) adds a much better interface for editing and redirects, including categorization, for which valid categories are dictated by /redirect-helper.json.
/rmtr-helper helps process technical requested moves without being able to actually move them.
Guycn2/UserInfoPopup(pictured) adds a flyout after the watchlist star on userspace pages that displays the common information you might use about a user.
Jeeputer/editCounter, under userspace, adds a portlet link to count your edits by namespace, put them in a table, and put that table in a hardcoded subpage, all in the background.
Hilst/Scripts/sectionLinks converts all section links to use the § sign, which are known to be preferred over the ugly # by 99% of the devils I've met.
PrimeHunter/Category source.js adds portlet links to tell you where a category for an article comes from and supports those from template transclusions.
Dragoniez/ToollinkTweaks adds more and customizable links next to users in page history, logs, watchlist, recent changes, etc.
Firefly/more-block-info optimizes the display of rangeblocks in contribution pages. Doesn't work outside the English locale of any wiki, unfortunately.
NguoiDungKhongDinhDanh/AjaxLoader makes paging links (e.g. older 50, 500, newest) load without refreshing and makes you realize how slow your internet actually is.
Ahecht/RedirectID adds the redirect target to all redirects. For all the WP:NAVPOPS haters. (Do these exist?)
Dragoniez/MarkBLockedGlobal: Remember the "strike blocked usernames" gadget? Now you can use a red, dotted line to highlight rangeblocks and global locks!
Jonesey/common(pictured) has some styles to overhaul your Vector 2022 experience. It reduces padding everywhere, and makes the top bar animation faster.
Aaron Liu/V22 is a fork that narrows the sidebars instead of upheaving them, reverts the January 2024 dropdown changes, and restores the old page-link color for links that don't go outside the current wiki.
Nardog: SmartDiff is a spiritual successor to Enterprisey/fancy-diffs. It makes the page title part of links in diffs clickable, along with template and parser function calls. Unnamed parameters can be configured per template to also be linked. All links are styled based on the normal CSS classes of rendered links.
For the paranoid: Rublov/anonymize replaces your username at the top of the screen with the generic "User page" text. Remember, it is your duty to persuade everyone that editing is an honor.
/AjaxBlock provides a dialog box for easy input of reasons while blocking users.
/Selective Rollback(pictured) provides a dialog box to customize rollback edit summaries and does them without reloading the page. Seriously, why doesn't MediaWiki already do this?
/flickrsearch adds a portlet link to search for uploadable flickr images about the subject.
/randomincategory adds a portlet link when on Category pages to go to a random page in the current category.
Vghfr/EasyTemplates adds a portlet link to automatically insert some of the most common inline {{fix}} templates.
Yes, we're just doing 'em as we go now. Thanks for reading through this looong issue, if you did! I'm sure this'll send a record for the longest issue ev-ah. You may need to wait even longer for the last issue, as our reserve of old-y and goodie scripts have ran out... We encourage you to try and do some of the requests or improvement tasks. See you in Summer, hopefully!
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Hey there, welcome to the 25th issue of the Wikipedia Scripts++ Newsletter, covering all our favorite new and updated user scripts since 1 March 2024. We've got a ton of wonderful editors taking back their pitchforks today. Don't worry, for they come in peace, to forcibly fix and extend existing scripts you use with sheer passion. There's so many, them forks have got what's basically their own column now! gift us with some rows before it's too late Aaron Liu (talk) 04:00, 1 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Got anything good? Tell us about your new, improved, old, or messed-up script here!
To a lesser extent, the same goes for PrimeHunter/Search sort. I wish someone would integrate the sorts into the sort menu instead of adding 11 portlet links.
An easily configurable script to add a link to the #p-vector-user-menu-overflow portlet with a name, target, and icon. This one should be a relatively easier one. I would do it myself, but I'm too busy rotting away on Celeste (video game).
After the RIIJ update, Aaron Liu: Watchlyst Greybar Unsin has a dismiss button that allows you to mark an item as read in one click and cycle to the next Watchlist item.
Lordseriouspig/StatusChangerImproved is just like Enterprisey's script, except you select your status from a dropdown instead of cycling through them with a button. The WMF operates out of car-centric infrastructure anyway. Shame!
Aaron Liu has created Duplinks from Evad37/duplinks-alt; his fork adds a config variable to automatically highlight duplicate links on the loading of any page where the portlet link would've appeared.
Tired of staring at a bunch of filtering text and waiting for darn filter logs to load? Msz2001/AbuseFilter analyzer can parse abuse filters into a visual syntax tree and evaluate locally on-demand!
Polygnotus/DuplicateReferences finds references with the same link and displays the number of them along with a button to add the {{duplicated citations}} tag under the references section. Being lazy has never been easier!
fastest gun on the net Ponor/really-quick-block really quick add to contribution lists three buttons awesome
Hello everyone, and welcome to the 26th issue of the Wikipedia Scripts++ Newsletter, covering all our favorite new and updated user scripts since 1 August 2024. At press time, over 94% of the world has legally fallen prey to the merry celebrations of "Christmas", and so shall you soon. It's been a quiet 4 months, and we hope to see you with way more new scripts next year. Happy holidays! Aaron Liu (talk) 05:06, 25 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Got anything good? Tell us about your new, improved, old, or messed-up script here!
Very useful for changelist patrollers, DiffUndo, by Nardog, is this edition's featured script. Taking inspiration from WP:AutoWikiBrowser's double-click-to-undo feature, it adds an undo button to every line of every diff from "show changes", optimizing partial reverts with your favorite magic spell and nearly fulfilling m:Community Wishlist/Wishes/Partial revert undo.
Doğu/Adiutor, a recent WP:Twinkle/WP:RedWarn-like userscript that follows modern WMF UI design, is now an extension. However, its sole maintainer has left the project, which still awaits WMF mw:code stewardship (among some audits) to be installed on your favorite WMF wikis.
DannyS712, our former chief editor, has ascended to MediaWiki and the greener purpley pastures of PHP with commits creating Special:NamespaceInfo and the __EXPECTUNUSEDTEMPLATE__ magic word to exclude a template from Special:UnusedTemplates! I wonder if Wikipedia has a templaters' newsletter...
BilledMammal/Move+ needs updating to order list of pages handle lists of pages to move correctly regardless of the discussion's page, so that we may avoid repeating fiasco history.
Andrybak/Unsigned helper forks Anomie/unsignedhelper to add support for binary search, automatic edit summaries after generating the {{unsigned}} template, support for {{undated}}, and support for generating while syntax highlighting is on.
Polygnotus/Move+ updates BilledMammal's classic Move+ to add automattic watchlisting of all pages—except the target page(s)—changed while processing a move.
Hi, poking you again as I don't have confidence to roll back possible vandalism; a recent deletion ( 04:45, 28 January 2025) on Donald Trump's page removes all mention of Project 2025. Maybe you wouldn't mind taking a look? Thanks for all your work Uhnyt Eiolog (talk) 04:57, 28 January 2025 (UTC)[reply]