Talk pages consultation 2019/Individual feedback

This is a page for all wiki contributors to add your perspectives and ideas to the Talk pages consultation 2019. The goal of the consultation is to identify a general product direction for improvements to the communication tools on wiki by the end of June. (For more information, see the TPC main page.)

When we say "talk pages," we mean all the on-wiki forms of communication. This could mean any of the talk namespaces, a project page, a subpage, a sandbox, or any other page. It includes all the tools or systems you use on the wiki: wikitext talk pages, Structured Discussions (Flow), LiquidThreads, user scripts, gadgets, WikiLove messages, pings, notifications, etc.

Please explain your needs in as much detail as you can.

Feel free to respond to other people on this page, if you'd like; we'd like to get as much information as we can. If you have questions or thoughts about the consultation process, please tell us. You can write on the consultation main talk page, or ping DannyH and Trizek. Thanks!

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When you want to talk on-wiki, what tools work for you, and what problems block you? Why?

 * As an experienced admin I'm fine, but even so, the constant need to use (numerous, convoluted) templates with detailed "what to do" directions, on each of multiple pages just to notify multiple users/talk pages/project pages, or in processes such as AFD/RFC/DRV/ANI/..., is a massively time consuming annoyance. Can this be ripped out and replaced with some kind of automated editor-process handler which defines the inputs needed, and stipulates in machine-usable logical steps, where these inputs should be posted on-site, and using what templates? So you can select an arbitrary wiki-process or template, and internal code in the template or page lists any required/optional inputs +validation, and what templates+content should be posted above/below which anchors on which pages as a result. So you can just pick a template, a form pops up, you fill in some text fields and validation + all edits for that process are posted automagically. That would be huge.  (Extra thoughts: We already have if-then-else and other statements as part of the parser. The validation/process handling code for a template would be held with the templates or on relevant project pages, in special &lt;process> ... &lt;/process> tags that render as a link+optional text to start the process, and creatable/updateable as templates and processes change, using ordinary editing, like any other template edits. WORKED EXAMPLE FOR AFD: the inputs could be one or more article/s to AFD, the AFD reason, type of AFD, a list of users/pages[+sections] to notify, and an optional user message or blank for the default notification wording. After entering these on a single page form, the inputs are used to test input validity, create the AFD for the article/s, list them at the AFD summary page, and notify users/pages, adapting its postings for repeat AFDs after testing whether an AFD already exists for the page.) 
 * If I were a less experienced user, I'd hate adding to talk pages. I'd like to see a hybrid system whereby discussion remains on talk pages as usual, but there's the additional ability (if desired) to read and add to it using ordinary chat systems somehow bridged to Mediawiki, and not just plain mediawiki editing. Perhaps talk pages and their sections can have links next to them "open for replying in a chat client" (or "add new section in a chat client")?  (On the possible objection that it implies social chatter, Stack Exchange's website chat system shows that if designed well, a tight focus can be achieved on topic. Anyway, we want user engagement so perhaps facilitating easy reader engagement may facilitate?) 
 * Those would be my two choices. Thank you! FT2 (Talk 11:21, 4 April 2019 (UTC)
 * StructuredDiscussions can be annoying due to reduced control when (re)editing.--Flugaal (talk) 11:36, 4 April 2019 (UTC)
 * What blocks me is if the interface gets in the way. Please do not remove the ability to enter text in a plain text editor with zero bells and whistles. Being forced to use an "visual editor" would considerably reduce my enjoyment and usefulness. The format of MediaWiki talk pages is horrendously ineffective. I don't mind you making things easier for newbs, as long as you offer a way to completely opt out of it all. CapnZapp (talk) 11:48, 4 April 2019 (UTC)
 * Support - I'm still using markup editing + MonoBook for that reason - used to it, quicker, less browser hassle, works well, compact, more control. FT2 (Talk 11:56, 4 April 2019 (UTC)



How do new users on your wiki use talk pages, and what problems do they run into?

 * Many new users fail to correctly make new sections for new discussions. Perhaps some scroll to the bottom and click "edit" without knowing about the button at the top. Anarchyte (talk) 11:15, 4 April 2019 (UTC)
 * Forgetting to sign their posts. There is nothing that says "Don't forget to add your signature" when editing a talk page. Anarchyte (talk) 11:15, 4 April 2019 (UTC)
 * +1 for the signing problem. That should not need much explanation/intervention/effort for a user. Maybe it should just be automatic, maybe even without much cryptic wiki code appearing.--Flugaal (talk) 11:26, 4 April 2019 (UTC)
 * Formatting to differentiate your post from previous ones takes knowledge/experience. Also, with lengthy discussions, it's impractical to just keep adding indentation.--Flugaal (talk) 11:29, 4 April 2019 (UTC)
 * Lots of little discussions get scattered on article pages and never get more eyes other than the few that have watchlisted those pages - it would be nice if the project tagging system allows any new talk page posts to be alerted to all those who subscribe to the projects to which that article is tagged. New users should be automatically asked if they want to join projects, based on the articles that they edit and the projects they belong to. Shyamal (talk) 12:00, 4 April 2019 (UTC)

Thank you for participating!