User talk:TMg

Wow, thanks. I'm still afraid I waste my time and the German users will reject the tool like they did in the English Wikipedia. It really, really needs to be opt-in. --TMg 11:31, 3 April 2013 (UTC)

Flow Portal/FAQ
Please do not continue to revert the topic, as you have done. Thanks.--Jorm (WMF) (talk) 22:28, 13 August 2013 (UTC)
 * Jorm: Why? "No" is not a proper answer to such a complex question. "No" is obviously wrong because the prototype and every second comment on the talk pages are talking about banning source editing. Please give a proper answer or write something like "currently discussed" or "Flow will use whatever Visual Editor offers" (which would be a bad decision in my opinion, but that's an other topic).


 * More general: It's not that I don't like Flow. I know we need a better discussion system in the Wikipedia. I want it as much as I want an easier file upload and an easier way to do simple edits in articles (not for me but for all my less technical friends). I want to help making Flow a success in the German Wikipedia (which is my main wiki). But I can not and I will not waste my time for this if you reject to communicate and don't want to give proper answers to complex questions. --TMg 12:52, 15 August 2013 (UTC)


 * Hi, possibly I can help. Over at the en.wiki version of the FAQ, an editor added the text from a comment that Jorm wrote in a talkpage-thread, to the equivalent question (w:Wikipedia:Flow/FAQ). I don't think it would be ideal to use that text over here, as a more concise answer would be preferable (in both locations!), but hopefully it will at least partially answer the question for you, in the meantime.


 * In regards to the more specific aspects of what exactly will happen to our current system of writing (i.e. the nice things Wikitext thread), I've tried to concisely summarize this issue (which has been discussed in a multitude of locations) at the bottom of this thread: w:Wikipedia talk:Flow - I've asked the VE developers and Flow developers to look at that list, and to give a short response sometime in the next few weeks (once they've all gotten back from Wikimania and holiday), so hopefully that will answer that question.


 * Hope that helps. Quiddity (talk) 17:22, 15 August 2013 (UTC)
 * So I'm right? This is a complex question. It needs a complex answer. Responding with "no" is the same as telling the volunteers they should "shut up". That's not how this is going to work. For now I replaced the unsufficient answer with a copy from en. --TMg 10:47, 16 August 2013 (UTC)
 * I don't think that either your edit-warring or what you've done most recently is appropriate. This is, at some level, a very simple question with a very simple answer:  Flow is not "replacing wikitext".  Flow is replacing discussion pages, not wikitext.  This very simple question and very simple answer is needed because there have been false rumors spread about Flow.
 * In terms of the "complex question", today's answer is equally simple: the question cannot usefully be answered until the answer is actually known, i.e., until after the staff has had time to write the specifications documents.  I'm sorry if "please do not keep demanding detailed answers until it is possible to give you an accurate detailed answer" sounds like "shut up" to you.  That is not what is being said and not what is meant.  WhatamIdoing (talk) 20:51, 16 August 2013 (UTC)
 * You know how this works, it's always the other one that edit-wars. I added the question and all I got was a "shut up" in form of a meaningless "no". I tried to get an appropriate answer and got reverted. I tried to remove my own question and got reverted. I don't know anything about "false rumors". I do my own deduction, I tried the prototype (knowing what it means) and read talk pages and there was and is an insane amount of discussions going on about this question. If the answer is "nobody can give an accurate detailed answer at the moment" then write this please. "No" is obviously wrong. If Flow depends on Visual Editor it will actually remove wikitext by default for most editors that do not want or do not know how to enable source editing. This will make things more complicated overall because most users can't and don't know how to simply copy and paste stuff between articles, talk pages and whatever external text editors a user prefers. That's the simple reason why I beg you: Rely on wikitext for the posts. WYSIWYG for talk pages is completely unnecessary. It's nice to have threads, headlines, automatic signatures and archiving. None of the features we really need and want requires a restricted WYSIWYG editor. Give us the freedom of source editing. --TMg 00:06, 17 August 2013 (UTC)
 * Yes, I know how this works: when you keep edit warring against multiple editors, you get blocked.  I don't want that to happen to you.
 * Flow does not require VisualEditor. Therefore, Flow does not "remove wikitext by default", or in any other way.  It's about 99% certain that Flow's internal database will store the data as HTML5+RDFa rather than directly as wikitext (or perhaps it will store it in duplicate, as both formats), but that doesn't mean that you will be forced to use VisualEditor.  WhatamIdoing (talk) 16:23, 18 August 2013 (UTC)
 * WhatamIdoing: Who is the edit-warrior if I tried to remove [ my own] addition and got reverted? This does not make sense. Maybe the wording of my initial question was bad. English is not my native language. This may explain why none of the answers was an answer to my question (except [ for this], at least partially). Please let me refine my own question or let me remove it if it was a bad idea in the first place. If it's true that Flow will use the Visual Editor for most unexperienced users by default then it's true that wikitext will be "removed" (read: hidden) for these users by default. If it's required to change a setting to disable Visual Editor then the users will in fact be "forced" to either use the Visual Editor or to change their settings. We know most users will never do this. Wikitext will be completely hidden by default for them. They will never have a reason to learn wikitext and it's advantages. It will be frustrating and time consuming to talk to these users because they don't know and don't understand what the experienced users are talking about. I think this is a problem. My solution for this problem is simple: No WYSIWYG in talk page posts (similar to Liquid Threads). It's not needed anyway in 99% of the posts. --TMg 17:35, 20 August 2013 (UTC)