Cannabis Ruderalis

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{{shortcut|[[WT:AUM]]}}
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{{old XfD multi |date=1 February 2006 |result=speedy keep |page=Wikipedia:Miscellany for deletion/Wikipedia:Avoid using meta-templates}}


== Conditionals ==


Netoholic and Thebainer want to have the sentence '''"One of the most common reasons meta-templates are created is to add functions that mimic conditional expressions"'''. I disagree with having this sentence in his guideline and I don't see why we need a section for conditionals at all. This might have been true before we had [[m:Parserfunctions]]. But nobody needs metatemplates for conditional logic anymore, so [[WP:AUM]] doesn't have to do anything anymore with conditional logic. How are metatemplates needed to implement conditionals? Could you show me where metatemplates are needed or used for conditional logic, let alone as "most common reasons"? --[[User:Ligulem|Ligulem]] 15:04, 22 October 2006 (UTC)
;Archives
* [[/Archive]] - Feb 2005—Nov 2005


:I've rewritten the section describing the use of metatemplates for conditionals as historic. But I don't think this section is needed anymore, as conditionals now don't have anything to do with metatemplates anymore. --[[User:Ligulem|Ligulem]] 15:24, 22 October 2006 (UTC)
== Logic templates ==


::That version's better, it emphasises the historical use. Although they aren't used for that purpose now, it makes perfect sense for this page to explain why that is so, and what is to be used instead. --[[User:Thebainer|bainer]] ([[User_talk:Thebainer|talk]]) 00:26, 23 October 2006 (UTC)
I intend to author a new section for this page dealing with the specific problems related to the so-called "logical" templates being created and used (see [[:Category:If Templates]] and [[:Category:Boolean Templates]]). A few "clever" individuals have found a way to hack the template mechanism into doing things it was not intended for. Rather than petition the MediaWiki developers (or write code themselves), they've put this kludge into effect and it is unfortunately growing rapidly. The problems I see with this are:
# As described on [[WP:AUM]], templates within templates have a direct effect on the performance of the wiki, just like templates used for meta-formatting.
# The developers may make future changes to the template mechanism which would make these logical templates fail. The amount of rework if we need to fix the related templates and pages could be incredibly extensive.
# New and old users alike have a hard time understanding how these all work. This discourages participation in the entire authoring process.
# Templates in general should be used sparingly. Certain tasks, like inserting [[Template:book reference|book reference]]s, are not being better served by using a template.
I'm going to ask some key people for comments on this topic. -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 14:47, 9 December 2005 (UTC)


Netoholic reinserted "Meta-template schemes are sometimes created using many layers of nested templates to mimic conditional expressions". Again, this is not correct. Meta-templates are no longer used to mimic conditional logic. I have thus reverted to the version which Thebainer agreed on. --[[User:Ligulem|Ligulem]] 07:58, 23 October 2006 (UTC)
:Please also have a look at the discussion that emerged on [[User talk:AzaToth#Wikipedia:Avoid_using_meta-templates]]. – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 15:22, 9 December 2005 (UTC)
::Maybe that discussion should be moved here? — [[User:Omegatron|Omegatron]] 15:25, 9 December 2005 (UTC)
:::Agreed. I already put a pointer to here on [[User talk:AzaToth#Wikipedia:Avoid_using_meta-templates]]. – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 15:29, 9 December 2005 (UTC)


: You are missing the point. While YOU may not create meta-template schemes... it is still a very common practice by template neophytes who don't know a thing about [[m:Parserfunctions]], and so '''"One of the most common reasons meta-templates are created is to add functions that mimic conditional expressions"'''. That statement, and the mention of the practice here is not an endorsement... the page title says to avoid such things. The point is to describe the practice so that people can recognize what's being discussed and be shown alternatives. In other words "Here's a common practice, and it should be avoided in favor of x, y, & z". -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 07:59, 23 October 2006 (UTC)
:Re: "Rather than petition the MediaWiki developers (or write code themselves)" we can still do that. "and it is unfortunately growing rapidly" :-) If this is true, this means that it gained some popularity as it seems to be grounded on some editors real needs. If this is enough evident, there will be enough drive to do "petition the MediaWiki developers (or write code themselves)". Which might be a good thing (if that should prove needed). – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 15:38, 9 December 2005 (UTC)


::Can you show me such practice? --[[User:Ligulem|Ligulem]] 08:02, 23 October 2006 (UTC)
:See also [[m:Template:If]] and [[:Category:Citation templates]]. – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 16:02, 9 December 2005 (UTC)


::: [[Template:Flag]]. Please to enjoy. -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 08:11, 23 October 2006 (UTC)
There is one template that is almost impossible to use without logical templates, that is {{tl|language}} <sub>→<font style="color:#975612">[[User:AzaToth|Aza]]</font><font style="color:#325596">[[User_talk:AzaToth|Toth]]</font></sub> 17:31, 9 December 2005 (UTC)
: When I look at the code in that template, I want to throw up. I'll post on that talk page further. -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 17:55, 9 December 2005 (UTC)
: I wouldn't say it's "almost impossible to use". I would rather say it's almost impossible to implement. Usage is not affected by how it is implemented (as long as it can be implemented, of course). – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 18:58, 9 December 2005 (UTC)


::::Well known. Anything else? But [[Template:Flag]] does not serve as an example of "common practice". --[[User:Ligulem|Ligulem]] 08:27, 23 October 2006 (UTC)
On the contrary: I find that inserting book references ''is'' better served by using a template. [[User:Uncle G|Uncle G]] 18:26, 9 December 2005 (UTC)
:* I agree, I personally dont know how to type a reference by my self, a template gives me defined fields to use (like author goes here) <sub>→<font style="color:#975612">[[User:AzaToth|Aza]]</font><font style="color:#325596">[[User_talk:AzaToth|Toth]]</font></sub> 18:30, 9 December 2005 (UTC)
:* I agree. Book templates help keep our articles referenced in a standard way. Keeping our material referenced properly is ''very'' important if we hope to create a useful encyclopedia. — [[User:Omegatron|Omegatron]] 19:29, 9 December 2005 (UTC)


::::: Those teeny-tiny flags are on hundreds pages, and there are several variations of the basic flag template. [[:Category:Flag templates]] and [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Flag Template]] cover all the related ones (Olympic, ISO, etc.). An extremely common practice (relatively on an encyclopedia of almost 1.5 million articles), and still is a convoluted meta-template scheme. You can see some of the hundreds of related templates [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special%3AAllpages&from=Country+IOC&namespace=10 here]. Because of how these are set up, Whatlinkshere is highly unreliable. The flag templates were my main inspiration for WP:AUM. I'd help fix them, but... -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 17:56, 23 October 2006 (UTC)
Re: "New and old users alike have a hard time understanding how these all work. This discourages participation in the entire authoring process". Not every user of book reference needs to understand how it was implemented. Those who do not take part in the development of book reference and the like never need to have a look at if & co. at all. The logic templates are mostly needed in more complicated templates like book reference, but there, they are essential. There is generally no need to use the logic templates on article pages. – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 18:50, 9 December 2005 (UTC)


In general, I agree with [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia%3AAvoid_using_meta-templates&diff=83168676&oldid=83167580 this wording]. Although I do think "Conditionals should generally be avoided, unless there is a significant advantage in their use" is a bit dense. But as long as "Generally avoided" is not misrepresented as "do not use <nowiki>{{#if:...}}</nowiki> at all cost", I can live with that wording. Common practice is that even the "few template gurus" don't insert #if's if they are not needed. --[[User:Ligulem|Ligulem]] 08:27, 23 October 2006 (UTC)
Re "Templates in general should be used sparingly". No. To the contrary. If we have an abstraction mechanism, then we should use it. This increases dependency but this is a good thing. Complicated things should be built up by using less complicated and tested building blocks. This is a well known engineering principle. – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 19:07, 9 December 2005 (UTC)


:Overall, I don't think there is enough of a 'problem' here to require a policy/guideline. If individual templates (e.g. the flags) could be better structured then we should address that directly on a case by case basis rather than setting up an 'official policy'. The latter can only serve as a 'club' to force people to change something which has consensus... and, as I said, I don't see any problems here which I think would necessitate that. The fact is that people generally '''aren't''' creating "convoluted meta-template schemes" since the introduction of parser-functions. The flags are a relic from pre 'conditional template' days that have never been updated to more recent methods. Maybe there are reasons for that... or maybe it is just that nobody ever put in the effort, but that is one of a handful of cases and not any sort of widespread or significant problem. --[[User talk:CBDunkerson|CBD]] 12:56, 26 October 2006 (UTC)
Re "A few "clever" individuals have found a way to hack the template mechanism into doing things it was not intended for". This is something very normal. If you have some powerful successfull tools, they sooner or later get used in ways you never dreamt of. I understand that this can be seen as threat. But it isn't. Just start thinking how to anticipate that new usage, if it's really needed and helps to solve real problems. – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 19:12, 9 December 2005 (UTC)


:: You'd probably be surprised with just how many conditionally-based nested template schemes there are out there. This page can be a guideline which explains the issues, so that the same arguements aren't repeated. -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 20:57, 27 October 2006 (UTC)
'''Comment''', I checked the use of class="hiddenTemplate{{{foo|}}}", it works optimal only if the specified parameter value does not include <code>"</code> <sub>→<font style="color:#975612">[[User:AzaToth|Aza]]</font><font style="color:#325596">[[User_talk:AzaToth|Toth]]</font></sub> 19:36, 9 December 2005 (UTC)


:::So point them out and I'll be happy to talk with the people there about simplifying them. Heck, you ''could'' talk to them yourself, work out a consensus, develop an alternative in your user space, and get someone to implement it. Which would probably go a ''long'' way towards getting your ArbCom probation on the matter rescinded. I just think it is a bad idea ''<tm>'' to go down the road of 'this type of template is a bad design... see there is a page which says so... so you have to change/abandon/delete it' again. There is not enough of a 'problem' here to justify ANY sort of cudgel... whether it be labeled 'guideline' or not. If there is really a way to simplify things people will usually jump at the chance. --[[User talk:CBDunkerson|CBD]] 13:11, 6 November 2006 (UTC)
See [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann#Spamming]]. No further comment needed from my side. – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 19:44, 9 December 2005 (UTC)


{{quotation|A rejected page is any proposal for which consensus support is not present. Consensus need not be fully opposed; if consensus is neutral on the issue and unlikely to improve, the proposal is likewise rejected. '''Making small changes will not change this fact, nor will repetitive arguments. Generally it is wiser to rewrite a rejected proposal from scratch and start in a different direction.'''|[[Wikipedia:Policies_and_guidelines#The_differences_between_policies.2C_guidelines.2C_essays.2C_etc.|Policies and guidelines]]}}
:This sounds like functionality to do this kind of thing should be implemented within the template syntax, where it would be cleaner, less taxing on the server, not use meta-templates, etc etc. Some of the functionality being implemented in this way is proving to be very useful for the average template ''user'' - such as making Template:Book reference not need a dozen different variations to handle different sets of provided information.


This page and its fundamental concept have been rejected over and over. Neto is the only one trying to revive this. The content you want to add is fine, but not policy material. It belongs on an informative page like [[Wikipedia:Template namespace]]; not here. — [[User:Omegatron|Omegatron]] 00:10, 4 November 2006 (UTC)
:I know, <nowiki>{{sofixit}}</nowiki>, so I plan to spend some time pretty soon on learning PHP so I can start working on stuff like this ... —[[User:Morven|Matthew Brown]] ([[User talk:Morven|T]]:[[Special:Contributions/Morven|C]]) 23:52, 9 December 2005 (UTC)


: So feel free to add a summary on that page, but let this be the expanded -guideline- (not "policy"). I cannot tell from the above whether YOU YOURSELF reject this page, or are only acting out of some sense of obligation becuase you believe that it oresently is rejected. IF you say the wording is fine, and Ligulem does, and me, and CBDunk doesn't have major objections... then what is the problem? It is a proposed guideline, nothing more. LEt it evolve, let more people read it without the stigma of that giant red "X" on the top. -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 07:21, 4 November 2006 (UTC)
==What on earth?==


== WP:AUM had been rejected... Is it time to revert some of the "forward looking" edits? ==
This page (in the version I restored and will happily lock) is a guideline not because of a consensus vote on a talk page, but because of sound technical reasons to avoid using the damn things. Just because you really want to do 'l33t Mediawiki hacks doesn't mean you can build consensus to make it not technically the case, any more than 2+2 equalling 4 is up for a vote. The only reason templates in templates aren't switched off entirely is because they're needed for a few specific purposes. That's why you're supposed to AVOID USING METATEMPLATES, not because some m33nz0r wants to keep you from the k3wl stuff - [[User:David Gerard|David Gerard]] 23:07, 9 December 2005 (UTC)
:*I did remove it becaus the box specified it's a guideline, and guideline says is by consensus, but after reading this talk page there was none, I didn't meen to [[WP:POINT]] <sub>→<font style="color:#975612">[[User:AzaToth|Aza]]</font><font style="color:#325596">[[User_talk:AzaToth|Toth]]</font></sub> 23:17, 9 December 2005 (UTC)
:m33nz0r? whatdoes that meen? <sub>→<font style="color:#975612">[[User:AzaToth|Aza]]</font><font style="color:#325596">[[User_talk:AzaToth|Toth]]</font></sub> 23:34, 9 December 2005 (UTC)


I believe there are a few pages that were edited in anticipation of WP:AUM. Some (probably not all) of these pages may warrant reverting. Are there any guidelines, or priorities or concensous was to what to revert first? I am of the mind to simply do the ones I know about.
:I do not understand what you want to say. Can you tell us what to do with {{tl|book reference}} and {{tl|web reference}}? You are also invited to write on the respective talk pages of those templates. That would fit much better than writing to people on their user talk pages. Please note that AUM is guideline, not a policy. As the box states "This page is considered a guideline on Wikipedia. It illustrates standards of conduct, which many editors agree with in principle. However, it is not a policy". "which many editors agree with in principle" seem to be just Netoholic so far in this specific matter. As this is not a policy, there may be others who don't follow this guideline, for good reasons. – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 00:25, 10 December 2005 (UTC)


[[User:Sumburgh|Sumburgh]] 08:49, 5 November 2006 (UTC)
:You may also write on the discussion page of [[:Category:Citation_templates]], as this covers a whole bunch of if or qif using templates. Thanks. – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 00:34, 10 December 2005 (UTC)


: Of course other pages should reflect the fact that this is rejected, but can you give some more concrete examples of what you're talking about? — [[User:Omegatron|Omegatron]] 09:29, 5 November 2006 (UTC)
== Any of this still valid? ==


: People who rejected this page 9 months ago did so because they felt that it threatened a poorly implemented hack involving [[Template:If]] and such. Now that scheme is deprecated in favor of ParserFunctions, and all RECENT indications about are that the main people who lead the rejection of this page are now of the mind that, with some updates to reflect the present situation, that the content of it is good. To repeatedly say this page is rejected while ignoring recent consensus is not accurate. I do not care about the past, I care that this page makes some excellent observations and suggestions. People "get" what this page is about, as I see the subject come up often and I see people working under the principles given here. Nested "meta-template" schemes are being wiped out. This page is current, and reflects wide consensus. I remain open to discussing specific parts, but Omegatron is not the decider of what is rejected or not. To do so he needs to show this page does not currently hold consensus. -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 09:51, 5 November 2006 (UTC)
Wikimedia's server capacity has gone up a few orders of magnitude this year. I'm not convinced that templates represent anything like the proportion of the total load they used to, and are therefore no longer a problem ("with enough power, a brick can fly"). [[User:Dan100|Dan100]] ([[User talk:Dan100|Talk]]) 12:13, 10 December 2005 (UTC)
::It seems this is a very touchy subject, so I suggest further discussion before making any changes on the actual project page. -- [[User:Ned Scott|Ned Scott]] 10:46, 5 November 2006 (UTC)
: Please take a look at the source for [[Template:Language]]. I don't care how fast the servers are, that template has been coded into complete obscurity. -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 15:14, 10 December 2005 (UTC)
::That's your POV, I belive [[User:Garzo]] knows what he do, he is a linguist specialist <sub>→<font style="color:#975612">[[User:AzaToth|Aza]]</font><font style="color:#325596">[[User_talk:AzaToth|Toth]]</font></sub> 15:21, 10 December 2005 (UTC)
:::Is it really a good thing that only one editor knows what's going on with that template? -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 15:32, 10 December 2005 (UTC)
::::There are plenty more peoples that knows what's going on in the template. But are you blaming [[User:Garzo]] for not creating a template in your way? <sub>→<font style="color:#975612">[[User:AzaToth|Aza]]</font><font style="color:#325596">[[User_talk:AzaToth|Toth]]</font></sub> 15:37, 10 December 2005 (UTC)
::::I can confim that there are several others which are able to understand this form of template. It's not that complicated as it might look at first sight. It takes a moment to accustom oneself with that <tt>if</tt> stuff. And you don't have to understand at the first step how <tt>if</tt> is implemented. But even that is not as complicated as it might look. <tt>qif</tt> is the easier to start with. Yes it is a trick, but a straightforward one, not even a dirty one. And yes, we are interested to keep a close eye on server load, that's why <tt>qif</tt> as a replacement for <tt>if</tt> was created (by using <tt>qif</tt>, one call level is eliminated compared to <tt>if</tt>). And if developers and server maintainers flock in to report that we blow off the servers, believe me, we will kill if/qif immediately. But not due to a guideline that should be carfully reviewed for this special case. And please note that I do not intend to put up a fight. You and we, all of us care about the future of wikipedia. Nobody is interested to "press in" tricky stuff just for it's own sake. We care about building new solutions to existing problems. The way how to solve them (and the cognition of their existence at all) is what we differ in opinions. In good faith, – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 18:08, 10 December 2005 (UTC)


::: And discussion is happening. It is only "touchy" because people assume it must be "touchy". In reality, the page's function is simple and generally agreeable. -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 09:50, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
:::::Well, seeing as I have been mentioned above, I'll let you know the history of &#123;{[[Template:language|language]]}}. The flexibility that the use of &#123;{[[Template:if|if]]}} allows was discussed long before that template was available. We had tried a number of ways of creating a modular template that could fit the great diversity of all language articles, but these hadn't worked. The other users of the template have appreciated the new flexibility that these templates have provided. I have tried to explain what I am doing as I go along, and, as I know nothing about computer programming, I am not being obscure for the sake of it. We weigh up the options of whether we want the template to do all we want it to do, or whether we want it to be easy to edit. I would love it, if there were a possibility of incorporating both options, but there isn't, and we have chosen flexibility above ease of editing. In the meantime, there are a few editors around who have acquainted themselves with the template, and feel able to make changes whan they are needed. In summary, the present state of &#123;{[[Template:language|language]]}} is the work of a linguist rather than a computer programmer, cobbling together the scraps of possibilities of template construction to make an infobox as good as possible. I'm writing an encycolpaedia... --[[User:Garzo|Gareth Hughes]] 18:56, 12 December 2005 (UTC)


:::: It would help if you gave some examples of this "general agreement" you keep talking about. Who has said they want this page revived besides you? — [[User:Omegatron|Omegatron]] 17:19, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
== Another view ==


::::: What you're not getting is that you and other people are "saying" that this page has no agreement, but not speaking for '''yourself'''. Do you '''yourself''' believe that meta-template schemes should be avoided? I really want everyone on this talk page to answer this question, rather than assume they are acting on behalf of some shadowy faction that oppses this page. -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 17:52, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
I did some check in the source code to see how mediawiki uses templates. When a page is using a template, that particular template is cached for actual page, so multiple uses of an template on a particular page uses only one fetch for this template. For an example, a book reference, is would then better to use an generic reference that have separate templates for different styles. (If the generic reference template only use for example {{tl|qif}} then there will only be one fetch for actual page) <sub>→<font style="color:#975612">[[User:AzaToth|Aza]]</font><font style="color:#325596">[[User_talk:AzaToth|Toth]]</font></sub> 21:53, 10 December 2005 (UTC)


:::::: So you can't? — [[User:Omegatron|Omegatron]] 02:37, 8 November 2006 (UTC)
Can try to explain it a bit further:
*We have the template ''Generic'' that utilize the "logic" template ''logic'' multiple times, and it replaces the usage of template ''Specific-1'' to ''Specific-n'', which does not use any aditional templates.
*If ''Article'' only uses ''Specific-1'' it's faster than using ''Generic''.
*If ''Article'' uses both ''Specific-1'' and ''Specific-2'' there is no difference.
*If ''Article'' uses more than two ''Specific'' templates, it's faster to use the ''Generic'' version.
*If another template used by ''Article'' utilizes template ''logic'', then the cost of ''Generic'' is reduced one step etc...


::::::[[WP:CREEP|instructions creep]], because it's not a big issue in the first place? -- [[User:Ned Scott|Ned Scott]] 03:31, 8 November 2006 (UTC)
<sub>→<font style="color:#975612">[[User:AzaToth|Aza]]</font><font style="color:#325596">[[User_talk:AzaToth|Toth]]</font></sub> 22:21, 10 December 2005 (UTC)


Why not make a workshop page, or a new proposal along similar lines? - [[User:A Man In Black|A Man In <span style="color:black;">'''Bl♟ck'''</span>]] <small>([[User talk:A_Man_In_Black|conspire]] | [[Special:Contributions/A Man In Black|past ops]])</small> 03:13, 6 November 2006 (UTC)
:Yeah that sounds damned interesting! Thanks for looking at that. You're really smart (no pun intended). I have to ruminate that further. I just wonder what the other template geeks (like SEWilco) are doing. The tangent I'm on gets bigger and bigger. Interesting. It all started with wondering me how to reference a book on an article....:-) Oh my! – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 23:20, 10 December 2005 (UTC)


: Because we've been down that road before, and this is the right title and place to discuss this very minor consideration in the template space. Besides, the content of the page is largely uncontroversial, except when people assume it is controversial. -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 09:50, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
:Interesting. This would suggest, for a start, that all of the various infobox templates should be moved away from using the logic templates if possible (since those are, by definition, used only once in an article). &mdash;[[User:Kirill Lokshin|Kirill Lokshin]] 01:46, 11 December 2005 (UTC)
::*That might be correct, but personally I think it's cheaper to do '''one''' extra meta-call (to the template ''logic'' in this case), than to hide a lot of text using class ''hiddenContent'', also, if there are other templates on the page using the template ''logic'' (for example a reference template), then there would be no saving going from logical templates. <sub>→<font style="color:#975612">[[User:AzaToth|Aza]]</font><font style="color:#325596">[[User_talk:AzaToth|Toth]]</font></sub> 02:00, 11 December 2005 (UTC)


== Not again ==
::I think it's exactly the opposite. Because the call to <tt>if</tt> (et al.) is cached per article, it does not matter whether we have 500 if calls rooted directly (does not apply now) or indirectly on the page. We can have 100 instances of let's say book reference on a page. Even if <tt>qif</tt> appears several times in book reference (22 times to be exact, at the moment), as per the findings of Carl (=AzaToth) it is loaded exactly *once* per page (not 100 x 22 - ok would possibly not be 22 because not all branches are evaluated, it depends on the parameters fed into each specific template call). I hope I got that right (please correct me if I'm wrong). That's very cool! – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 09:57, 11 December 2005 (UTC)


Ugh. Do you ever feel like you're the needle running over a broken record? Edit warring, disputed page protections, blocks, et cetera. We've all been here before and we all know how it turns out... badly for Wikipedia. Can we ''please'' not fight this war '''again'''?
: Don't worry too much about there being several types of citation templates, they are being consolidated. It probably is more important for this discussion that citations have to deal with the fact that including or omitting information requires various formatting details be included or omitted. The logic templates are at present the only tool for doing that formatting, and infoboxes have similar formatting needs If wiki adds some builtin logic it will be trivial to change the few templates. However, that is not the only possibility, as another possible solution is some sort of tool similar to a "report generator" which would allow specification of the format of data display. For citations there have been various proposals for information handling, and it is possible someone will come up with tools with other solutions (whether specific to citations such as a publication-name-selector or a more general tool such as Jimbo's data retriever ("name of capitol city of country X"). ([[User:SEWilco|SEWilco]] 06:10, 11 December 2005 (UTC))
::''Don't worry too much about there being several types of citation templates, they are being consolidated'' - can you point to where that's happening (out of curiousity)? [[User:Dan100|Dan100]] ([[User talk:Dan100|Talk]]) 08:40, 11 December 2005 (UTC)


Netoholic, you are not wrong that some templates are set up less efficiently than they could be. We should indeed encourage people to use different methods where appropriate. However, this page '''''is not needed to do that'''''. There is nothing preventing direct contact with people involved in various templates that could be re-designed. No, you can't then point at a page and say, 'all the reasons why this must be done are there'... but that's a ''good'' thing. It forces us to examine the individual needs of the template and the people using it and work ''with'' them to come up with a replacement they are comfortable with. So that we are the 'good guys' not just in terms of improving templates for Wikipedia as a whole, but also to the individual users impacted.
:::I hope SEWilco allows me to step in: see [[Template:Citation]] ([[Template talk:Citation|talk]]). But '''please do not use that in articles yet'''. As per SEWilco (who thankfully started that) who intends it do be for testing and development for now. But I think we can have a look at it, as it is not under user-space. Citation has just got more attraction as per the findings of AzaToth (in this thread). – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 10:07, 11 December 2005 (UTC)


Why not work on improving the templates collaboratively... rather than fighting to enshrine a framework which can serve no purpose but to over-ride collaboration with 'established practice'? --[[User talk:CBDunkerson|CBD]] 13:38, 6 November 2006 (UTC)
:::: There are ongoing changes to the various citation templates which will affect the consolidated template. A number of the changes involve logic incantations. ([[User:SEWilco|SEWilco]] 15:27, 11 December 2005 (UTC))


: I don't think that approach will help in more than a few cases. I prepared the first version of this page only after dozens of individual meta-template arguments and deletion votes. This page centralises many of the points, so why would we want to expend effort re-explaining this each and every time? No, this is not the biggest problem on Wikipedia - I never said it was. Far more often then not, people have been directed to this page, read it, and come away with a greater understanding and a desire to make their templates less cumbersome. Why take that away? -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 09:45, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
:::: The consolidation of citation templates is also visible in the History of [[WP:CITET]]. The availability of optional parameters has allowed reduction in the number of citation templates to perhaps 20-30% of the number which used to exist. Unfortunately, this also has increased use of if/qif so as to display text and punctuation needed by various optional fields. Consolidation has been slowed by the need to standardize parameter names, conversion of existing calls, and non-technical demands such as consensus finding and devoting time to Arbitration threats. ([[User:SEWilco|SEWilco]] 09:26, 13 December 2005 (UTC))


:: I just stumbled here looking for template content. I come from a strong background in C++ template meta-programming and I've witnessed this same debate play out over a decade with larger armies, better trained, and better equiped. I would say the debate was more complex than the meta-programming techniques themselves. The <code><nowiki>autoptr<></nowiki></code> saga raged forever. In my view, this page is '''not''' the right forum to achieve its purpose: advocating a judicious use of complexity for the betterment of the community as a whole. Far more useful would be a page or collection of pages concerning '''Recommendations on avoiding unnecessary complexity''' in general, with portions applied to templates, and meta-templates, in particular; and from there, as others have suggested, work with people to adopt this material to their specific situation so far as it makes sense.
== Proposal for "lazy templates" ==


:: '''I lost what sympathy I had''' when I saw the prominent link to '''protected pages are bad(tm)'''. That's the kind of innocuous-on-the-surface wolf-in-sheeps-clothing that makes this page dangerous and far from uncontroversial. The same facility that these semi-protected deep-infrastructure meta-templates provide could just have easily have been incorporated into the MediaWiki code base as custom PHP. Does that end up making the facility less-protected? The C++ community went through endless heartache to push complexity away from the core compiler by making the template infrastructure sufficiently powerful that the same complexity could be handled as a deep systems library provided by the compiler vendor or by means of a battle-hardened primitives library (e.g. Boost). At the end of the day, it benefits the entire ecosystem not to code more policy into the compiler itself than absolutely necessary. For C++, the equivalent of the parse-functions extension is coded in a Boost library and you wouldn't want to be mucking with this down in the sub-basement unless you feel up to the challenge of performing a successful self-amputation. Most likely it was of great value that the community could explore the use of this facility '''before''' it was formally codified as Mediawiki extension. Experience has shown that new C++ coders often learn faster and make fewer mistakes programming on top of the Boost library, rather than cooking from scratch in a notoriously unsafe kitchen. The issue is about packaging the complexity appropriately, not whether it exists somewhere in a basement that eats children.
As we have noticed, there is some concern that meta-templates which are defined as templates that include calls to other templates have some drawbacks which are described in the associated article.


:: The point here is that there is certainly no consensus in any policy page that the use of protected pages to promote the general safety of Wikipedia while wrangling with how to best dispatch complexity taints such an endeavour intrinsically, which is the wolf-in-sheeps clothing that invoking the trappings of a consensus formed about the abuse of a mechanism in a broad political context rather than this hillybilly-esoteric technical backwater. In so far as the reader comes away informed, it could be achieved better by other means.
Recent development around the templates [[template:book reference]] or [[template:web reference]] which include calls to so-called "logic templates" like [[template:qif]] have triggered some partly hefty reactions among some wikifolks. These logic templates haven been deemed by some as beeing a "kludge" or just "ridiculous" and for beeing a violation of this guideline here.


:: A good book to consider is '''Getting to Yes''' which talks at length about the need to argue from interests rather than positions. The interest here is that Wikipedia complexity be managed in the best possible way across the broad swath of the Wikipedia ecosystem, from casual contributors to hard-core MediaWiki hackers. IMO the existence of this page subtley biases the debate away from the '''interest''' of managing complexity and toward the '''position''' that template meta-programming can be tarred with one brush. That makes this page plenty controversial in my estimation. [[User:MaxEnt|MaxEnt]] 18:18, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
Some wikifolks insist that templates like [[template:book reference]] do add real value to wikipedia and its development, as they increase the quality of articles and do help non-wiki experts to write correct citations. What's also clear is that calls of [[template:book reference]] can easily be converted to anything else by a fairly simple bot. This includes possible future extensions. It is also relatively simple to convert those calls back to the old style low-level kind of citations that have been done by using wiki syntax only (without the use of templates). But the other direction is far less easy to do. So articles that today contain calls to [[template:book reference]] are - from an entropy standpoint - more valueable than those who do citations the old-style way (if we look at the wiki source).


:::Wow, that was.. really well put :) -- [[User:Ned Scott|Ned Scott]] 03:35, 8 November 2006 (UTC)
Today, there are about 3000+ articles that already use [[template:book reference]]. If we come to the conclusion, that this guideline here rules, we can see that [[template:book reference]] has qualities of a "meta-template" as it uses [[template:qif]]. Some wikifolks have come to the conclusion that [[template:book reference]] cannot be implemented without using [[template:qif]]. So if this guideline here rules, this would mean the shutdown of [[template:qif]] and in turn the shutdown of [[template:book reference]]. The consequense of this would be that all calls to book reference would need to be downgraded to pure old-style wiki source.


== Cache size is getting too small again ==
One of the mentioned problem areas of the so called "meta-templates" is that - as it seems to be implemented now in the Wiki-software - if a template T is changed, all article pages that contain calls to T get their cache invalidated. As Jamesday describes in the article here, this can be a resource consuming task. This can also result in operations enduring in the order of several tenths of seconds.


The text alone from [[United States]] is 500 KB of meta-templated goodness, not counting javascript, stylesheets and of course images. I clocked five various diffs (with "time wget" from the shell) at '''between 43 and 48(!) seconds''' just now. The second try of each was about 5 seconds. When a particular version of an article with enough meta-templates in it gets bumped from the caches, you wait. And wait. I disbelieve the developers when they say nested transclusion isn't a performance penalty. That depends on having an effectively much larger cache than we do now. [[User:1of3|1of3]] 03:40, 6 October 2007 (UTC)
A well known mechanism to circumvent this is "subst", where a template is instantiated at the moment the editor clicks on save. The problem with subst is, that it cannot be applied to book reference, as the result is just a bunch of qif expressions that nobody can manage by hand.
:from Rob Church on the mailing list:

::''The "technical team" is not responsible for checking that content is correct, nor is it responsible for checking page load times for each article and pruning them in the dumps. If a page contains obvious abuses of markup which cause significant problems for large numbers of users, then we'll kill it off, but of course, we haven't had a large number of reports of that in recent months, although as other threads on the list imply, the problem is resurfacing, and will likely be looked into.''
It must be noted that reckless editing of [[template:book reference]] is not desired anyway. So it is expected that book reference stabilizes more and more and there should be the longer the more less reasons to change it. This is even more true for [[template:qif]], which is even more stable. So rippling changes originating from [[template:qif]] today already are a rare case. So beeing dependent on stable stuff is not that bad.
::''We can't really help it if our users are silly enough to insist upon abusing a markup language as if it were pure code, nor if they insist upon continuing to use fragile-looking template constructs which will end in tears. ''

:— [[User:Xaosflux|<span style="color:#FF9933; font-weight:bold; font-family:monotype;">xaosflux</span>]] [[User_talk:Xaosflux|<sup style="color:#00FF00;">Talk</sup>]] 11:27, 26 October 2007 (UTC)
What remains are changes in [[template:book reference]].

I would like to present the following idea: Why not ignore changes in [[template:book reference]] at first for some time and leave that cache invalidating step away completely. It does not hurt if articles referencing [[template:book reference]] use an old version of it. This can wait until somebody edits an article or until a slow bot comes by and invalidates that article's cache (within 24 hours or so). That bot could run at off-peak hours. I would call this feature a "lazy template". Maybe [[template:book reference]] (and [[template:web reference]]) could be marked in some way as "lazy templates". This could also be seen as a more luxory form of "subst" that preserves the entropy of the wiki-source of an article.
– [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 17:03, 11 December 2005 (UTC)

:See also the [http://mail.wikipedia.org/pipermail/wikitech-l/2005-December/032939.html thread ] on the mailing list [http://mail.wikipedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikitech-l wikitech-l]. – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 18:53, 11 December 2005 (UTC)

:Server caches of pages can be manually purged. See [[template:purge]], [[Wikipedia:Purge]]. – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 23:00, 11 December 2005 (UTC)

==Removing guideline status==
There is no evidence that [[Wikipedia:Avoid using meta-templates]] ever had community consensus. No polls or discussions were held on the issue that I am aware of. In fact, with the exception of [[User:Netoholic]] (its author) and about three or four other users, virtually all of the comments regarding it have been negative. Furthermore, it was written as a very specific response to a technical issue with MediaWiki server capacity ''circa'' early 2005. No evidence has been adduced that this is still the case. The guideline status seems to be primarily an excuse for Netoholic to engage in revert warring and to carry out a [[jihad]] (or [[crusade]], if you prefer) against templates he doesn't like for whatever reason. Until I see evidence of consensus, I'm removing the guideline status. [[User:Firebug|Firebug]] 20:35, 12 December 2005 (UTC)

:There is just a problem with consensus: as David Gerard correctly points out, we cannot vote whether the servers can manage meta-templates or not. So we need statements from experts (those that run the servers, for example) and specific examples of meta-templates. I do not have a problem with this being a guideline. A guideline, not a policy. Disclaimer: I'm an aficionado of [[template:qif]] and [[template:book reference]] (a meta-template). – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 23:54, 12 December 2005 (UTC)

::One mitigating factor for the logic templates is that once they are stable, they can be protected and not changed, thus removing most of the odds of them cache-invalidating lots of pages if changed. —[[User:Morven|Matthew Brown]] ([[User talk:Morven|T]]:[[Special:Contributions/Morven|C]]) 00:54, 13 December 2005 (UTC)

::: MediaWiki server capacity improvements are a continual race against increasing usage. Profligate waste of server resources is never a good idea. IMO, this guideline should really be reworked into a "don't waste server resources" guideline. Templates invoking templates invoking templates invoking templates for no particular point is a bad idea. Simple is better. I've asked [[user:Jamesday|Jamesday]] to comment. -- [[user:Rick Block|Rick Block]] <small>([[user talk:Rick Block|talk]])</small> 01:21, 13 December 2005 (UTC)

:: Why does everyone say we need developer input... [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Avoid_using_meta-templates&diff=10217343&oldid=10212289 we have]! I'm not here to say that you can't get more input from them, but it seems this Talk page wants to make it a requirement that the developers check in every couple months just to keep this a guideline. The correct approach would be to respect their previous input UNTIL you hear differently. Meta-templates should be avoided - I doubt there will ever be a time where that guideline will change. What seems to be the point of contention is ''how'' they should be avoided (subst:ing, multiple similar templates, CSS tricks). Don't confuse the two issues, and you'll be far better off. -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 03:17, 13 December 2005 (UTC)

:::That's because this proposed guideline makes the job of Wikipedia template editors significantly harder, and therefore it should be subject to severe scrutiny to ensure that it is absolutely necessary. Simply saying that something might increase the server load isn't enough to mean it shouldn't be done. After all, we could dramatically reduce the server load by turning off images completely, but I don't recall anyone making a page called [[Wikipedia:Avoid using images]]. Being able to nest code is a elementary programming feature, and if the MediaWiki software can't handle it without a performance hit, that should be treated as a serious bug that needs to be addressed, not something that users should have to continually work around. I am not at all convinced that the server situation remains unchanged in the past 10 months. [[User:Firebug|Firebug]] 03:48, 13 December 2005 (UTC)

::::It's a guideline, not a policy. So if you have very good reason not to follow it, don't follow it. But it's ok to think four times before violating it. If the developers would have been that shure as they are claimed, then they would have made it a policy. – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 10:59, 13 December 2005 (UTC)

:::No. All of this violates basic programming principles. Every programmer knows that hard coding is a ugly, godawful thing to do, but you're urging that it be made Wikipedia policy. (And subst is a form of hard coding - since changes from the template don't automatically propagate.) What we should be talking about is how to add new features like inheritance and polymorphism to the MediaWiki engine - not getting rid of the most basic functionality that was taken for granted in the 1980s. [[User:Firebug|Firebug]] 03:48, 13 December 2005 (UTC)

::::Quite true. I'll remind you, though, that what we're writing here is ''markup'', not ''code''&mdash;and while we need a few semi-clever tricks to get the markup right, I can't for the life of me imagine why we would ever want to use polymorphism, for instance. (On another note, this would likely make templates utterly unreadable to anyone without a CS degree). &mdash;[[User:Kirill Lokshin|Kirill Lokshin]] 04:07, 13 December 2005 (UTC)

:::::I will admit I was being a bit deliberately provocative with my comment about polymorphism. But that's not the point. In many cases, nesting templates can make template code ''easier'', not harder, to read. We should not have a policy that encourages editors to write unmaintainable spaghetti templates and hard-coded shit. And using subst: is a hack because it makes further editing more difficult and prevents template changes from propagating, as with transclusions. Even a markup language should be able to handle basic nesting of calls. This ain't rocket science. [[User:Firebug|Firebug]] 04:25, 13 December 2005 (UTC)

::::::: Have you ever actually read all of [[User:Jamesday|Jamesday]]'s comments on this very talk page, or are you just deliberately dismissing them? -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 04:49, 13 December 2005 (UTC)

::::::Well, it does handle them; obviously, this has associated costs (just as nested function calls in code do). In this case, at least at the time this page was written, the resource cost wasn't worth the benefits of using nested calls; it remains to be seen, based on developer input, whether this is still the case.
::::::As an aside, most templates are merely blocks of markup: tables, frames, etc. Only a few templates&mdash;the citation ones, for instance&mdash;truly benefit from nested calls as opposed to some other method of hiding undesired markup; and some of them would likely be better off as MediaWiki features rather than templates. The citation templates, for instance, are basically a wizard to produce a proper citation based on some parameters; once the citation is inserted into the page, we generally don't want it to change appearance. &mdash;[[User:Kirill Lokshin|Kirill Lokshin]] 04:33, 13 December 2005 (UTC)

:::To Netoholic's point about asking for developer input - I'm reasonably certain the basics for how pages are constructed has not changed in the last year. My understanding is that if the page is not cached, some Apache server makes a database fetch for its contents and database fetches for each template that must be interpreted in order to build the page contents. I think doing any less work than this is likely to be very difficult. There's ultimately a single database behind all wikipedia pages, and for pages that aren't cached, the database is almost certainly the true bottleneck (since we can add a relatively arbitrary number of Apache servers). A page that references no templates requires one DB fetch. A page that references a template that references a template requires three. We can buy all the Apache servers we want, but if they all have to connect to the same database the limiting factor is going to be the database. It was a year ago. I'm actually a bit surprised we're doing as well as we are. In any event, the point of all of this is that I'm not a MediaWiki developer and I suspect Netoholic isn't either. Certainly some things have changed in the past year. I think it's distinctly unlikely, but it's possible things have changed so that database fetches are not even close to the current bottleneck. The folks wanting to use templates in programmatic ways seem to want to optimistically believe this isn't an issue anymore. Developers know for sure. Asserting it isn't an issue without developer input seems ludicrous. Asserting nothing's changed in the last year that might help this issue without developer input also seems ludicrous. -- [[user:Rick Block|Rick Block]] <small>([[user talk:Rick Block|talk]])</small> 05:15, 13 December 2005 (UTC)
::::My point is simply that a feature this useful and powerful should not be discouraged without a '''very''' good reason. Someone's suspicions aren't enough. See my analogy above - this is like asking people not to use images. The burden of proof should be on the anti-template crowd (who have no community consensus that I can see) to prove - not once, but continually - that so-called "meta-templates" make the server utterly impossible to maintain. [[User:Firebug|Firebug]] 06:14, 13 December 2005 (UTC)

: About the Guideline discussion: For this subject, it seems the community of Developers (particularly of DB) are the ones who should decide on the Guideline status. I view many of the meta-templates as tools to achieve needed results using the current technology. If an application such as infoboxes with optional fields become popular, it is likely that an efficient Wiki tool will be created to replace it. However, limits have to be drawn someplace; AUM should prevent extremes such as a fad of everyone creating complex signature templates and then those also being accepted on article pages. We all want to avoid dealing with the ultimate authority on where the limits are: reaching the maximum capacity of the hardware. ([[User:SEWilco|SEWilco]] 09:14, 13 December 2005 (UTC))

:: The hiddenStructure CSS trick can handle optional infobox fields (for now). It's not particularly elegant, but it's probably a good way of keeping meta-template usage limited to where it's really necessary. &mdash;[[User:Kirill Lokshin|Kirill Lokshin]] 14:09, 13 December 2005 (UTC)
:::As far as I know, hiddenStructure only works with the monobook skin. People who use different skins have said they see the fields (as, for example Cinematography:{{{cinematography}}} in a page where that field doesn't exist for {{tl|Infobox Film}}). - [[User:Bobet|Bobet]] 20:32, 13 December 2005 (UTC)
::::As of yesterday, that should no longer be the case :-) &mdash;[[User:Kirill Lokshin|Kirill Lokshin]] 20:34, 13 December 2005 (UTC)
::::* It also wont work if the parameter start with '" ' or contains the string " class="hiddenStructure"" etc... <sub>→<font style="color:#975612">[[User:AzaToth|Aza]]</font><font style="color:#325596">[[User_talk:AzaToth|Toth]]</font></sub> 20:36, 13 December 2005 (UTC)
:::::Thanks, I just went to test it out and thought I was crazy since it looked fine :). - [[User:Bobet|Bobet]] 20:39, 13 December 2005 (UTC)

==Community consensus is beside the point==

The developers flat-out said "Avoid using meta-templates." The developers are given free reign to say "Please do not make our database collapse weeping." And then we, as editors, have to listen. And it doesn't actually matter how many editors don't want to listen - the developers remain empowered to implement guidelines like this. [[User:Snowspinner|Phil Sandifer]] 06:46, 13 December 2005 (UTC)
:No, Wikipedia has substantial editorial problems (Siegenthaler, vandalism on [[George W. Bush]]) and anything that makes it harder to maintain is a '''dangerous''' distraction that imperils the whole project. [[User:Susvolans|Susvolans]] [[User talk:Susvolans|⇔]] 08:07, 13 December 2005 (UTC)
::Wikipedia is very hard to maintain when the database stops working. Though this is beside the point - just as you cannot vote or complain away the developer's right to say "Don't do this," you also cannot vote or complain away the fact that you are unable to do the former. [[User:Snowspinner|Phil Sandifer]] 20:40, 13 December 2005 (UTC)

Perhaps the page title "Avoid" is where people are getting confused. Maybe we need to rename it something stronger like "Don't use meta-templates"? Or better yet, how about "Wikipedia:Template policy"? Let's nail down some of the rules related to template usage. -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 06:16, 14 December 2005 (UTC) (revised)

:Wasn't it called "Meta-templates are considered harmful" once? [[User:Snowspinner|Phil Sandifer]] 06:19, 14 December 2005 (UTC)

:: Yeah, but that also confused some users and was a little softer than "Avoid". -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 06:21, 14 December 2005 (UTC)

== Something to read: [[m:Help:Parameter default]] ==

Hi folks! Let's have a break and learn something. For those who watch this talk page and enjoy reading new stuff: There is a nice new page at [[m:Help:Parameter default]] about all that new stuff which is at the heart of these new template tricks. Kudos to Patrick and AzaToth. (Sorry for the advertising here). Have fun reading (no pun intended)! – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 21:30, 13 December 2005 (UTC)

: Boy oh boy... now if either one of them would [[meta:How to become a MediaWiki hacker|learn how]] to write real code in PHP and become real [[meta:developers|developers]], we might have a solution that we could use. -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 21:38, 13 December 2005 (UTC)

::And in the interim we use what we have. Deal or no deal? :-) (please don't hit me! And have a look at Carl's box profile). – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 22:22, 13 December 2005 (UTC)

::: No, in the interim we work very hard to ensure these meta-templates are eliminated ''per this guideline''. Does that mean some functions will require multiple templates? Sure. Does this mean some template will lose function? No problem. Will this bruise some egos? Doesn't matter. -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 23:49, 13 December 2005 (UTC)

::::First of all, as stated previously, let's see some evidence of developer consensus. I've heard about ONE developer (Jamesday) who has complained about meta-templates. And that was ten months ago. Are there any others? How serious (if at all) do they think the problem is at this time? What (if anything) are they doing about it? Until we know the answer to this, we can't proceed. Furthermore, doing away with nested templates altogether is utterly unacceptable. It's like proposing we do away with images. '''IF''' the developers need template use reduced as a '''TEMPORARY''' hack to reduce server usage, then we can start with templates that can easily be rewritten to avoid metafication. Breaking existing functionality should be an absolute last resort, yet you go about it with an unseemly glee. You should be banned from ever having anything to do with templates on Wikipedia ever again. [[User:Firebug|Firebug]] 04:36, 14 December 2005 (UTC)
::::BTW, on Aug 6 of this year, Jamesday wrote (from the main article): "''There are changes in 1.5 which will help. How much is currently not known.''" Are we running that now? Did it fix the issue? If the issue is resolved, then all of this bullshit should stop and people should use any kind of templates that make things easier. [[User:Firebug|Firebug]] 04:40, 14 December 2005 (UTC)

:::::So basically unless the developers personally continue to notify you that it is a problem, you're going to assume it goes away on its own? [[User:Snowspinner|Phil Sandifer]] 05:04, 14 December 2005 (UTC)

::::::Well, no. When the developers said a couple months ago that the new software update would fix the problem, and when the only person who is openly complaining about the use of these templates isn't even a developer at all, I'd like to get some sort of statement from the developers regarding the issues raised above. I don't need personal notification, but I think the Wikicommunity as a whole should get updates on this. When was the last time the developers were asked about the impact of nested templates? Has MediaWiki 1.5 been rolled out yet? I AGREE that the technical issues are important - and they are being overlooked due to Netoholic's insistence on shoving things down people's throats. [[User:Firebug|Firebug]] 05:14, 14 December 2005 (UTC)

:::::::I generally assume that the developers are too busy to let us know when they have not fixed a problem, and thus to assume that no news is bad news. In the absence of any evidence whatsoever that the problem has fixed, perhaps you might undertake bothering the developers, as I, at least, am rather too polite to do so with questions that they have already answered. [[User:Snowspinner|Phil Sandifer]] 05:18, 14 December 2005 (UTC)
::::::::Where can I obtain Jamesday's email address? I would like to (politely of course) ask him if MediaWiki 1.5 is in use and if this has fixed the "meta template" issues and to what extent. If devs agree the issue is fixed with the newer software, can we get rid of this nonsense? [[User:Firebug|Firebug]] 05:25, 14 December 2005 (UTC)
:::::::::I have faith that you can figure out how to contact [[User:Jamesday]]. [[User:Snowspinner|Phil Sandifer]] 05:26, 14 December 2005 (UTC)

:Can we please relax about this? [[user:Jamesday|Jamesday]] has been asked to comment. I don't think anyone is arguing real problems should be ignored. My suspicion is that this is not a black or white issue, and that the truth is that every little bit hurts and no one (not even the developers) exactly know how much is too much. Yes, we use images. Yes, we'll use some meta-templates. If we can avoid both of these, we'll need to buy fewer servers. The guideline says "avoid". It doesn't say "seek out and destroy all". Don't do things that consume resources unless there's a good reason to do so. Repeat after me - "duh". -- [[user:Rick Block|Rick Block]] <small>([[user talk:Rick Block|talk]])</small> 05:32, 14 December 2005 (UTC)

::I was responding specifically to Netoholic's "salt the earth" comment above, where he said that even if it breaks things we should get rid of all "meta templates". You may be right that the truth lies somewhere in between. It would be helpful to know the extent of the issue as things currently stand, so we can decide just how much effort should be put into this. [[User:Firebug|Firebug]] 05:40, 14 December 2005 (UTC)

::A very wise statement. Thanks for that. And I do apologize for having added fuel to the fire. At least it was worth a try. In the mean time I might see whether I can ameliorate things a bit by replacing calls to <tt>if</tt> with the server friendlier <tt>qif</tt> (one less meta-level, thanks to AzaToth). We might then even be able to delete <tt>if</tt>. At least this would not hurt the servers. I know that this might be in vain if <tt>qif</tt> should get abolished. Just a try. – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 08:47, 14 December 2005 (UTC)

== Why Templates in templates not switched off? ==

David Gerard wrote ''"The only reason templates in templates aren't switched off entirely is because they're needed for a few specific purposes."''' Can somebody please list these? Which meta-templates qualify for these "few specific purposes"? What are the requirements to qualify for "few specific purposes"?

I'm just asking this because I wonder why we got into all this trouble if meta-templates are that bad? Why haven't they been switched off? Why is this article here not a policy with a list of exceptions?

Sorry for asking, I'm relatively new to Wikipedia. I came to all this because I wondered how to add a book reference to an article. After some search I found [[template:book reference]] and just used that. Then I wondered why it's not used in more articles and just started slowly to use it on a few articles. After receiving no objections, I just continued a bit. Then some smaller problems around book reference occured and I suddenly was in the middle of template wonderland.

What I cannot understand, as a newbie, is that how is it possible that a technique which seems to be that dangerous can "slip" into thousands of articles without noticing by any of the proponents of the "don't use meta-templates group"? Why did Wikipedia not make this a policy at first hand and list the allowed exceptions or even shut down templates in templates completely? I simply do not understand.

Why do you attract people and do not take more care that they cannot do that harmful things to the servers. Why does wikipedia attract people by saying be bold and beat them afterwards. I think there must be something wrong. I just do not understand that. What I also not understand is, that I haven't seen any of the "don't use meta-templates group" appearing on the talk page of book reference. It's been there quite some time already.

Sorry for my silly questions. Sorry for the long post. I'm just a newbie trying to understand the wonders of wiki-land. Please note that it is not my intention to put a fight. And my ego does not care whether Wikipedia uses meta-templates or not. I'm just puzzeling. And I just stayed here because I found some really great articles and some bright people.
– [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 12:09, 14 December 2005 (UTC)
:Wikipedia and the MediaWiki software and the hardware complex that runs it grow organically, based on strictly volunteer contributions (cash in the case of the hardware). The template mechanism was introduced in the software to address the need for a way to include similar (identical) content in multiple places without reentering it. The way it was implemented allowed template references to be nested. Contributors, being clever, have figured this out and have defined lots of templates that use other templates. Meanwhile, Wikipedia's popularity has been increasing exponentially. It is now one of the most highly viewed sites in the world (Alexa says more than 1000M page views per day [http://www.alexa.com/data/details/traffic_details?&range=1y&size=medium&compare_sites=&y=p&url=www.wikipedia.org#top]). The software and hardware architecture have evolved in response to increasing load (see [[m:Wikimedia servers]]) to the point that I would assert wikipedia.org is one of the most sophisticated web sites in the world (note the basic problem - anyone, anywhere, can edit any page and their changes are immediately visible, combined with tremendous "view only" traffic - is much more difficult than high traffic "view only" sites like microsoft.com). The developers don't get paid. The server admins don't get paid. I believe there's one person who is paid who is in charge of the IT infrastructure. To keep the site running reasonably responsively there's an ongoing effort (again volunteer) to add more servers and analyze and improve the software efficiency. [[user:Jamesday]] is one of a handful of people (volunteers) who do this. He noticed templates including templates can cause bad performance effects, which resulted in this guideline. In general, the things done to improve performance are done without affecting user operation (turning search off being a notable exception). Turning off template inclusion of templates at this point would break lots of articles, so is clearly not a desirable solution. Is template inclusion of templates a significant performance issue at this point? I don't know. I do know that general performance is, and almost certainly always will be, a BIG issue. -- [[user:Rick Block|Rick Block]] <small>([[user talk:Rick Block|talk]])</small> 16:45, 14 December 2005 (UTC)

::That's really impressive. And shocking too. I feel the point of no return in re <tt>if</tt> has already passed. And to handle that by consensus does not work. Maybe it would be best to face the situation and put all efforts in implementing that in code instead of argumenting about how to throw it out. But I don't know how long that would take. However, this discussion here is just academic. By yelling at newbies Netoholic just pisses them off. Maybe he also hits that one who could implemement it. They just do not understand him. And the rate he does this is clearly insuffient to solve the problem. Being bold does not solve this. – [[User:Adrian Buehlmann|Adrian]] | [[User talk:Adrian Buehlmann|Talk]] 18:18, 14 December 2005 (UTC)

:::I don't think that means anything, really. Perhaps it's too late to remove {{tl|if}} outright&mdash;but that certainly doesn't mean its spread cannot be controlled.
:::In other words, we may need to keep {{tl|if}} in order to maintain the various reference templates; but that's no reason to thoughtlessly insert it into every template we can find. In particular, the various userbox templates seem to have been infused with logic extensions&mdash;and why? They're not really part of the encyclopedia proper; to stress the servers for the sake of a little extra eye candy on userpages seems shortsighted. &mdash;[[User:Kirill Lokshin|Kirill Lokshin]] 18:36, 14 December 2005 (UTC)

::::[[Template:if]] should be aggressively removed from every userbox template that it is in immediately. [[User:Snowspinner|Phil Sandifer]] 19:57, 16 December 2005 (UTC)
:::::According to [[WP:UBX]] so is no userbox there using {{tl|if}}, one ({{tl|Userbox/Vandalized}}) is using {{tl|qif}} <sub>→<font style="color:#975612">[[User:AzaToth|Aza]]</font><font style="color:#325596">[[User_talk:AzaToth|Toth]]</font></sub> 20:51, 16 December 2005 (UTC)
:::::: Are you trying to be funny? [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Userbox_religion&action=edit Here's] a great example of what needs to go far away. {(if}}, {(switch}}... it's all the same. -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 20:57, 16 December 2005 (UTC)
::::::: I'm not trying to be funny, Phil said ''if''. Also, it's more server friendlier to use switch in a generic userbox than to use several different userboxes per meta call perspective (called templates are cached so only one database lookup per template is issued per session) <sub>→<font style="color:#975612">[[User:AzaToth|Aza]]</font><font style="color:#325596">[[User_talk:AzaToth|Toth]]</font></sub> 21:04, 16 December 2005 (UTC)
::::::::: '''"Templates" are not cached in any way. ''Pages'' are gathered from their various components, parsed, and then cached as HTML. Read [[Wikipedia:Avoid using meta-templates#How a page is built and cached]]. Each time a user page is edited, all templates and sub-templates it contains are pulled from the database. A template with 10 {(switch}} calls creates ten identical database calls and gets ten identical results. It then mashes those results into the userbox template result, and then incorporates that in the final page. The completed HTML page is then written to cache. '''-- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 21:19, 16 December 2005 (UTC)
::::::::::You have wrong, perhaps it's a so new change in the software that you are unaware of it, but template '''are''' catched. on line 108 on includes/Parser.php, it states:
<pre> $mTemplates, // cache of already loaded templates, avoids
// multiple SQL queries for the same string</pre>
::::::::::<sub>→<font style="color:#975612">[[User:AzaToth|Aza]]</font><font style="color:#325596">[[User_talk:AzaToth|Toth]]</font></sub> 21:23, 16 December 2005 (UTC)
::::::::::: You said it right... "multiple SQL queries for the '''same string'''" - multiple occurances of {(stub}} are held in the parser... but parameterized templates ''are not all the same string''. Take [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Userbox_religion&action=edit this example]. {(userbox|...}} is called 19 times because the string changes each time. -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 21:32, 16 December 2005 (UTC)
::::::::If userboxes are creating any sort of server load, they should be shot on sight - they are as wholly a non-essential function as can be dreamed up. We ought not have to play "Which way of doing this totally useless function is less destructive." [[User:Snowspinner|Phil Sandifer]] 21:12, 16 December 2005 (UTC)
:::::::::I don't think userboxes are to much of a worry, they are only used on low traffic pages (userpages) <sub>→<font style="color:#975612">[[User:AzaToth|Aza]]</font><font style="color:#325596">[[User_talk:AzaToth|Toth]]</font></sub> 21:21, 16 December 2005 (UTC)

They also tend to be used multiple times on userpages. Furthermore, there is absolutely no reason why they should need to use meta-templates. "This user is X" is a simple enough thing to communicate without being l33t. [[User:Snowspinner|Phil Sandifer]] 21:26, 16 December 2005 (UTC)
:That's why I created userbox foo using switch to reduce the relative number of sql calls if multiple simlar boxes are used on one page <sub>→<font style="color:#975612">[[User:AzaToth|Aza]]</font><font style="color:#325596">[[User_talk:AzaToth|Toth]]</font></sub> 21:29, 16 December 2005 (UTC)

== related debate ==

The relevance of this guidelene is being debated at [[Template talk:Spoiler#Wikipedia:Avoid using meta-templates]]. People intested in these issues would be welcome to comment there. [[User:DESiegel|DES]] [[User talk:DESiegel|<sup>(talk)</sup>]] 18:33, 14 December 2005 (UTC)

: Don't let this turn into a [[MeatBall:ForestFire]]. Discuss the [[WP:AUM]] guideline here... talk about possibly merging the spoiler templates there. -- [[User:Netoholic|Netoholic]] [[User talk:Netoholic|@]] 18:56, 14 December 2005 (UTC)
::Since the queastion about whether the AUM guideline applis to the spolier templates, and indeed to the IF logic templates has been raised there, it seems that it is a courtesy to let intersted and possibly knowlegable people here know about the discussion there. This was more in the line of posting a notice of a relevant ongoing discussion in another plce, such as is often done on the pump, or via RFC. I fail to see how that is ignigting a "forest fire" (and given the size of wikipedia, i don't see that discussion on several pages has the kind of problems that MeatBall was complaining about anyway. My only experince with a case where someone cited that "guideline" was in what I continue to regard as an improper attempt to stifle valid discussion, so I do not react positively to the reference.) I might add that you are the person who raised the issue of AUM on [[Template talk:Spoiler]], and used it as the basis of a revert, to boot. [[User:DESiegel|DES]] [[User talk:DESiegel|<sup>(talk)</sup>]] 19:04, 14 December 2005 (UTC)

== A small point ==

Templates are needed for consistency. Compare the situation where we have templates A and B. If they call a template C implementing the common denominator, and it gets edited, then, true enough, all pages containing A and B will need to be re-rendered. But if they don't call C, and A is changed then B must be changed as well. In case of several similar templates this is prone to error (I'm sure you can imagine what can go wrong). All pages containing A and C still need to be re-rendered. Fortunately most of the templates like C will not need changing frequently. That templates are a vandal-magnet is a problem all by itself. Suppose someone would put something nasty on disamb? Perhaps it would be better if we only allowed high-frequency templates to be changed only by registered users who have been around for a while. But that's probably to unwiki of me. Another thing: might it be possible to make only that part of a page affected by a template re-render if that template changes? That would solve a lot. Also if an article is edited and only stuff outside template calls changes, they wouldn't need to be called again, would they? I know, our develepors are busy enough as it is, but hey, one can dream (or have a wishlist). [[User:Gerbrant|Shinobu]] 19:55, 16 December 2005 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 16:37, 21 December 2022

Conditionals[edit]

Netoholic and Thebainer want to have the sentence "One of the most common reasons meta-templates are created is to add functions that mimic conditional expressions". I disagree with having this sentence in his guideline and I don't see why we need a section for conditionals at all. This might have been true before we had m:Parserfunctions. But nobody needs metatemplates for conditional logic anymore, so WP:AUM doesn't have to do anything anymore with conditional logic. How are metatemplates needed to implement conditionals? Could you show me where metatemplates are needed or used for conditional logic, let alone as "most common reasons"? --Ligulem 15:04, 22 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I've rewritten the section describing the use of metatemplates for conditionals as historic. But I don't think this section is needed anymore, as conditionals now don't have anything to do with metatemplates anymore. --Ligulem 15:24, 22 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
That version's better, it emphasises the historical use. Although they aren't used for that purpose now, it makes perfect sense for this page to explain why that is so, and what is to be used instead. --bainer (talk) 00:26, 23 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Netoholic reinserted "Meta-template schemes are sometimes created using many layers of nested templates to mimic conditional expressions". Again, this is not correct. Meta-templates are no longer used to mimic conditional logic. I have thus reverted to the version which Thebainer agreed on. --Ligulem 07:58, 23 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

You are missing the point. While YOU may not create meta-template schemes... it is still a very common practice by template neophytes who don't know a thing about m:Parserfunctions, and so "One of the most common reasons meta-templates are created is to add functions that mimic conditional expressions". That statement, and the mention of the practice here is not an endorsement... the page title says to avoid such things. The point is to describe the practice so that people can recognize what's being discussed and be shown alternatives. In other words "Here's a common practice, and it should be avoided in favor of x, y, & z". -- Netoholic @ 07:59, 23 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Can you show me such practice? --Ligulem 08:02, 23 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Template:Flag. Please to enjoy. -- Netoholic @ 08:11, 23 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Well known. Anything else? But Template:Flag does not serve as an example of "common practice". --Ligulem 08:27, 23 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Those teeny-tiny flags are on hundreds pages, and there are several variations of the basic flag template. Category:Flag templates and Wikipedia:WikiProject Flag Template cover all the related ones (Olympic, ISO, etc.). An extremely common practice (relatively on an encyclopedia of almost 1.5 million articles), and still is a convoluted meta-template scheme. You can see some of the hundreds of related templates here. Because of how these are set up, Whatlinkshere is highly unreliable. The flag templates were my main inspiration for WP:AUM. I'd help fix them, but... -- Netoholic @ 17:56, 23 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

In general, I agree with this wording. Although I do think "Conditionals should generally be avoided, unless there is a significant advantage in their use" is a bit dense. But as long as "Generally avoided" is not misrepresented as "do not use {{#if:...}} at all cost", I can live with that wording. Common practice is that even the "few template gurus" don't insert #if's if they are not needed. --Ligulem 08:27, 23 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Overall, I don't think there is enough of a 'problem' here to require a policy/guideline. If individual templates (e.g. the flags) could be better structured then we should address that directly on a case by case basis rather than setting up an 'official policy'. The latter can only serve as a 'club' to force people to change something which has consensus... and, as I said, I don't see any problems here which I think would necessitate that. The fact is that people generally aren't creating "convoluted meta-template schemes" since the introduction of parser-functions. The flags are a relic from pre 'conditional template' days that have never been updated to more recent methods. Maybe there are reasons for that... or maybe it is just that nobody ever put in the effort, but that is one of a handful of cases and not any sort of widespread or significant problem. --CBD 12:56, 26 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
You'd probably be surprised with just how many conditionally-based nested template schemes there are out there. This page can be a guideline which explains the issues, so that the same arguements aren't repeated. -- Netoholic @ 20:57, 27 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
So point them out and I'll be happy to talk with the people there about simplifying them. Heck, you could talk to them yourself, work out a consensus, develop an alternative in your user space, and get someone to implement it. Which would probably go a long way towards getting your ArbCom probation on the matter rescinded. I just think it is a bad idea <tm> to go down the road of 'this type of template is a bad design... see there is a page which says so... so you have to change/abandon/delete it' again. There is not enough of a 'problem' here to justify ANY sort of cudgel... whether it be labeled 'guideline' or not. If there is really a way to simplify things people will usually jump at the chance. --CBD 13:11, 6 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

A rejected page is any proposal for which consensus support is not present. Consensus need not be fully opposed; if consensus is neutral on the issue and unlikely to improve, the proposal is likewise rejected. Making small changes will not change this fact, nor will repetitive arguments. Generally it is wiser to rewrite a rejected proposal from scratch and start in a different direction.

This page and its fundamental concept have been rejected over and over. Neto is the only one trying to revive this. The content you want to add is fine, but not policy material. It belongs on an informative page like Wikipedia:Template namespace; not here. — Omegatron 00:10, 4 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

So feel free to add a summary on that page, but let this be the expanded -guideline- (not "policy"). I cannot tell from the above whether YOU YOURSELF reject this page, or are only acting out of some sense of obligation becuase you believe that it oresently is rejected. IF you say the wording is fine, and Ligulem does, and me, and CBDunk doesn't have major objections... then what is the problem? It is a proposed guideline, nothing more. LEt it evolve, let more people read it without the stigma of that giant red "X" on the top. -- Netoholic @ 07:21, 4 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

WP:AUM had been rejected... Is it time to revert some of the "forward looking" edits?[edit]

I believe there are a few pages that were edited in anticipation of WP:AUM. Some (probably not all) of these pages may warrant reverting. Are there any guidelines, or priorities or concensous was to what to revert first? I am of the mind to simply do the ones I know about.

Sumburgh 08:49, 5 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Of course other pages should reflect the fact that this is rejected, but can you give some more concrete examples of what you're talking about? — Omegatron 09:29, 5 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
People who rejected this page 9 months ago did so because they felt that it threatened a poorly implemented hack involving Template:If and such. Now that scheme is deprecated in favor of ParserFunctions, and all RECENT indications about are that the main people who lead the rejection of this page are now of the mind that, with some updates to reflect the present situation, that the content of it is good. To repeatedly say this page is rejected while ignoring recent consensus is not accurate. I do not care about the past, I care that this page makes some excellent observations and suggestions. People "get" what this page is about, as I see the subject come up often and I see people working under the principles given here. Nested "meta-template" schemes are being wiped out. This page is current, and reflects wide consensus. I remain open to discussing specific parts, but Omegatron is not the decider of what is rejected or not. To do so he needs to show this page does not currently hold consensus. -- Netoholic @ 09:51, 5 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
It seems this is a very touchy subject, so I suggest further discussion before making any changes on the actual project page. -- Ned Scott 10:46, 5 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
And discussion is happening. It is only "touchy" because people assume it must be "touchy". In reality, the page's function is simple and generally agreeable. -- Netoholic @ 09:50, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
It would help if you gave some examples of this "general agreement" you keep talking about. Who has said they want this page revived besides you? — Omegatron 17:19, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
What you're not getting is that you and other people are "saying" that this page has no agreement, but not speaking for yourself. Do you yourself believe that meta-template schemes should be avoided? I really want everyone on this talk page to answer this question, rather than assume they are acting on behalf of some shadowy faction that oppses this page. -- Netoholic @ 17:52, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
So you can't? — Omegatron 02:37, 8 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
instructions creep, because it's not a big issue in the first place? -- Ned Scott 03:31, 8 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Why not make a workshop page, or a new proposal along similar lines? - A Man In Bl♟ck (conspire | past ops) 03:13, 6 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Because we've been down that road before, and this is the right title and place to discuss this very minor consideration in the template space. Besides, the content of the page is largely uncontroversial, except when people assume it is controversial. -- Netoholic @ 09:50, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Not again[edit]

Ugh. Do you ever feel like you're the needle running over a broken record? Edit warring, disputed page protections, blocks, et cetera. We've all been here before and we all know how it turns out... badly for Wikipedia. Can we please not fight this war again?

Netoholic, you are not wrong that some templates are set up less efficiently than they could be. We should indeed encourage people to use different methods where appropriate. However, this page is not needed to do that. There is nothing preventing direct contact with people involved in various templates that could be re-designed. No, you can't then point at a page and say, 'all the reasons why this must be done are there'... but that's a good thing. It forces us to examine the individual needs of the template and the people using it and work with them to come up with a replacement they are comfortable with. So that we are the 'good guys' not just in terms of improving templates for Wikipedia as a whole, but also to the individual users impacted.

Why not work on improving the templates collaboratively... rather than fighting to enshrine a framework which can serve no purpose but to over-ride collaboration with 'established practice'? --CBD 13:38, 6 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I don't think that approach will help in more than a few cases. I prepared the first version of this page only after dozens of individual meta-template arguments and deletion votes. This page centralises many of the points, so why would we want to expend effort re-explaining this each and every time? No, this is not the biggest problem on Wikipedia - I never said it was. Far more often then not, people have been directed to this page, read it, and come away with a greater understanding and a desire to make their templates less cumbersome. Why take that away? -- Netoholic @ 09:45, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I just stumbled here looking for template content. I come from a strong background in C++ template meta-programming and I've witnessed this same debate play out over a decade with larger armies, better trained, and better equiped. I would say the debate was more complex than the meta-programming techniques themselves. The autoptr<> saga raged forever. In my view, this page is not the right forum to achieve its purpose: advocating a judicious use of complexity for the betterment of the community as a whole. Far more useful would be a page or collection of pages concerning Recommendations on avoiding unnecessary complexity in general, with portions applied to templates, and meta-templates, in particular; and from there, as others have suggested, work with people to adopt this material to their specific situation so far as it makes sense.
I lost what sympathy I had when I saw the prominent link to protected pages are bad(tm). That's the kind of innocuous-on-the-surface wolf-in-sheeps-clothing that makes this page dangerous and far from uncontroversial. The same facility that these semi-protected deep-infrastructure meta-templates provide could just have easily have been incorporated into the MediaWiki code base as custom PHP. Does that end up making the facility less-protected? The C++ community went through endless heartache to push complexity away from the core compiler by making the template infrastructure sufficiently powerful that the same complexity could be handled as a deep systems library provided by the compiler vendor or by means of a battle-hardened primitives library (e.g. Boost). At the end of the day, it benefits the entire ecosystem not to code more policy into the compiler itself than absolutely necessary. For C++, the equivalent of the parse-functions extension is coded in a Boost library and you wouldn't want to be mucking with this down in the sub-basement unless you feel up to the challenge of performing a successful self-amputation. Most likely it was of great value that the community could explore the use of this facility before it was formally codified as Mediawiki extension. Experience has shown that new C++ coders often learn faster and make fewer mistakes programming on top of the Boost library, rather than cooking from scratch in a notoriously unsafe kitchen. The issue is about packaging the complexity appropriately, not whether it exists somewhere in a basement that eats children.
The point here is that there is certainly no consensus in any policy page that the use of protected pages to promote the general safety of Wikipedia while wrangling with how to best dispatch complexity taints such an endeavour intrinsically, which is the wolf-in-sheeps clothing that invoking the trappings of a consensus formed about the abuse of a mechanism in a broad political context rather than this hillybilly-esoteric technical backwater. In so far as the reader comes away informed, it could be achieved better by other means.
A good book to consider is Getting to Yes which talks at length about the need to argue from interests rather than positions. The interest here is that Wikipedia complexity be managed in the best possible way across the broad swath of the Wikipedia ecosystem, from casual contributors to hard-core MediaWiki hackers. IMO the existence of this page subtley biases the debate away from the interest of managing complexity and toward the position that template meta-programming can be tarred with one brush. That makes this page plenty controversial in my estimation. MaxEnt 18:18, 7 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Wow, that was.. really well put :) -- Ned Scott 03:35, 8 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Cache size is getting too small again[edit]

The text alone from United States is 500 KB of meta-templated goodness, not counting javascript, stylesheets and of course images. I clocked five various diffs (with "time wget" from the shell) at between 43 and 48(!) seconds just now. The second try of each was about 5 seconds. When a particular version of an article with enough meta-templates in it gets bumped from the caches, you wait. And wait. I disbelieve the developers when they say nested transclusion isn't a performance penalty. That depends on having an effectively much larger cache than we do now. 1of3 03:40, 6 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

from Rob Church on the mailing list:
The "technical team" is not responsible for checking that content is correct, nor is it responsible for checking page load times for each article and pruning them in the dumps. If a page contains obvious abuses of markup which cause significant problems for large numbers of users, then we'll kill it off, but of course, we haven't had a large number of reports of that in recent months, although as other threads on the list imply, the problem is resurfacing, and will likely be looked into.
We can't really help it if our users are silly enough to insist upon abusing a markup language as if it were pure code, nor if they insist upon continuing to use fragile-looking template constructs which will end in tears.
xaosflux Talk 11:27, 26 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

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