GuildWiki talk:Style and formatting/Skills

Acquistion
I put the cantha and tyria subs for future consideration but it takes up too much space and i'm sure we can do that just as easily in future chapters. Number two is easier to read imo &mdash; Skuld  03:36, 12 July 2006 (CDT)


 * I think continent is not important, but campaign is. How about:


 * Sigh... in general I hate putting bullet points inside tables, the wikicode is just ugly, yet here I am... - 06:08, 12 July 2006 (CDT)


 * How does not using bullet points inside tables make wikicode look ugly? Without them, the generally structure of the whole thing ain't really that much different right? Using tables always makes things look complex. --Ab.Er.Rant @ User:Aberrant80 (msg) 06:19, 12 July 2006 (CDT)
 * I meant using bullet points inside tables make the wikicode look ugly (or messy).  This is because the bullet point has to start as the first character of a new line.   - 03:24, 14 July 2006 (CDT)
 * I personally don't think tables look good for this at all, especially seeing as the wiki is becoming tableholics. That said, I'm all for Skuld's proposition. Possibly in the form Name (Location, Campaign), but no tables. &mdash; Galil  14:59, 27 August 2006 (CDT)
 * A month later, but I don't really care, but deciding this is good. Skuld wasn't proposing using a table, he was just using tables to show which was in use and which was proposed.  I also hate the "before it's unlocked" part since it's ugly and people are ignoring it anyway.  If they don't already understand how the unlocking/availability works that notice isn't enough.  --Fyren 03:42, 26 September 2006 (CDT)
 * the "before it's unlocked" might not be sufficiently enough, but I think it is much better than NOT having it there. Peopel who didnt realize who things work before, might at least be curious and click on the link and learn something.  Every little bit helps, and I added that part in beause I was getting sick of reverting stuff.  I *think* it's been better lately. - 04:12, 26 September 2006 (CDT)
 * I don't think it's been better lately. --Fyren 04:19, 26 September 2006 (CDT)

Back to the bullet point thing, why use them at all? If you need to go to another line use  instead, same thing, no bullet. --Rainith 11:16, 26 September 2006 (CDT)
 * Br = ugly, bullets = easier to read. Why use html > wikicode? &mdash; Skuld 11:21, 26 September 2006 (CDT)
 * If there's no hierarchy involving the campaign in some way, I agree that there's no need for bullets. I also agree that HTML is pretty ugly in wikitext, so if there'll be no bullets, just insert blank lines to get the final output to be what you want.  --Fyren 11:25, 26 September 2006 (CDT)

using templates for some related skills sections
There's certain clusters of skills are all related to eachother by a common property (spells with armor penetration, multi-target attack skills, damage prevention skills, energy denial skills and the numerous subcategories of damage spells), which would make it practical to just use a template for the related skills section. Then again, categories might be a better idea. -- Gordon Ecker 01:30, 21 July 2006 (CDT)
 * I'd certainly favor categories for some of these. For instance, damage prevention or healing skills (since they cross classes and attributes) would be fine choices for a category.  Possibly broken down (i.e. the utility is being able to say, "I'm a Ranger/Assasin, what are my options for self-healing / other-healing / AoE or multiple attacks / energy denial, etc.").  Certainly my current method is to just try to read all the skills, which will become less and less feasible over time (for the core professions). --JoDiamonds 23:46, 23 July 2006 (CDT)
 * I dunno, you're potentially going to have a lot of new categories, many of which will contain a couple of articles... Currently related skills are listed on the skill page, it's unwieldy to have a link to out energy denial category and having a list and which is exactly the same as what's contained in the category... We already have this kind of info anyway in Category:Skill_quick_references for major smiliar skills. --Xasxas256 00:12, 24 July 2006 (CDT)
 * On a related note to what Xasxas256 said--For example, if you want to see related skills on Distracting Shot, certainly not all of the related skills that also interrupt should be listed on its "Related Skills" section--as they're already somewhat easily accessible in the Skill quick references as he stated. It is really redundant and not to mention hoggish of space to list ALL of a related field on the Skill's page itself. But on the same subject: What should ultimately be listed in the Related Skills field? I felt silly when I almost tried linking ALL of the skills that Interrupt through the Related Skills field of all revelant skills... It just felt very wrong to do--so I ultimately only listed other interrupts in that Profession's field. So where is the line really drawn, in the higher authorities opinion? -- Feather 09:14, 20 August 2006 (CDT)
 * In some cases a template would be unwieldy since you might not want to break up the "related skills" and give them headings. In such a case the list may end up being "out of order" with skills not grouped by profession or in the prescribed profession order (not that people pay attention to that anyway).  --68.142.14.19 03:57, 24 July 2006 (CDT)


 * Might I suggest a template add-on(?) such as the mini Profession icons before each related skill as the norm? Its aesthetically pleasing and the images are of small size... One could easily recognize to which class the skill originates from--and it doesn't account for vertical clutter. (Stating the Profession in Text-form uses up a line.) -- Feather 10:21, 14 August 2006 (CDT)
 * I don't think anyone would complain if you went through and added the icons into the articles. --68.142.14.39 16:02, 14 August 2006 (CDT)
 * Okies, I can see that Feather (who possibly was 24.23.114.242) has gotten onto this. Anywho, does any one else like/dislike the profession icon? Theres no note on it on the actual article so I thought it was worth furthering this discussion if we're going to add it to the S&F guide. My own opinion is that I don't mind it, it's certainly far perferable to having the skill icon. --Xasxas256 21:51, 14 August 2006 (CDT)
 * Given that Feather/24.23.114.242 have now done about 100 of them, I've added it to the example and the S&F pages.


 * Strangely enough, I had started creating those related skills templates you speak of, when Karlos (who seems to be opposed to the templates use... in this part of the wiki) told me about this talk page. So, even if I've started the discussion on my user talk, here are my arguments :
 * (fact #1) related skills are actually outdated and unconsistent,
 * (fact #2) templates are the bread and butter of a wiki,
 * [fact #3) especially when listing repetitive lines (as shorter as a signature or a shortcut for an image, as long as a full article),
 * (fact #4) the same template can be tweaked for different usages and presented views (or emphasis as I may call that).
 * (fact #5) A few skills would belong to more than one group of "related skills" (but the decision can be made case by case).


 * (opinion #1) If you don't use templates here, you miss something useful and those "related skills" sections will stay outdated and give incomplete information to the reader.
 * [opinion #2) About the discussion on icon presentation and lost lines, "related skills" are at the end of those pages, with the "see also" section, no matter if they are about a dozen lines long (longer may means you have missed the point of this particular group of skills).
 * (opinion #3) "Related skills" are not for any skills, but only those exotic enough not to fit a recognized category (shout, chant, lead attack, binding ritual... and so on) and still have bear an interest.
 * (opinion #4) :Two words generally define this "related skills" groupings, like for examples : spell immunity, minion summoning, damage sharing, instant recharge... but you can also havelike distant armor protection, trigger on block or evade.


 * Anyway I agree those things need guide lines and discussion, but I must also add they are pretty irrevelent comapred to the content (i mean the naming can be changed in less than a hour, by minor updates in all the implicated articles).
 * So, my proposal is to create those few missing templates (I assume around twenty) and put them in the Related skills category, which talk page would be a better place to discuss the labelling of those templates and their contents. --Leonim 08:56, 27 September 2006 (CDT)


 * For your "facts:" I won't argue with #1. I reject #2 as simply false.  The users are the bread and butter.  Templates are merely tools to ease editing and not meant to be used everywhere possible.  #3 I reject as related lists shouldn't be that long.  #4-5 aren't about why a template helps.
 * I don't mind changing the formatting of the section, but I do not want to use templates to do it. In short, I don't think templates provide much of a help.  I'd much rather see skills in a plain list, sorted by profession.  A template doesn't allow insertion into the middle of its list to keep a sorted order.  If a related skills list is longer than a few skills, it should be culled to make sure the skill are similar enough.  When there's a long list with some kind of logical grouping, it can be done through a quick reference page as Skuld pointed out already.  With short lists, it's easy enough to maintain by hand rather than templates.  I think we disagree about how long "too long" is, since you mention a dozen as an example.  I'm thinking more like 5 skills max for most cases.  --Fyren 13:22, 27 September 2006 (CDT)


 * Anyway, not my role to decide of those things, i'm just proposing. Sysops are against it, no problem, I will use my time elsewhere. :) Could be nice to put the maintenance of those related skills in a todo list and have a talk page to discuss them (since they cover a bunch of articles). By the way, Skuld proposed using quick reference articles instead of templates, does that mean a simple and plain wiki link is allowed in the section (not mentionned in this formatting guide)? --Leonim 06:16, 28 September 2006 (CDT)


 * Because sysops are arguing against it isn't a good reason to stop arguing, though since three other people have said they don't like it (me, Skuld, Karlos), it might be. I'll never tell someone to stop arguing about it if you think it's better, though.  If you make a QR template for it, add a "see also" section with just a plain wikilink to the QR page you make (named " skills quick reference").  The minion spells are a good candidate for this, as Skuld said.  See Template:Frenzy, Template:Skill box ias, attack speed skills quick reference as references, though use ParserFunctions instead of template-ifs... which reminds me to rewrite some of those .  --Fyren 06:49, 28 September 2006 (CDT)

Skill icons in Related Skills

 * Why is it far preferable to the skill icon? I would prefer the skill icon. Some people have said that they recognise skill icons better than skill names for the beastiary pages. Also, simply by virtue of the colour of the skill icon is likely more than enough to identify the profession. --Ab.Er.Rant (msg Aberrant80) 22:15, 14 August 2006 (CDT)
 * Oh god not this vote again! Look it's just the small related skills section do we really need them? It's overload for a small optional section which is often not even there. And hey you voted for the good guys last time! Damn swinging voters! --Xasxas256 22:24, 14 August 2006 (CDT)
 * Another point is that Bestiary articles normally only concern one profession, there's very few creatures with dual professions. With related skills there could be any profession. At that icon size Ranger and Necro skills can look the same, as can Assassin and Mesmer ones. To me it just adds confusion, adds a lot of work, makes standardisation a lot more difficult without much payoff. --Xasxas256
 * Ok, ok, I'll just... swing back! No to skill icons! :P --Ab.Er.Rant (msg Aberrant80) 22:58, 15 August 2006 (CDT)
 * Cheers big ears! ;) --Xasxas256 23:16, 15 August 2006 (CDT)

Summary of When/Where Decision Were Made
I haven't mucked about with skills in a long time, and looking at them now, I wouldn't know where to start.

When did this subtemplate nonsense become standard? I thought I, Karlos, Nunix, and  shot this stuff down back when Ollj suggested it a year ago. It took me 10 minutes to figure out how to edit a skill article&mdash;there's absolutely no way Random McNewbie will be able to use them.

*mutters something about damned kids wrecking the place*

&mdash;Tanaric 06:06, 2 August 2006 (CDT)


 * lol, have I mentioned how glad I am that you're back Tanaric? :)  &lt;LordBiro&gt;/&lt;Talk&gt; 15:48, 2 August 2006 (CDT)
 * it is a bit daunting, but it has it's uses. consider the attack speed skills quick reference. all that data is pulled from the skill templates, dynamically. should another IWAY nerf happen, one edit on template:"I Will Avenge You!" fixes that and two or three other references. --Honorable Sarah [[image:Honorable_Icon.gif]] 15:56, 2 August 2006 (CDT)


 * The coder in me (and that's a big part of me!) absolutely loves the elegance of that solution. I'm not saying it isn't pretty or that it doesn't work. However, it's unwiki. The point of wiki is that, since we have a million pageviews every day anyway, if something changes skill-wise, somebody will see the wrong information on any page where it's redundant and fix it.


 * The current status quo of template use establishes an editor class within the wiki. There are editors who know what they are doing and therefore can contribute and control the direction of this place, and there's the rest of us, who are so in the dark that our voices are essentially meaningless, because we lack the ability to create change anyway. You guys with intimate knowledge of templates are the bourgeoisie, and I'm trying to get the proletariat to rise up against you. :)


 * In all seriousness, though, I believe the barrier to entry created by this current method far outweighs any advantage they can possibly provide. As Karlos noted on his talk page, much of our information is out of date simply because people don't know how to edit anymore. It's sad, but we were more current back when Nunix, Biro, Karlos, and I were writing most of the content -- there were a bloody ton of manhours dumped into it, and mistakes were definitely made, but there were so many anon and new member edits keeping us in line that it didn't matter. We've scared away a lot of these single-edit wonders, and I think the GuildWiki is weakened as a result. &mdash;Tanaric 04:25, 3 August 2006 (CDT)


 * I completely agree, Tanaric. I believe I said so during the discussion too, but my objections were not heard. I wish those who are now voicing this opinion would have said something back then instead of waiting 'till now. -- [[Image:Bishop_icon2.png]] Bishop [ rap|con ] 17:11, 4 August 2006 (CDT)
 * Reading up on the discussion, the above statement is not quite fair. There was indeed voices raised in concern (and right now I can't even seem to find where I objected although I'm sure I did). Just not loudly enough, I guess. -- [[Image:Bishop_icon2.png]] Bishop [ rap|con ] 17:17, 4 August 2006 (CDT)


 * Most of the relavent discussion can be found here and later GuildWiki_talk:Community_Portal/Archive_5. Much of those discussion took place when implementation started on Mesmer skills, but haven't been completely spread over to other professions yet.  Anything I currently can think of to say on the matter have been expressed in those two discussions. - 16:39, 2 August 2006 (CDT)
 * BTW, maybe we should start some kind of campaign to promote contributors to edit via the edit section links. It helps auto-generate a edit summary and makes Recentchanges-patrolling much easier anyways.  It also would've saved Tanaric 10 minutes of his time. - 16:43, 2 August 2006 (CDT)


 * Section edit links are optional&mdash;users have the ability to turn them off in Preferences. In addition, I think some of the other skins don't offer them at all. We can't rely on those mechanics to make the wiki functional. &mdash;Tanaric 04:25, 3 August 2006 (CDT)


 * Personally, as I'm sure I've said before, I don't think that making the wiki less redundant is worth the price of increased complexity.  &lt;LordBiro&gt;/&lt;Talk&gt; 14:06, 3 August 2006 (CDT)
 * some templates are harder to understand then others. i personally do not wish to repeat my experiances with attack speed skills quick reference, i had to ask another user to create the appropreate template for me (the fact that it was an anon that actually created template:skill box ias is rather... counterintuitive). however, some templates, like Template:skill bar and template:TOCright are great effort savers, and make it easier to edit. the skills data is fairly straight forward, all game data is stored in the template, and usage/progression/experimental data is stored in the main namespace. the game data will only change with a rebalance, which is fairly rare (a handfull of times in the past six months), and the bulk of the changes are to the main namespace. The Deep and Urgoz's Warren (Mission) are strangely free of the type of template we are talking about. --Honorable Sarah [[image:Honorable_Icon.gif]] 14:24, 3 August 2006 (CDT)

Make it easier to edit skill articles
Let me repeat the above critisism. When looking at the recent skill balance, it took much longer than the usual 1-2 hours till skills where updated and (I might be wrong about this) there were almost no edits by anon contributers. I perfectly understand the usefullness of templates, but more should be done to counter their disadvantages. Looking at this article page, there is nothing to help a first time user understand why there is a template, how it works and how to get to edit it. A basic "you need to click here to edit skill data" is missing. Ideally that line would also be found (commented-out) in all the skill articles, to make anon-editors aware of what to do to edit the skill data. --Xeeron 06:45, 15 September 2006 (CDT)
 * I saw several anon edits. I think the extremely large download had more to do with the delay this time.  Using -image took close to 45 minutes to complete for me.
 * I really don't understand where you mean for inclusion of the "you need to click here to edit skill data" comment. There are section "edit" links, just as in every other article.  Can you clarify?  It's likely just too early in the morning here, and I'm just not awake enough to follow without a clearer explaination of what you mean.  ;-D  --- Barek (talk • contribs) - 08:28, 15 September 2006 (CDT)


 * Section edit links are disable-able by skin and preferences, and probably should not be relied upon. &mdash;Tanaric 10:55, 15 September 2006 (CDT)


 * If disabled via preferences or skin, it would be a site wide issue for the user, not specific to skills. Xeeron mentioned the link was to benefit first time / newer users, who would be most likely to be using the default skins and not to have changed the preferences to hide section edit links.
 * Keep in mind, I'm not saying it's a bad idea. I just want to understand better what is being proposed and why it's being suggested.  --- Barek (talk • contribs) - 11:07, 15 September 2006 (CDT)


 * I wouldn't be opposed to having some comments in the article saying to edit the template instead of the article itself. It might be a good idea to say something as standard in skill articles, such as:


 * "Skill data is not held directly in the skill article, as in some situations we need to use this information in other places. If you would like to change any of this skills' details please go to Template:Skill name ".


 * Is this the kind of thing you were suggesting Xeeron?  &lt;LordBiro&gt;/&lt;Talk&gt; 11:44, 15 September 2006 (CDT)


 * Yes exactly. I clicked on the normal edit of a skill first when I wanted to check something earlier and didnt find the data. Of course then I remembered that it was outsourced to a template, but any new user would likely not come to the conclusion that fast. The edit link in the section is there, but unless you know how the wiki works, you will never get why you have to click there instead of the normal edit button. That is what should be explained in comments. --Xeeron 12:50, 15 September 2006 (CDT)


 * * sigh* --Karlos 08:50, 27 September 2006 (CDT)


 * Just to point out, I changed the [edit] link to say [edit skill details] in my proposed template. I can still add a comment in the article text pretty easily with a bot saying to edit the template.  The edit link the template generates (whether the old one that looks like a section edit or the one in the proposal) can't be disabled in preferences because it's not a real section edit link.  --Fyren 20:28, 8 October 2006 (CDT)

Typo?
The subst comment in the article says "{{subst:skill box qu" Does that make sense? --Karlos 08:51, 27 September 2006 (CDT)
 * It's correct as it is. --Fyren 13:29, 27 September 2006 (CDT)

Skill box revamp
So, there's a couple changes I've been wanting to make to the basic template:skill box. I'll separate them out into subheadings for discussion since they're all independent. My mostly-everything-in-one example is at Sandbox/Skill box. Its talk page has a list of example skills (which will look broken until the CSS is site wide or you put the CSS in your user space, see the CSS section below) in the sandbox that use the template and a listing of changes (which I think are all described fully here). --Fyren 20:15, 5 October 2006 (CDT)
 * Doesn't seem like anyone has specifically objected to these changes. Still going to think about the special skills thing more. I'm going to plan to have these changes live by noon on the 23rd (the Monday before Nightfall release).  If anyone wants anything else added, speaking up now would be good.  --Fyren 21:57, 13 October 2006 (CDT)
 * So, I have a script ready to edit all the skill templates and articles. I tested it against a random selection of 50 skills (on my test wiki, not here) so I'm confident that I've caught most weirdness.  It removes the progression from the article, puts the data into the template, fixes a bunch of skill article formatting things (old noincludes, cats that shouldn't be there, extra whitespace, headings with wrong case), and changes the skill templates from valX/statX (and a couple formatting things).  Unless someone suggests changes to be made, on Thursday or Friday morning at around 5 AM EST I'm going to apply the changes.  --Fyren 08:25, 14 October 2006 (CDT)

Auto progressions
Since we've got PF now and I've waited a long while to make sure there's nothing horribly wrong that would make us want to get rid of it, I think we should auto-generate the progression tables. I've implemented this by putting it straight into the skill box template. See Sandbox/Symbiosis and [ its source]. The three progression lines/nine progression parameters are the data used to generate the table for symbiosis. This isn't the only way to do it, but putting all the skill data into the skill templates seems like a good idea to me (as opposed to having most of it in the templates and progression data in the articles).

This would solve the problem of people making up data, inconsistent use of ? and N/A, and people filling in numbers for unattainable attribute ranks. It should also cut down on actual errors since there are only two numbers to check per range.

For users who don't edit the skill data templates or progression tables, this change is invisible besides that the progression sections will disappear from the articles. To edit a progression table, the only things to change are the row headings and the values at 0 or 15, all of which would be located in the templates. --Fyren 20:15, 5 October 2006 (CDT)


 * Sounds ok to me. --[[Image:Gem-icon-sm.png]] (talk) 00:21, 6 October 2006 (CDT)


 * Do all progressions increase in the same way? As long as there are no exceptions to the way in which values are calculated from attributes then I think this is an excellent idea. Even if there are some exceptions to the rule, as long as we would be able to allow for these exceptions then I think this would be great.  &lt;LordBiro&gt;/&lt;Talk&gt; 04:14, 6 October 2006 (CDT)
 * There are no exceptions. --Fyren 04:41, 6 October 2006 (CDT)


 * If that's the case then I see no problem with implementing this.  &lt;LordBiro&gt;/&lt;Talk&gt; 05:24, 6 October 2006 (CDT)

valX/statX
Right now, upkeep/sacrifice/energy/adrenaline/activation/recharge need to be manually given the right "X." That is, recharge is always val3/stat3 (so in a template you always see "val3 = Recharge" and "stat3 = 5"). The change is to just have "recharge = 5." Compare [ the source for the real unyielding aura template] to [ the source for my example UY template].

I think the existing parameter names are slightly confusing and much more complex than necessary. When users misnumber a stat, then in the all the various skill boxes, the stat will show up in the wrong place. The positioning shouldn't be left to the user but to the template.

For users who don't edit the skill data templates, this change is invisible. I think it makes the templates more readable. As mentioned, this allows other templates (ones like template:skill box qr) to format the stats how they want, which is good. --Fyren 20:15, 5 October 2006 (CDT)


 * I always wondered why the names were so weird. Agreed. --[[Image:Gem-icon-sm.png]] (talk) 00:21, 6 October 2006 (CDT)


 * Good idea. In my old one I wanted this ^^ &mdash; Skuld 01:12, 6 October 2006 (CDT)


 * Yeah, it's ridiculous that it was ever implemented this way really.  &lt;LordBiro&gt;/&lt;Talk&gt; 05:25, 6 October 2006 (CDT)


 * The rational behind the original design was to minimize the use of logical operators (IF's) in the template. In fact, we did NOT even have the If-Then-Else template back then, and therefore the alternative would've been more ridiculous.  As a general principle, I still prefer to minimize the use of IF's, but now with parser functions it's much less important than it used to be. - 00:43, 9 October 2006 (CDT)

Formatting
These are all independent of each other, of course, but I'll lump them together.

I don't like it displaying profession "common" or attribute "no attribute." I especially dislike that it links No Attribute. I'd bet the only reason common isn't linked is that's already a redirect for something else. I'd prefer to remove the rows entirely for such skills. See Resurrection Signet versus my example Sandbox/Resurrection Signet. I won't be crushed if people want the rows to stay.
 * Leaving the rows, changing the values to plain "common" or "unlinked" (no links). --Fyren 00:50, 14 October 2006 (CDT)

In my example, I set fixed widths for the cells containing the energy/activation/etc. stats, I right aligned the text "type:" and such, and I changed the "[edit]" link that went to the templates into "[edit skill details]" (and changed its position a little). I can't really imagine opposition to these three changes, but maybe someone will surprise me.

These changes would, of course, change how the boxes are displayed. But for editors, there's no change to the data templates or articles. --Fyren 20:15, 5 October 2006 (CDT)


 * You should add some padding on the edges of the title (in the skill box). About the rows below the icon, I prefer the actual display, but it is a matter of taste and web-browsing general use.


 * "Title?" The skill name?  "Actual display?"  --Fyren 21:19, 5 October 2006 (CDT)


 * I would like to keep the No Attribute displayed. When I look at a skill and don't know if it is tied to an attribute, it takes me more time to realise that there is no attribute field than it would take to find the 'No Attribute' attribute field.
 * I would also like the boxes to have borders as as before. Your skillboxs don't have borders. (Using Opera) --[[Image:Gem-icon-sm.png]] (talk) 00:21, 6 October 2006 (CDT)
 * Argh. I didn't test the recent border changes anywhere but Firefox.  --Fyren 01:00, 6 October 2006 (CDT)
 * So, I fiddled with it but don't have Opera. Someone with Opera (or simply less lazy than me) check it and report back?  --Fyren 01:22, 6 October 2006 (CDT)


 * It works now. --[[Image:Gem-icon-sm.png]] (talk) 18:23, 7 October 2006 (CDT)

Special skills
With the change to the template version of skills, all of these show up in the normal skill lists, making them look like normal skills. Here is a prove of someone getting confused. I dont know how to change the template, but it needs to move these out of the normal skill categories. --Xeeron 06:08, 2 October 2006 (CDT)
 * I've been thinking about this. We either have to make a new template for "special" skills or add a parameter to not apply the normal categorization (and then do it by hand in the skill articles).  I'm not sure if there are any better ways.  --Fyren 09:57, 2 October 2006 (CDT)
 * How about not using a template at all since the reasons to use templates in the first place do not apply? Or is there any reason I am missing? --Xeeron 10:07, 2 October 2006 (CDT)
 * They're still skills and have descriptions, icons, costs, activations, and recharges. --Fyren 10:10, 2 October 2006 (CDT)
 * Can't the code from the template simply be placed on the article page itself? Well if it doesnt work, I'd vote for a special template: Better not to complicate the normal one just to account for special event skills. --Xeeron 11:04, 6 October 2006 (CDT)
 * You could copy and paste the table code, but it's actually kind of long. I'm not sure how much you could cut out.  It would be better to change the existing template to take something like "nocats = yes" than make a new template if categorization is the only problem.  --Fyren 16:11, 6 October 2006 (CDT)


 * I think it would make sense to make the appearance of non-standard skills different. Either by giving the image itself a different border (blue or red or something) or changing the background colour of the skill box from green to something else, or doing both. I don't like the idea of "nocats = yes", it should be "special = yes" or "non-standard = yes" or something.  &lt;LordBiro&gt;/&lt;Talk&gt; 17:41, 6 October 2006 (CDT)


 * Depending on what we want changed for certain skills, maybe. If all it does is remove categories, then nocats is a better name than special.  If it does more, then sure.  --Fyren 17:53, 6 October 2006 (CDT)


 * I disagree there. The parameters you pass to a template should describe what the item IS, not how it should behave. For example, you might be tempted to make a template with a parameter "nocats", because the decided way of handling special skills is to make sure they don't appear in any categories. Later on it might be decided that the way special skills should be distinguished is that they should still be included in categories, but they have some special decoration on them. If you had originally called the parameter "nocats" then this would no longer make sense and you'd have to go through every article and change "nocats" to "decoration" or something. But the item is still a special skill, that hasn't changed and never will. If you just use "special-skill" as a parameter then regardless of how we treat special skills it will always be a sensible parameter.  &lt;LordBiro&gt;/&lt;Talk&gt; 07:34, 8 October 2006 (CDT)


 * I don't mean to be rude, but that makes no sense. I don't even know how to question it.  What item?  It's a MediaWiki template.  It's not an abstraction of a skill.  --Fyren 07:59, 8 October 2006 (CDT)


 * Ok... I don't see what doesn't make sense. It makes perfect sense to me to abstract the behaviour of a template away from the place that the template is called. In this case skill articles.


 * I know I'm repeating myself here, but I don't care.


 * Say we discuss it here and decide that special skills should not be in categories. Then you alter the skill template to make use of a parameter called "nocats" and edit every special skills page so that it says "nocats = true" or whatever. This would accomplish the goal. Then a month later we decide, actually, they should be in the same categories as regular skills, but they should have some other difference, such as a style difference. So you alter the template so that "nocats" doesn't do anything, and you add a new parameter called "different-style" and add "different-style = true" to every skill article.


 * That process is fine, but if you just used the template "special-skill = true" then you wouldn't have to go through every article again in the future and replace "nocats" with "different-style".


 * If you don't agree with that then that's fine. If you don't understand that though then I don't know what else to say. It's just a way of saving time in the future, should things change.  &lt;LordBiro&gt;/&lt;Talk&gt; 13:36, 8 October 2006 (CDT)


 * That sounds nothing like what you said before, but at least I can address it. If later, rather than changing the style of them, you want to make different styles for holiday skills and for celestial skills and for cheese-related skills, you still have to go through and edit the all skills.  If later we want special skills to not be special, we don't just edit the template (and perhaps we don't edit the template at all) to remove the functionality.  We go through and remove all the special = trues.
 * If we have nocats and you later want to actually categorize, we (again) don't edit the template. We would go through all the skills.  In neither case is it surprising or a design flaw.  If we want to completely reverse changes we made, then it'll have to go through as much effort as it did to add the changes (that is, removing "nocats" or "special" from each to match the adding).
 * I don't want to try to make templates smarter than they have to be. I'd rather specify every little detail then leave it up to the template.  Being smart has resulted in things like [ this] creeping in (note the type and cat parameters... and the "part" parameter which never actually did anything useful for any skill, which is why I'm discussing changes rather than pushing them out, not to badmouth what Pan did with the creation of the current skill box).  nocats will do exactly one thing depending on exactly one input. It won't break and it's highly unlikely its functionality will ever change, only where you want to use it.  --Fyren 17:26, 8 October 2006 (CDT)

Reading through my two posts they sound pretty much identical to me, but ok :P

I'm not really arguing that we should make the templates complicated, and I don't beleive that using a parameter name such as "special-skill" instead of "nocats" makes the template any more complicated. In fact I think it makes perfect sense to do so. I can understand where you're coming from but I don't agree with it. I can't really think of much more to say, and it appears to just be us two here, so I'll just leave it at that.  &lt;LordBiro&gt;/&lt;Talk&gt; 18:05, 8 October 2006 (CDT)


 * Just for the record I would also be in favour of a parameter like "type = special". Just felt I should say that :) hehe  &lt;LordBiro&gt;/&lt;Talk&gt; 20:41, 8 October 2006 (CDT)

CSS
Most of the changes to the current skill box or skill box qr templates have been style changes. That is, the tables and information displayed haven't changed, only things like cell widths, alignments, paddings, and other things that could be separated out. I've factored it out (for the main skill box and the progression tables, not for all the other skill templates yet) by slapping a class on a lot of things so it can be placed in MediaWiki:Common.css. This is a site-wide stylesheet that's already loaded by every user (though it contains nothing but a comment right now). Edits can be made to the stylesheet as opposed to the template which is a significant gain when considering CPU and database load because of work work the wiki does to track changes in templates that affect all the pages that include it. Bandwidth-wise, the CSS is currently about 1.9k. Since it'll be cached client-side by browsers, this will be a one-time cost till the browser cache is cleared. For someone viewing skill articles, it'll actually be a bandwidth-saver since the inline styles won't be transferred for every skill.

I tested it out already in Firefox, IE6, and Opera. I didn't really change anything, so I don't think there's much chance of a problem. To test it out, copy the contents of my monobook.css to your monobook.css or your gamewikis.css, depending on your skin, and viewing the skills linked on GuildWiki talk:Sandbox/Skill box. I'd like to hear comments and suggestions about what I've classed and what I haven't or how I've otherwise arranged things. Web design isn't one of my hobbies. --Fyren 05:52, 15 October 2006 (CDT)

Other
Assuming progression data gets moved inside the skill templates, there's still duplicated information in the description: the ranges in the descriptions. We can calculate them, but we can't splice them in. StringFunctions would let us. On my test wiki at http:// MYUSERNAME.nimh.net/wiki, check out the build JS demo and any of the example skills. The thing to notice is that when you toggle the build there (as opposed to the test I ran here), the QR-like view has no ranges but instead actual values. The numbers for the skill ranges work in the same way, though you can't tell just by looking at the skill articles, so check the source for a skill data template to see where "RANGEX" is used in descriptions as placeholders. I'm not putting the SF-related stuff forth as a proposal yet, but I'd like to hear if people think it's worth doing. Adding SF shouldn't be a bad thing but it would require more thought (the version I run on my wiki has most of the functionality stripped out, only keeping pos/len/substr). --Fyren 20:15, 5 October 2006 (CDT)


 * That is pretty cool, but I don't know how useful it is. It does reduce redundancy, but that's not much of an issue since the two values are both inside the same template.  &lt;LordBiro&gt;/&lt;Talk&gt; 04:20, 6 October 2006 (CDT)
 * The main use is for use in a hypothetical build template to fill in the specific value. The skill description ranges are just sort of a "why not, this is one less place for someone to screw up when updating numbers." --Fyren 21:44, 13 October 2006 (CDT)

Trivia mention in skill articles
I'm not a big fan of the trivia sections; but assuming that we use them, I disagree with where the information is placed per the current guidelines. By this, the trivia belongs in the Notes section, which is shown in the example article as belonging above the progression section. To me, trivia, if included at all, is a very low priority and should be placed below related skills at the end of the article. --- Barek (talk • contribs) - 12:07, 6 October 2006 (CDT)


 * Currently the notes are usually under the progression and trivia under the notes. The guidelines should be changed to reflect that. --[[Image:Gem-icon-sm.png]] (talk) 13:27, 6 October 2006 (CDT)

Skill capture and other formatting questions.
I also just noticed that the current example no longer shows that it should document from what bosses you can capture elites. It used to have a "signet of capture" section, but that was removed. While I can understand not liting it for most skills, this section should exist for elites, and the template should mention that (it is still mentioned in the guideline, just not in the example). --- Barek (talk • contribs) - 12:19, 6 October 2006 (CDT)


 * Elite skills should have the bosses listed, but normal skills in my opinnion not. --[[Image:Gem-icon-sm.png]] (talk) 13:30, 6 October 2006 (CDT)


 * I think having signet of capture lists makes sense in any situation where you can cap it before you can buy it.  &lt;LordBiro&gt;/&lt;Talk&gt; 07:36, 8 October 2006 (CDT)

Difference between "health per second" and "health regeneration"
Just noted this on "Fall Back!": It seems that the skill template does not differentiate between regen and hps, but it should, since regen is more then hps and the interaction with regen/degen caps is different, too. --Xeeron 09:45, 10 October 2006 (CDT)
 * That's because someone decided to name it "health regeneration." The template doesn't fill in the effect names for progression rows.  --Fyren 21:42, 13 October 2006 (CDT)

Related Builds Section
I've added a "Related builds" section to several elite skills (examples: Barrage and Spiteful Spirit, listing Tested/Favored builds using that skill.

When I or my guildies first encounter an elite skill, our initial question is: How do I create a build around this? The logical search path is to look up the skill on GuildWiki, and then follow links to examples of quality builds based around it. The vast majority of builds are constructed around an elite skill, and having these sections is similar in concept to the current "Related skills" sections.

The amount of effort going into this is minor; it took me all of twenty minutes today to added "Related builds" to a dozen or so Necromancer and Ranger skills. I'm more than happy to do this for other classes, and maintain the sections by watching the Tested/Favored builds page. &mdash; ChaoticCoyote 21:59, 20 October 2006 (CDT)


 * The idea is fine, but the problem is the number of builds that use the elite. The list may get too long.  Picking only certain builds will be completely arbitrary.  --Fyren 22:07, 20 October 2006 (CDT)


 * I doubt there will be more than a half-dozen builds for any given elite, and then only for a very few "popular" elites like Barrage. &mdash; ChaoticCoyote 22:17, 20 October 2006 (CDT)


 * I just hit "What Links Here" from the template and scan through builds, personally. - Greven 22:08, 20 October 2006 (CDT)


 * That technique isn't obvious to casual Wikians &mdash; and a skill may be linked from lots of places, including unfavored and abandoned builds. A "Related builds" section provides clear links to tested/favored builds that, in theory, make effective use of the skill. &mdash; ChaoticCoyote 22:17, 20 October 2006 (CDT)


 * Yes, non-wiki experts will not get that. Obviously, only tested builds should be linked, that will keep down the number of builds per skill as well. I doubt we have more than 5 tested builds for all but very few elite skills. --Xeeron 04:45, 21 October 2006 (CDT)