Category talk:Settings

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Revision as of 15:39, 7 April 2006 by imported>Kkuhlmann (→‎Category size)
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Updating the page now, but I notice that closing and reopening the game settings window can change the variables that are shown in it. Where do we report construction settings bugs again? --Stickman 23:57, 31 March 2006 (EST)

If I noticed anything was misspelled I put a (sic) there. Sic is an editor's term that basically means "intentionally misspelled" and is often used when quoting some written work that missues spelling or grammar. See also sic on Wikipedia. I figured it would help avoid spur-of-the-moment "oh he made a typo here" corrections.

There are also a few oddities I didn't draw notes on. For example fAItalktoNPCtimer is one of the few that only capitalizes AI and NPC instead of using title capitalization. "Standoff" also only appears as one word, as near as I can tell, so "off" is always lowercase. When they use the word "to" it may or may not be capitalized. All the rules are out the window when dealing with facegen strings.

I assume the correctness will all eventually be double checked when people made sub pages for them with circles and arrows and a paragraph on the back of each one explaining what each one is.

Lastly, this page should be split into sections. It's 4:30am and I just spent the last few hours transcribing variable names. I'm in no mood to do that, but I did have an idea on how to play the game:

Two sections. If they know the variable name they're looking for, they can look at an alphabetical listing (divided into pages or variable type (eg, float, integer, string) and then alphabetical. Or if they know what it's related to, they can check the "subject" section and get info on things like facegen, xbox specific (a place to dump them), chargen, and until we get it all sorted, the all-inclusive "unknown" category.

I'll see about getting to the task later if no one else has. If I can figure out how to play this wiki game well enough. --Stickman 07:30, 1 April 2006 (EST)

Category size

As new articles are created for this category its going to explode in size. Can a webmaster weigh in on how we're to organize this stuff. A single massive article might be better than hundreds of small articles. MegaBurn 19:12, 2 April 2006 (EDT)

I'm of the position that settings should be split into general sections like Bribery. This page is almost entirely useless. Individual settings pages should have Redirects to their appropriate page. Daego 19:22, 2 April 2006 (EDT)

That might work for tutorials and/or general use article. This page is still necessary and its usefulness will increase as more articles are added. An alternative is splitting the category into 3 subcategories for f, i, s settings but thats still pretty ugly organization. 4 articles might be better, general article, f article, i article, and s article, then delete the setting specific articles that have already been created. Someone who's a sysop or higher needs to settle this... MegaBurn 19:36, 2 April 2006 (EDT)

This page isn't entirely useless, when categories reach 200+ they split across multiple pages and it becomes a royal PITA to swap pages when looking for related things. Go here (category:functions) and you'll see what I mean, paging between page1 and page2 to look for related functions isn't helpful. If sub categories (bribery, spellcasting) are needed, or useful for organization, then we create them as necessary and see what happens as the wiki evolves. FWIW there's nothing to "settle" at the moment, create some pages and see how they're used, if they become irrelevant then remove them, if not then expand on them. --Halo112358 20:12, 2 April 2006 (EDT)

--Kkuhlmann 16:39, 7 April 2006 (EDT): Why restrict yourselves to one solution? Script functions is organized in multiple ways: there are categories for each function type (Movement Functions, Player Functions, Crime Functions, etc.), and each command includes the Category:Functions (so it appears on the main page) as well as its particular function type (sometimes more than one). That way you get the best of both worlds -- one big category where you can see everything if you want to, plus smaller subcategories if you want to delve. It might help to put a higher level category above these pages (again, similar to the way script functions are organized) so that the massive multi-page list isn't the first thing you hit.