Glossary of poker terms and Wikipedia talk:Requests for adminship: Difference between pages

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The large and growing '''jargon of [[poker]]''' includes many terms. This page contains brief definitions of the most common terms you may encounter in text or at play. The list has been trimmed to primarily those poker-specific terms one might find in poker texts or in common use in casinos. Some terms link to a more complete article on the topic.


== "Are you over 18" ==
Various [[poker hand]]s have been given many names, and these are listed in [[List of slang names for poker hands]]. Finally, this is not meant to be a formal dictionary; precise usage details and multiple closely related senses are omitted here in favor of concise treatment of the basics. See also [[:Category:Card game terminology|card game terminology]].


Should we discourage this question on privacy grounds? A person should not have to yield any personal information to earn our consideration at RfA, and while we all know that while these questions are "optional", people feel that they're expected to answer. There's pressure.
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We all get so concerned about privacy on BLPs, trying to protect publicly-available information like the first names of spouses, and even &mdash; in one [[Walter Sedlmayr|recent and incredible effort]] which was thankfully rejected &mdash; trying to conceal the surnames of the convicted torture-murderers Manfred Lauber and Wolfgang Werlé. There are obvious differences &mdash; that's article space and this isn't, those pages are indexed and these pages are NOINDEXed &mdash; but there would be much hypocrisy in discouraging the inclusion of publicly-available information on notable persons while condoning systematized requests for private information from our own editors.
== A ==
; A-B-C, A-B-C-D
# A sequence of the lowest cards in a [[Lowball (poker)|lowball]] game. For example, the hand 8-6-3-2-A might be called ''an eight-six-a-b-c''.
# Uncreative or predictable play. ''He's an a-b-c player''.


And no, I'm not some 12-year-old pissed off because there's an ongoing age crackdown at RfA. I'm well over 18, and I'm not afraid to disclose my age. But some people may want to keep that sort of thing a secret ''and not be judged for refusing to give the information'', so this should never become a regular question at RfA.
; ace-to-five, ace-to-six
: Methods of evaluating low hands. See [[Rank of hands (poker)#Ace-to-five|ace-to-five low]], [[Rank of hands (poker)#Ace-to-six|ace-to-six low]].


I remember being discouraged from asking a regular policy question about open editing and anonymous users, on the grounds that too many questions are being asked, and too many people are reluctant to undergo the ordeal. Since candidates are overburdened already, is it appropriate to be pressuring them for personal information through the question system? '''[[User:Mr. IP|<font color="blue">Mr. IP</font>]]'''&nbsp;'''《[[User_talk:Mr. IP|<font color="red">Defender of Open Editing</font>]]》''' 00:12, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
<span id="act">
:The question should be discouraged indeed. Simply saying that it is "optional" no longer cuts it; people assume any kind of refusal to answer is the confirmation that said person is under 18. unlike the abilities of Permissions such as Checkuser, which require identification and a minimal age, any acts committed with admin abilities can be quickly and easily corrected; there's no reason that a "minimal age" should be considered. In any case, setting a number is impossible; countries and cultures have different standards of when one is considered an "adult", and since this isn't a legal matter there can be no claim that we must abide by the US definition. [[User:Ironholds|<b style="color:#D3D3D3">Ir</b><b style="color:#A9A9A9">on</b><b style="color:#808080">ho</b>]][[User talk:Ironholds|<b style="color:#696969">ld</b><b style="color:#000">s</b>]] 00:17, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
; act
: To make a play (bet, call, raise, or fold) at the required time. ''It is Ted's turn to act.'' Compare to "in turn".
</span>


:Has this question been asked lately? &mdash; [[User:Rdsmith4|Dan]] | [[User talk:Rdsmith4|talk]] 00:25, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
<span id="action">
; action
# A player's turn to act. ''The action is on you''.
# A willingness to gamble. ''I'll give you action'' or ''There's plenty of action in this game''
# A bet, along with all the calls of that bet. For example, if one player makes a $5 bet and three other players call, he is said to have $5 "in action", and to have received $15 worth of action on his bet. Usually this term comes into play when figuring side pots when one or more players is all in. See [[table stakes]].
</span>


::@Dan: Yep: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Requests_for_adminship/Synergy#Questions_for_the_candidate #11. Regards, —[[user:aitias|αἰτίας]] ''•''[[User talk:Aitias|''discussion'']]''•'' 00:30, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
; action button
:I agree that the over 18 question should be discouraged on privacy grounds, although I am not sure how exactly to do that. I actually share many of Sandstein's concerns about underage admins, but I think that asking direct questions regarding any kind of personal data is not appropriate. If the candidate has chosen to previosly disclose this info somewhere else (on their user page, talk page, etc), that's a different story. [[User:Nsk92|Nsk92]] ([[User talk:Nsk92|talk]]) 00:37, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
: A marker similar to a kill button, on which a player places an extra forced bet. In a seven-card stud high-low game, the action button is awarded to the winner of a [[#scoop|scoop]] pot above a certain size, signifying that in the next pot, that player will be required to post an amount representing a completion of the [[Betting (poker)#Open|bring-in]] to a full bet. For example, in a stud game with $2 and $4 betting limits and a $1 bring-in, a player with the action button must post $2; after the cards are dealt, the player with the low card must still pay the $1 bring-in, then when the betting reaches the player who posted the $2, he is required to leave it in as a raise of the bring-in (and has the option to raise further). Players in between the bring-in and the action button can just call the bring-in, but they know ahead of time that they will be raised by the action button.
:I don't like this question either, but I have some questions about the rationale. None of these are rhetorical. What is the precise problem or evil excluding the question seeks to prevent? Making it more difficult to find out an editor is a child? Making it more difficult to locate, identify, out, or harass a child editor? To what extent does knowledge of age help someone to determine a child's RL ID? Does every (child) candidate have a problem with answering the age question or are some happy to answer it? If the only problem is editors getting discouraged from participation in an arduous process, then would discouraging votes based on the candidate's refusal to answer optional questions (and perhaps bureaucratic disregard of such votes specifically regarding the age question) solve this problem more effectively?--[[User:Chaser|chaser]] - [[User_talk:Chaser|t]] 00:48, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
::Let me take these one at a time.
:::*1.) I think that excluding the question would prevent editors from being pressured to reveal an aspect of personal identity they have not indicated any willingness to reveal, and also have the salutary effect of forcing a contribs-based judgment of maturity rather than an age-based judgment of maturity.
:::*2.) Well, I don't think we should have to "find out" any aspect of an editor's identity.
:::*3.) This isn't really a worry about protecting children, I wouldn't say. There's plenty of "out" children on this site, and if someone were preying on kids here, there's plenty around.
:::*4.) I don't think knowing age could help determine ID. Not much, anyway.
:::*5.) I figure that anyone who hasn't already volunteered that information would prefer to do it at a time and place of their choosing.
:::*6.) I guess the possible discouragement of candidates from participation is not my main concern. I mostly brought that up because I was previously asked not to use a general "standardized" question on open editing, under the rationale that overquestioning discourages candidacies. I do worry that someone might avoid service to the project as an administrator because they fear they will be pressured to reveal personal information &mdash; and !voted against if they don't &mdash; but it's not my main problem with the age question.
::Hope that helps. '''[[User:Mr. IP|<font color="blue">Mr. IP</font>]]'''&nbsp;'''《[[User_talk:Mr. IP|<font color="red">Defender of Open Editing</font>]]》''' 06:17, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
::I think that asking the under 18 question in RfAs sets a general bad precedent regarding privacy-related info on WP. I don't believe that any WP editor should ''ever'' be required to disclose any personal information about themselves, such as gender, age, nationality, religion, where they live, what their profession is, etc. It is very easy to get on a slippery slope with questions like that, and I would rather we did not start down that road at all. [[User:Nsk92|Nsk92]] ([[User talk:Nsk92|talk]]) 01:11, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:::I agree. We should not request that a user reveal personal information about themselves as a prerequisite to becoming an admin. It raises privacy concerns, and is totally irrelevant in determining whether someone is fit to be an admin. The only things that matter are the quality of the applicant's work and the soundness of their judgement. If someone has demonstrated through their contributions the level head and hard work necessary to convince me they should be an admin, then I don't care how old or young they are and neither should the 'pedia. [[User:Reyk|<font color="Maroon">'''Reyk'''</font>]] <sub>[[User talk:Reyk|'''<font color="Blue">YO!</font>''']]</sub> 01:53, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:::These questions ''should'' be optional anyway, so they shouldn't ''have'' to be answered, but things naturally ''don't'' work out that way. —[[User:Animum|<b style="color:#002BB8">Animum</b>]] <small>([[User_talk:Animum|''talk'']])</small> 01:58, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
::::This question should never be asked at an RFA, it's adminship for god's sake not checkuser. It puts the candidate between a rock and a hard place, because if the person doesn't answer it they are considered as being under 18, so it therefore is not optional and it is asking a person to reveal private information that is not necessary to decide whether or not a person is eligible for adminship. The only thing that ''is needed'' to see if a person is eligible is [[Special:Contributions]]. I would request that if this question is asked again on another RFA it will be reverted on site. --<small style="color:#999;white-space:nowrap">[[User:Coffee|<big style="color:#ffa439">Coffee</big>]] // [[user talk:Coffee|<font color="#090">talk</font>]] // [[WP:ARK|<font color="#4682b4">ark</font>]] // 02:04, 7 September 2008 (UTC)</small>


:::::My sentiments exactly, Coffee. Every time I see this question asked I want to respond "old enough to be an admin" for them. &mdash; [[User talk:Springeragh|<span style="background:#808;color:#fff;text-decoration:none;">&nbsp;'''''$PЯING'''''εrαgђ&nbsp;</span>]] 02:06 [[7 September]], [[2008]] (UTC)
; action card
::::::I agree that it's an inappropriate question, and I say that as one of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:Undelete&target=User%3AShapiros10%2FUnder-18%2Cdon%27t_give_a_damn_about_it_Cabal&timestamp=20080625232550 evil ageist cabal]. There's a difference between being immature and acting immature, and this puts undue weight on age as an issue; even as someone who thinks age ''is'' an issue, there are plenty of people under 18 I'd still support (Giggy, for example), and no doubt plenty more I have supported who haven't disclosed their age. Anyway, as we've learned rather forcefully over the last couple of days, People on Wikipedia Are Not Necessarily Who They Say They Are.<font face="Trebuchet MS">&nbsp;–&nbsp;[[User:Iridescent|<font color="#E45E05">iride</font>]][[User_talk:Iridescent|<font color="#C1118C">scent</font>]]</font> 02:10, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:In Texas Hold'em, a card in which two players hold that comes out on the Flop.
:::::Well... [[on the Internet, nobody knows you're a dog]]. Naturally, people shouldn't give much weight on the answer to this question. &mdash;[[User:DarkFalls|Dark]] <sup>[[User talk:DarkFalls|talk]]</sup> 02:22, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:Yes... the age question should be discouraged... I say that as a person who fully understands and appreciates the position that some people take regarding youth. There are legitimate arguments to be made, but I think privacy is paramount and I don't think it should be asked. Because there is no way to verify the veracity of the statement. Who knows, somebody may be able to tell enough lies that they can get a job with the Wiki Foundation.---'''[[User:Balloonman|<font color="purple">Balloonman</font>]]''' ''[[User talk:Balloonman|<b><sup><small>PoppaBalloon</small></sup></b>]]'' 02:33, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:: Ah [[User:Essjay|yes]]. - [[User:Mailer diablo|Mailer Diablo]] 12:09, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
I don't even know why the question holds weight at all. In my case, whether age matters can be summed up in two words: [[User:Anonymous Dissident|Anonymous Dissident]]. [[User:Wizardman|<span style="color:#060">'''''Wizardman'''''</span>]] 03:00, 7 September 2008 (UTC)


:As the person who's been asking this question a few times, I'm surprised at the privacy concerns above. Common sense tells us that all editors are somewhere between 5 and 100 years old. If an editor tells us that he or she's either in the 5-18 or in the 19-100 year range, that's by far not enough information to identify him or her in any way. Moreover, the editor can choose to withhold the information, or they can lie (although I'm [[WP:AGF]] and assume that they usually do not).
; action only
:But adminship is a position of responsability, and I think that it is fair that persons who seek such responsability – and any status that may be attached to it – be ready to make this one datum public if they want the job. We've, after all, had our share of drama because of unsuitable admins. I know that many children are well-suited for adminship, but again, common sense tells me that, on a purely statistical basis, a random 15-year-old is less likely to be suitable than, say, a random 25-year-old. <small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">[[User:Sandstein|<font style="color:white;background:blue;font-family:sans-serif;">'''&nbsp;Sandstein&nbsp;'''</font>]]</span></small> 05:53, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:In many cardrooms, with respect to an all-in bet, only a full (or half) bet can be reraised. Anything less than a full (or half) bet is considered to be ''action only'', that is, other players can call the bet but not raise it. For example, Alice bets $100. Bob calls. Carol goes all in for $119. When the action returns to Alice and Bob, they may only call the extra $19; they cannot raise it. Carol's raise is called ''action only''. Compare to "[[#full bet rule|full bet rule]]", "[[#half bet rule|half bet rule]]".
::You do realize that there is no easy way for them to not answer that question? If you were to ask someone who was 16 and didn't want to reveal that information, them not answering the question makes people think that they are under 18; if you ask someone who is 22 and they don't want to give out the information they also will be thought of as under 18. --<small style="color:#999;white-space:nowrap">[[User:Coffee|<big style="color:#ffa439">Coffee</big>]] // [[user talk:Coffee|<font color="#090">talk</font>]] // [[WP:ARK|<font color="#4682b4">ark</font>]] // 06:06, 7 September 2008 (UTC)</small>
:::Well, an easy way to answer the question is to say "I don't want to say." I'll still support them if it is likely, judging from the subject matter or style of their contributions, that they are adults (e.g. if they write articles about, say, ancient Roman history instead of video games); or if their contribs and length of service indicate ''exceptional'' maturity. I'll just apply a much higher standard in the latter case. <small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">[[User:Sandstein|<font style="color:white;background:blue;font-family:sans-serif;">'''&nbsp;Sandstein&nbsp;'''</font>]]</span></small> 07:41, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:::: For those who believe that refusal to answer is guilty, this answer to them is as good as not answering, perhaps even worse. - [[User:Mailer diablo|Mailer Diablo]] 12:13, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
::::: [[Guilt]] doesn't come into this at any level. <small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">[[User:Sandstein|<font style="color:white;background:blue;font-family:sans-serif;">'''&nbsp;Sandstein&nbsp;'''</font>]]</span></small> 15:36, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:::::: Perhaps I didn't phrase it clearly. I mean, if not answering the question would make some people think that the candidate is under 18, then answering "I don't want to say" would probably have the same effect on this same group of people (they would still think that the candidate is under 18), or worse treat it as the candidate is trying to be evasive (perhaps, even grounds for opposing the candidate's RfA). So the answer is not the easy solution out. - [[User:Mailer diablo|Mailer Diablo]] 15:42, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
::::::: No, it's not, but my concern is not to provide an easy solution out. I want admin colleagues whom I can trust. I will ask whatever question I feel is required to that effect. It's up to the candidate to decide whether they want to answer (and possibly get my vote) or not answer (and a bit less possibly get my vote). <small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">[[User:Sandstein|<font style="color:white;background:blue;font-family:sans-serif;">'''&nbsp;Sandstein&nbsp;'''</font>]]</span></small> 15:50, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:::::::: Discussion continued below. Thanks, [[User:Mailer diablo|Mailer Diablo]] 16:03, 7 September 2008 (UTC)


::When I say "privacy concern", I don't mean that anyone is going to be stalked and targeted for flaming arrows of death based on this &mdash; just that this is personal information that people have already chosen not to volunteer if the question is even getting asked in the first place. It's something that a lot of people have no interest in telling everyone, and putting pressure on them to cough it up if they don't want to look like they're withholding information &mdash; or don't want to look like they're secretly 9 years old &mdash; seems unnecessary in this process. More importantly, ''not'' knowing someone's age might force people to actually look through their contribs to gauge their ''actual level of maturity'' rather than relying on that "one datum" you mention for an indication of same. I prefer, always, a contribs-based review of maturity over an age-based review of maturity, so I believe we lose nothing by ''not'' asking this question, and that we lose a lot, i.e. our basic respect for the non-volunteering of personal information, if we ask it. I don't want to give you a hard time or act like you're some crazed interrogator &mdash; obv. your concerns are in good faith &mdash; but I think this question is unproductive and a bit too prying. And also, what Coffee says. '''[[User:Mr. IP|<font color="blue">Mr. IP</font>]]'''&nbsp;'''《[[User_talk:Mr. IP|<font color="red">Defender of Open Editing</font>]]》''' 06:17, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
; add-on
:::I certainly respect the right of anyone not to volunteer personal information. But exercising that right, as with any right, may have consequences – such as not getting my vote in an RfA.
: In a live game, to buy more chips before you have busted. In [[Poker tournament|tournament]] play, a single rebuy for which all players are eligible regardless of their stack size. This is usually allowed only once, at the end of the rebuy period.
:::The age question is certainly not a substitute for a contribs-based assessment of suitability. That's still required. But admins sometimes need to make stressful decisions that other editors don't (such as blocks or deletions in a dispute with real life impact), and I am frankly more comfortable if I know that such decisions are generally made by adults (or by young adults with ''exceptional'' maturity). Also, because the functions of administrator and normal editor differ in this regard, past contribs are of limited usefulness for assessing someone's maturity with respect to such situations. So is age, of course, but it is (like a history of good contributions) positively correlated to maturity, which warrants the question as one data point among others. <small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">[[User:Sandstein|<font style="color:white;background:blue;font-family:sans-serif;">'''&nbsp;Sandstein&nbsp;'''</font>]]</span></small> 07:41, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:::: I asked Friday before, and I thought I should ask you as well. Where is the statistical data proving that age is correlated to maturity (behaviour)? - [[User:Mailer diablo|Mailer Diablo]] 16:03, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
::::: There is no data that I am aware of. There ''is'' common sense and general life experience, though. For Wikipedia purposes, that will have to do. <small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">[[User:Sandstein|<font style="color:white;background:blue;font-family:sans-serif;">'''&nbsp;Sandstein&nbsp;'''</font>]]</span></small> 16:10, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
::::::[http://www.uoregon.edu/~moursund/Math/developmental_theory.htm Attainment of Formal Operational Thinking by High School Students]. Take it with a disclaimer that Renner & Huitt's findings are not universally accepted.<font face="Trebuchet MS">&nbsp;–&nbsp;[[User:Iridescent|<font color="#E45E05">iride</font>]][[User_talk:Iridescent|<font color="#C1118C">scent</font>]]<small>&nbsp;16:14, 7 September 2008 (UTC)</small></font>


The age question seemingly rests on the (arguably reasonable) notion that underage admins are generally immature. Now the question is, from all the admin controversies that were severe enough to warrant involuntary desysoppings (which as of this time usually means that the admin did something ''really'' wrong), how many of the desysopped admins were actually under 18? —'''<font face="Comic Sans MS">[[User:Kurykh|<font color="#0000C0">kur</font>]][[User talk:Kurykh|<font color="#0000C0">ykh</font>]]</font>''' 07:55, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
; advertising
: To make an obvious play or expose cards in such a way as to deliberately convey an impression to your opponents about your style of play. For example, to make a bad play or bluff to give the impression that you bluff frequently (hoping opponents will then call your legitimate bets) or to show only good hands to give the impression that you rarely bluff (hoping opponents will then fold when you do).


18 is a bit arbitrary. It also puts a small number of people in a tricky situation. If the answer to the question was "no, but I'll be over 18 next week". What then? That, alone, reveals the absurdity of the question. I would, however, support a question along the lines of "do you consider yourself to have the mental maturity necessary to be an admin?". Or, "Do you throw tantrums online, and if so are they due to your age or your character (ie. if you throw tantrums, or sulk, or snap under pressure, is that a character trait that you will grow out of)?" Or "would you be comfortable dealing with matters that are age-restricted in the country you are editing from?" Though that last one is more borderline, as it raises legal concerns as well as being a more direct form of "are you underage". It's tricky, but the focus should always be on maturity, judgment, calmness under pressure, politeness, and other such things, not on actual age. I also think more attention should be paid to people changing over time. Many pre-adolescents change emotionally as they enter adolescence, many adults change as their lives change or external circumstances cause increased stress, or their lives change in general (relationship, family, jobs, school, university, etc). The root of all these questions is really trying to find out (if possible) whether the candidate: (a) is aware of this; (b) is aware of themselves; and (c) if they possess the judgment to handle such changes, up to and including resigning adminship if need be, whether adult or child. [[User:Carcharoth|Carcharoth]] ([[User talk:Carcharoth|talk]]) 11:01, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
<span id="aggressive">
:Exactly. Come on. I thought we are past this stage. And why 18? Why not 21? Or 16? Do you know that in my country, we are trained to handle a rifle to kill at 18 (16.5 if enlisted early) but do not have the right to vote until the legal age of 21? - [[User:Mailer diablo|Mailer Diablo]] 12:20, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
; aggressive, aggression
:::The question could be formulated more elegantly, of course. I'm open to suggestions. <small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">[[User:Sandstein|<font style="color:white;background:blue;font-family:sans-serif;">'''&nbsp;Sandstein&nbsp;'''</font>]]</span></small> 15:36, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
: See [[aggression (poker)]]. Compare to "[[#loose|loose]]", "[[#tight|tight]]", "[[#passive|passive]]".
:::: Discussion (with point reworded) continued at policy page. FYIP. - Thanks, [[User:Mailer diablo|Mailer Diablo]] 16:32, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
</span>
::This is a good point actually. The age at which you are perceived to have 'maturity' varies across societies. Here in the UK I could drive, smoke, have sex, buy porn, get married, and join the army by the time I was 17. It seems a bit strange that a 17 year old could do all that, and yet not be permitted to administrate a website. However, I don't think asking the question is ever going to cause anyone's RfA to fail, as most people don't consider age when deciding whether to support. '''[[User:Naerii|<span style="font-size:15px;font-family:helvetica;color:#1693A5;">naerii</span>]]''' 13:56, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:I think there is value in the idea of looking at how the age demographics of desysopped admins compare to the demographics of admins generally, if that is at all possible. (I realise that user age will only have been known in a limited proportion of desysop cases.) Basically, such decisions should be made on the basis of data, not on the basis of assumptions. Sure it is tempting to assume that very young admins may have worked hard at "doing and saying all the right things" for a few months, out of youthful ambition to become an admin, and then, flushed with their success, foul up sooner or later by making immature decisions. But I am not sure that older admins are exempt from such things, and I could easily imagine older admins having a whole range of different sorts of behavioural problems that are less likely in the very young – COIs, tendentious opinions based on established life choices, stuff like that – which might also affect their admin performance. So, if there are data that show that young admins foul up more often than older ones, I would be in favour of allowing the question. If there is no such statistical evidence, then the question is irrelevant. <font color="#0000FF">[[User:Jayen466|Jayen]]</font>''<font color=" #FFBF00">[[User_Talk:Jayen466|466]]</font>'' 13:53, 7 September 2008 (UTC)


*I wasn't as aware of the issue, nor do I think it was as much of an issue in May when I did my RfA, but from a couple of the comments, this userbox:{{Template:user typewriter}} satisfied a number of concerns. Who says userboxen are pointless? :) That said, the issue is not the number, there are immature 30 year olds and mature 12 year olds. I think the onus is on those who choose to identify as <18 to prove they're not the norm. That said, there are >18 drama mavens so >18 isn't a sign of A OK. I don't think the number matters as much as temperament. <font face="Verdana"><font color="Blue">[[User_talk:Travellingcari|TravellingCari]]</font></font> 15:19, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
; air
: In a [[Lowball (poker)|lowball]] game, "giving air" is letting an opponent who might otherwise fold know that you intend to draw one or more cards to induce him to call.


=== A decision ===
<span id="all day">
Having looked at some past discussions of this, it has come up over and over again, and nothing has been done. Looking above, I can only see one user who really thinks it's a good idea - and that's the user who posted the question. I think something needs to be done about questions of this kind once and for all, before this thread dries up yet again. Might I humbly suggest all such question are removed from RfAs, and if they get asked, are removed? Does that sound fair? <big>[[User:How do you turn this on|<span style="font-family:Times New Roman; color:white; background:black;">how&nbsp;do&nbsp;you&nbsp;turn&nbsp;this&nbsp;on</span>]]</big> 12:35, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
; all day
: The total current posted bet. Used to indicate that the speaker is referring to the ''total'' bet, versus the ''difference'' the acting player would need to post. ''Action is on Alice; twenty all day.'' Also "[[#altogether|altogether]]" or "[[#straight|straight]]".
</span>


Or perhaps a blanket ban of questions of all personal type? (such as age, location, occupation etc). <big>[[User:How do you turn this on|<span style="font-family:Times New Roman; color:white; background:black;">how&nbsp;do&nbsp;you&nbsp;turn&nbsp;this&nbsp;on</span>]]</big> 12:50, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
; all in
: The act of betting all of your chips against another player. See [[Betting (poker)#"All in"|all in]].


:That would violate [[WP:MOP]], the adminship policy, which states: "Adminship is oriented to communal trust and confidence, rather than checklists and edit counts; each user will have their own way to assess their confidence in a candidates' readiness for the role."
<span id="altogether">
:This implies that users may not be prohibited from ''asking'' questions that they feel are relevant for assessing a candidate's readiness. To change this, you would need to gather consensus to change the policy at the policy talk page. <small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">[[User:Sandstein|<font style="color:white;background:blue;font-family:sans-serif;">'''&nbsp;Sandstein&nbsp;'''</font>]]</span></small> 14:03, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
; altogether
::I agree with Sandstein. While I'd probably prefer an optional question of "Approximately how old are you?" rather than specifically "Are you over 18", in either case it is a good-faith attempt by the questioner in order to obtain information they feel is relevant to their decision. The question ''is'' optional, and if the number of people who care about age is as low as you suggest, surely a candidate would not find themselves receiving many opposes if they chose not to answer it. ~ <font color="#228b22">[[User:Mazca|'''m'''a'''z'''c'''a''']]</font> <sup>[[User_talk:Mazca|'''t''']] | [[Special:Contributions/Mazca|'''c''']]</sup> 14:09, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
: The total current posted bet. Used to indicate that the speaker is referring to the ''total'' bet, versus the ''difference'' the acting player would need to post. ''Action is on Alice; twenty dollars altogether.'' Also "[[#all day|all day]]" or "[[#straight|straight]]".
:::I respectfully disagree age has a lot to do with adminship. Someone could easily just lie about their age. If you're going to !vote on RfA, what's hard about going through the candidate's contributions yourself? And if someone did answer "no" to your question, would you check any further, or oppose based on that alone? What if they answered yes? Would they get an automatic support? I really think personal questions are irrelevant and intrusive, and that if you want to get to know if the candidate is suitable, you should look at their contributions. <big>[[User:How do you turn this on|<span style="font-family:Times New Roman; color:white; background:black;">how&nbsp;do&nbsp;you&nbsp;turn&nbsp;this&nbsp;on</span>]]</big> 14:34, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
</span>
::I don't see any such implication, Sandstein. It implies that you are free to select criteria, not that any question you might want to ask is magically admissible. If your criteria include "no blacks", would it become morally defensible to ask what color skin the prospective admin is? What about if you want to exclude Britons because you don't want any "bias against ''correct'' spelling"? You may be free to pick random criteria which have nothing to do with adminship, but that does not give you the right to go pry into peoples' private lives and ask for personal and private information. &mdash;&nbsp;[[User:Coren|Coren]]&nbsp;<sup>[[User Talk:Coren|(talk)]]</sup> 15:04, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:::This is not about skin colour or Britishness (which of course I don't care about), this is about age. If I'm free to select my own criteria, as you say, it follows that I may ask questions pertinent to these questions, and the candidates may choose whether to reply or not. Even if the question is not allowed on RfA itself, there's nothing to prevent me from posing it on the user talk page or per e-mail, and cast my vote based on any reply I may receive. As you can see, prohibiting questions on RfA is not the solution to what you perceive as the problem. It would require a change in editors' right to select their own criteria to bring that about. <small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">[[User:Sandstein|<font style="color:white;background:blue;font-family:sans-serif;">'''&nbsp;Sandstein&nbsp;'''</font>]]</span></small> 15:26, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
::::This is where we strongly disagree. I say it does ''not'' follow that you can satisfy your prejudices (whichever they are) with questions invading the privacy of editors. &mdash;&nbsp;[[User:Coren|Coren]]&nbsp;<sup>[[User Talk:Coren|(talk)]]</sup> 17:01, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:::::The question is not a matter of privacy, since "over 18" is not an identifiable datum, and it is not invasive because candidates are free not to answer it. <small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">[[User:Sandstein|<font style="color:white;background:blue;font-family:sans-serif;">'''&nbsp;Sandstein&nbsp;'''</font>]]</span></small> 17:04, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
::::::If they turn 18 during the RfA, they can't reasonable answer the question without revealing that they will soon be 18. Well, they could wait until they turn 18 and then answer "yes". But still, reaad what I wrote above. There are better ways to phrase this question, focusing on asking the candidates to assess their own levels of maturity, or finding ways to assess that yourself. [[User:Carcharoth|Carcharoth]] ([[User talk:Carcharoth|talk]]) 17:33, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
*I fully, and '''strongly endorse''' an absolute ban on questions that requests revealing personal information&mdash; that would need to include at least name, age, sex, geographical location, religious beliefs, political views, and sexual orientations. Those questions do not, and cannot, influence past contributions from the editor and, where not outright illegal, are ethically indefensible. Any such question should be reverted on sight. &mdash;&nbsp;[[User:Coren|Coren]]&nbsp;<sup>[[User Talk:Coren|(talk)]]</sup> 14:56, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:*I'd never ask about sexual orientation, location, sex and so forth, but we are discussing ''human beings'' on RfA, not abstract user accounts, and some personal characteristics of human beings do have a bearing on whether or not ''I'' trust them. I reserve the right to oppose a self-identified Neo-Nazi or Neo-Stalinist on the basis of his or her political views, for instance. <small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">[[User:Sandstein|<font style="color:white;background:blue;font-family:sans-serif;">'''&nbsp;Sandstein&nbsp;'''</font>]]</span></small> 15:26, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
::*Note: '''self-identified''' Neo-Nazi or Neo-Stalinist. Do you notice your own argument, right there? &mdash;&nbsp;[[User:Coren|Coren]]&nbsp;<sup>[[User Talk:Coren|(talk)]]</sup> 17:03, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
**Agree. Let's stick to discussing the candidate ''as a Wikipedian'', and not what they are in real life. <big>[[User:How do you turn this on|<span style="font-family:Times New Roman; color:white; background:black;">how&nbsp;do&nbsp;you&nbsp;turn&nbsp;this&nbsp;on</span>]]</big> 15:04, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
*<span style="color: red">'''Strong support'''</span> banning this questions because of being disruptive. Some people want to keep their anonymity on the internet, and also because people take the answer as a reason to oppose RfA candidates. <small>[[User talk:Macy|Macy]]</small> 15:15, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:*Are you aware that [[WP:MOP]], the adminship policy, allows people to support or oppose candidates for any reason that they feel is relevant with respect to the candidate's trustworthiness? <small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">[[User:Sandstein|<font style="color:white;background:blue;font-family:sans-serif;">'''&nbsp;Sandstein&nbsp;'''</font>]]</span></small> 15:38, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
::*Yes, I know the policy, but are you aware that if the question gets banned, age-based opposes may reduce or stop? <code>:-P</code>. <small>[[User talk:Macy|Macy]]</small> 15:47, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:::*If the policy states anyone can oppose for whatever reason they like, then the policy really could do with changing. I might bring this to the talk page of it. <big>[[User:How do you turn this on|<span style="font-family:Times New Roman; color:white; background:black;">how&nbsp;do&nbsp;you&nbsp;turn&nbsp;this&nbsp;on</span>]]</big> 15:50, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:::*So I'm clear, whereabout in that policy does it state you can vote with whatever reason you like? <big>[[User:How do you turn this on|<span style="font-family:Times New Roman; color:white; background:black;">how&nbsp;do&nbsp;you&nbsp;turn&nbsp;this&nbsp;on</span>]]</big> 15:53, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
::::* As I quoted above: "Adminship is oriented to communal trust and confidence, rather than checklists and edit counts; each user will have their own way to assess their confidence in a candidates' readiness for the role." <small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">[[User:Sandstein|<font style="color:white;background:blue;font-family:sans-serif;">'''&nbsp;Sandstein&nbsp;'''</font>]]</span></small> 15:55, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
*As a note, please realize that my quip above about such questions being "outright illegal" is not hyperbole: in [[Quebec]], at least, they are illegal on their face&mdash; I would expect the same everywhere in Europe (where privacy laws are strong as well), and while privacy laws are generally weaker in the Unites States it would not be unlikely that those are just as illegal in Florida. Someone should check. &mdash;&nbsp;[[User:Coren|Coren]]&nbsp;<sup>[[User Talk:Coren|(talk)]]</sup> 15:18, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:*There is something like freedom of speech on a privately owned website in the US, yes? RfA is not a job interview. <small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">[[User:Sandstein|<font style="color:white;background:blue;font-family:sans-serif;">'''&nbsp;Sandstein&nbsp;'''</font>]]</span></small> 15:33, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
::*That may be, but given the popularity of WP, the number of minors who participate here, and the probability that there are authorities monitoring the site for those reasons (Hello detectives/special agents, etc!), ''I'' wouldn't want to be the one asking questions about people's ages. It could too easily be misinterpreted as something nefarious. '''[[User:JimMillerJr|<span style="color:green">Jim Miller</span>]]''' <sup> [[Special:Contributions/JimMillerJr|See me]] | [[User talk:JimMillerJr|Touch me]]</sup> 15:39, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:::*I'm not an American, and I may lack any special sensibility that Americans may have in this regard, but I fail to see how asking people who are running for a position of responsability whether they are older than 18 is in some way "nefarious", let alone illegal. <small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">[[User:Sandstein|<font style="color:white;background:blue;font-family:sans-serif;">'''&nbsp;Sandstein&nbsp;'''</font>]]</span></small> 15:44, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
*I absolutely agree. No one should be forced to reveal their age (and of course, if they are, some might lie, to protect their online security), except where is it required for privacy reasons (eg CheckUser). [[User:X!|<span style="font-family:Verdana,Arial,Helvetica;color:steelblue;">'''X'''</span>]][[User talk:X!|<span style="color:steelblue;"><small>clamation point</small></span>]] 15:26, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:*No one is forced to reveal their age. Stating that one is over 18 is not revealing one's age, and of course they are not in any way compelled to answer. They will lose very few votes not answering, it seems; and not even necessarily mine. <small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">[[User:Sandstein|<font style="color:white;background:blue;font-family:sans-serif;">'''&nbsp;Sandstein&nbsp;'''</font>]]</span></small> 15:33, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:** How can you possibly quantify and/or qualify the statement of "they will lose very few votes"? What ''you'' choose to !vote is not indicative of what the general masses that !vote at RfA, WP:AGF not withstanding. I'm personally willing to bet that the bureaucrats have enough sense to discard !votes based on age, but we still return to the fact that your promise is unlikely to hold water, as that seems to be one of your defense... --[[User:Izno|Izno]] ([[User talk:Izno|talk]]) 15:50, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:::*If they ''do'' lose many votes on account of that question, then that would be a sign that many users share my concerns, which would be an even better reason for asking the question. <small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">[[User:Sandstein|<font style="color:white;background:blue;font-family:sans-serif;">'''&nbsp;Sandstein&nbsp;'''</font>]]</span></small> 15:54, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
::::*The statement you made was "They will lose very few votes not answering" and not [paraphrasing] "If they lose votes, it must be a quasi-legitimate reason": This is inconsistent, and does not answer the question I posed... --[[User:Izno|Izno]] ([[User talk:Izno|talk]]) 15:58, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
:::::*I made that statement because I seem to be in a minority here with my opinion that age may be a relevant or determinative factor in an RfA. <small><span style="border:1px solid black;padding:1px;">[[User:Sandstein|<font style="color:white;background:blue;font-family:sans-serif;">'''&nbsp;Sandstein&nbsp;'''</font>]]</span></small> 16:02, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
::::::What you don't know can't hurt you. Instead of trying to take some kind of shortcut and determine a candidate's maturity/qualifications based on age, look at their contributions.--[[User:KojiDude#(top)|<font color="00CD32">Koji</font>]][[User talk:KojiDude#(top)|<font color="green">Dude</font>]] [[Special:Contributions/KojiDude|<sup><font color="90EE90">(C)</font></sup>]] 18:01, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
I have taken this to [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_talk:Administrators#Issue_with_policy the admin policy talk page] - please weigh in there. Thanks <big>[[User:How do you turn this on|<span style="font-family:Times New Roman; color:white; background:black;">how&nbsp;do&nbsp;you&nbsp;turn&nbsp;this&nbsp;on</span>]]</big> 16:02, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
::::::*Sandstein, you are not alone in realizing that youth is a legitimate concern. This is one of those perrenial arguments that has no end. There are a number of people in the RfA community who believe it shouldn't be an issue and try to tie the view of the rest of the world as "ageism" that is equivalent to racism/sexism/etc. They would do better to argue that specific candidates deserve the bit rather than fight a battle that they can't win. Age IS an issue, and legitimately so. I will over look it for specific individuals, but for somebody to claim otherwise is going against the general body of evidence that exists.---'''[[User:Balloonman|<font color="purple">Balloonman</font>]]''' ''[[User talk:Balloonman|<b><sup><small>PoppaBalloon</small></sup></b>]]'' 14:39, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
* Rather than forbid any questions, why don't we recommend that people freely [[Noble lie]] about their answer? [[User:Jmcw37|jmcw]] ([[User talk:Jmcw37|talk]]) 10:51, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
:*If you want to see how lying to protect your privacy turns out, just as Essjay. [[User talk:Chillum|<font color="Green">'''Chillum'''</font>]] 13:47, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
::* [[Essjay_incident]] is interesting. It was not a noble lie that brought trouble but rather the abuse of position. A noble lie about age or sex or religion seems different: it would neutralize the question. [[User:Jmcw37|jmcw]] ([[User talk:Jmcw37|talk]]) 09:08, 10 September 2008 (UTC)
I personally feel that the age question is very inappropriate, and would add to any request that I saw it on a suggestion that the question remains unanswered --[[User:T-rex|T]]-[[User talk:T-rex|rex]] 13:35, 9 September 2008 (UTC)


:Give up private information not related to being an admin or I oppose? That sounds out of line. It is a silly question, if you want to know how mature someone is look at their contribution history. We don't let people ask "Are you black", "Are you a Jew", or "Who are you voting for in the upcoming election", so I don't see how asking age is any better. '''Endorse ban''' on asking about private information such as age in RfA. I also need nothing at [[WP:MOP]] which prevents the community creating some standards for the questions asked. [[User talk:Chillum|<font color="Green">'''Chillum'''</font>]] 13:40, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
<span id="ammo">
; ammo, ammunition
: Chips in play. ''I'm going to need more ammo for this game.'' Compare to "[[#fire|fire]]".
</span>


===A decision (break)===
; angle
: A technically legal, but borderline unethical, play. For example, deliberately miscalling one's own hand to induce a fold, or placing odd amounts of chips in the pot to confuse opponents about whether you mean to call or raise. A player employing such tactics is called an "angle shooter".


Can people please discuss this on the [[WP:ADMIN|policy]] talk page from now on, as that's the page that needs changing. It seems strange to have two discussions. <big>[[User:How do you turn this on|<span style="font-family:Times New Roman; color:white; background:black;">how&nbsp;do&nbsp;you&nbsp;turn&nbsp;this&nbsp;on</span>]]</big> 13:47, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
; ante
: See [[Betting (poker)#Ante|ante]].


:We don't need to change the admin policy to change how we run RfA. This is not changing admins, but how we select them. This is the correct forum. The conversation at WT:ADMIN does seem redundant, but I do this this is the better spot. [[User talk:Chillum|<font color="Green">'''Chillum'''</font>]] 13:48, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
<span id="ante off">
::Actually the relevant text ''is'' on the admin policy page (have a look at the discussion to see which text). The way we choose admins is documented in the policy, and needs changing there, not here. <big>[[User:How do you turn this on|<span style="font-family:Times New Roman; color:white; background:black;">how&nbsp;do&nbsp;you&nbsp;turn&nbsp;this&nbsp;on</span>]]</big> 13:51, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
; ante off
:I already read it. "Adminship is oriented to communal trust and confidence, rather than checklists and edit counts; each user will have their own way to assess their confidence in a candidates' readiness for the role" in no way prevents RfA from deciding what questions are inappropriate. It does not say they can take any action or ask any question they want to assess their confidence. It says they can have their own way, not that they can act inappropriately doing so. They can have their own way without asking personal questions. No conflict with policy. [[User talk:Chillum|<font color="Green">'''Chillum'''</font>]] 13:56, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
: In [[Poker tournament|tournament]] play, to force an absent player to continue paying antes, blinds, bring-ins, or other forced bets so that the contest remains fair to the other players. ''Go ahead and take that phone call. We'll ante you off until you get back.'' Also "[[#blind off|blind off]]".
::Alright. So how do you suggest we get consensus to ban such questions being asked? <big>[[User:How do you turn this on|<span style="font-family:Times New Roman; color:white; background:black;">how&nbsp;do&nbsp;you&nbsp;turn&nbsp;this&nbsp;on</span>]]</big> 14:24, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
</span>
:::You're not going to get consensus to ban these questions, that's the futility of the issue. Even people who don't think the question should be asked, such as myself, won't support banning it. The best you can hope for is consensus to add a note to such questions advising the candidate not to answer. There are other questions, such as the one regarding AOR, that the community hates, but there is no consensus to ban it. You're not going to get consensus to ignore !votes based on age, because too many people acknowledge the validity of the concern (even if they don't necessarily share it.) Even if you think you have consensus here, these are questions that are bigger than RfA and would have to be brought forth to the broader community.---'''[[User:Balloonman|<font color="purple">Balloonman</font>]]''' ''[[User talk:Balloonman|<b><sup><small>PoppaBalloon</small></sup></b>]]'' 14:45, 9 September 2008 (UTC)


Why are we even discussing banning serious questions? How many times has this been brought up and dismissed just in the last few weeks? If you find a question so offensive, refuse to answer it or address it with the questioner on their talkpage. We don't need to add rules on the type and style of questions beyond the common sense limitations we already have, which are typically enforced by bureaucrats. [[User:Avruch|<strong style="color:#000;background:#fff;border:0px solid #000">Avruch</strong>]][[User talk:Avruch|<sup><strong style="color:#000;background:#fff;border:0px solid #000"> T </strong></sup>]] 15:06, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
== B ==
; baby
: A low-ranked card, usually used in [[Lowball (poker)|lowball]] games. Also "spoke" when between ace and five.


:Indeed, no need to ban any type of serious question. Some editors equate youth with immaturity, others don't. I see no problem with attempting to gather relevant information while making a decision. We don't need to ban this particular question and the consensus will (likely) never want to do so, and we don't need the instruction creep that will occur if we start making lists of questions that cannot be asked. [[User:Useight|Useight]] ([[User talk:Useight|talk]]) 14:48, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
<span id="backdoor">
; backdoor
# A draw requiring two or more rounds to fill. For example, catching two consecutive cards in two rounds of [[seven-card stud]] or [[Texas hold 'em]] to fill a [[Rank of hands (poker)#Straight|straight]] or [[Rank of hands (poker)#Flush|flush]].
# A hand made other than the hand the player intended to make. ''I started with four hearts hoping for a flush, but I backdoored two more kings and my [[#trips|trips]] won.''
</span>


::Every time this topic comes up there is more and more opposition to the age question and less and less support for it. I think in time we will come to a consensus not to allow questions of such a personal nature. [[User talk:Chillum|<font color="Green">'''Chillum'''</font>]] 16:21, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
; back in
# To enter a pot by checking and then calling someone else's [[Betting (poker)#Open|open]] on the first betting round. Usually used in games like [[Five-card draw|Jackpots]], meaning to enter without openers.
# To enter a pot cheaply or for free because of having posted a [[blind (poker)|blind]].


:::I find it hard to believe people are still clinging to the belief trying to find out as much as possible about a candidate is wrong. Given we've just discovered a one-time admin here, who had admin, bureaucrat and checkuser rights on other projects, was in fact an identity thief who ran a fairly sophisticated sock-farm (oh, who had, in real life, created models that form the basis of economic theory in many western nations), surely we need to know more, not less? For if and when that situation reaches the press, there will be calls for aliases and anonymous editing to be banned outright, as well as removing any editor who cannot be held to account legally [[User:George The Dragon|George The Dragon]] ([[User talk:George The Dragon|talk]]) 16:48, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
; back into
: To win a pot with a hand that would have folded to any bet. For example, two players enter a pot of draw poker, both drawing to [[Rank of hands (poker)#Flush|flush]]es. Both miss, and check after the draw. The player with the ace-high draw "backs into" winning the pot against the player with only a king-high draw. Also to make a backdoor draw, for example, a player who starts a hand with three of a kind, but makes a runner-runner flush, can be said to back into the flush.


:::I think the folks who have opposed it in the past just don't see the need to come in and repeat themselves every few days. I can see their point, and I think if it ever comes to the point that someone posts a question of some sort and its removed as "banned" it will again become clear that banning serious questions is not going to have the support of the community.[[User:Avruch|<strong style="color:#000;background:#fff;border:0px solid #000">Avruch</strong>]][[User talk:Avruch|<sup><strong style="color:#000;background:#fff;border:0px solid #000"> T </strong></sup>]] 16:52, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
<span id="backraise">
; backraise
: A [[#reraise|reraise]] from a player that previously [[#limp|limped]] in the same betting round. ''I decided to backraise with my pocket eights to isolate the all-in player.''
</span>


::::George: assuming you're referring to Poetlister, he was banned here for over a year and never held admin rights. I don't see how asking how old someone is will somehow make rouge admins an impossibility. As has been said, they could just lie. It's a useless exercise. <big>[[User:How do you turn this on|<span style="font-family:Times New Roman; color:white; background:black;">how&nbsp;do&nbsp;you&nbsp;turn&nbsp;this&nbsp;on</span>]]</big> 16:55, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
; bad beat
: See [[bad beat]].


:::::You're wrong about that. Poetlister held admin rights here and on other projects, he was a bureaucrat and a checkuser elsewhere as well. [[User:Avruch|<strong style="color:#000;background:#fff;border:0px solid #000">Avruch</strong>]][[User talk:Avruch|<sup><strong style="color:#000;background:#fff;border:0px solid #000"> T </strong></sup>]] 17:01, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
; bank
::::::He never held admin rights as the user Poetlister on this project. Whether he did as another user is another question - did he? I don't know. I know he held rights elsewhere, but he never got higher than the role of "user" here. He was banned for ages here, looking at his block log. <big>[[User:How do you turn this on|<span style="font-family:Times New Roman; color:white; background:black;">how&nbsp;do&nbsp;you&nbsp;turn&nbsp;this&nbsp;on</span>]]</big> 17:04, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
: Also called the house, the person responsible for distributing chips, keeping track of the buy-ins, and paying winners at the end of the game.
:::::::It isn't really relevant to this discussion, but yes the person held admin rights under another account. The ban was for sockpuppeting, including with an admin account on en.wp. [[User:Avruch|<strong style="color:#000;background:#fff;border:0px solid #000">Avruch</strong>]][[User talk:Avruch|<sup><strong style="color:#000;background:#fff;border:0px solid #000"> T </strong></sup>]] 17:10, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
::::::::What I'm saying is, asking how old they are isn't going to stop a rouge admin from getting through is it? <big>[[User:How do you turn this on|<span style="font-family:Times New Roman; color:white; background:black;">how&nbsp;do&nbsp;you&nbsp;turn&nbsp;this&nbsp;on</span>]]</big> 17:14, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
:::Do you mean [[rogue]] or rouge? ''[[Wikipedia:Rouge admin|Je suis une rouge admin.]]'' <grin> Age is irrelevant. If someone lacks the requisite qualities, it will show or not regardless of the age of the candidate. There is an age below which a candidate simply could not pass an RFA. That age must differ from person to person. But it should be evident in the gruelling process we now impose on candidates. How articulate and clear thinking would most 6 year olds come across? How many 12 year olds would have the patience to gain the experience? We gain nothing by asking an impertinent question of someone seemingly qualified otherwise. Soon we will be looking at the other end of the age question. Who among us will be the first to be put out to pasture because of encroaching senility? Is there a max age beyond which we would question the ability of a user to think clearly and apply policy effectively? Will failing eyesight become a concern over misinterpreted dif's or a misconstrued edit? Cheers, [[User:Dlohcierekim|<font color="#00ff00"> Dloh</font>]][[User_talk:Dlohcierekim|<font color="#bb00bb">cierekim''' </font>]] 04:07, 10 September 2008 (UTC)


:Frankly, I'm torn. On the one hand, I'm uncomfortable that candidates are being asked questions of a more personal nature; on the other hand, I'm also uncomfortable "banning" people from asking questions just because I don't like their question. I'm sure most of you have noticed that, in the real world, applications for positions of trust pretty much always include an age field as par for the course? Wikipedia seems to be the only large, mainstream organization I've ever seen where "adulthood doesn't matter" is any sort of rallying cry... I'm not saying that's good or bad, but I am saying it's keenly unusual. &ndash; <span style="font-family: Garamond">[[User:Luna Santin|<font color="#1E90FF">'''Luna Santin'''</font>]] ([[User talk:Luna Santin|talk]])</span> 23:18, 14 September 2008 (UTC)
; bankroll
::I have to agree most with this comment here. I also agree with Sandstein's insistence that questions shouldn't be banned for RFAs, each user can use their own criteria. Determining if someone is an adult is a valid question that, though some may not like, still could have a place with many users for determining support. --[[User:Banime|Banime]] ([[User talk:Banime|talk]]) 23:45, 19 September 2008 (UTC)
: The amount of money that a player has to wager for the duration of his or her poker career.


===Legality===
; behind
# Not (currently) having the best hand. ''I'm pretty sure my pair of jacks was behind Lou's kings, but I had other outs, so I kept playing.''
# Describing money in play but not visible as chips in front of a player. For example, a player may announce "I've got $100 behind" while handing money to a casino employee, meaning that he intends those chips to be in play as soon as they are brought to him.


I would be very interested to see any actual evidence to support the notion that asking questions about such subjects as age or political views is ''illegal'' in any jurisdiction of a modern nation. This isn't a job interview, there is no determination of benefits or dispensation of a legal entitlement, so I don't see how in any respect such a question could be illegal. [[User:Avruch|<strong style="color:#000;background:#fff;border:0px solid #000">Avruch</strong>]][[User talk:Avruch|<sup><strong style="color:#000;background:#fff;border:0px solid #000"> T </strong></sup>]] 14:44, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
<span id="belly buster">
:In Quebec, at least, this would be considered a job interview; the position is that of an unpaid volunteer, but there is a selection process. But that wouldn't even be necessary: the laws against discrimination here are very strict and ''anything'' which is open to the public has an open application process open to the public may not use any such criteria (mind you, ''age'' is a special case insofar as that specific non-discrimination section is tempered with a limitation that laws about age limits are allowed and it ''is'' legal to ask one's age in order to apply them (buying booze, for instance) &mdash; but that limitation is not relevant here). &mdash;&nbsp;[[User:Coren|Coren]]&nbsp;<sup>[[User Talk:Coren|(talk)]]</sup> 15:55, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
; belly buster
::''Editing'' is open to the public, and doesn't use any such criteria. Adminship is a private matter; we have opted to make it open, but it is still a ''private'' matter, and laws like those stated are not applicable. [[User:EVula|EVula]] <span style="color: #999;">// [[User talk:EVula|talk]] // [[User:EVula/admin|<span style="color: #366;">&#9775;</span>]] //</span> 16:00, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
: An [[Draw (poker)#Inside straight draw|inside straight draw]]. Also "[[#gutshot|gutshot]]".
::What a horrible reading of the law. [[User:Badger Drink|Badger Drink]] ([[User talk:Badger Drink|talk]]) 20:09, 13 September 2008 (UTC)
</span>


:I just realized a possible cause of confusion: it's important to note that the US Bill of rights, the example so many people are familiar with, gives specific garantees of freedom ''from the governement''. I.e., the governement may not make laws that curtail those freedoms. Many other bills of rights (Quebec's being amongst them) gives to garantees of freedom from ''anyone''; governement, businesses and individuals alike. &mdash;&nbsp;[[User:Coren|Coren]]&nbsp;<sup>[[User Talk:Coren|(talk)]]</sup> 15:59, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
; berry patch
: A game with many unskilled or "live" players; a lucrative opportunity for profit.


I seriously doubt that you could apply discrimination laws to adminship on Wikipedia - you have to be deprived of something meaningful, i.e. suffer an injury of legal import, before you can establish a discrimination claim. I don't think that discrimination which could exclude a protected class from ''adminship on Wikipedia'' rises to that level. And I don't see how the US constitution enters into it at all. [[User:Avruch|<strong style="color:#000;background:#fff;border:0px solid #000">Avruch</strong>]][[User talk:Avruch|<sup><strong style="color:#000;background:#fff;border:0px solid #000"> T </strong></sup>]] 16:41, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
<span id="bet">
; bet
# Any money wagered during the play of a hand.
# More specifically, the [[Betting (poker)#Open|opening]] bet of a betting round.
# In a [[Betting (poker)#fixed limit|fixed limit]] game, the standard betting amount. ''There were six bets in the pot when I called.''
</span>


To make myself clear, since I've commented several times in this discussion in the last little while - I'm not against asking such questions in RfA. I don't think the candidates are or should be required to answer them either. I'm not against people taking age into account when deciding whether to support or oppose a candidate, but I don't think it should be the primary attribute they weigh or even a major consideration in the face of a long history of conduct to review on Wikipedia. But it is a factor that fills in holes when the history is brief or debatable. I don't think we should get into prescribing what elements people are allowed to weigh in their judgments, and while I accept that many young editors (including most of the folks posting to this page) find it unfair -- you don't here, or anywhere else, have the right to be free from being offended. [[User:Avruch|<strong style="color:#000;background:#fff;border:0px solid #000">Avruch</strong>]][[User talk:Avruch|<sup><strong style="color:#000;background:#fff;border:0px solid #000"> T </strong></sup>]] 16:58, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
; betting structure
:I'd agree against you in ''principle'', were it not for the fact that not answering one of those putatively "optional" questions pretty much guarantees sinking your RfA; making them quite mandatory in practice&mdash; there is no ''genuine'' right to not answer in other words. &mdash;&nbsp;[[User:Coren|Coren]]&nbsp;<sup>[[User Talk:Coren|(talk)]]</sup> 21:46, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
: See [[betting (poker)]].


===New proposal===
; big bet
We ban the discussion to ban this perenial topic.---'''[[User:Balloonman|<font color="purple">Balloonman</font>]]''' ''[[User talk:Balloonman|<b><sup><small>PoppaBalloon</small></sup></b>]]'' 17:42, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
: See [[big bet]].
:It's only perennial because people haven't liked the idea in the past. If we were to set up a poll now, we'd get a much more accurate idea of whether such a ban is wanted by the community. <big>[[User:How do you turn this on|<span style="font-family:Times New Roman; color:white; background:black;">how&nbsp;do&nbsp;you&nbsp;turn&nbsp;this&nbsp;on</span>]]</big> 17:47, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
*I strongly oppose banning the discussion. First, as I said above that question is disruptive and it violates user's privacy. I support having a privacy policy against this questions, not just because it crashes RFAs, it's because in the future we may get more discrimination than before, and this needs to be resolved before it gets worst. <small>[[User talk:Macy|Macy]]</small> 23:11, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
:*Obviously the irony was missed on you...---'''[[User:Balloonman|<font color="purple">Balloonman</font>]]''' ''[[User talk:Balloonman|<b><sup><small>PoppaBalloon</small></sup></b>]]'' 22:32, 15 September 2008 (UTC)
*Agree strongly with Balloonman. Ban the discussion to prevent incessant discussion and endless arguments. [[User:Wisdom89|'''<font color="#660000">Wisdom89</font>''']] <sub>([[User_talk:Wisdom89|<small><sub><font color="#17001E">T</font></sub></small>]] / [[Special:Contributions/Wisdom89|<small><sup><font color="#17001E">C</font></sup></small>]])</sub> 04:29, 10 September 2008 (UTC)
*I couldn't have put it better myself, Balloonman ;-) <font color="#8080ff">[[User_talk:Strikeout_Sister|<b><i><s>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;SIS</s></i></b>]]</font>&nbsp; 08:13, 10 September 2008 (UTC)
**I think banning people from talking about something is a ''very'' chilling idea. I can't tell if this proposal is actually serious though. <big>[[User:How do you turn this on|<span style="font-family:Times New Roman; color:white; background:black;">how&nbsp;do&nbsp;you&nbsp;turn&nbsp;this&nbsp;on</span>]]</big> 13:39, 10 September 2008 (UTC)
***If you feel banning discussion is harmful, why do you seem to support doing so in the threads above? &ndash; <span style="font-family: Garamond">[[User:Luna Santin|<font color="#1E90FF">'''Luna Santin'''</font>]] ([[User talk:Luna Santin|talk]])</span> 23:19, 14 September 2008 (UTC)


===counter proposal===
; big bet game
That we ban the discussion to ban the discussion to ban this perennial topic. <tongue in cheek> [[User:Dlohcierekim|<font color="#00ff00"> Dloh</font>]][[User_talk:Dlohcierekim|<font color="#bb00bb">cierekim''' </font>]] 03:51, 10 September 2008 (UTC)
: A game played with a [[Betting (poker)#No limit|no limit]] or [[Betting (poker)#Pot limit|pot limit]] betting structure.


===counter proposal to the counter proposal to the new proposal===
; big blind
Ban this perennial topic semi-annually. [[User:Hiberniantears|Hiberniantears]] ([[User talk:Hiberniantears|talk]]) 14:36, 10 September 2008 (UTC)
: See [[blind (poker)]].
:Why? <big>[[User:How do you turn this on|<span style="font-family:Times New Roman; color:white; background:black;">how&nbsp;do&nbsp;you&nbsp;turn&nbsp;this&nbsp;on</span>]]</big> 14:57, 10 September 2008 (UTC)
::Why not? It doesn't have to be semiannually, per se. I'm also open to Tuesday of every third week between 2:33pm and 7:56pm. [[User:Hiberniantears|Hiberniantears]] ([[User talk:Hiberniantears|talk]]) 15:06, 10 September 2008 (UTC)
::: At this rate someone draw me a [[set|mathematical set]] to make sense of it all... - [[User:Mailer diablo|Mailer Diablo]] 17:44, 10 September 2008 (UTC)
::::Can someone give a brief summary of all the above. [[WP:TLDR]].:P Thanks.--[[User:Xp54321|<font color="0070FF">'''Xp54321''']]</font><sup> ([[User talk:Xp54321|<font color="4CBB17">'''''Hello!'''''</font>]] • [[Special:Contributions/Xp54321|<font color="4CBB17">'''''Contribs'''''</font>]])</sup> 02:10, 21 September 2008 (UTC)


== Stats ==
<span id="big blind special">
; big blind special
: A situation in which (assuming no raising) the player in the big blind is dealt weak hole cards, but ends up making the best hand because he or she was able to see the flop for free, often two pair with unusual cards such as 3-9 or 10-2. Compare to "[[#small blind special|small blind special]]".
</span>


Hi all,
<span id="blank">
; blank
: A card, frequently a [[community card]], of no apparent value. ''I suspected Margaret had a good draw, but the river card was a blank, so I bet again.'' Also "[[#rags|rag]]". Compare to "[[#brick|brick]]", "[[#bomb|bomb]]".
</span>


As some are aware, over the past few weeks, months, I've been updating the old RfA archives, in doing so for preparation for some interesting stats, located [[User:Majorly/RfA/Stats|here]]. These are details of every successful request for adminship going back to February 2004, when the idea of adding the tally was introduced. There are earlier requests, but none of these had numbered votes, so wouldn't fit very well.
; blaze
: A [[Non-standard poker hand#blaze|Non-standard poker hand]] of five [[face card]]s that outranks a [[Rank of hands (poker)#Flush|flush]].


It currently needs filling in for a lot of requests, and probably has a lot of mistakes. Anyone who is interested in helping to add/correct various bits of data on it, please do help! Do note that the tallies do not always reflect what's on the actual RfA, since I got reverted attempting to correct those, so please don't fix them. Otherwise, I'd appreciate people updating/correcting their own/nominee's/whoever's entries, so we can get this list accurate and filled.
; bleed, bleeding chips
: To lose small amounts continually, so as to add up to a large loss. ''I won that large pot with my kings, but then I bled it all off over the next hour.''


Some notes, if you intend to assist:
<span id="blind">
; blind
# A type of forced bet. See [[blind (poker)]].
# In the "[[#dark|dark]]".
</span>


*All times are in UTC.
; blind stud
*When determining the day a user became active, I based it on when they started making edits on a daily basis.
: A [[stud poker]] game in which all cards are dealt face down. Was popular in [[California]] before legal rulings made traditional stud legal there.
*The Days column is how many days they were active on the day they were promoted. I used [http://timeanddate.com/date/duration.html this] useful tool. Don't include the end date option.
*Edit counts are either mentioned in the nomination, on the nomination somewhere, or in more recent ones, on the talk page. If it isn't there, it isn't there.
*For co-nominations, only the first user is included.


I recommend a good internet connection to edit that page as well. Thanks for anyone who helps.
<span id="blind off">
'''[[User:Majorly|<span style="font-family:verdana; color:#B05427">Majorly</span>]]''' <sup>''[[User talk:Majorly|<span style="color:black">talk</span>]]''</sup> 16:16, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
; blind off, blinded
# To "[[#ante off|ante off]]".
# To have one's stack reduced by paying ever increasing blinds in tournaments. ''Ted had to make a move soon or he would be blinded away in three more rounds.''
</span>


:Thank you, Majorly, for your effort. The list is very useful indeed. --[[User:Meno25|Meno25]] ([[User talk:Meno25|talk]]) 18:19, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
<span id="blocker">
:: Wow! That's great work, Majorly! [[User:WBOSITG|<font color=#006600>'''weburiedoursecretsinthegarden'''</font>]] 19:40, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
; blocker
:::Cool. Now for the RfB ones! ;) --'''[[User:Cameron|Cameron]][[User Talk:Cameron|*]]''' 19:45, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
: In [[community card poker]], refers to holding one of the opponent's [[Out (poker)|outs]], typically when the board threatens a straight or straight draw. ''The board was A23 but with my pair of fives I held two blockers to the straight.'' Compare to "[[#dry ace|dry ace]]".
::::RfB should be a lot easier since there's only a few of those. '''[[User:Majorly|<span style="font-family:verdana; color:#B05427">Majorly</span>]]''' <sup>''[[User talk:Majorly|<span style="color:black">talk</span>]]''</sup> 19:46, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
</span>
:Great work, Majorly. This'll come in handy :) —'''[[User:Cyclonenim|Cyclonenim]]''' ([[User talk:Cyclonenim|talk]] · [[Special:Contributions/Cyclonenim|contribs]] · [[Special:EmailUser/Cyclonenim|email]]) 20:20, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
::Ya, this is interesting. I can imagine, 1000 years in the future, people visiting the "Wikipedia Museum" and looking at a copy of [[User:Tillwe|Tillwe]]'s RfA on the wall. They'll say things like, "Look, Mom, Only 25 participants!" [[User:Lazulilasher|Lazulilasher]] ([[User talk:Lazulilasher|talk]]) 20:25, 16 September 2008 (UTC)


:I've added this to my list of things to do when closing RfAs. Good work. [[User:EVula|EVula]] <span style="color: #999;">// [[User talk:EVula|talk]] // [[User:EVula/admin|<span style="color: #366;">&#9775;</span>]] //</span> 21:10, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
<span id="bluff">
; bluff
: See [[bluff (poker)]].
</span>


All I see is some raw data. What statistical analyses are being proposed for this data? --[[User:Malleus Fatuorum|Malleus Fatuorum]] ([[User talk:Malleus Fatuorum|talk]]) 22:04, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
; bluff-catcher
:It's not complete yet. I'll be creating stats when it's complete (such as highest support, lowest edit count, shortest time here, who has nominated the most times etc). '''[[User:Majorly|<span style="font-family:verdana; color:#B05427">Majorly</span>]]''' <sup>''[[User talk:Majorly|<span style="color:black">talk</span>]]''</sup> 22:08, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
: On the last betting round, a hand that cannot win if the opponent is making a legitimate [[Value (poker)|value]] bet, but that might win if the opponent's bet was a pure bluff. ''It looked like Jim and I were both drawing for a flush. I missed and he bet, but I figured the pair of nines I caught along the way made a bluff-catcher, so I called.''
::That'll no doubt be interesting, but I was more wondering about a statistical analysis of the data. For instance, a correlation between edit count and support votes. On the hypothesis that higher edit counts may be an influence on more editors becoming aware of and becoming involved in the RfA. --[[User:Malleus Fatuorum|Malleus Fatuorum]] ([[User talk:Malleus Fatuorum|talk]]) 22:22, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
:::Yes, stuff like that can certainly be looked at too. But it can only be done once all the data is there. I'll add a load more data tomorrow hopefully. '''[[User:Majorly|<span style="font-family:verdana; color:#B05427">Majorly</span>]]''' <sup>''[[User talk:Majorly|<span style="color:black">talk</span>]]''</sup> 22:27, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
::::I'm fully behind your attempt to get some data together, and I congratulate you for what you've achieved. I look forward to having the full data set available to be mined for hidden treasures. Now, if only you could do a similar thing for the failed RfAs ... :lol: --[[User:Malleus Fatuorum|Malleus Fatuorum]] ([[User talk:Malleus Fatuorum|talk]]) 22:38, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
:::::There's some incomplete data [[Wikipedia:Requests for adminship/Nomination data/All RfA nominations|here]]. In the future, once this is done, I intend to create data for all bureaucrat requests, and some other "significant" RfAs (including SNOW RfAs wouldn't be useful imo). '''[[User:Majorly|<span style="font-family:verdana; color:#B05427">Majorly</span>]]''' <sup>''[[User talk:Majorly|<span style="color:black">talk</span>]]''</sup> 22:44, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
::::::I have started a replica table for RFBs at [[User:Useight/RFB Stats]]. I should have it completed by the end of the evening. [[User:Useight|Useight]] ([[User talk:Useight|talk]]) 03:54, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
:::::::{{done}} Well, all the RFBs are in the table, a couple more columns need to be finished. [[User:Useight|Useight]] ([[User talk:Useight|talk]]) 04:57, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
Here's an interesting statistic. The English wikipedia has 1,590 administrators administrating 10,455 active users.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Statistics] Police state or what? --[[User:Malleus Fatuorum|Malleus Fatuorum]] ([[User talk:Malleus Fatuorum|talk]]) 23:15, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
:You got a problem with police states? Wanna get blocked, mister? In other words, yeah, you're right. Find a good dozen or so editors that haven't screwed up enough, and at the same time, have been here long enough, to pass RFA. RFA sucks, but the quiet, sleuthful, non-controversial (read:non-article writers) will easily get through. We need more of them (me) !!!!. In ''other'' words, if you don't have solution, we don't have a problem....[[User:Keeper76|<font color="#21421E" face="comic sans ms">Keeper</font>]] <span title="Representation in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA)" class="IPA">&#448;</span> [[User talk:Keeper76|<font color="#CC7722" face="Papyrus">76</font>]] 23:22, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
::Malleus, no fair comparing ''total'' admins to ''active'' accounts; both should be active, or both should be total. Also, keep in mind the 10,455 does not count ''any'' IP editors at all. --[[User:Barneca|barneca]] ([[User talk:Barneca|talk]]) 23:28, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
:::(ec) I was just about to say that. Its a rather inaccurate account for day to day operations. '''[[User:Synergy|<font color="#222222" face="Times New Roman">Syn</font>]]'''[[User_talk:Synergy|<font color="#222222" face="Times New Roman">ergy</font>]] 23:29, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
:::OK. The number of active editors has been established; so what do you believe the number of active administrators to be if you don't agree with the figure of 1,590 given? --[[User:Malleus Fatuorum|Malleus Fatuorum]] ([[User talk:Malleus Fatuorum|talk]]) 23:40, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
::::Betacommand used to have a page about "active admins" somewhere that he updated with his bot, but I don't remember where it was (someone will come up with a link, I'm sure). I seem to vaguely recall that about 1/3 of admins were active within a given month, but that's such a hazy recollection I wouldn't put too much stock in it. The bigger issue is the uncounted number of IP editors in a given month. --[[User:Barneca|barneca]] ([[User talk:Barneca|talk]]) 23:47, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
:::::No, that's not the bigger issue at all, as most of those IPs are dealt with by the active editors. Just look above to see in what low regard that kind of work is held in anyway. A third sounds about right to me, which means that there's one active administrator for every five active editors. Does that seem sensible to you? --[[User:Malleus Fatuorum|Malleus Fatuorum]] ([[User talk:Malleus Fatuorum|talk]]) 23:54, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
::::::It would be 1:20, but I get your point. However, I know as a admin I spend a very serious portion of my time dealing with IP editors (more than half, I suspect, though I haven't checked), so I wouldn't discount them as you do. --[[User:Barneca|barneca]] ([[User talk:Barneca|talk]]) 00:00, 17 September 2008 (UTC)


:::::::Your assumption that I discount IP editors is very far from the truth. Take a look at the thread above this one. My assertion is that IP editors are dealt with by and large by non-administrators, apart from the delivery of the final ''coup de grace'' of course. --[[User:Malleus Fatuorum|Malleus Fatuorum]] ([[User talk:Malleus Fatuorum|talk]]) 02:51, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
<span id="board">
::::::::That hasn't been my own experience, can't speak for other admins. Anyway, something is off in this analysis, even if i can't put my finger on where it is, because I know I deal with way more than 20 other editors every month. Plus, admins have to police each other, which is 10 times harder than policing a normal human... --[[User:Barneca|barneca]] ([[User talk:Barneca|talk]]) 03:04, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
; board
:::::::::I thought admins were janitors, not a security force? --[[User:Malleus Fatuorum|Malleus Fatuorum]] ([[User talk:Malleus Fatuorum|talk]]) 03:14, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
# The set of [[community card]]s in a [[Community card poker|community card game]]. ''If another spade hits the board, I'll have to fold.''
::::::::::You can't trap me, Malleus, because you're preaching to the choir. I don't buy the janitor metaphor either. --[[User:Barneca|barneca]] ([[User talk:Barneca|talk]]) 03:24, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
# The set of face-up cards of a particular player in a [[Stud poker|stud]] game. ''Zack's board didn't look too scary, so I bet into him again.''
:::::::::::Like I said before. If you guys don't like the concept, than change all of the icons and userboxes from a mop to something that makes more sense. Then I'll remove it from my essay. '''[[User:Synergy|<font color="#222222" face="Times New Roman">Syn</font>]]'''[[User_talk:Synergy|<font color="#222222" face="Times New Roman">ergy</font>]] 03:46, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
# The set of all face-up cards in a stud game. ''I started with a flush draw, but there were already four other diamonds showing on the board, so I folded.''
::::::::::::(ec)Eh, the janitor metaphor fits in a way, a janitor is supposed to be a behind-the-scenes job that just focuses on keeping things clean, organized, and working smoothly. To that extent, the metaphor fits. But one will be hard pressed to find a metaphor that can accurately describe the job of an administrator, just because the scope of administrative duties is so diverse and sometimes complicated that I think the it is just too unique to be easily compared by a simple metaphor. Just my random thought of the day...:)<span style="white-space:nowrap"><font face="Harlow Solid Italic">[[User:Gonzo_fan2007|<font size="2px" color="teal"> « Gonzo fan2007</font>]] ''([[User talk:Gonzo_fan2007|talk]] ♦ [[Special:Contributions/Gonzo_fan2007|contribs]]) @ ''</font></span>'' 03:49, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
</span>
:::::::::::::Yeah, I can't readily think of many real-life jobs that can be immediately compared with Wikipedia admins, because our admins (ideally, at least) have additional powers, but not really additional authority - in real ife, the two tend to go hand in hand. Perhaps a combination of a janitor and a security guard is the best metaphor - and I'm now thinking of that bit from [[Scrubs (TV series)|Scrubs]] with the "knife-wrench". ~ <font color="#228b22">[[User:Mazca|'''m'''a'''z'''c'''a''']]</font> <sup>[[User_talk:Mazca|'''t''']] | [[Special:Contributions/Mazca|'''c''']]</sup> 09:56, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
(<<<outdent) I think of the "mop" image as an ideal to strive towards: to remind admins of the virtue of humility: not to give undue weight to their own opinions about situations. <span style="color:Green; font-size:1.5em;">☺</span> [[User:Coppertwig|Coppertwig]] ([[User talk:Coppertwig|talk]]) 13:36, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
:::: [[User:Rick Bot]] updates [[WP:LOA]] daily with the number of active admins. Currently it is 976. -[[User:SpuriousQ|SpuriousQ]] ([[User talk:SpuriousQ|talk]]) 12:05, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
:The ratio is probably a holdover, to when the connection between "any trusted user" and "administrator" was more close. I think that was the idea to begin with, and while that clearly isn't the way candidates are measured these days it probably has had an effect on the stats proportionate to the length of time it was. [[User:Avruch|<strong style="color:#000;background:#fff;border:0px solid #000">Avruch</strong>]][[User talk:Avruch|<sup><strong style="color:#000;background:#fff;border:0px solid #000"> T </strong></sup>]] 01:06, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
::Here's another way to phrase the question: if you choose an edit at random, what is the probability that the edit is by an admin? I would guess that admins on average are much more active than the average "active" non-admin, so this question would give a higher ratio of admins to non-admins than just counting the numbers of users. <span style="color:Red; font-size:1.5em;">☺</span> [[User:Coppertwig|Coppertwig]] ([[User talk:Coppertwig|talk]]) 13:41, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
Good job on the stats, Majorly. Useful work, interesting to look over the numbers. Oops: I reverted many of the tally changes you made, citing "consensus" at AN/I, then afterwards noticed that the person who closed the AN/I discussion had said ''"Content dispute should be settled through RFA talk page and dispute resolution - i.e. not through edit-warring. ..."'' so perhaps my reverting was premature. I think there are various ways to count the votes and that we should leave the closed discussions as they <s>are</s> ''were''<sup>(02:14, 21 September 2008 (UTC))</sup>, but I wouldn't oppose a notation being added (per Franamax in that discussion) if the original tallies are also left and the new notation is clearly marked as being such, e.g. in square brackets "[Later analysis gives a tally of...]", or outside the top and bottom discussion-closing markers, or on the talk page. I also agree with brenneman in that discussion: it was OK for Majorly to be bold per [[WP:BRD|BRD]]. <span style="color:Purple; font-size:1.5em;">☺</span> [[User:Coppertwig|Coppertwig]] ([[User talk:Coppertwig|talk]]) 02:18, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
:I meant "leave the closed discussions as they were", not "as they are". In other words, if there's no further comment I expect I'll revert the rest of them too. <span style="color:Purple; font-size:1.5em;">☺</span> [[User:Coppertwig|Coppertwig]] ([[User talk:Coppertwig|talk]]) 02:14, 21 September 2008 (UTC)


It's fascinating to see all the RfAs in one place like that - good work, Majorly. We had a suggestion at the [[WP:RREV|RfA Review]] (Now [[Wikipedia:RfA Review/Recommend|Ongoing]]) (<nowiki></plug></nowiki>) that, rather than setting minimum editcounts or months of service before someone can go to RfA, we simply post the averages of successful candidates. The implication is that editors who are well below those figures are not as likely to succeed as editors at or above them. Obviously, other factors are present - several of the last 50 successful candidates had less than 4000 edits, while the averages were in the 9,000's - but it is interesting to see how stable the averages are over those last 50 candidates. I posted the analysis at [[User:Ultraexactzz/RfA Success]], for reference. [[User:Ultraexactzz|UltraExactZZ]] <sup> [[User_talk:Ultraexactzz|Claims]] </sup>~<small> [[Special:Contributions/Ultraexactzz|Evidence]] </small> 13:00, 18 September 2008 (UTC)
; boat
:Could you add the edit counts for the ones you analysed to the stats page? Thanks '''[[User:Majorly|<span style="font-family:verdana; color:#B05427">Majorly</span>]]''' <sup>''[[User talk:Majorly|<span style="color:black">talk</span>]]''</sup> 13:18, 18 September 2008 (UTC)
: Slang for a full house. Named for its resemblance to a boat structure; the pair making up the bow and stern, and the three of a kind as the hull.
::Done, back to Werdna. I didn't add account creation or first edit dates, since I didn't record them - I just kept a count of the account's age in months, from first edit to nom. [[User:Ultraexactzz|UltraExactZZ]] <sup> [[User_talk:Ultraexactzz|Claims]] </sup>~<small> [[Special:Contributions/Ultraexactzz|Evidence]] </small> 14:09, 18 September 2008 (UTC)


== Watchlist notice for RfA Review ==
<span id="bomb">
; bomb
: A "[[#brick|brick]]". Compare to "[[#blank|blank]]", "[[#rags|rags]]".
</span>


Now that the RfA Review is accepting responses to its second questionnaire, I thought it might be a good idea to post a Watchlist notice. Since the previous such notice was discussed here, I want to make sure there's a consensus for the notice. My proposal would be to have a general notice now, for two weeks, followed by a specific "The deadline to submit responses to the RfA Review is..." for a week, and then clear the notice. Thoughts? {{unsigned2|14:12, September 19, 2008|Ultraexactzz}}
; bone
:Have we a deadline? I be wonderin' that for a while. 'Twould be good to put that up first, methinks. Cheers, me hearties. <font color="green">[[User:Lifebaka|''lifebaka'']]</font>[[User talk:Lifebaka|'''++''']] 19:10, 19 September 2008 (UTC)
: A chip, often of small denomination.
::The last phase started on 12 June and was closed on 1 July. Since this phase started on 12 September, and there are more questions, I had proposed the idea of closing it on 10 October (4 weeks later, 3 weeks from now). Also, ''arrrr''. [[User:Ultraexactzz|UltraExactZZ]] <sup> [[User_talk:Ultraexactzz|Claims]] </sup>~<small> [[Special:Contributions/Ultraexactzz|Evidence]] </small> 20:58, 19 September 2008 (UTC)


== Admin Bots ==
<span id="both ways">
; both ways
: Both halves of a [[High-low split|split pot]], often declared by a player who thinks he or she will win both low and high.
</span>


We could use more input on the proposed admin bot policy at [[WT:BOT]] --[[User_talk:Chris G|<b><font style="color:Green;">Chris</font></b>]] 02:05, 21 September 2008 (UTC)
<span id="bottom end">
; bottom end
: The lowest of several possible [[Rank of hands (poker)#Straight|straights]], especially in a [[Community card poker|community card game]]. For example, in [[Texas hold'em]] with the cards 5-6-7 on the board, a player holding 3-4 has the bottom end straight, while a player holding 4-8 or 8-9 has a higher straight. Also "[[#idiot end|idiot end]]".
</span>


== AFD Stats for RFA (mainly at least, I can't imagine any other uses) ==
; bottom pair, bottom set
: In a [[Community card poker|community card game]], a pair (or set) made by matching the lowest-ranking board card with one (or two) in one's private hand. Compare [[#second pair|second pair]], [[#top pair|top pair]].


Someone asked for this a while ago, when I unveiled my RFA tool. I've yet to get into what a user has kept, deleted, etc, but, I've cobbled together a script to reveal what AFD's a user has started. Since someone here asked for this, I thought I'd unveil it here, too. Please see http://toolserver.org/~sql/afd.php . Without going into detecting votes, I'd love input on how I could improve this. [[User:SQL|<span style="font-size:7pt;color: #fff;background:#900;border:2px solid #999">SQL</span>]][[User talk:SQL|<sup style="font-size: 5pt;color:#999">Query me!</sup>]] 04:45, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
; box
:I found one problem with it, take [[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Arcel]] in which the result was delete but later another article about a different subject by the same name was created so it lists the result of the AfD as 'keep' instead of what it was; 'delete'. I think you could fix this by checking the deletion of the page between the day the AfD was started and, say, 10 days later to determine the result of the AfD. - '''[[User:Icewedge|Icewedge]] ([[User talk:Icewedge|talk]])''' 04:53, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
: The chip tray in front of a house dealer, and by extension, the house dealer's position at the table. ''You've been in the box for an hour now; don't you get a break?''
::Well, as best as it can tell, it still exists, and is not a redirect, I'm not sure how to detect a '''merge''' without looking at the page content... [[User:SQL|<span style="font-size:7pt;color: #fff;background:#900;border:2px solid #999">SQL</span>]][[User talk:SQL|<sup style="font-size: 5pt;color:#999">Query me!</sup>]] 06:31, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
:Doesn't seem to do merges either - [[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Wikijunior (2nd nomination)]] shows up as a keep. '''[[User:Naerii|<span style="font-size:15px;font-family:helvetica;color:#1693A5;">naerii</span>]]''' 05:46, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
::See above [[User:SQL|<span style="font-size:7pt;color: #fff;background:#900;border:2px solid #999">SQL</span>]][[User talk:SQL|<sup style="font-size: 5pt;color:#999">Query me!</sup>]] 06:31, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
::"Inaccurate" is splet wrnog in the preamble of the output. The output pastes clickably into Excel, but it would be nice if it columnized also. Nice tool - no comments on the actual functionality (unlike the other posters here who have actual substantive comments :). [[User:Franamax|Franamax]] ([[User talk:Franamax|talk]]) 06:22, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
:::D'oh! I'll go fix the spelling, and, maybe make it table-ized :) Thanks! [[User:SQL|<span style="font-size:7pt;color: #fff;background:#900;border:2px solid #999">SQL</span>]][[User talk:SQL|<sup style="font-size: 5pt;color:#999">Query me!</sup>]] 06:31, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
::::Not a bad tool at all, could weed out some silly nominators (i.e. that all end up in keep) I guess...Cheers, [[User:Casliber|Casliber]] ([[User talk:Casliber|talk]] '''·''' [[Special:Contributions/Casliber|contribs]]) 06:33, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
:I'm gonna see if I can manage to get a tool running that can sorta detect keeps and deletes. [[User:X!|<span style="font-family:Verdana,Arial,Helvetica;color:steelblue;">'''X'''</span>]][[User talk:X!|<span style="color:steelblue;"><small>clamation point</small></span>]] 11:02, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
::I'd say lose the percentages. Just plain misleading despite your sensible disclaimer at the top. Of the four "probably kept" at [http://toolserver.org/~sql/afd.php?user=Darkspots mine], one was a recreation with entirely different material, two were procedural listings of incomplete nominations, and one was kept, giving me a dismal 64% deletion rate. Good tool in general, though. [[User:Darkspots|Darkspots]] ([[User talk:Darkspots|talk]]) 11:44, 22 September 2008 (UTC)


:::Actually seeing how a few nomination profiles goes may be interesting, especially if itemised at the bottom anyway. Also voting ones as well :) Cheers, [[User:Casliber|Casliber]] ([[User talk:Casliber|talk]] '''·''' [[Special:Contributions/Casliber|contribs]]) 11:50, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
<span id="boxed card">
; boxed card
: A card encountered face-up in the assembled deck during the deal, as opposed to one overturned in the act of dealing. Most house rules treat a boxed card as if it didn't exist; that is, it is placed aside and not used. Different rules cover cards exposed during the deal.
</span>


== Moar Admin Bots ==
; break
# In a [[draw poker]] game, to discard cards that make a [[made hand]] in the hope of making a much better one. For example, a player with J-J-10-9-8 may wish to break his pair of jacks to draw for the [[Rank of hands (poker)#Straight|straight]], and a [[Lowball (poker)|lowball]] player may break his 9-high 9-5-4-2-A to draw for the [[Rank of hands (poker)#Wheel|wheel]].
# To end a session of play. ''The game broke at about 3:00''.


[[Wikipedia:An#Approval_of_FA_Template_Protection_Bot]], just incase you haven't seen it yet --[[User_talk:Chris G|<b><font style="color:Green;">Chris</font></b>]] 12:14, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
<span id="brick">
; brick
: A "[[#blank|blank]]", though more often used in the derogatory sense of a card that is undesirable rather than merely inconsequential, such as a card of high rank or one that makes a pair in a low-hand game. Also "[[#bomb|bomb]]". Compare to "[[#rags|rags]]".
</span>

<span id="brick & mortar">
; brick & mortar
: A ''brick & mortar'' or ''B&M'' casino is a term referring to a "real" [[casino]] based in a building, as opposed to an [[online casino]]. This term is used to refer to many real world locations vs. their Internet counterparts. It is not just a poker term.
</span>

; bring in
# To [[Betting (poker)#Open|open]] a betting round. ''Alice brought it in for $4, and Bob raised to $10.'' ''Ted posted the bring-in.''
# A type of forced bet. Rather than (or in addition to) [[ante|antes]] or blinds, some games, like [[seven card stud]] use a bring-in. The advantage of bring-in games is that the player can look at their hand before betting and can then bet the minimum bring or a full bet (usually 2.5X the bring in amount). So even though it is a forced bet, it is not considered a [blind bet] because the player can look at their cards before acting.

; Broadway
: The Ace high [[Poker_hands#Straight|straight]]. AKQJT (offsuit) is Broadway.

; Broomcorn's Uncle
: This is a colorful term for calling a player overly tight.
:[[Mike Sexton]] used this term on the [[World Poker Tour]] Ladies Night 2006 episode. The pop-up defined it as "Losing all your chips by never playing a hand." [[Broomcorn]] is an other name for boring [[common millet]]. Also see "[[#ante off|ante off]]", "[[#blind off|blind off]]".

; brush
# A casino employee whose job it is to greet players entering the poker room, maintain the list of persons waiting to play, announce open seats, and various other duties (including brushing off tables to prepare them for new games, hence the name).
# To recruit players into a game. ''Dave is brushing up some players for tonight's game.''

; bubble
: The last finishing position in a [[poker tournament]] before entering the payout structure. ''He was very frustrated after getting eliminated on the bubble.'' Also can be applied to other situations like if six players will make a televised final table the player finishing seventh will go out on the "TV bubble". Also used to describe any situation close to the payout structure.

; buck
: See [[button (poker)]].

; bug
: See [[bug (poker)]]. Compare to [[wild card (poker)]].

<span id="bullet">
; bullet
# An ace.
# A chip. Also "[[#ammo|ammo]]".
</span>

; bully
: A player who repeatedly makes large bets. This prevents opportunities from getting free or cheap cards that may complete a drawing hand. Also see [[#buy the pot|buy the pot]]. Compare to "run over".

; bum deal
: A mis-deal

; bump
: To [[Betting (poker)#Raise|raise]]. ''Alice bet $5 and Bob bumped it to $20.''

; burn, burn card
: See [[burn card]].

<span id="busted">
; busted
# Not complete, such as four cards to a straight that never gets the fifth card to complete it.
# Out of chips. To "bust out" is to lose all of one's chips.
</span>

; button
: See [[button (poker)]]. Also "buck" or "hat".

<span id="buy-in">
; buy-in
: The minimum required amount of chips that must be "bought" to become involved in a game (or tournament). For example, a $4-$8 [[Betting (poker)#Fixed limit|fixed limit]] game might require a player to buy at least $40 worth of chips to play. This is typically far less than an average player would expect to play with for any amount of time, but large enough that the player can play a number of hands without buying more, so the game isn't slowed down by constant chip-buying.
</span>

; buy short
: To buy into a game for an amount smaller than the normal buy-in. Some casinos allow this under certain circumstances, such as after having lost a full buy-in, or if all players agree to allow it.

<span id="buy the button">
; buy the button
# A rule originating in northern California casinos in games played with [[Blind (poker)|blinds]], in which a new player sitting down with the [[Button (poker)|button]] to his right (who would normally be required to sit out a hand as the button passed him, then post to come in) may choose to pay the amount of both blinds for this one hand (the amount of the large blind playing as a [[#live|live blind]], and the amount of the small blind as [[Dead money (poker)|dead money]]), play this hand, and then receive the button on the next hand as if he had been playing all along. See [[public cardroom rules (poker)]].
# In games with blinds, usually done by the person sitting to the immediate right of the dealer, who will make a position raise, acting much like the dealer might have done, when only the blinds are still in the hand. <i>Every time he dealt, the dealer let the blinds see the flop, so I started buying the button to force them to fold.</i>
</span>

; buy the pot
: Making a bet when no one else is betting so as to force the other players to fold in order to win the pot uncontested.

== C ==
; call
: See [[Betting (poker)#Call|call]].
<span id="call the clock">
; call the clock
: A method of discouraging players from taking an excessively long time to act. When someone calls the clock, the player has a set amount of time in which to make up his mind; if he fails to do so, his hand is immediately declared dead. In tournament play, a common rule is that if a player takes too long and no one calls the clock, the dealer or floor personnel will automatically do so.
</span>

; calling station
: See [[calling station]].

; cap
: A limit on the number of [[Betting (poker)#Raise)|raises]] allowed in a betting round. Typically three or four (in addition the [[Open (poker)|opening]] bet). In most casinos, the cap is removed if there are only two players remaining either (1) at the beginning of the betting round, or (2) at the time that what would have otherwise been the last raise is made.
: Also, term for the chip, token, or object placed atop one's cards to show continued involvement with a hand.

; cap game
: Similar to "cap" above, but used to describe a no-limit or pot limit game with a cap on the amount that a player can bet during the course of a hand. Once the cap is reached, all players remaining in the hand are considered all-in. For example, a no limit game could have a betting cap of 30 times the big blind.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.fulltiltpoker.com/capGames.php | title=Cap Games | publisher=[[Full Tilt Poker]] | accessmonthday=[[November 29]] | accessyear=[[2006]]}}</ref>

; cards speak
: See [[cards speak (poker)]].

<span id="case card">
; case card
: The last available card of a certain description (typically a rank). ''The only way I can win is to catch the case king.'', meaning the only king remaining in the deck.
</span>

; cash plays
: An announcement, usually by a dealer, that a player requested to buy chips and can bet the cash he has on the table in lieu of chips until he receives his chips.

<span id="catch">
; catch
: To receive needed cards on a [[Draw (poker)|draw]]. ''I'm down 300--I can't catch anything today.'' or ''Joe caught his flush early, but I caught the boat on seventh street to beat him.'' Often used with an adjective to further specify, for example "catch perfect", "catch inside", "catch smooth".
</span>

<span id="catch up">
; catch up
: To successfully complete a [[Draw (poker)|draw]], thus defeating a player who previously had a better hand. ''I was sure I had Alice beat, but she caught up when that spade fell.''
</span>

<span id="catch perfect">
; catch perfect
: To catch the only two possible cards that will complete a hand and win the pot, usually those leading to a straight flush. Usually used in [[Texas Hold 'Em]]. Compare with "[[#runner-runner|runner-runner]]".
</span>

; center
: Synonym for pot. "Chips in the center..." means the chips that are in the main pot. "I'm going to center your stack" means that a player is going to force all of an opponents chips into the pot. "My stack got centered" means that a player was forced to wager his/her remaining chips.

; center pot
: The main pot in a [[table stakes]] game where one or more players are all in.

<span id="chase">
; chase
# To call a bet to see the next card when holding a [[Draw (poker)|drawing hand]] when the [[pot odds]] do not merit it.
# To continue to play a [[Draw (poker)|drawing]] hand over multiple betting rounds, especially one unlikely to succeed. ''Bob knew I made three nines on fourth street, but he chased that flush draw all the way to the river.''
# To continue playing with a hand that is not likely the best because one has already invested money in the pot.
</span>

; check
# To bet nothing. See [[Betting (poker)#Check|check]].
# A casino chip.

<span id="check out">
; check out
: To fold, in turn, even though there is no bet facing the player. In some games this is considered a breach of etiquette equivalent to folding out of turn. In others it is permitted, but frowned upon. Also known as a "French raise".
</span>

; check-raise
: See [[check-raise]].

; cheese
: A poor hand. ''Throw that piece of cheese in the muck and move on to the next hand''.

; chip
: See [[poker chip]].

; chip along
: To bet or call the minimum required to stay in, often done with little or no thought.

; chip declare
: A method of declaring intent to play high or low in a split-pot game with declaration. See [[Declaration (poker)|declaration]].

; chip dumping
: A form of collusion that happens during tournaments, especially in the early rounds. Two or more players decide to go all-in early. The winner gets a large amount of chips, which increases the player's chance of cashing. The winnings are then split among the colluders.

; chip race
: See [[chip race]].

; chip up
: To exchange lower-denomination chips for higher-denomination chips. In [[Poker tournament|tournament]] play, the term means to remove all the small chips from play by rounding up any odd small chips to the nearest large denomination, rather than using a chip race.

; chop
# To split a pot because of a tie, split-pot game, or player agreement.
# To play a game for a short time and cash out. Also "hit and run".
# A request made by a player to a dealer after taking a large-denomination chip that he wishes the dealer to make change.
# To chop blinds.
# An agreement by all players remaining in a tournament to distribute the remaining money in the prize pool according to an agreed-upon formula instead of playing the tournament to completion. Usually occurs at the final table of a large tournament.

; chopping the blinds
: See [[chopping the blinds]].

<span id="clean out">
; clean out
: A card that is likely to make your hand the best at the table.
</span>

; closed
: See [[closed (poker)]].

; coffeehouse
: To make annoying smalltalk during a game, to make comments about a hand in progress, or to make deceptive comments about one's own play.

; cold
# Consecutive. ''I caught three cold spades for the flush''.
# Unlucky. ''I've been cold all week''.

<span id="cold call">
; cold call
: To call an amount that represents a sum of bets or raises by more than one player. ''Alice opened for $10, Bob raised another $20, and Carol cold called the $30''. Compare to "[[#flat call|flat call]]", "[[#overcall|overcall]]".
</span>

; cold deck
: See [[cold deck]]. Also "stacked deck", "ice" or "[[#cooler|cooler]]".

; collusion
: A form of cheating involving cooperation among two or more players. See [[cheating in poker]].

; color change, color up
: To exchange small-denomination chips for larger ones.

; combo, combination game
: A casino table at which multiple forms of poker are played in rotation.

; come bet, on the come
: A bet or raise made with a [[Draw (poker)|drawing]] hand, building the pot in anticipation of filling the draw. Usually a weak "gambler's" play, but occasionally correct with a very good draw and large pot or as a semi-bluff.

<span id="come hand">
; come hand
: See [[#draw, drawing hand|drawing hand]].
</span>

; community card
: See [[community card poker]].

<span id="complete hand">
; complete hand
: See [[made hand]].
</span>

; completion
: To raise a small bet up to the amount of what would be a normal-sized bet. For example, in a $2/$4 stud game with $1 [[Bring-in (poker)|bring-in]], a player after the bring-in may raise it to $2, completing what would otherwise be a sub-minimum bet up to the normal minimum. Also in limit games, if one player raises all in for less than the normally required minimum, a later player might complete the raise to the normal minimum (depending on house rules). See [[table stakes]].

<span id="connectors">
; connectors
: Two or more cards of consecutive rank.
</span>

<span id="continuation bet">
; continuation bet
: A bet made after the flop by the player who took the lead in betting before the flop (Hold 'em and Omaha). Compare to "[[#probe bet|probe bet]]".
</span>

; cooler
: See [[#cold deck|cold deck]].

; countdown
# Especially in [[Lowball (poker)|lowball]], two hands very nearly tied that must be compared in detail to determine a winner, for example, 8-6-5-3-2 versus 8-6-5-3-A.
# The act of counting the cards that remain in the stub after all cards have been dealt, done by a dealer to ensure that a complete deck is being used.

; counterfeit
: See [[counterfeit (poker)]]. Also "[[#duplicate|duplicate]]".

; cow
: A player with whom one is sharing a buy-in, with the intent to split the result after play. To "go cow" is to make such an arrangement.

; cowboys :(pocket cowboys)
: these are nicknames for a pair of kings or "pocket" kings, but can also be used when talking about triple kings or four kings.

; crack
: To beat a better hand, mostly heard in reference to the best Hold em hole cards, AA. eg "My aces were cracked again"

<span id="cripple">
; cripple
: In some [[community card poker|community card games]], to ''cripple the deck'' means to have a hand that makes it virtually impossible for anyone else to catch up to. For example, in [[Texas hold 'em]], if your [[#hole, hole cards|hole cards]] are '''A-T''' and the [[#flop|flop]] is '''A-A-T''' you have "crippled the deck" and it is unlikely you will make much money from it.
</span>

<span id="crossfire">
; crossfire
: When a player is caught in the middle between two raisers and is induced to call each bet because of the [[pot odds]]. Compare to "[[#whipsaw|whipsaw]]".
</span>

<span id="crying call">
; crying call
: A call made reluctantly on the last betting round with the expectation of losing (but with some remote hope of catching a bluff).
</span>

; cut
: See [[Cut (cards)|cut]].

<span id="cutoff">
; cutoff
: The seat immediately to the right of the dealer button. Also "pone".
</span>

== D ==
<span id="dark">
; dark
: Describing an action taken before receiving information to which the player would normally be entitled. ''I'm drawing three, and I check in the dark.'' Compare to "blind".
</span>

<span id="dead blind">
; dead blind
: A [[Blind (poker)|blind]] that is not "live", in that the player posting it does not have the option to raise if other players just call. Usually refers to a small blind posted by a player entering, or returning to, a game (in a position other than the big blind) that is posted in addition to a live blind equal to the big blind.
</span>

; dead button
: See [[Betting (poker)#Dead button rule|dead button rule]].

<span id="dead hand">
; dead hand
: A player's hand that is not entitled to participate in the deal for some reason, such as having been fouled by touching another player's cards, being found to contain the wrong number of cards, being dealt to a player who did not make the appropriate forced bets, etc.
</span>

; dead money
: See [[dead money (poker)]].

; deadwood
: The muck.

<span id="deal">
; deal
# To distribute cards to players in accordance with the rules of the game being played.
# A single instance of a game of poker, begun by shuffling the cards and ending with the award of a pot. Also called a "hand" (though both terms are ambiguous).
# An agreement to split [[Poker tournament|tournament]] prize money differently from the announced payouts.
</span>

<span id="deal twice">
; deal twice
: In a cash game, when two players are involved in a large pot and one is all-in, they might agree to deal the remaining cards twice. If one player wins both times he wins the whole pot, but if both players win one hand they split the pot.
</span>

<span id="dealer">
; dealer
# The person dealing the cards. '''Give Alice the cards, she's dealing.'''
# The person who assumes that role for the purposes of betting order in a game, even though someone else might be physically dealing. Also "[[#button|button]]". Compare to "[[#buck|buck]]".
</span>

; dealer's choice
: A version of poker in which the deal passes each game and each dealer can choose, or invent, a new poker game each hand.

<span id="declare">
; declare
: To verbally indicate an action or intention. See [[declaration (poker)]].
</span>

<span id="decloak">
; decloak
: To raise after [[Slow play (poker)|slow playing]] for a time (making it clear that you were, in fact, slow playing). See "[[#in the bushes|in the bushes]]".
</span>

; deep
: Describing a large amount of money, either in play or having been lost. ''How deep are you?'' (meaning "How much money do you have", in anticipation of making a very large bet). ''I won that large pot, but I'm in much deeper than that.''

; defense
: See [[defense (poker)]].

; deuce
# A 2-spot card. Also called a duck, quack, or swan.
# Any of various related uses of the number two, such as a $2 limit game, a $2 chip, etc.

; deuce-to-seven
: A method of evaluating low hands. See [[Deuce-to-seven low]].

; dirty stack
: A [[#stack|stack]] of [[Poker chip|chips]] that has a chip of the wrong denomination mixed in.

<span id="discard">
; discard
: To take a previously dealt card out of play. The set of all discards for a deal is called the "muck" or the "deadwood".
</span>

; dog
: See [[#underdog|underdog]].

; dominated hand
: A hand that is extremely unlikely to win against another specific hand, even though it may not be a poor hand in its own right. Most commonly used in [[Texas hold 'em]]. A hand like A-Q, for example, is a good hand in general but is dominated by A-K, because whenever the former makes a good hand, the latter is likely to make a better one. A hand like 7-8 is a poor hand in general, but is not dominated by A-K because it makes different kinds of hands. See [[Dominating hand]].

; donation
: A [[Call (poker)|call]] made by a player who fully expects to lose; made either out of boredom or irrational optimism.

<span id="donkey">
; donk, donkey
: Epithet for an inexperienced, unskilled, or foolish poker player. ''I played that hand like a donkey.''
</span>

; donk, donk down (verb)
: To play a hand poorly. ''I donked off 15 bucks on that last hand.''

; donk, donkbet
: Betting when one doesn't have the [[#lead|lead]].

; door card
: In a [[Stud poker|stud]] game, a player's first face-up card. ''Patty paired her door card on fifth street and raised, so I put her on [[#trips|trips]].''
:In [[Hold'em]], the door card is the first visible card of the [[flop]].

; double-ace flush
: Under [[Non-standard poker hand|unconventional rules]], a flush with one or more [[Wild card (poker)|wild cards]] in which they play as aces, even if an ace is already present.

; double-board, double-flop
: Any of several [[Community card poker|community card game]] variants (usually [[Texas hold 'em]]) in which two separate boards of community cards are dealt simultaneously, with the pot split between the winning hands using each board.

; double-draw
: Any of several [[Draw poker]] games in which the draw phase and subsequent betting round are repeated twice.

; double belly buster, double gut-shot, double inside straight
: See [[Draw (poker)#Double inside straight draw|double inside straight draw]].

<span id="double suited">
; double suited
: Used to describe an [[Omaha hold 'em|Omaha]] starting hand where two pairs of [[#suited|suited]] cards are held. May be abbreviated "ds" in written descriptions. ''AAJT (ds) is widely considered a premium [[Omaha hold 'em#Pot-limit Omaha|PLO]] starting hand.''
</span>

<span id="double up">
; double through, double up
: In a big bet game, to bet all of one's chips on one hand against a single opponent (who has an equal or larger stack) and win, thereby doubling your stack. ''I was losing a bit, but then I doubled through Sarah to put me in good shape.''
</span>

; downcard
: A card that is dealt facedown.

; down to the felt
: All in, or having lost all of one's money. Refers to the green felt surface of a poker table no longer obscured by chips.

; drag light
: To pull chips away from the pot to indicate that you don't have enough money to cover the bet. If you win, the amount is ignored. If you lose, you must cover the amount from your pocket.

; draw, drawing hand
: See [[draw (poker)]].

<span id="drawing dead">
; drawing dead
: Playing a [[Draw (poker)|drawing]] hand that will lose even if successful (a state of affairs usually only discovered after the fact or in a tounament when two or more players are "all in" and they show their cards). ''I caught the jack to make my straight, but Rob had a full house all along, so I was drawing dead.''
</span>

<span id="drawing live">
; drawing live
: Not drawing dead; that is, [[Draw (poker)|drawing]] to a hand that will win if successful.
</span>

<span id="drawing thin">
; drawing thin
: Not drawing completely dead, but [[#chase|chasing]] a draw in the face of poor odds. Example: a player who will only win by catching 1 or 2 specific cards is said to be drawing thin.
</span>

; drop
# To fold.
# Money charged by the casino for providing its services, often dropped through a slot in the table into a strong box. See "[[#rake|rake]]".
# To drop ones cards to the felt to indicate that one is in or out of a game.

<span id="dry ace">
; dry ace
: In [[Omaha hold 'em|Omaha]] or [[Texas hold 'em]], refers to an ace in one's hand without another card of the same suit. Used especially to describe the situation where the [[#board|board]] presents a flush possibility, when the player does not in fact have a flush, but holding the ace presents some [[Bluff (poker)|bluffing]] or [[Bluff (poker)#Semi-bluff|semi-bluffing]] opportunity. Compare to "[[#blocker|blocker]]".
</span>

; dry pot
: A side pot with no money created when a player goes all in and is called by more than one opponent, but not raised.

; dump, dumped
: To lose a large quantity of ones stack to another player on a particular hand or set of hands in short succession. ''I dumped half my stack to John after he cracked my Kings.''

<span id="duplicate">
; duplicate
: To [[Counterfeit (poker)|counterfeit]], especially when the counterfeiting card matches one already present in the one's hand.
</span>

== E ==
<span id="early position">
; early position
: See [[position (poker)]].
</span>

<span id="eight or better">
; eight or better
: A common qualifier in [[High-low split]] games that use Ace-5 ranking. Only hands where the highest card is an eight can qualify to win the low portion of the pot.
</span>

<span id="equity">
; equity
: One's mathematical [[expected value]] from the current deal, calculated by multiplying the amount of money in the pot by one's probability of winning. For example, if the pot currently contains $100, and you estimate that you have a one in four chance of winning it, then your equity in the pot is $25.
</span>

; expectation, expected value, EV
: See [[expected value]]. Often used in poker to mean "profitability in the long run".

<span id="exposed card">
; exposed card
: A card whose face has been deliberately or accidentally revealed to players normally not entitled to that information during the play of the game. Various games have different rules about how to handle this irregularity. Compare to "[[#boxed card|boxed card]]".
</span>

== F ==
; family pot
: A deal in which every (or almost every) seated player called the first [[Betting (poker)#Open|opening]] bet.

<span id="fast">
; fast
: [[Aggression (poker)|Aggressive]] play. ''I was afraid of too many chasers, so I played my trips fast.'' Compare to "[[#speeding|speeding]]".
</span>

; feeder
: In a casino setting, a second or third table playing the same game as a "main" table, and from which players move to the main game as players there leave. Also called a "must-move table."

<span id="fence-hopper">
; fence-hopper
: Compare to "hop the fence".
</span>

<span id="fifth street">
; fifth street
# The last card dealt to the board in community card games. Also "[[River (poker)|river]]".
# The fifth card dealt to each player in stud poker.
</span>

<span id="fill">
; fill, fill up
: To successfully draw to a hand that needs one card to complete it, by getting the last card of a [[Rank of hands (poker)#Straight|straight]], [[Rank of hands (poker)#Flush|flush]], or [[Rank of hands (poker)#Full house|full house]]. ''Jerry made his flush when I was betting my kings up, but I filled on seventh street to catch up.''
</span>

<span id="final table">
; final table
: In a multi-table tournament: to remain in the game long enough as to make it to the last round of players that can fit at one standard tournament table (usually 9 or 10 players).
</span>

<span id="fire">
; fire
: To make the [[Betting (poker)#Open|opening]] bet of a round, following the same analogy by which chips are called "[[#ammo|ammo]]". ''I called Ken's bet on fourth with a draw, but I bricked, and when he fired again I had to fold.'' or ''I think Randy suspected my earlier bet was a bluff, but when I fired a second shot he let it go.''
</span>

<span id="fish">
; fish
# An unskilled player who plays loosely and passively, calling a lot of bets.
# To risk money on a long-shot bet.
# The action of calling bets on the flop and the turn to make a hand on the river.
</span>

; five of a kind
: A hand possible only in games with [[Wild card (poker)|wild cards]], defeating all other hands, comprising five cards of equal rank.

; fixed limit, flat limit
: See [[Betting (poker)#Fixed limit|fixed limits]].

; flash
# To show the bottom card of the deck while shuffling.
# To show one or more downcards from one's hand. ''After everyone folded, Ted flashed his bluff to the other players.''

<span id="flat call">
; flat call
: A [[Betting (poker)#Call|call]], in a situation where one might be expected to [[Betting (poker)#Raise|raise]]. ''Normally I raise with jacks, but with three limpers ahead of me I decided to flat call.'' Also "[[#smooth call|smooth call]]". Compare to "[[#cold call|cold call]]", "[[#overcall|overcall]]". See [[slow play (poker)]].
</span>

<span id="float">
; float
: To call a bet with an inferior hand, with the intention of bluffing on a later betting round.
</span>

<span id="floorman">
; floorman, floorperson
: A casino employee whose duties include adjudicating player disputes, keeping games filled and balanced, and managing dealers and other personnel. Players may shout "floor!" to call for a floorperson to resolve a dispute, to ask for a table or seat change, or to ask for some other casino service.
</span>

; flop
: See [[flop (poker)]]

; flop game
: A [[Community card poker|community card game]].

; flush
: A hand comprising five cards of the same suit. See [[rank of hands (poker)]].

; fold
: See [[Betting (poker)#Fold|fold]].

<span id="fold equity">
; fold equity
: The extra value gained by forcing your opponents to fold, rather than seeing the showdown. See also [[#equity|equity]].
</span>

; forced bet
: See [[Betting (poker)#Forced bets|forced bets]].

; forced-move
: In a casino where more than one table is playing the same game with the same betting structure, one of the tables may be designated the "main" table, and will be kept full by requiring a player to move from one of the feeder tables to fill any vacancies. Players will generally be informed that their table is a "forced-move" table to be used in this way before they agree to play there. Also "must-move".

<span id="forward motion">
; forward motion
: A house rule of some casinos states that if a player in turn picks up chips from his stack and moves his hand toward the pot ("forward motion with chips in hand"), this constitutes a commitment to bet (or call), and the player may not withdraw his hand to check or fold. Such a player still has the choice of whether to call or raise. Compare to "[[#string bet|string bet]]".
</span>

<span id="fouled hand">
; fouled hand
: A hand that is ruled unplayable because of an irregularity, such as being found with too many or two few cards, having been mixed with cards of other players or the muck, having fallen off the table, etc. Compare to "[[#dead hand|dead hand]]".
</span>

<span id="four-flush">
; four-flush
: Four cards of the same suit. A [[non-standard poker hand]] in some games, an incomplete [[Draw (poker)|drawing]] hand in most.
</span>

; four of a kind
: A hand containing four cards of equal rank. Also "quads". See [[rank of hands (poker)]].

; four-straight
: Four cards in rank sequence; either an open-ender or one-ender. A [[non-standard poker hand]] in some games, an incomplete drawing hand in most. Sometimes "four to a straight".

<span id="fourth street">
; fourth street
# The fourth card dealt to the board in community card games. Also "turn".
# The fourth card dealt to each player in stud.
</span>

<span id="fox hunt">
; fox hunt
: See [[#rabbit hunt|rabbit hunt]].
</span>

<span id="free card">
; free card
: A card dealt to one's hand (or to the board of [[community card]]s) after a betting round in which no player [[Betting (poker)#Open|opened]]. One is thereby being given a chance to improve one's hand without having to pay anything. ''I wasn't sure my hand was good, but I bet so I wouldn't give a free card to Bill's flush draw.''
</span>

; freeroll
: See [[freeroll (poker)]].

<span id="freezeout">
; freezeout
: The most common form of [[Poker tournament|tournament]]. There's no [[Poker jargon#rebuy|rebuy]], play continues until one player has all the chips.
</span>

; full, full boat, full hand, full house
: A hand with three cards of one rank and two of a second rank. Also "boat", "tight". See [[rank of hands (poker)]].

<span id="full bet rule">
; full bet rule
: In some casinos, the rule that a player must wager the full amount required in order for his action to constitute a raise. For example, in a game with a $4 fixed limit, a player facing an [[Betting (poker)#Open|opening]] bet of $4 who wagers $7 is deemed to have flat called, because $8 is required to raise. Compare to "[[#half bet rule|half bet rule]]". See [[Public cardroom rules (poker)]] and [[Betting (poker)#"All in"|"All in" betting]].
</span>

== G ==
<span id="gap hand">
; gap hand
: In [[Texas hold 'em]], a ''gap hand'' is a [[#hole|starting hand]] with at least one rank separating the two cards. Usually referred to in context of ''one-gap'' and ''two-gap'' hands.
</span>

; garbage
# The "[[#muck|muck]]".
# A worthless hand.

<span id="going south">
; going south
:To sneak a portion of your chips from the table while the game is underway. Normally prohibited in public card rooms. Also "[[#ratholing|ratholing]]".
</span>

; grinder
: A player who earns a living by making small profits over a long period of consistent, conservative play. Compare to "[[#rock|rock]]".

; guts, guts to open
# A game with no opening hand requirement; that is, where the only requirement to open the betting is "guts", or courage.
# Any of several poker variants where pots accumulate over several hands until a single player wins. See [[List of poker variants#Guts|guts]].

<span id="gutshot">
; gutshot
: An [[Draw (poker)#Inside straight draw|inside straight draw]]. ''Ted has a gutshot draw.'' Also "[[#belly buster|belly buster]]".
</span>

; gypsy
: To enter the pot cheaply by just calling the blind rather than raising. Also "[[#limp|limp]]".

== H ==
<span id="half bet rule">
; half bet rule
: In some casinos, the rule that placing chips equal to or greater than half the normal bet amount beyond the amount required to call constitutes a commitment to [[Raise (poker)|raise]] the normal amount. For example, in a game with a $4 fixed limit, a player facing a $4 [[Open (poker)|opening]] bet who places $6 in the pot is deemed to have raised, and must complete his bet to $8. Compare to "[[#full bet rule|full bet rule]]". See [[Public cardroom rules (poker)]] and [[Betting (poker)#"All in"|"all in" betting]].
</span>

<span id="hammer">
; hammer
# To bet and raise aggressively. ''Nora kept hammering, so I folded.''
# "Having the hammer" is being in last position, especially head up. ''You've got the hammer; I check to you.''
# A "hammer lock" refers to a player with an almost 100% chance of winning the pot.
# In [[Texas Hold'em]], [[List of slang names for poker hands|The Hammer]] refers to a starting hand consisting of a '''7-2 offsuit'''.
</span>

; hand
: See [[hand (poker)]].

; hand-for-hand
: See [[hand-for-hand]].

; hard
# Aggressive and uncompromising, said of one's play. ''Jim played me hard all night; I could never get a break.''
# Chips, as opposed to paper money. ''I gave the floorman $100 for $50 hard and $50 soft.''

; hat
: See [[button (poker)]].

<span id="heads up">
; head up, heads up
: Playing against a single opponent. ''After Lori folded, Frank and I were heads up for the rest of the hand.''
</span>

; heater
: If one is consistently getting favorable cards, then he or she is said to be ''on a heater''.

; here kitty kitty
: A conspicuously small bet made with a very powerful hand in the hope of getting a call from one or more opponents who would otherwise fold to a normal-sized bet.

<span id="high hand">
; high, high hand
: The best hand using traditional [[poker hand]] values, as opposed to [[Lowball (poker)|lowball]]. Used especially in high-low split games.
</span>

; high card
# A [[no pair]] hand, ranked according to its highest-ranking cards.
# To defeat another player by virtue of high-ranking cards, especially [[Kicker (poker)|kickers]].
# To randomly select a player for some purpose by having each draw one card, the highest of which is selected (for example, to decide who deals first). ''When all the players get here, we'll high card for the button.'' Often [[High card by suit (poker)|high card by suit]] is used for this purpose.

; high-low, high-low split
: See [[high-low split]].

; high society
# Large-denomination chips. Also "society".

; hit and run
: To play for a short time, make money, and leave. Also called "chopping" a game.

; hog, hogger
: To win all of the pot in a split-pot game, for example, by having both the best high hand and best low hand simultaneously. Also called "scooping" the pot.

<span id="hole">
; hole, hole cards
# Face-down cards. Also "pocket cards". ''I think Willy has two more queens in the hole.''
# A seat, often preceded by a number relative to the button. ''Sara opened from the 2-hole.''
</span>

<span id="hole cam">
; hole cam
: a camera that displays a player's face-down cards ("hole cards") to television viewers. Also "pocket cam".
</span>

; Hollywood
: Overt acting to deceive other players. ''Karl had a big smile when he bet, but it seemed too Hollywood to me, so I called anyway.'' Also refers to taking excessive time to act &mdash; a common suspense-building feature of movies which highly irritates other players when carried out in real life.

<span id="home game">
; home game
: A game played at a private venue (usually the home of one of the players), as opposed to a casino or public cardroom.
</span>

;hooks
: Nickname for a pair (or "pocket")of jacks. This nickname was put into use because of the hooked shape of the letter J that shows on the jack cards.

<span id="hop the fence">
; hop the fence
: The enter the pot with a cold call.
</span>

; horse
: A player financially backed by someone else. ''I lost today, but Larry was my horse in the stud game, and he won big.''

; H.O.R.S.E.
: See [[H.O.R.S.E.]].

<span id="hunt">
; hunt
: Looking further into the deck after the hand is over to see what cards would have come next. Also "fox hunt", "rabbit hunt".
</span>

== I ==
<span id="idiot end">
; idiot end, ignorant end
: The bottom end of a straight. Compare to "[[#sucker straight|sucker straight]]".
</span>

; immortal
: Unbeatable; often said of a hand that a player knows cannot be beaten under the circumstances of play. Also "lock", "nuts".

<span id="implied pot odds">
; implied odds, implied pot odds
: See [[Pot odds#Implied pot odds|implied pot odds]].
</span>

<span id="improve">
; improve
: To achieve a better hand than one currently holds by adding or exchanging cards as provided in the rules of the game being played. ''I didn't think Paula was bluffing, so I decided not to call unless I improved on the draw.''
</span>

; inside straight
: See [[Draw (poker)#Inside straight draw|inside straight draw]]. Also "[[#belly buster|belly buster]]", "[[#gutshot|gutshot]]". Compare to [[Draw (poker)#Outside straight draw|outside straight draw]].

; insurance
: A "business" deal in which players agree to split or reduce a pot (roughly in proportion to the chances of each of them winning) with more cards to come rather than playing out the hand, or else a deal where one player makes a side bet against himself with a third party to hedge against a large loss.

<span id="in the bushes">
; in the bushes, in the weeds
: A player [[Slow play (poker)|slow playing]] is said to be "in the bushes" during the time he is quietly checking and calling while others bet aggressively. He will eventually "[[#decloak|decloak]]".
</span>

<span id="in the middle">
; in the middle
# In a game with multiple [[Blind (poker)|blinds]], an incoming player may sometimes be allowed to post the blinds "in the middle" (that is, out of their normal order) rather than having to wait for them to pass.
# A player being whipsawed is said to be "in the middle".
</span>

<span id="in the money">
; in the money
: To place high enough in a [[poker tournament]] to get prize money.
</span>

<span id="in the tank">
; in the tank
: When a player is facing a bet or raise, typically a large one late in the hand, and takes a long time thinking about whether to call is said to have gone "in the tank."
</span>

<span id="in turn">
; in turn
: A player, or an action, is said to be in turn if that player is expected to act next under the rules. ''Jerry said "check" while he was in turn, so he's not allowed to raise.''
</span>

; irregular declaration
: An action taken by a player in turn that is not a straightforward declaration of intent, but that is reasonably interpreted as an action by other players, such as pointing a thumb up to signify "raise". [[Public cardroom rules (poker)|House rules]] or dealer discretion may determine when such actions are meaningful and/or binding.

<span id="irregularity">
; irregularity
: Any of a number of abnormal conditions in play, such as unexpectedly exposed cards, that may call for corrective action. See [[Public cardroom rules (poker)]].
</span>

; isolation
: See [[isolation (poker)]].

<span id="ITM">
; ITM
: Abbreviation of [[#in the money|in the money]].
</span>

== J ==
<span id="jack it up">
; jack it up
: To [[Betting (poker)#Raise|raise]].
</span>

; jackpot
# A game of "jackpot poker" or "jackpots", which is a variant of [[five-card draw]] with an [[ante]] from each player, no [[Blind (poker)|blinds]], and an [[Open (poker)|opening]] requirement of a pair of jacks or better.
# A large pool of money collected by the house and awarded for some rare occurrence, typically a bad beat.

; jam
: To [[Betting (poker)#Open|open]] or [[Betting (poker)#Raise|raise]] the maximum amount allowed. Players who "jam a pot" in limit poker keep putting in raises until the cap is reached.

; joint
: Jack-high straight.



<span id="juice">
; juice
: Money collected by the house. Also "[[#vigorish|vig]]", "[[#vigorish|vigorish]]". See [[Rake (poker)]].
</span>

== K ==
; keep (a bettor) honest
: To call a final bet while not expecting to win, for the primary purpose of discouraging future bluffs.

; kicker
: See [[kicker (poker)]].

; kill game, kill pot
: See [[Betting (poker)#Kill game|kill game]].

; kitty
: A pool of money built by collecting small amounts from certain pots, often used to buy refreshments, cards, and so on. The home-game equivalent of a rake.

== L ==
<span id="laydown">
; laydown
: A tough choice to fold a good hand in anticipation of superior opposition.
</span>

<span id="lead">
; lead
: The player who makes the last bet or raise in a round of betting is said to have the lead at the start of the next round.</span>

; limit
: The minimum or maximum amount of a bet.

<span id="limp">
; limp, limp in
: To enter a pot by simply calling instead of raising.
</span>

<span id="live bet">
; live bet
: A bet posted by a player under conditions that give him the option to raise even if no other player raises first; typically because it was posted as a [[#blind|blind]] or [[#straddle bet|straddle]], or to enter a new game.
</span>

<span id="live cards">
; live cards
: In [[stud poker]] games, cards that will improve your hand that have not been seen among anyone's upcards, and are therefore presumably still available. In games such as [[Texas hold'em]], a player's hand is said to contain "live" cards if matching either of them on the board would give that player the lead over his opponent. Typically used to describe a hand that is weak, but not [[#dominated hand|dominated]].
</span>

<span id="live game">
; live game
: A game with a lot of [[#action|action]], usually including many unskilled players, especially [[#maniac|maniacs]].
</span>

<span id="live one">
; live one
: A weak player, especially a [[#maniac|maniac]].
</span>

<span id="lock up">
; lock up
: To "lock up" a seat in a cash game means to place a poker chip, player's card, or other personal effect on the table in front of the seat, to signify that the seat is occupied even though the player may not be present.
</span>

<span id="loose">
; loose
: See [[Poker strategy#Loose/tight play|loose/tight play]]. Compare to "[[#tight|tight]]", "[[#aggressive|aggressive]]", "[[#passive|passive]]".
</span>

; loose cannon
: A player who is not afraid to put money in the pot; one who is "gambling" a lot and liable to lose all his money at any given time.

; low
# The lowest card by rank.
# The low half of the pot in a [[high-low split]].

== M ==
; M-ratio
: See [[M-ratio]].

; made hand
: See [[made hand]]. Compare to a [[drawing hand]].

; maniac
: A loose and aggressive player. A player who bets constantly and plays many inferior hands.

; match the pot
: To put in an amount equal to all the chips in the pot.

<span id="micro-limit">
; micro-limit
: Internet poker games with stakes so small that real cardrooms couldn't possibly profit from them, are said to be at the "micro-limit" level (e.g. 25¢-50¢).
</span>

; misdeal
: A deal which is ruined for some reason and must be redealt.

<span id="move in">
; move in
: In a no-limit game, to "move in" or to "go all in" means to bet one's entire stake on the hand in play. See [[table stakes]].
</span>

<span id="muck">
; muck
# To fold.
# To discard one's hand without revealing the cards. Often done after winning without a [[Showdown (poker)|showdown]] or at a showdown when a better hand has already been revealed.
# The discard pile "There were only a couple of cards in the ''muck''"
</span>

== N ==
; natural card
: A card that isn’t wild or otherwise modified by the game rules. In most houses, a natural hand beats an equivalent hand that uses wild cards. For example, a pair comprising a wild card and a natural (Joker, 2♠) would lose to one made from two naturals of the same number (<span style="color:red">2♥</span>, 2♣).
; no-limit
: See [[Betting (poker)#No limit|no-limit]].
; negative freeroll
: See [[negative freeroll]].
; nuts, the
: See [[nut hand]].

== O ==
<span id="offsuit">
; offsuit
: Cards that are not of the same suit. ''The ace of clubs and the king of spades are called ace-king offsuit''
</span>

; one-eyed royals
: See [[one-eyed royals]].

; open
: To bet first. See [[Betting (poker)#Open|open]].

; open ended, open ended straight draw
: An [[Draw (poker)#Outside straight draw|outside straight draw]]. Also "two-way straight draw".

; openers
: The cards held by a player in a game of "jackpots" entitling him to open the pot. "Splitting openers" refers to holding onto one of your openers after discarding it to prove you had the necessary cards to open should you win the pot.

<span id="option">
; option
# An optional bet or draw, such as getting an extra card facedown for 50 cents or raising on the big blind when checked all the way around.
# The right to raise possessed by the [[Blind (poker)|big blind]] if there have been no raises.
</span>

; out of pocket
: A game which gives the players the ability to add more money to their stack in the middle of a hand. See [[Table stakes]].

<span id="outrun">
; outrun
: To beat another hand, usually by being dealt extra cards after the initial deal.
</span>

; outs
: See [[out (poker)]].

; outside straight, outside straight draw
: See [[Draw (poker)#Outside straight draw|outside straight draw]]. Also "two-way straight draw".

<span id="overcall">
; overcall
: To call a bet after others have called, esp. big bets. ''Jim bet, Alice called, then Ted overcalled.'' Compare to "[[#cold call|cold call]]", "[[#flat call|flat call]]", "[[#smooth call|smooth call]]".
</span>

<span id="overcard">
; overcard
# A community card with a higher rank than a player's pocket pair.
# A higher card. ''Ted held two overcards to Jill's pair with two cards to come.''
</span>

<span id="overpair">
; overpair
: In community card games such as Texas Hold'em and Omaha, a pocket pair with a higher rank than any community card.
</span>

; over the top
: To [[#reraise|reraise]]. ''Ted raised $20, then Alice came over the top for $60 more.''

== P ==
<span id="paint">
; paint
: The face cards, Jacks, Queens, and Kings, in a deck. In [[Texas hold'em]], a flop can be said to be "all paint" if it consists of only these cards. This is also called a "[[List of slang names for poker hands#Flop slang|Picasso Flop]]".
</span>

; pair
: See [[Rank of hands (poker)#One pair|one pair]]

<span id="passive">
; passive
: A style of play characterized by checking and calling. Compare to "[[#aggressive|aggressive]]", "[[#loose|loose]]", "[[#tight|tight]]".
</span>

<span id="pat">
; pat
: Already complete. A hand is a pat hand when, for example, a [[Rank of hands (poker)#Flush|flush]] comes on the first five cards dealt in [[Draw poker]]. Also see made hand.
</span>

<span id="pay off">
; pay off
: To call a bet when you are most likely [[#drawing dead|drawing dead]] because the [[#pot odds|pot odds]] justify the call.
</span>

<span id="penny ante">
; penny ante
: Frivilous, low stakes, or "for fun" only; A game where no significant stake is likely to change hands.
</span>

<span id="perfect">
; perfect
: The best possible cards, in a lowball hand, after those already named. For example, 7-perfect would be 7-4-3-2-A, and 8-6-perfect would be 8-6-3-2-A.
</span>

; Picasso flop
: Slang for "paint". See [[List of slang names for poker hands#Flop slang|Flop Slang]].

; pick-up
: When the house picks up cash from the dealer after a player buys chips.

; pigeon
: A bad player. Also "[[#donkey|donkey]]", "[[#fish|fish]]".

<span id="play the board">
; play the board
: In games such as [[Texas Hold 'Em]], where 5 community cards are dealt, if your best hand is on the [[#board|board]] and you go to the [[#showdown|showdown]] you are said to "play the board".
</span>

<span id="play twice">
; play twice
: See [[#deal twice|deal twice]].
</span>

<span id="pocket pair">
; pocket pair
: In [[community card poker]] or [[stud poker]], when two of a player's private cards make a pair. Also "[[#wired pair|wired pair]]".
</span>

<span id="poker face">
; poker face
: A blank face that does not reveal anything about the cards being held. Often used metaphorically outside the world of poker.
</span>

; porch
: In [[seven-card stud]], the four cards dealt face up to the player.

; position
: See [[position (poker)]].

<span id="position bet">
; position bet
: A bet that is made more due to the strength of the bettor's [[Position (poker)|position]] than the strength of the bettor's cards.
</span>

<span id="post">
; post
: To make the required small or big [[Blind (poker)|blind]] bet in [[Texas Hold 'em]] or other games played with blinds rather than antes
</span>

<span id="post dead">
; post dead
: To post a bet amount equal to the small and the big blind combined (the amount of the large blind playing as a live blind, and the amount of the small blind as dead money). In games played with blinds, a player who steps away from the table and misses his turn for the blinds must either post dead or wait for the big blind to re-enter the game. Compare to "dead blind".
</span>

; post oak bluff
: See [[post oak bluff]].

; pot
: See [[pot (poker)]].

<span id="pot-committed">
; pot-committed
: More often in the context of a [[#no limit|no limit]] game; the situation where you can no longer fold because the size of the [[#pot|pot]] is so large compared to the size of your [[#stack|stack]].
</span>

; pot limit
: See [[Betting (poker)#Pot limit|pot limit]].

; pot odds
: See [[pot odds]].

<span id="price">
; price
: See [[#pot odds|pot odds]]. ''"The price was right for me to call."''
</span>

<span id="probe bet">
; probe bet
: A bet after the flop by a player who did not take the lead in betting before the flop (and when the player that did take the lead in betting before the flop declined to act). Compare to "continuation bet".
</span>

; proposition player, prop
: A player that gets paid an hourly rate to start poker games or to help them stay active. Prop players play with their own money, which distinguishes them from shills, who play with the casino's money.

; protect, protection
: See [[protection (poker)]].

<span id="push">
; push
: To put yourself all-in.
</span>

;put the clock (on someone)
: See [[#call the clock|call the clock]].

<span id="put on">
; put on
: To ''put someone on'' a hand is to deduce what hand they have based on their actions and your knowledge of their gameplay. See also [[#tell|tells]].
</span>

== Q ==
<span id="quads">
; quads
: [[Rank of hands (poker)#Four of a kind|Four of a kind]].
</span>

<span id="qualifier">
; qualifier, qualifying low
: A qualifying [[lowball (poker)|low hand]]. [[High-low split]] games often require a minimum hand value, such as 8-high, in order to award the low half of the [[pot (poker)|pot]].
</span>

<span id="quarter">
; quarter
: To win a quarter of a pot, usually by tying the low or high hand of a [[high-low split]] game. Generally, this is an unwanted outcome, as it seldom wins enough money to cover the amount bet during the hand.
</span>

== R ==
<span id="rabbit hunt">
; rabbit hunt
: After a hand is over, a rabbit hunt means to reveal the last card that would have come up in a community card game with a fixed number of cards. Such activity is usually prohibited in casinos.
</span>

; rack
: 1. A collection of 100 chips of the same denomination, usually arranged in 5 stacks in a plastic tray.
: 2. A plastic tray used for storing a rack of chips.

<span id="ragged">
; ragged
: In [[community card poker]] games, if the [[community card]]s are likely to be of little or no use to anyone, they are said to be ''ragged''.
</span>

<span id="rags">
; rags
: Worthless (or apparently worthless) cards. Most often refers to small cards in high-hand games, while high cards in low games are more often called "[[#brick|bricks]]" or "[[#bomb|bombs]]". Also "[[#blank|blank]]".
</span>

; rail
: The rail is the sideline at a poker table - the (often imaginary) rail separating spectators from the field of play. Watching from the rail means watching a poker game as a spectator. People on the rail are sometimes called railbirds.

<span id="rainbow">
; rainbow
: Three or four cards of different suits, especially said of a [[Flop (poker)|flop]].
</span>

<span id="raise">
; raise
: See [[Betting (poker)#Raise|raise]].
</span>

; rake
: See [[rake (poker)]]. Also "[[#juice|juice]]", "[[#vigorish|vig]]", "[[#vigorish|vigorish]]".

<span id="rakeback">
; rakeback
: Rebate/repayment to a player of a portion of the rake paid by that player, normally from a non-cardroom, third-party source such as an affiliate. Rakeback is paid in many ways by online poker rooms, affiliates or brick and mortar rooms. Many use direct money payments for online poker play. Brick and Mortar rooms usually use rate cards to track and pay their rakeback.
</span>

; ram and jam
: To aggressively bet, raise, and reraise.

<span id="ratholing">
; ratholing
: To "[[#going south|go south]]".
</span>

<span id="rebuy">
; rebuy
: An amount of chips purchased after the buy-in.
</span>

; redeal
: To deal a hand again, possibly after a misdeal.

; redraw
# To make one hand and have a draw for a better hand. ''Ted made a straight on the turn with a redraw for a flush on the river.''.
# Second or later draws in a draw game with multiple draws.

<span id="represent">
; represent
: To ''represent'' a hand is to play as if you hold it (whether you actually hold it or are bluffing).
</span>

<span id="reraise">
; reraise
: Raise after one has been raised. Also coming "over the top".
</span>

; ring game
: See [[ring game]].

; river
: See [[river (poker)]].

; river rat
: A player whose hand was dominated from the start, but improves his hand on the river to win the pot. See "[[#suck out|suck out]]".

; rock
# A very [[#tight|tight]] player (plays very few hands and only continues with strong hands).
# A bundle of chips held together with a rubber band, or other token signifying an obligatory [[Betting (poker)#Straddle bets|live straddle]]. If the player [[#under the gun|under the gun]] has the rock, he must use it to post a live straddle. The winner of the pot collects the rock and is obligated to use it in turn.

; rolled-up trips
: In [[seven-card stud]], three of a kind dealt in the first three cards.

; rounder
: See [[rounder]].

; runner
: A tournament entrant, a contestant.

<span id="runner-runner">
; runner-runner
: A hand made by hitting two consecutive cards on the [[Turn (poker)|turn]] and [[River (poker)|river]]. Also "[[#backdoor|backdoor]]". Compare to "[[#bad beat|bad beat]]" and "[[#suck out|suck out]]".
</span>

; rush
: Winning streak. A player who has won several big pots recently is said to be ''on a rush''.

== S ==
; sandbag
: See [[slow play (poker)]].

;sailboats
: Nickname for a pair (or "pocket") of fours. This nickname was put into use because of the way that two number fours look like sails (44).

<span id="satellite">
; satellite
: A tournament in which the prize is a free entrance to another (larger) tournament.
</span>

<span id="scare card">
; scare card
: A card dealt face up (either to a player in a game such as stud or to the board in a community card game) that appears to create a strong hand for someone. ''The Jack of spades on the turn was a scare card because it put both flush and straight possibilities on the board.''
</span>

<span id="scoop">
; scoop
: In high-low split games, to win both the high and the low half of the pot.
</span>

<span id="second pair">
; second pair
: In [[community card poker]] games, a pair of cards of the second-top rank on the [[#board|board]]. Compare [[#bottom pair|bottom pair]], [[#top pair|top pair]].
</span>

<span id="sell">
; sell
: In [[#spread limit|spread limit]] poker, to ''sell'' a hand is to bet less than the maximum with a strong hand, in the hope that more of your opponents will call the bet.
</span>

; semi-bluff
: See [[Bluff (poker)#Semi-bluff|semi-bluff]].

<span id="set">
; set
: [[Rank of hands (poker)#Three of a kind|Three of a kind]], esp. the situation where two of the cards are concealed in the player's [[#hole|hole]] cards. Compare to "[[#trips|trips]]".
</span>

; set-up
: A deck that has been ordered, usually King to Ace by suit (spades, hearts, clubs and diamonds). In casinos, it is customary to use a set-up deck when introducing a new deck to the table. The set-up is spread face up for the players to demonstrate that all of the cards are present before the first shuffle. Also called to "spade the deck".

; shark
: A professional player.

; shill
: See [[shill]]. Compare to "proposition player".

; ship it
: Same as "send it." Phrase sometimes exclaimed by the winner of a big pot.

<span id="shootout">
; shootout
: A [[poker tournament]] format where the last remaining player of a table goes on to play the remaining players of other tables. Each table plays independently of the others; that is, there is no balancing as players are eliminated. This format is particularly common in European televised poker programs, including [[Late Night Poker]].
</span>

<span id="short stack">
; short stack
: A [[#stack|stack]] of [[#chips|chips]] that is relatively small for the stakes being played.
</span>

; shorthanded
: A poker game that is played with around six players or less, as opposed to a full ring game, which is usually nine or ten players.

; showdown
: See [[showdown (poker)]].

<span id="side pot">
; side pot
: A separate pot created to deal with the situation of one player going "all in". See [[table stakes]].
</span>

<span id="sit and go">
; sit and go
: A "Sit and Go" is a [[poker tournament]] which has no starting time that will start as soon as a set number of players, usually 9 or 10, sign up. Also called ''sit n' gos'' and a variety of other similar spellings.
</span>

; 16-way straight draw
: A hand in [[draw poker]] such as <font color=red>6♥ 7♥</font> <font color=black>8♠ (Joker)</font>, in which any of sixteen cards (4 fours, 4 fives, 4 nines, 4 tens) can fill a straight.

; slow play
: See [[slow play (poker)]]. Also "sandbag".

; slow roll
: To delay or avoid showing one's hand at showdown, forcing other players to expose their hands first. When done while holding a good hand likely to be the winner, it is considered poor etiquette, because it often gives other players "false hope" that their hands might win before the slow-roller's is exposed.

<span id="small blind">
; small blind
: See [[Betting (poker)#Blinds|blinds]].
</span>

<span id="small blind special">
; small blind special
: A situation in which (assuming no raising) a player is dealt weak hole cards in the small blind, but ends up making the best hand because they got to see a relatively inexpensive flop. Compare to "[[#big blind special|big blind special]]".
</span>

<span id="smooth call">
; smooth call
: See "[[#flat call|flat call]]".
</span>

<span id="snow">
; snow
# To play a worthless hand misleadingly in [[draw poker]] in order to [[Bluff (poker)|bluff]].
# The worthless hand in question.
</span>

<span id="soft-play">
; soft-play
: To intentionally go easy on a player (e.g. not betting or raising against him when you usually would).
</span>

<span id="speeding">
; speeding
: To play very loose with no identifiable pattern, or to bluff frequently. Also known as speeding around. Compare to "[[#fast|fast]]".
</span>

<span id="spike">
; spike
: When a flop is spread out, if the first card revealed is the card an underdog needs, they spike that card. More loosely, if any of the flop cards help you, then you spike it. ''I had Q9 to my opponent's pocket jacks, but I spiked a queen on the flop to take the lead.''
</span>

<span id="splash the pot">
; splash the pot
: To throw one's chips in the pot in a disorderly fashion. Not typically allowed, because the dealer can't tell how much has been bet.
</span>

; split
: See [[split (poker)]] and [[high-low split]].

<span id="split two pair">
; split two pair
: In [[community card poker]], a [[Rank of hands (poker)#Two pair|two pair]] hand, with each pair made of one of your [[#hole, hole cards|hole cards]], and one community card.
</span>

; spread
: The range between a table's minimum and maximum bets.

<span id="spread-limit">
; spread-limit
: A form of [[#limit|limit]] poker where the bets and raises can be between a minimum and maximum value. The [[#spread|spread]] may change between rounds.
</span>

<span id="stack">
; stack
: A collection of 20 [[poker chip]]s of the same denomination, usually arranged in an orderly column.
</span>

; stacked deck
: See [[cold deck]].

; stakes
: The definition of the amount one buys in for and can bet. For example, a "low stakes" game might be a $10 buy-in with a $1 maximum raise.

; stand pat
: In [[draw poker]], playing the original hand using no draws, either as a bluff or in the belief it is the best hand.

; starting hand
: See [[starting hand]].

<span id="steal">
; steal
: See [[steal (poker)]].
</span>

<span id="steam">
; steam
: Act of playing recklessly when one is frustrated. Compare to "[[#tilt|tilt]]".
</span>

; stop and go
: ''Stop and go'' or ''stop 'n' go'' is when a player bets into another player who has previously raised or otherwise shown [[Aggression (poker)|aggression]]. Example: On the flop, Bill bets into Tom, Tom raises, and Bill just calls. On the turn, Bill bets into Tom again. Bill has just pulled a ''stop 'n' go'' play.
: Another version of the "stop and go" is in tournament poker when a player raises pre-flop with the intention of going all in after the flop regardless of the cards that fall. This is typically done when the blinds are high and every chip becomes vital.

; straddle bet
: See [[Betting (poker)#Straddle bets|straddle bets]].

; straight
# Poker hand: see [[Rank of hands (poker)#Straight|straight]].
# When used with an amount, indicates that the speaker is referring to the total bet, versus the amount being raised. ''Alice bets twenty. Bob raises to fifty straight.'' Also "[[#altogether|altogether]]" or "[[#all day|all day]]".

; straight flush
: See [[Rank of hands (poker)#Straight flush|straight flush]].

; strategy card
: A wallet sized card that is commonly used to help with poker strategies in online and casino games.

<span id="string bet">
; string bet
: To call with one motion and raise with another, or to reach for more chips in the middle of laying a bet/raise without stating the intended amount. String bets are prohibited in [[Public cardroom rules (poker)|public cardroom rules]]. Compare to "[[#forward motion|forward motion]]".
</span>

<span id="structured">
; structured
: A structured betting system is one where the [[#spread|spread]] of the bets may change from round to round.
</span>

; stuck
: Having lost money. ''I'm stuck $300 right now.''

; stud
# A variant of poker. See [[stud poker]].
# A card dealt face up in Stud poker.

; suck out
: To draw a winning hand despite poor odds.

<span id="sucker straight">
; sucker straight
: In [[community card poker]] variants, a straight completed on the low end of the possible straight on the board. Compare to "[[#idiot end|idiot end, ignorant end]]".
</span>

<span id="suited">
; suited
: Having the same suit. See [[Suit (cards)|card suits]].
</span>

; suited connectors
: See [[suited connectors]].

; super satellite
: A multi-table [[poker tournament]] in which the prize is a free entrance to a satellite tournament or a tournament in which all the top finishers gain entrance to a larger tournament.

== T ==
<span id="table stakes">
; table stakes
: See [[table stakes]].
</span>

<span id="tell">
; tell
: See [[tell (poker)]].
</span>

<span id="third man walking">
; third man walking
: A player who gets up from his seat in a cash game, after two other players are already away from the table, is referred to as the "third man walking". In a casino with a "third man walking rule", this player may be required to return to his seat within 10 minutes, or one rotation of the deal around the table, or else his seat in the game will be forfeited if there is a waiting list for the game.
</span>

<span id="throwing a party">
; throwing a party
: A player who is playing like a fool and gambling all of their money away is said to be ''throwing a party''.
</span>

<span id="three of a kind">
; three of a kind
: See [[Rank of hands (poker)#Three of a kind|three of a kind]]. Also "[[#trips|trips]]", "[[#set|set]]".
</span>

<span id="three pair">
; three pair
: In a seven card game, such as seven card stud or Texas hold 'em, it is possible for a player to have 3 pairs, although a player can only play two of them as part of a standard 5-card poker hand. This situation may jokingly be referred to as a player having a hand of three pair. Note that in Omaha, it is possible to "have" 4 pair in the same manner.
</span>

<span id="tight">
; tight
: See [[Poker strategy#Loose/tight play|loose/tight play]]. Compare to "[[#loose|loose]]", "[[#aggressive|aggressive]]", "[[#passive|passive]]".
</span>

<span id="tilt">
; tilt
: See [[tilt (poker)]]. Compare to "[[#steam|steam]]".
</span>

<span id="to go">
; to go
: A term used to describe the amount that a player is required to call in order to stay in the hand, ''"Alice was deciding whether to call now it was $50 to go."''
</span>

<span id="toke">
; toke
: In a [[#brick and mortar|brick and mortar]] casino, a ''toke'' is a "tip" given to the dealer by the winner of the pot. Tokes often represent a large percentage of a dealer's income.
</span>

<span id="top pair">
; top pair
: In [[community card poker]] games, ''top pair'' is a [[Rank of hands (poker)#Pair|pair]] of the same rank as the highest ranking card on the [[#board|board]]. Compare [[#second pair|second pair]], [[#bottom pair|bottom pair]].
</span>

<span id="top two">
; top two
: A [[#split two pair|split two pair]], matching the highest-ranking two flop cards.
</span>

; trey
: A 3-spot card. Casino personnel refer to the 3♣ as the "trey of clubs".

<span id="trips">
; trips
: When one of a players hole cards in hold 'em connects with two cards on the board to make three of a kind. This differs from a set where three of a kind is made when a pocket pair connects with one card on the flop to make three of a kind.
: [[Rank of hands (poker)#Three of a kind|Three of a kind]]. Compare to "[[#set|set]]".
</span>

<span id="turn">
; turn
: See [[turn (poker)]].
</span>

<span id="12-way straight draw">
; 12-way straight draw
: A hand in [[draw poker]] such as <font color=red>6♥ 7♥</font> <font color=black>(Joker) 9♣</font>, in which any of twelve cards (4 fives, 4 eights, 4 tens) can fill a straight.
</span>

== U ==
<span id="under the gun">
;under the gun
:The playing position to the direct left of the blinds in [[Texas hold 'em]] or [[Omaha hold'em|Omaha ]]. The player who is under the gun must act first on the first round of betting.
</span>

<span id="underdog">
; underdog
: An ''underdog'' or ''dog'' is a player with a smaller chance to win than another specified player. Frequently used when the exact odds are expressed. ''Harry might have been bluffing, but if he really had the king, my hand was a 4-to-1 dog, so I folded.''
</span>

; underfull
: In a [[Community card poker|community card]] game, a full house that is one of the lowest full houses possible. For example: in [[Texas hold 'em]], a player holding a pair of deuces with a final board of 2A33Q holds an underfull (Deuces full of Treys). The highest possible full house is Aces full of Treys. Also "underboat".

; up
: When used with a card rank to describe a poker hand, refers to [[Rank of hands (poker)#Two pair|two pair]] with the named card being the higher pair. For example, a hand of QQ885 might be called "queens up".

; up and down straight draw
: An [[#open ended|open ended]] straight draw. Also called an 'up and down' or an 'up and down draw'.

<span id="upcard">
; upcard
: See [[upcard]].
</span>

; up the ante
: Increase the stake. Also commonly used outside the context of poker.

== V ==
; value bet
: See [[value (poker)]].

<span id="vigorish">
; vig, vigorish
: The [[rake (poker)|rake]]. See [[vigorish]].
</span>

; vnh
: Abbreviation for "very nice hand", used in [[online poker]] chat.

== W ==
<span id="wake up">
; wake up
: To "wake up with a hand" means to discover a strong starting hand, often when there has already been action in front of the player.
</span>

<span id="walk">
; walk
: A walk is the situation where all players fold to the big blind.
</span>

<span id="wash">
; wash
: To mix the deck by spreading the cards face down on the table and mixing them up. A dealer may wash the deck before shuffling.
</span>

<span id="weak ace">
; weak ace
: An ace with a low kicker (e.g. four). Also "small ace," "soft ace," "ace-rag."
</span>

; wheel
: A 5-high straight, with the Ace playing low. See [[Rank of hands (poker)#Wheel|wheel]].

<span id="whipsaw">
; whipsaw
: When a player is caught in the middle between two raisers and must call each bet because of the pot odds. Compare to "crossfire".
</span>

<span id="wild card">
; wild card
: See [[wild card (poker)]]. Compare to [[bug (poker)]].
</span>

; window card
: An upcard in [[stud poker]]. The first window card in stud is called the "door card".

<span id="wired pair">
; wired pair
: A "[[#pocket pair|pocket pair]]".
</span>

<span id="wrap">
; wrap
: In [[Omaha hold 'em|Omaha]], the term for an open ended straight that consists of two board cards and three or four cards from a player's hand. An example would be a player holding 345A with the board 67K is said to have a "wrap" as any 3, 4, or 5, or 8 will make a straight. A hand of 4589 would also be a wrap draw, but would often be referred to as a "big wrap" due to twenty cards making the straight as opposed to thirteen in the first example.
</span>

== X ==
== Y ==
== Z ==

; z-game
: The lowest-stakes game in the house.

{{compactTOC2}}

==Notes and references==
<div class="references-small">
<references/>
</div>

[[Category:Poker gameplay and terminology|*]]
[[Category:Glossaries|Poker]]

[[eo:Pokera terminaro]]

Revision as of 12:14, 22 September 2008

"Are you over 18"

Should we discourage this question on privacy grounds? A person should not have to yield any personal information to earn our consideration at RfA, and while we all know that while these questions are "optional", people feel that they're expected to answer. There's pressure.

We all get so concerned about privacy on BLPs, trying to protect publicly-available information like the first names of spouses, and even — in one recent and incredible effort which was thankfully rejected — trying to conceal the surnames of the convicted torture-murderers Manfred Lauber and Wolfgang Werlé. There are obvious differences — that's article space and this isn't, those pages are indexed and these pages are NOINDEXed — but there would be much hypocrisy in discouraging the inclusion of publicly-available information on notable persons while condoning systematized requests for private information from our own editors.

And no, I'm not some 12-year-old pissed off because there's an ongoing age crackdown at RfA. I'm well over 18, and I'm not afraid to disclose my age. But some people may want to keep that sort of thing a secret and not be judged for refusing to give the information, so this should never become a regular question at RfA.

I remember being discouraged from asking a regular policy question about open editing and anonymous users, on the grounds that too many questions are being asked, and too many people are reluctant to undergo the ordeal. Since candidates are overburdened already, is it appropriate to be pressuring them for personal information through the question system? Mr. IP Defender of Open Editing 00:12, 7 September 2008 (UTC)

The question should be discouraged indeed. Simply saying that it is "optional" no longer cuts it; people assume any kind of refusal to answer is the confirmation that said person is under 18. unlike the abilities of Permissions such as Checkuser, which require identification and a minimal age, any acts committed with admin abilities can be quickly and easily corrected; there's no reason that a "minimal age" should be considered. In any case, setting a number is impossible; countries and cultures have different standards of when one is considered an "adult", and since this isn't a legal matter there can be no claim that we must abide by the US definition. Ironholds 00:17, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
Has this question been asked lately? — Dan | talk 00:25, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
@Dan: Yep: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Requests_for_adminship/Synergy#Questions_for_the_candidate #11. Regards, —αἰτίας discussion 00:30, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
I agree that the over 18 question should be discouraged on privacy grounds, although I am not sure how exactly to do that. I actually share many of Sandstein's concerns about underage admins, but I think that asking direct questions regarding any kind of personal data is not appropriate. If the candidate has chosen to previosly disclose this info somewhere else (on their user page, talk page, etc), that's a different story. Nsk92 (talk) 00:37, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
I don't like this question either, but I have some questions about the rationale. None of these are rhetorical. What is the precise problem or evil excluding the question seeks to prevent? Making it more difficult to find out an editor is a child? Making it more difficult to locate, identify, out, or harass a child editor? To what extent does knowledge of age help someone to determine a child's RL ID? Does every (child) candidate have a problem with answering the age question or are some happy to answer it? If the only problem is editors getting discouraged from participation in an arduous process, then would discouraging votes based on the candidate's refusal to answer optional questions (and perhaps bureaucratic disregard of such votes specifically regarding the age question) solve this problem more effectively?--chaser - t 00:48, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
Let me take these one at a time.
  • 1.) I think that excluding the question would prevent editors from being pressured to reveal an aspect of personal identity they have not indicated any willingness to reveal, and also have the salutary effect of forcing a contribs-based judgment of maturity rather than an age-based judgment of maturity.
  • 2.) Well, I don't think we should have to "find out" any aspect of an editor's identity.
  • 3.) This isn't really a worry about protecting children, I wouldn't say. There's plenty of "out" children on this site, and if someone were preying on kids here, there's plenty around.
  • 4.) I don't think knowing age could help determine ID. Not much, anyway.
  • 5.) I figure that anyone who hasn't already volunteered that information would prefer to do it at a time and place of their choosing.
  • 6.) I guess the possible discouragement of candidates from participation is not my main concern. I mostly brought that up because I was previously asked not to use a general "standardized" question on open editing, under the rationale that overquestioning discourages candidacies. I do worry that someone might avoid service to the project as an administrator because they fear they will be pressured to reveal personal information — and !voted against if they don't — but it's not my main problem with the age question.
Hope that helps. Mr. IP Defender of Open Editing 06:17, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
I think that asking the under 18 question in RfAs sets a general bad precedent regarding privacy-related info on WP. I don't believe that any WP editor should ever be required to disclose any personal information about themselves, such as gender, age, nationality, religion, where they live, what their profession is, etc. It is very easy to get on a slippery slope with questions like that, and I would rather we did not start down that road at all. Nsk92 (talk) 01:11, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
I agree. We should not request that a user reveal personal information about themselves as a prerequisite to becoming an admin. It raises privacy concerns, and is totally irrelevant in determining whether someone is fit to be an admin. The only things that matter are the quality of the applicant's work and the soundness of their judgement. If someone has demonstrated through their contributions the level head and hard work necessary to convince me they should be an admin, then I don't care how old or young they are and neither should the 'pedia. Reyk YO! 01:53, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
These questions should be optional anyway, so they shouldn't have to be answered, but things naturally don't work out that way. —Animum (talk) 01:58, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
This question should never be asked at an RFA, it's adminship for god's sake not checkuser. It puts the candidate between a rock and a hard place, because if the person doesn't answer it they are considered as being under 18, so it therefore is not optional and it is asking a person to reveal private information that is not necessary to decide whether or not a person is eligible for adminship. The only thing that is needed to see if a person is eligible is Special:Contributions. I would request that if this question is asked again on another RFA it will be reverted on site. --Coffee // talk // ark // 02:04, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
My sentiments exactly, Coffee. Every time I see this question asked I want to respond "old enough to be an admin" for them. —  $PЯINGεrαgђ  02:06 7 September, 2008 (UTC)
I agree that it's an inappropriate question, and I say that as one of the evil ageist cabal. There's a difference between being immature and acting immature, and this puts undue weight on age as an issue; even as someone who thinks age is an issue, there are plenty of people under 18 I'd still support (Giggy, for example), and no doubt plenty more I have supported who haven't disclosed their age. Anyway, as we've learned rather forcefully over the last couple of days, People on Wikipedia Are Not Necessarily Who They Say They Are. – iridescent 02:10, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
Well... on the Internet, nobody knows you're a dog. Naturally, people shouldn't give much weight on the answer to this question. —Dark talk 02:22, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
Yes... the age question should be discouraged... I say that as a person who fully understands and appreciates the position that some people take regarding youth. There are legitimate arguments to be made, but I think privacy is paramount and I don't think it should be asked. Because there is no way to verify the veracity of the statement. Who knows, somebody may be able to tell enough lies that they can get a job with the Wiki Foundation.---Balloonman PoppaBalloon 02:33, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
Ah yes. - Mailer Diablo 12:09, 7 September 2008 (UTC)

I don't even know why the question holds weight at all. In my case, whether age matters can be summed up in two words: Anonymous Dissident. Wizardman 03:00, 7 September 2008 (UTC)

As the person who's been asking this question a few times, I'm surprised at the privacy concerns above. Common sense tells us that all editors are somewhere between 5 and 100 years old. If an editor tells us that he or she's either in the 5-18 or in the 19-100 year range, that's by far not enough information to identify him or her in any way. Moreover, the editor can choose to withhold the information, or they can lie (although I'm WP:AGF and assume that they usually do not).
But adminship is a position of responsability, and I think that it is fair that persons who seek such responsability – and any status that may be attached to it – be ready to make this one datum public if they want the job. We've, after all, had our share of drama because of unsuitable admins. I know that many children are well-suited for adminship, but again, common sense tells me that, on a purely statistical basis, a random 15-year-old is less likely to be suitable than, say, a random 25-year-old.  Sandstein  05:53, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
You do realize that there is no easy way for them to not answer that question? If you were to ask someone who was 16 and didn't want to reveal that information, them not answering the question makes people think that they are under 18; if you ask someone who is 22 and they don't want to give out the information they also will be thought of as under 18. --Coffee // talk // ark // 06:06, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
Well, an easy way to answer the question is to say "I don't want to say." I'll still support them if it is likely, judging from the subject matter or style of their contributions, that they are adults (e.g. if they write articles about, say, ancient Roman history instead of video games); or if their contribs and length of service indicate exceptional maturity. I'll just apply a much higher standard in the latter case.  Sandstein  07:41, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
For those who believe that refusal to answer is guilty, this answer to them is as good as not answering, perhaps even worse. - Mailer Diablo 12:13, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
Guilt doesn't come into this at any level.  Sandstein  15:36, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
Perhaps I didn't phrase it clearly. I mean, if not answering the question would make some people think that the candidate is under 18, then answering "I don't want to say" would probably have the same effect on this same group of people (they would still think that the candidate is under 18), or worse treat it as the candidate is trying to be evasive (perhaps, even grounds for opposing the candidate's RfA). So the answer is not the easy solution out. - Mailer Diablo 15:42, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
No, it's not, but my concern is not to provide an easy solution out. I want admin colleagues whom I can trust. I will ask whatever question I feel is required to that effect. It's up to the candidate to decide whether they want to answer (and possibly get my vote) or not answer (and a bit less possibly get my vote).  Sandstein  15:50, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
Discussion continued below. Thanks, Mailer Diablo 16:03, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
When I say "privacy concern", I don't mean that anyone is going to be stalked and targeted for flaming arrows of death based on this — just that this is personal information that people have already chosen not to volunteer if the question is even getting asked in the first place. It's something that a lot of people have no interest in telling everyone, and putting pressure on them to cough it up if they don't want to look like they're withholding information — or don't want to look like they're secretly 9 years old — seems unnecessary in this process. More importantly, not knowing someone's age might force people to actually look through their contribs to gauge their actual level of maturity rather than relying on that "one datum" you mention for an indication of same. I prefer, always, a contribs-based review of maturity over an age-based review of maturity, so I believe we lose nothing by not asking this question, and that we lose a lot, i.e. our basic respect for the non-volunteering of personal information, if we ask it. I don't want to give you a hard time or act like you're some crazed interrogator — obv. your concerns are in good faith — but I think this question is unproductive and a bit too prying. And also, what Coffee says. Mr. IP Defender of Open Editing 06:17, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
I certainly respect the right of anyone not to volunteer personal information. But exercising that right, as with any right, may have consequences – such as not getting my vote in an RfA.
The age question is certainly not a substitute for a contribs-based assessment of suitability. That's still required. But admins sometimes need to make stressful decisions that other editors don't (such as blocks or deletions in a dispute with real life impact), and I am frankly more comfortable if I know that such decisions are generally made by adults (or by young adults with exceptional maturity). Also, because the functions of administrator and normal editor differ in this regard, past contribs are of limited usefulness for assessing someone's maturity with respect to such situations. So is age, of course, but it is (like a history of good contributions) positively correlated to maturity, which warrants the question as one data point among others.  Sandstein  07:41, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
I asked Friday before, and I thought I should ask you as well. Where is the statistical data proving that age is correlated to maturity (behaviour)? - Mailer Diablo 16:03, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
There is no data that I am aware of. There is common sense and general life experience, though. For Wikipedia purposes, that will have to do.  Sandstein  16:10, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
Attainment of Formal Operational Thinking by High School Students. Take it with a disclaimer that Renner & Huitt's findings are not universally accepted. – iridescent 16:14, 7 September 2008 (UTC)

The age question seemingly rests on the (arguably reasonable) notion that underage admins are generally immature. Now the question is, from all the admin controversies that were severe enough to warrant involuntary desysoppings (which as of this time usually means that the admin did something really wrong), how many of the desysopped admins were actually under 18? —kurykh 07:55, 7 September 2008 (UTC)

18 is a bit arbitrary. It also puts a small number of people in a tricky situation. If the answer to the question was "no, but I'll be over 18 next week". What then? That, alone, reveals the absurdity of the question. I would, however, support a question along the lines of "do you consider yourself to have the mental maturity necessary to be an admin?". Or, "Do you throw tantrums online, and if so are they due to your age or your character (ie. if you throw tantrums, or sulk, or snap under pressure, is that a character trait that you will grow out of)?" Or "would you be comfortable dealing with matters that are age-restricted in the country you are editing from?" Though that last one is more borderline, as it raises legal concerns as well as being a more direct form of "are you underage". It's tricky, but the focus should always be on maturity, judgment, calmness under pressure, politeness, and other such things, not on actual age. I also think more attention should be paid to people changing over time. Many pre-adolescents change emotionally as they enter adolescence, many adults change as their lives change or external circumstances cause increased stress, or their lives change in general (relationship, family, jobs, school, university, etc). The root of all these questions is really trying to find out (if possible) whether the candidate: (a) is aware of this; (b) is aware of themselves; and (c) if they possess the judgment to handle such changes, up to and including resigning adminship if need be, whether adult or child. Carcharoth (talk) 11:01, 7 September 2008 (UTC)

Exactly. Come on. I thought we are past this stage. And why 18? Why not 21? Or 16? Do you know that in my country, we are trained to handle a rifle to kill at 18 (16.5 if enlisted early) but do not have the right to vote until the legal age of 21? - Mailer Diablo 12:20, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
The question could be formulated more elegantly, of course. I'm open to suggestions.  Sandstein  15:36, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
Discussion (with point reworded) continued at policy page. FYIP. - Thanks, Mailer Diablo 16:32, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
This is a good point actually. The age at which you are perceived to have 'maturity' varies across societies. Here in the UK I could drive, smoke, have sex, buy porn, get married, and join the army by the time I was 17. It seems a bit strange that a 17 year old could do all that, and yet not be permitted to administrate a website. However, I don't think asking the question is ever going to cause anyone's RfA to fail, as most people don't consider age when deciding whether to support. naerii 13:56, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
I think there is value in the idea of looking at how the age demographics of desysopped admins compare to the demographics of admins generally, if that is at all possible. (I realise that user age will only have been known in a limited proportion of desysop cases.) Basically, such decisions should be made on the basis of data, not on the basis of assumptions. Sure it is tempting to assume that very young admins may have worked hard at "doing and saying all the right things" for a few months, out of youthful ambition to become an admin, and then, flushed with their success, foul up sooner or later by making immature decisions. But I am not sure that older admins are exempt from such things, and I could easily imagine older admins having a whole range of different sorts of behavioural problems that are less likely in the very young – COIs, tendentious opinions based on established life choices, stuff like that – which might also affect their admin performance. So, if there are data that show that young admins foul up more often than older ones, I would be in favour of allowing the question. If there is no such statistical evidence, then the question is irrelevant. Jayen466 13:53, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
  • I wasn't as aware of the issue, nor do I think it was as much of an issue in May when I did my RfA, but from a couple of the comments, this userbox:
    This user is old enough to remember what a typewriter is, and that's all you need to know.
    satisfied a number of concerns. Who says userboxen are pointless? :) That said, the issue is not the number, there are immature 30 year olds and mature 12 year olds. I think the onus is on those who choose to identify as <18 to prove they're not the norm. That said, there are >18 drama mavens so >18 isn't a sign of A OK. I don't think the number matters as much as temperament. TravellingCari 15:19, 7 September 2008 (UTC)

A decision

Having looked at some past discussions of this, it has come up over and over again, and nothing has been done. Looking above, I can only see one user who really thinks it's a good idea - and that's the user who posted the question. I think something needs to be done about questions of this kind once and for all, before this thread dries up yet again. Might I humbly suggest all such question are removed from RfAs, and if they get asked, are removed? Does that sound fair? how do you turn this on 12:35, 7 September 2008 (UTC)

Or perhaps a blanket ban of questions of all personal type? (such as age, location, occupation etc). how do you turn this on 12:50, 7 September 2008 (UTC)

That would violate WP:MOP, the adminship policy, which states: "Adminship is oriented to communal trust and confidence, rather than checklists and edit counts; each user will have their own way to assess their confidence in a candidates' readiness for the role."
This implies that users may not be prohibited from asking questions that they feel are relevant for assessing a candidate's readiness. To change this, you would need to gather consensus to change the policy at the policy talk page.  Sandstein  14:03, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
I agree with Sandstein. While I'd probably prefer an optional question of "Approximately how old are you?" rather than specifically "Are you over 18", in either case it is a good-faith attempt by the questioner in order to obtain information they feel is relevant to their decision. The question is optional, and if the number of people who care about age is as low as you suggest, surely a candidate would not find themselves receiving many opposes if they chose not to answer it. ~ mazca t | c 14:09, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
I respectfully disagree age has a lot to do with adminship. Someone could easily just lie about their age. If you're going to !vote on RfA, what's hard about going through the candidate's contributions yourself? And if someone did answer "no" to your question, would you check any further, or oppose based on that alone? What if they answered yes? Would they get an automatic support? I really think personal questions are irrelevant and intrusive, and that if you want to get to know if the candidate is suitable, you should look at their contributions. how do you turn this on 14:34, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
I don't see any such implication, Sandstein. It implies that you are free to select criteria, not that any question you might want to ask is magically admissible. If your criteria include "no blacks", would it become morally defensible to ask what color skin the prospective admin is? What about if you want to exclude Britons because you don't want any "bias against correct spelling"? You may be free to pick random criteria which have nothing to do with adminship, but that does not give you the right to go pry into peoples' private lives and ask for personal and private information. — Coren (talk) 15:04, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
This is not about skin colour or Britishness (which of course I don't care about), this is about age. If I'm free to select my own criteria, as you say, it follows that I may ask questions pertinent to these questions, and the candidates may choose whether to reply or not. Even if the question is not allowed on RfA itself, there's nothing to prevent me from posing it on the user talk page or per e-mail, and cast my vote based on any reply I may receive. As you can see, prohibiting questions on RfA is not the solution to what you perceive as the problem. It would require a change in editors' right to select their own criteria to bring that about.  Sandstein  15:26, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
This is where we strongly disagree. I say it does not follow that you can satisfy your prejudices (whichever they are) with questions invading the privacy of editors. — Coren (talk) 17:01, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
The question is not a matter of privacy, since "over 18" is not an identifiable datum, and it is not invasive because candidates are free not to answer it.  Sandstein  17:04, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
If they turn 18 during the RfA, they can't reasonable answer the question without revealing that they will soon be 18. Well, they could wait until they turn 18 and then answer "yes". But still, reaad what I wrote above. There are better ways to phrase this question, focusing on asking the candidates to assess their own levels of maturity, or finding ways to assess that yourself. Carcharoth (talk) 17:33, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
  • I fully, and strongly endorse an absolute ban on questions that requests revealing personal information— that would need to include at least name, age, sex, geographical location, religious beliefs, political views, and sexual orientations. Those questions do not, and cannot, influence past contributions from the editor and, where not outright illegal, are ethically indefensible. Any such question should be reverted on sight. — Coren (talk) 14:56, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
  • I'd never ask about sexual orientation, location, sex and so forth, but we are discussing human beings on RfA, not abstract user accounts, and some personal characteristics of human beings do have a bearing on whether or not I trust them. I reserve the right to oppose a self-identified Neo-Nazi or Neo-Stalinist on the basis of his or her political views, for instance.  Sandstein  15:26, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
  • Note: self-identified Neo-Nazi or Neo-Stalinist. Do you notice your own argument, right there? — Coren (talk) 17:03, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
    • Agree. Let's stick to discussing the candidate as a Wikipedian, and not what they are in real life. how do you turn this on 15:04, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
  • Strong support banning this questions because of being disruptive. Some people want to keep their anonymity on the internet, and also because people take the answer as a reason to oppose RfA candidates. Macy 15:15, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
  • Are you aware that WP:MOP, the adminship policy, allows people to support or oppose candidates for any reason that they feel is relevant with respect to the candidate's trustworthiness?  Sandstein  15:38, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
  • Yes, I know the policy, but are you aware that if the question gets banned, age-based opposes may reduce or stop? :-P. Macy 15:47, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
  • If the policy states anyone can oppose for whatever reason they like, then the policy really could do with changing. I might bring this to the talk page of it. how do you turn this on 15:50, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
  • So I'm clear, whereabout in that policy does it state you can vote with whatever reason you like? how do you turn this on 15:53, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
  • As I quoted above: "Adminship is oriented to communal trust and confidence, rather than checklists and edit counts; each user will have their own way to assess their confidence in a candidates' readiness for the role."  Sandstein  15:55, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
  • As a note, please realize that my quip above about such questions being "outright illegal" is not hyperbole: in Quebec, at least, they are illegal on their face— I would expect the same everywhere in Europe (where privacy laws are strong as well), and while privacy laws are generally weaker in the Unites States it would not be unlikely that those are just as illegal in Florida. Someone should check. — Coren (talk) 15:18, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
  • There is something like freedom of speech on a privately owned website in the US, yes? RfA is not a job interview.  Sandstein  15:33, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
  • That may be, but given the popularity of WP, the number of minors who participate here, and the probability that there are authorities monitoring the site for those reasons (Hello detectives/special agents, etc!), I wouldn't want to be the one asking questions about people's ages. It could too easily be misinterpreted as something nefarious. Jim Miller See me | Touch me 15:39, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
  • I'm not an American, and I may lack any special sensibility that Americans may have in this regard, but I fail to see how asking people who are running for a position of responsability whether they are older than 18 is in some way "nefarious", let alone illegal.  Sandstein  15:44, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
  • I absolutely agree. No one should be forced to reveal their age (and of course, if they are, some might lie, to protect their online security), except where is it required for privacy reasons (eg CheckUser). Xclamation point 15:26, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
  • No one is forced to reveal their age. Stating that one is over 18 is not revealing one's age, and of course they are not in any way compelled to answer. They will lose very few votes not answering, it seems; and not even necessarily mine.  Sandstein  15:33, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
    • How can you possibly quantify and/or qualify the statement of "they will lose very few votes"? What you choose to !vote is not indicative of what the general masses that !vote at RfA, WP:AGF not withstanding. I'm personally willing to bet that the bureaucrats have enough sense to discard !votes based on age, but we still return to the fact that your promise is unlikely to hold water, as that seems to be one of your defense... --Izno (talk) 15:50, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
  • If they do lose many votes on account of that question, then that would be a sign that many users share my concerns, which would be an even better reason for asking the question.  Sandstein  15:54, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
  • The statement you made was "They will lose very few votes not answering" and not [paraphrasing] "If they lose votes, it must be a quasi-legitimate reason": This is inconsistent, and does not answer the question I posed... --Izno (talk) 15:58, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
  • I made that statement because I seem to be in a minority here with my opinion that age may be a relevant or determinative factor in an RfA.  Sandstein  16:02, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
What you don't know can't hurt you. Instead of trying to take some kind of shortcut and determine a candidate's maturity/qualifications based on age, look at their contributions.--KojiDude (C) 18:01, 7 September 2008 (UTC)

I have taken this to the admin policy talk page - please weigh in there. Thanks how do you turn this on 16:02, 7 September 2008 (UTC)

  • Sandstein, you are not alone in realizing that youth is a legitimate concern. This is one of those perrenial arguments that has no end. There are a number of people in the RfA community who believe it shouldn't be an issue and try to tie the view of the rest of the world as "ageism" that is equivalent to racism/sexism/etc. They would do better to argue that specific candidates deserve the bit rather than fight a battle that they can't win. Age IS an issue, and legitimately so. I will over look it for specific individuals, but for somebody to claim otherwise is going against the general body of evidence that exists.---Balloonman PoppaBalloon 14:39, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
  • Rather than forbid any questions, why don't we recommend that people freely Noble lie about their answer? jmcw (talk) 10:51, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
  • If you want to see how lying to protect your privacy turns out, just as Essjay. Chillum 13:47, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
  • Essjay_incident is interesting. It was not a noble lie that brought trouble but rather the abuse of position. A noble lie about age or sex or religion seems different: it would neutralize the question. jmcw (talk) 09:08, 10 September 2008 (UTC)

I personally feel that the age question is very inappropriate, and would add to any request that I saw it on a suggestion that the question remains unanswered --T-rex 13:35, 9 September 2008 (UTC)

Give up private information not related to being an admin or I oppose? That sounds out of line. It is a silly question, if you want to know how mature someone is look at their contribution history. We don't let people ask "Are you black", "Are you a Jew", or "Who are you voting for in the upcoming election", so I don't see how asking age is any better. Endorse ban on asking about private information such as age in RfA. I also need nothing at WP:MOP which prevents the community creating some standards for the questions asked. Chillum 13:40, 9 September 2008 (UTC)

A decision (break)

Can people please discuss this on the policy talk page from now on, as that's the page that needs changing. It seems strange to have two discussions. how do you turn this on 13:47, 9 September 2008 (UTC)

We don't need to change the admin policy to change how we run RfA. This is not changing admins, but how we select them. This is the correct forum. The conversation at WT:ADMIN does seem redundant, but I do this this is the better spot. Chillum 13:48, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
Actually the relevant text is on the admin policy page (have a look at the discussion to see which text). The way we choose admins is documented in the policy, and needs changing there, not here. how do you turn this on 13:51, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
I already read it. "Adminship is oriented to communal trust and confidence, rather than checklists and edit counts; each user will have their own way to assess their confidence in a candidates' readiness for the role" in no way prevents RfA from deciding what questions are inappropriate. It does not say they can take any action or ask any question they want to assess their confidence. It says they can have their own way, not that they can act inappropriately doing so. They can have their own way without asking personal questions. No conflict with policy. Chillum 13:56, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
Alright. So how do you suggest we get consensus to ban such questions being asked? how do you turn this on 14:24, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
You're not going to get consensus to ban these questions, that's the futility of the issue. Even people who don't think the question should be asked, such as myself, won't support banning it. The best you can hope for is consensus to add a note to such questions advising the candidate not to answer. There are other questions, such as the one regarding AOR, that the community hates, but there is no consensus to ban it. You're not going to get consensus to ignore !votes based on age, because too many people acknowledge the validity of the concern (even if they don't necessarily share it.) Even if you think you have consensus here, these are questions that are bigger than RfA and would have to be brought forth to the broader community.---Balloonman PoppaBalloon 14:45, 9 September 2008 (UTC)

Why are we even discussing banning serious questions? How many times has this been brought up and dismissed just in the last few weeks? If you find a question so offensive, refuse to answer it or address it with the questioner on their talkpage. We don't need to add rules on the type and style of questions beyond the common sense limitations we already have, which are typically enforced by bureaucrats. Avruch T 15:06, 9 September 2008 (UTC)

Indeed, no need to ban any type of serious question. Some editors equate youth with immaturity, others don't. I see no problem with attempting to gather relevant information while making a decision. We don't need to ban this particular question and the consensus will (likely) never want to do so, and we don't need the instruction creep that will occur if we start making lists of questions that cannot be asked. Useight (talk) 14:48, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
Every time this topic comes up there is more and more opposition to the age question and less and less support for it. I think in time we will come to a consensus not to allow questions of such a personal nature. Chillum 16:21, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
I find it hard to believe people are still clinging to the belief trying to find out as much as possible about a candidate is wrong. Given we've just discovered a one-time admin here, who had admin, bureaucrat and checkuser rights on other projects, was in fact an identity thief who ran a fairly sophisticated sock-farm (oh, who had, in real life, created models that form the basis of economic theory in many western nations), surely we need to know more, not less? For if and when that situation reaches the press, there will be calls for aliases and anonymous editing to be banned outright, as well as removing any editor who cannot be held to account legally George The Dragon (talk) 16:48, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
I think the folks who have opposed it in the past just don't see the need to come in and repeat themselves every few days. I can see their point, and I think if it ever comes to the point that someone posts a question of some sort and its removed as "banned" it will again become clear that banning serious questions is not going to have the support of the community.Avruch T 16:52, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
George: assuming you're referring to Poetlister, he was banned here for over a year and never held admin rights. I don't see how asking how old someone is will somehow make rouge admins an impossibility. As has been said, they could just lie. It's a useless exercise. how do you turn this on 16:55, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
You're wrong about that. Poetlister held admin rights here and on other projects, he was a bureaucrat and a checkuser elsewhere as well. Avruch T 17:01, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
He never held admin rights as the user Poetlister on this project. Whether he did as another user is another question - did he? I don't know. I know he held rights elsewhere, but he never got higher than the role of "user" here. He was banned for ages here, looking at his block log. how do you turn this on 17:04, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
It isn't really relevant to this discussion, but yes the person held admin rights under another account. The ban was for sockpuppeting, including with an admin account on en.wp. Avruch T 17:10, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
What I'm saying is, asking how old they are isn't going to stop a rouge admin from getting through is it? how do you turn this on 17:14, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
Do you mean rogue or rouge? Je suis une rouge admin. <grin> Age is irrelevant. If someone lacks the requisite qualities, it will show or not regardless of the age of the candidate. There is an age below which a candidate simply could not pass an RFA. That age must differ from person to person. But it should be evident in the gruelling process we now impose on candidates. How articulate and clear thinking would most 6 year olds come across? How many 12 year olds would have the patience to gain the experience? We gain nothing by asking an impertinent question of someone seemingly qualified otherwise. Soon we will be looking at the other end of the age question. Who among us will be the first to be put out to pasture because of encroaching senility? Is there a max age beyond which we would question the ability of a user to think clearly and apply policy effectively? Will failing eyesight become a concern over misinterpreted dif's or a misconstrued edit? Cheers, Dlohcierekim 04:07, 10 September 2008 (UTC)
Frankly, I'm torn. On the one hand, I'm uncomfortable that candidates are being asked questions of a more personal nature; on the other hand, I'm also uncomfortable "banning" people from asking questions just because I don't like their question. I'm sure most of you have noticed that, in the real world, applications for positions of trust pretty much always include an age field as par for the course? Wikipedia seems to be the only large, mainstream organization I've ever seen where "adulthood doesn't matter" is any sort of rallying cry... I'm not saying that's good or bad, but I am saying it's keenly unusual. – Luna Santin (talk) 23:18, 14 September 2008 (UTC)
I have to agree most with this comment here. I also agree with Sandstein's insistence that questions shouldn't be banned for RFAs, each user can use their own criteria. Determining if someone is an adult is a valid question that, though some may not like, still could have a place with many users for determining support. --Banime (talk) 23:45, 19 September 2008 (UTC)

Legality

I would be very interested to see any actual evidence to support the notion that asking questions about such subjects as age or political views is illegal in any jurisdiction of a modern nation. This isn't a job interview, there is no determination of benefits or dispensation of a legal entitlement, so I don't see how in any respect such a question could be illegal. Avruch T 14:44, 9 September 2008 (UTC)

In Quebec, at least, this would be considered a job interview; the position is that of an unpaid volunteer, but there is a selection process. But that wouldn't even be necessary: the laws against discrimination here are very strict and anything which is open to the public has an open application process open to the public may not use any such criteria (mind you, age is a special case insofar as that specific non-discrimination section is tempered with a limitation that laws about age limits are allowed and it is legal to ask one's age in order to apply them (buying booze, for instance) — but that limitation is not relevant here). — Coren (talk) 15:55, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
Editing is open to the public, and doesn't use any such criteria. Adminship is a private matter; we have opted to make it open, but it is still a private matter, and laws like those stated are not applicable. EVula // talk // // 16:00, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
What a horrible reading of the law. Badger Drink (talk) 20:09, 13 September 2008 (UTC)
I just realized a possible cause of confusion: it's important to note that the US Bill of rights, the example so many people are familiar with, gives specific garantees of freedom from the governement. I.e., the governement may not make laws that curtail those freedoms. Many other bills of rights (Quebec's being amongst them) gives to garantees of freedom from anyone; governement, businesses and individuals alike. — Coren (talk) 15:59, 9 September 2008 (UTC)

I seriously doubt that you could apply discrimination laws to adminship on Wikipedia - you have to be deprived of something meaningful, i.e. suffer an injury of legal import, before you can establish a discrimination claim. I don't think that discrimination which could exclude a protected class from adminship on Wikipedia rises to that level. And I don't see how the US constitution enters into it at all. Avruch T 16:41, 9 September 2008 (UTC)

To make myself clear, since I've commented several times in this discussion in the last little while - I'm not against asking such questions in RfA. I don't think the candidates are or should be required to answer them either. I'm not against people taking age into account when deciding whether to support or oppose a candidate, but I don't think it should be the primary attribute they weigh or even a major consideration in the face of a long history of conduct to review on Wikipedia. But it is a factor that fills in holes when the history is brief or debatable. I don't think we should get into prescribing what elements people are allowed to weigh in their judgments, and while I accept that many young editors (including most of the folks posting to this page) find it unfair -- you don't here, or anywhere else, have the right to be free from being offended. Avruch T 16:58, 9 September 2008 (UTC)

I'd agree against you in principle, were it not for the fact that not answering one of those putatively "optional" questions pretty much guarantees sinking your RfA; making them quite mandatory in practice— there is no genuine right to not answer in other words. — Coren (talk) 21:46, 9 September 2008 (UTC)

New proposal

We ban the discussion to ban this perenial topic.---Balloonman PoppaBalloon 17:42, 9 September 2008 (UTC)

It's only perennial because people haven't liked the idea in the past. If we were to set up a poll now, we'd get a much more accurate idea of whether such a ban is wanted by the community. how do you turn this on 17:47, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
  • I strongly oppose banning the discussion. First, as I said above that question is disruptive and it violates user's privacy. I support having a privacy policy against this questions, not just because it crashes RFAs, it's because in the future we may get more discrimination than before, and this needs to be resolved before it gets worst. Macy 23:11, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
  • Agree strongly with Balloonman. Ban the discussion to prevent incessant discussion and endless arguments. Wisdom89 (T / C) 04:29, 10 September 2008 (UTC)
  • I couldn't have put it better myself, Balloonman ;-)    SIS  08:13, 10 September 2008 (UTC)
    • I think banning people from talking about something is a very chilling idea. I can't tell if this proposal is actually serious though. how do you turn this on 13:39, 10 September 2008 (UTC)
      • If you feel banning discussion is harmful, why do you seem to support doing so in the threads above? – Luna Santin (talk) 23:19, 14 September 2008 (UTC)

counter proposal

That we ban the discussion to ban the discussion to ban this perennial topic. <tongue in cheek> Dlohcierekim 03:51, 10 September 2008 (UTC)

counter proposal to the counter proposal to the new proposal

Ban this perennial topic semi-annually. Hiberniantears (talk) 14:36, 10 September 2008 (UTC)

Why? how do you turn this on 14:57, 10 September 2008 (UTC)
Why not? It doesn't have to be semiannually, per se. I'm also open to Tuesday of every third week between 2:33pm and 7:56pm. Hiberniantears (talk) 15:06, 10 September 2008 (UTC)
At this rate someone draw me a mathematical set to make sense of it all... - Mailer Diablo 17:44, 10 September 2008 (UTC)
Can someone give a brief summary of all the above. WP:TLDR.:P Thanks.--Xp54321 (Hello!Contribs) 02:10, 21 September 2008 (UTC)

Stats

Hi all,

As some are aware, over the past few weeks, months, I've been updating the old RfA archives, in doing so for preparation for some interesting stats, located here. These are details of every successful request for adminship going back to February 2004, when the idea of adding the tally was introduced. There are earlier requests, but none of these had numbered votes, so wouldn't fit very well.

It currently needs filling in for a lot of requests, and probably has a lot of mistakes. Anyone who is interested in helping to add/correct various bits of data on it, please do help! Do note that the tallies do not always reflect what's on the actual RfA, since I got reverted attempting to correct those, so please don't fix them. Otherwise, I'd appreciate people updating/correcting their own/nominee's/whoever's entries, so we can get this list accurate and filled.

Some notes, if you intend to assist:

  • All times are in UTC.
  • When determining the day a user became active, I based it on when they started making edits on a daily basis.
  • The Days column is how many days they were active on the day they were promoted. I used this useful tool. Don't include the end date option.
  • Edit counts are either mentioned in the nomination, on the nomination somewhere, or in more recent ones, on the talk page. If it isn't there, it isn't there.
  • For co-nominations, only the first user is included.

I recommend a good internet connection to edit that page as well. Thanks for anyone who helps. Majorly talk 16:16, 16 September 2008 (UTC)

Thank you, Majorly, for your effort. The list is very useful indeed. --Meno25 (talk) 18:19, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
Wow! That's great work, Majorly! weburiedoursecretsinthegarden 19:40, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
Cool. Now for the RfB ones! ;) --Cameron* 19:45, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
RfB should be a lot easier since there's only a few of those. Majorly talk 19:46, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
Great work, Majorly. This'll come in handy :) —Cyclonenim (talk · contribs · email) 20:20, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
Ya, this is interesting. I can imagine, 1000 years in the future, people visiting the "Wikipedia Museum" and looking at a copy of Tillwe's RfA on the wall. They'll say things like, "Look, Mom, Only 25 participants!" Lazulilasher (talk) 20:25, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
I've added this to my list of things to do when closing RfAs. Good work. EVula // talk // // 21:10, 16 September 2008 (UTC)

All I see is some raw data. What statistical analyses are being proposed for this data? --Malleus Fatuorum (talk) 22:04, 16 September 2008 (UTC)

It's not complete yet. I'll be creating stats when it's complete (such as highest support, lowest edit count, shortest time here, who has nominated the most times etc). Majorly talk 22:08, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
That'll no doubt be interesting, but I was more wondering about a statistical analysis of the data. For instance, a correlation between edit count and support votes. On the hypothesis that higher edit counts may be an influence on more editors becoming aware of and becoming involved in the RfA. --Malleus Fatuorum (talk) 22:22, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
Yes, stuff like that can certainly be looked at too. But it can only be done once all the data is there. I'll add a load more data tomorrow hopefully. Majorly talk 22:27, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
I'm fully behind your attempt to get some data together, and I congratulate you for what you've achieved. I look forward to having the full data set available to be mined for hidden treasures. Now, if only you could do a similar thing for the failed RfAs ... :lol: --Malleus Fatuorum (talk) 22:38, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
There's some incomplete data here. In the future, once this is done, I intend to create data for all bureaucrat requests, and some other "significant" RfAs (including SNOW RfAs wouldn't be useful imo). Majorly talk 22:44, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
I have started a replica table for RFBs at User:Useight/RFB Stats. I should have it completed by the end of the evening. Useight (talk) 03:54, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
 Done Well, all the RFBs are in the table, a couple more columns need to be finished. Useight (talk) 04:57, 17 September 2008 (UTC)

Here's an interesting statistic. The English wikipedia has 1,590 administrators administrating 10,455 active users.[1] Police state or what? --Malleus Fatuorum (talk) 23:15, 16 September 2008 (UTC)

You got a problem with police states? Wanna get blocked, mister? In other words, yeah, you're right. Find a good dozen or so editors that haven't screwed up enough, and at the same time, have been here long enough, to pass RFA. RFA sucks, but the quiet, sleuthful, non-controversial (read:non-article writers) will easily get through. We need more of them (me) !!!!. In other words, if you don't have solution, we don't have a problem....Keeper ǀ 76 23:22, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
Malleus, no fair comparing total admins to active accounts; both should be active, or both should be total. Also, keep in mind the 10,455 does not count any IP editors at all. --barneca (talk) 23:28, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
(ec) I was just about to say that. Its a rather inaccurate account for day to day operations. Synergy 23:29, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
OK. The number of active editors has been established; so what do you believe the number of active administrators to be if you don't agree with the figure of 1,590 given? --Malleus Fatuorum (talk) 23:40, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
Betacommand used to have a page about "active admins" somewhere that he updated with his bot, but I don't remember where it was (someone will come up with a link, I'm sure). I seem to vaguely recall that about 1/3 of admins were active within a given month, but that's such a hazy recollection I wouldn't put too much stock in it. The bigger issue is the uncounted number of IP editors in a given month. --barneca (talk) 23:47, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
No, that's not the bigger issue at all, as most of those IPs are dealt with by the active editors. Just look above to see in what low regard that kind of work is held in anyway. A third sounds about right to me, which means that there's one active administrator for every five active editors. Does that seem sensible to you? --Malleus Fatuorum (talk) 23:54, 16 September 2008 (UTC)
It would be 1:20, but I get your point. However, I know as a admin I spend a very serious portion of my time dealing with IP editors (more than half, I suspect, though I haven't checked), so I wouldn't discount them as you do. --barneca (talk) 00:00, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
Your assumption that I discount IP editors is very far from the truth. Take a look at the thread above this one. My assertion is that IP editors are dealt with by and large by non-administrators, apart from the delivery of the final coup de grace of course. --Malleus Fatuorum (talk) 02:51, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
That hasn't been my own experience, can't speak for other admins. Anyway, something is off in this analysis, even if i can't put my finger on where it is, because I know I deal with way more than 20 other editors every month. Plus, admins have to police each other, which is 10 times harder than policing a normal human... --barneca (talk) 03:04, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
I thought admins were janitors, not a security force? --Malleus Fatuorum (talk) 03:14, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
You can't trap me, Malleus, because you're preaching to the choir. I don't buy the janitor metaphor either. --barneca (talk) 03:24, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
Like I said before. If you guys don't like the concept, than change all of the icons and userboxes from a mop to something that makes more sense. Then I'll remove it from my essay. Synergy 03:46, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
(ec)Eh, the janitor metaphor fits in a way, a janitor is supposed to be a behind-the-scenes job that just focuses on keeping things clean, organized, and working smoothly. To that extent, the metaphor fits. But one will be hard pressed to find a metaphor that can accurately describe the job of an administrator, just because the scope of administrative duties is so diverse and sometimes complicated that I think the it is just too unique to be easily compared by a simple metaphor. Just my random thought of the day...:) « Gonzo fan2007 (talkcontribs) @ 03:49, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
Yeah, I can't readily think of many real-life jobs that can be immediately compared with Wikipedia admins, because our admins (ideally, at least) have additional powers, but not really additional authority - in real ife, the two tend to go hand in hand. Perhaps a combination of a janitor and a security guard is the best metaphor - and I'm now thinking of that bit from Scrubs with the "knife-wrench". ~ mazca t | c 09:56, 17 September 2008 (UTC)

(<<<outdent) I think of the "mop" image as an ideal to strive towards: to remind admins of the virtue of humility: not to give undue weight to their own opinions about situations. Coppertwig (talk) 13:36, 17 September 2008 (UTC)

User:Rick Bot updates WP:LOA daily with the number of active admins. Currently it is 976. -SpuriousQ (talk) 12:05, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
The ratio is probably a holdover, to when the connection between "any trusted user" and "administrator" was more close. I think that was the idea to begin with, and while that clearly isn't the way candidates are measured these days it probably has had an effect on the stats proportionate to the length of time it was. Avruch T 01:06, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
Here's another way to phrase the question: if you choose an edit at random, what is the probability that the edit is by an admin? I would guess that admins on average are much more active than the average "active" non-admin, so this question would give a higher ratio of admins to non-admins than just counting the numbers of users. Coppertwig (talk) 13:41, 17 September 2008 (UTC)

Good job on the stats, Majorly. Useful work, interesting to look over the numbers. Oops: I reverted many of the tally changes you made, citing "consensus" at AN/I, then afterwards noticed that the person who closed the AN/I discussion had said "Content dispute should be settled through RFA talk page and dispute resolution - i.e. not through edit-warring. ..." so perhaps my reverting was premature. I think there are various ways to count the votes and that we should leave the closed discussions as they are were(02:14, 21 September 2008 (UTC)), but I wouldn't oppose a notation being added (per Franamax in that discussion) if the original tallies are also left and the new notation is clearly marked as being such, e.g. in square brackets "[Later analysis gives a tally of...]", or outside the top and bottom discussion-closing markers, or on the talk page. I also agree with brenneman in that discussion: it was OK for Majorly to be bold per BRD. Coppertwig (talk) 02:18, 17 September 2008 (UTC)

I meant "leave the closed discussions as they were", not "as they are". In other words, if there's no further comment I expect I'll revert the rest of them too. Coppertwig (talk) 02:14, 21 September 2008 (UTC)

It's fascinating to see all the RfAs in one place like that - good work, Majorly. We had a suggestion at the RfA Review (Now Ongoing) (</plug>) that, rather than setting minimum editcounts or months of service before someone can go to RfA, we simply post the averages of successful candidates. The implication is that editors who are well below those figures are not as likely to succeed as editors at or above them. Obviously, other factors are present - several of the last 50 successful candidates had less than 4000 edits, while the averages were in the 9,000's - but it is interesting to see how stable the averages are over those last 50 candidates. I posted the analysis at User:Ultraexactzz/RfA Success, for reference. UltraExactZZ Claims ~ Evidence 13:00, 18 September 2008 (UTC)

Could you add the edit counts for the ones you analysed to the stats page? Thanks Majorly talk 13:18, 18 September 2008 (UTC)
Done, back to Werdna. I didn't add account creation or first edit dates, since I didn't record them - I just kept a count of the account's age in months, from first edit to nom. UltraExactZZ Claims ~ Evidence 14:09, 18 September 2008 (UTC)

Watchlist notice for RfA Review

Now that the RfA Review is accepting responses to its second questionnaire, I thought it might be a good idea to post a Watchlist notice. Since the previous such notice was discussed here, I want to make sure there's a consensus for the notice. My proposal would be to have a general notice now, for two weeks, followed by a specific "The deadline to submit responses to the RfA Review is..." for a week, and then clear the notice. Thoughts? — Preceding unsigned comment added by Ultraexactzz (talkcontribs) 14:12, September 19, 2008 (UTC)

Have we a deadline? I be wonderin' that for a while. 'Twould be good to put that up first, methinks. Cheers, me hearties. lifebaka++ 19:10, 19 September 2008 (UTC)
The last phase started on 12 June and was closed on 1 July. Since this phase started on 12 September, and there are more questions, I had proposed the idea of closing it on 10 October (4 weeks later, 3 weeks from now). Also, arrrr. UltraExactZZ Claims ~ Evidence 20:58, 19 September 2008 (UTC)

Admin Bots

We could use more input on the proposed admin bot policy at WT:BOT --Chris 02:05, 21 September 2008 (UTC)

AFD Stats for RFA (mainly at least, I can't imagine any other uses)

Someone asked for this a while ago, when I unveiled my RFA tool. I've yet to get into what a user has kept, deleted, etc, but, I've cobbled together a script to reveal what AFD's a user has started. Since someone here asked for this, I thought I'd unveil it here, too. Please see http://toolserver.org/~sql/afd.php . Without going into detecting votes, I'd love input on how I could improve this. SQLQuery me! 04:45, 22 September 2008 (UTC)

I found one problem with it, take Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Arcel in which the result was delete but later another article about a different subject by the same name was created so it lists the result of the AfD as 'keep' instead of what it was; 'delete'. I think you could fix this by checking the deletion of the page between the day the AfD was started and, say, 10 days later to determine the result of the AfD. - Icewedge (talk) 04:53, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
Well, as best as it can tell, it still exists, and is not a redirect, I'm not sure how to detect a merge without looking at the page content... SQLQuery me! 06:31, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
Doesn't seem to do merges either - Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Wikijunior (2nd nomination) shows up as a keep. naerii 05:46, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
See above SQLQuery me! 06:31, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
"Inaccurate" is splet wrnog in the preamble of the output. The output pastes clickably into Excel, but it would be nice if it columnized also. Nice tool - no comments on the actual functionality (unlike the other posters here who have actual substantive comments :). Franamax (talk) 06:22, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
D'oh! I'll go fix the spelling, and, maybe make it table-ized :) Thanks! SQLQuery me! 06:31, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
Not a bad tool at all, could weed out some silly nominators (i.e. that all end up in keep) I guess...Cheers, Casliber (talk · contribs) 06:33, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
I'm gonna see if I can manage to get a tool running that can sorta detect keeps and deletes. Xclamation point 11:02, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
I'd say lose the percentages. Just plain misleading despite your sensible disclaimer at the top. Of the four "probably kept" at mine, one was a recreation with entirely different material, two were procedural listings of incomplete nominations, and one was kept, giving me a dismal 64% deletion rate. Good tool in general, though. Darkspots (talk) 11:44, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
Actually seeing how a few nomination profiles goes may be interesting, especially if itemised at the bottom anyway. Also voting ones as well :) Cheers, Casliber (talk · contribs) 11:50, 22 September 2008 (UTC)

Moar Admin Bots

Wikipedia:An#Approval_of_FA_Template_Protection_Bot, just incase you haven't seen it yet --Chris 12:14, 22 September 2008 (UTC)