User:Tony1: Difference between revisions

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====Transform your Wikipedia experience: attractive new wikilink formatting====
====Transform your Wikipedia experience: attractive new wikilink formatting====
Linking, which is often overused on Wikipedia, looks seriously messy in densely linked text and makes reading more difficult. You can very easily change the display colour of links on your monitor from the current gaudy blue to a more subtle shade called midnightblue. Try it and see if you like it. It will take two minutes; here's how.
Linking, which is often overused on Wikipedia, looks seriously messy in densely linked text and makes reading more difficult. You can very easily change the display colour of links on your monitor from the current gaudy blue to a more subtle shade called midnightblue. Try it and see if you like it. It will take two minutes; here's how.
*(1) First, choose how subtle you want your links to look: [[User:Tony1/Colours_for_linking|here's a comparison]] over whole paragraphs of the current default colour with <font color=darkblue>four</font color> <font color=#120A8F>other,</font color> <font color=#000080>decreasingly</font color> <font color=#003366>bright</font color> <font color=#003153>colours</font color>.
*(1) First, choose how subtle you want your links to look: [[User:Tony1/Colours_for_linking|here's a comparison]] over whole paragraphs of the current default colour with [[four]] <font color=#120A8F>other,</font color> <font color=#000080>decreasingly</font color> <font color=#003366>bright</font color> <font color=#003153>colours</font color>.
*(2) Create your own user stylesheet, if you haven’t done so already: <code><nowiki>[[User:YourUsername/monobook.css]]</nowiki></code>. Here is <code><nowiki>[[User:Tony1/monobook.css]]</nowiki>)</code>; take a look at [[User:Tony1/monobook.css|mine]].
*(2) Create your own user stylesheet, if you haven’t done so already: <code><nowiki>[[User:YourUsername/monobook.css]]</nowiki></code>. Here is <code><nowiki>[[User:Tony1/monobook.css]]</nowiki>)</code>; take a look at [[User:Tony1/monobook.css|mine]].
*(3) At the top of that page, paste in the following, starting with “a” and ending with the curly bracket: a { color: #003366 } (this one is for midnight blue, the second darkest—simply replace that code with the one that suits you on the comparison page).
*(3) At the top of that page, paste in the following, starting with “a” and ending with the curly bracket: a { color: #003366 } (this one is for midnight blue, the second darkest—simply replace that code with the one that suits you on the comparison page).

Revision as of 02:00, 29 July 2007

This editor is not an administrator and does not wish to be one.
ABCThis user supports Australian Broadcasting Corporation radio, television and online services.

About me

I’m a professional editor and research consultant. My doctoral dissertation was in the psychology of music reading, including the roles of working memory and eye movement. I work with researchers and academics in their preparation of grant applications for competitive research funding. Most of my clients are staff at the University of Sydney who are applying for funding from the Australian Research Council and the National Health and Medical Research Council. This typically involves the negotiation of text in the areas of engineering, chemistry, physics, biology and information technology, although some of my work brings me into contact with a much broader spectrum of research.

My first career was in the European art music of the 18th and 19th centuries, specialising in the compositional techniques that underly the main styles—how acoustics, culture and psychology intersect in harmony and voice leading—and the psychological and musculoskeletal patterns that support excellent performance, particularly on keyboard. That career crashed and burned seven years ago, a matter of great sadness to me.

I’m a keen advocate of Michael Halliday’s systemic functional grammar, as embodied in MAK Halliday, Introduction to functional grammar, 2nd ed, Arnold, London, 1995. Traditional grammar sucks; while it might be helpful in the early stages of learning a foreign language, the parsing of written words into inflexible categories doesn't help people to write better. What does help is a knowledge of the functional relationships between speakers/writers and their listeners/readers as embodied in the grammar. But it's damned complicated: theme and rheme; the given and the new; hypotactic and paratactic clauses; mood; texture; cohesion; tone groups, and much more. It's a whole science of how the language fits together on many levels. And I can't claim more than amateur status.

I enjoy the teamwork aspect of working on Wikipedian text, and I’m interested that the NPOV thing works so well. I like the way in which the project brings anglophones into a relatively homogenous international community to share their wonderful language.


Featured article candidates

I encourage contributors to significantly improve the quality of FACs, particularly the standard of their prose; for this purpose, I tend to hang around the FAC and FAR/C rooms. Where I feel motivated, I lend a hand to improve nominated articles on the list; however, sometimes I just take a sample from the candidate article and critique it to show the authors why they should already have arranged for a thorough copy-edit. I’ve written a guide for the improvement of writing and editing skills in relation to Criterion 1a of the featured article criteria (‘compelling, even brilliant’ prose); the guide is accompanied by exercises in identifying and eliminating redundancy in prose, and in constructing effective paragraphs, sentences and lists, and many other aspects of writing and editing. I like other people to improve my prose, by the way.


Transform your Wikipedia experience: attractive new wikilink formatting

Linking, which is often overused on Wikipedia, looks seriously messy in densely linked text and makes reading more difficult. You can very easily change the display colour of links on your monitor from the current gaudy blue to a more subtle shade called midnightblue. Try it and see if you like it. It will take two minutes; here's how.

  • (1) First, choose how subtle you want your links to look: here's a comparison over whole paragraphs of the current default colour with four other, decreasingly bright colours.
  • (2) Create your own user stylesheet, if you haven’t done so already: [[User:YourUsername/monobook.css]]. Here is [[User:Tony1/monobook.css]]); take a look at mine.
  • (3) At the top of that page, paste in the following, starting with “a” and ending with the curly bracket: a { color: #003366 } (this one is for midnight blue, the second darkest—simply replace that code with the one that suits you on the comparison page).
  • (4) Then go to your user preferences. Make sure that you’ve selected “MonoBook (default)” under Skin, and “Never underline links” under Miscellaneous.

Empty your cache, and you're done. To use another colour, simply replace “midnightblue” with the name of your choice; remove the pasted text to return to the default. Feedback on this is welcome on my talk page. I'd like to see WikiMedia adopt this as the default colour, and decouple the date-autoformatting and linking functions: it's ridiculous that dates have to be blue links to activate the formatting mechanicsm.

My heroes

JS Bach, the 18th-century German composer; Michael Tippett, the 20th-century English composer; Patrick White, the Australian novelist; and Geoffrey Miller, the American evolutionary psychologist. These are the people whose work continues to have the deepest impact on me.


My pet hates

  • Display consumption
  • Unregulated television and radio advertising
  • Supernatural religion
  • Doof-doof

Patrick White

I run a Yahoo group for lovers of the work of Patrick White (1912–90), one of the great novelists of the 20th century, who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1973. The Australian Broadcasting Corporation runs an excellent online resource packed with text, images and audio streams of his voice here.

Featured article removal candidates
Pokémon Channel Review now
Borobudur Review now
William Wilberforce Review now
Polio Review now
Concerto delle donne Review now
The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask Review now
Geography of Ireland Review now
Edward III of England Review now
USS Wisconsin (BB-64) Review now
Doolittle (album) Review now
The Encephalon Cross
For commendable contributions to the featured medical article Asthma.
The Original Reviewer's Award for Tony, in appreciation of his outstanding efforts in striving to maintain the quality of articles going though FAC. — Ambuj Saxena (talk) 12:53, 16 September 2006 (UTC)
I =Nichalp «Talk»=, award Tony this Barnstar for his great work copyediting the Bhutan article. =Nichalp «Talk»= 12:51, September 9, 2005 (UTC)
Enjoy this Barnstar of Diligence for raising standards across the board. Keep at it.
A Barnstar!
The Original Barnstar

A bit random, but I want to award you with a barnstar for your contributions in User:Tony1/How to satisfy Criterion 1a, which—ironically—I thought should be something like the "featured guide" if there was such thing. :D
Jared Hunt August 20, 2006, 16:14 (UTC)
I hereby award Tony1 the Barnstar of Diligence for his excellent copyediting of the Encyclopædia Britannica article. Keep up the good work! --NauticaShades 10:18, 22 October 2006 (UTC)
osx This user contributes using Mac OS X.