Forum:Where to use cite source

Opening post
As Forum:Cite source, a new citation template has concluded, has been rolled out and implemented on many pages, with little issue other than a few bug fixes and a visual change or two. For citations, this template works perfectly, living up to the expectation set by the initial forum, and all is good. I've nothing to change, in this thread, about the template.

What I do want to do, however, is clarify where to use it; this, unfortunately, has seemed to have been glossed over in the original thread.

How I saw the suggested usage of the template is when we want to — operative word here; it's in the title of the template — cite information. So instead of using (PROSE: The Time Traveller's Almanac)

We would instead use PROSE: )

But in practise, I've been observing others use the template in places that, in my opinion, think unnecessary. So think of this thread as my ideas on where to use and where not to use. Please note that the examples I use below aren't meant to be a slight or criticism of any of the editors who used the template!

Infoboxes
As seen in this revision of Doctor Strange, has been used in the  |appearances=  field of.

Now... I don't think this works for several reasons.


 * First of all, we aren't citing anything, we're listing off sources. I don't think a list needs cite source.
 * Second of all, this adds visual clutter to the infobox. Not only does it look, in my opinion, distracting, when you expand the citation it stretches the length of the infobox and all the text that is revealed is forced into multiple line breaks as the infobox is too narrow to display a full sentence.
 * Third of all, it doesn't match the autolinking fields of  |first mention=  and  |first= , so only some of the sources in infoboxes has cite source and some don't, leaving it all very inconsistent.

Image captions
Now, technically, the usage of in image captions, as a citation to in-universe text, is using the template in a way generally describable as correct. But I feel, that, like the second reason I gave for infoboxes, this doesn't quite work. It looks cluttered, it stretches the image caption pushing the paragraph(s) of text around it, the area is too small to display a full sentence so there are lots of line breaks, etc.

Out of universe sections
Well, hasn't been used in out of universe sections — that I know of — but given this thread, I want to future proof the usage of the template.

If we're referencing a source in plain paragraphs of text, for example:


 * First, the establishing shots of the camera zooming from space onto Rose's alarm clock at 48 Bucknall House after the opening titles in the first episode of series one, Rose, (reused in the pre-titles scene in the 2005 Christmas Special The Christmas Invasion, this time transitioning to a bauble Jackie picks up at home) shows the geography of Kennington, including the Brandon Estate, the Oval and Kennington Park.

We shouldn't need to do:


 * First, the establishing shots of the camera zooming from space onto Rose's alarm clock at 48 Bucknall House after the opening titles in the first episode of series one,, (reused in the pre-titles scene in the 2005 Christmas Special , this time transitioning to a bauble Jackie picks up at home) shows the geography of Kennington, including the Brandon Estate, the Oval and Kennington Park.

I feel, given the out of universe perspective, we can give any necessary context to the reference of a source (e.g. "first episode of series one", "2005 Christmas Special", etc.). Cite source is a bit redundant and unnecessary.

Conclusion
I don't expect people will fully agree with me, but it is a small issue I want to establish some ground rules on. We've figured out how to use cite source, but not where, so this thread should hopefully clear that up.

Discussion
I think it is absolutely vital that it be used in image caption: knowing when in a given book the image comes from is as useful as knowing where a given tidbit of information comes from. It even pairs beautifully with the recent reform authorising the use of production photos from missing episodes: this can now be specified via, preventing any confusion about the image being an actual screenshot.

Setting that aside, I don't understand the rest of your objections. The collapsed "+" is only a single character more than the titles would otherwise include, so I find it rather confusing to hold that it "clutters" the infoboxes unduly. If people want to expand the collapsible, that's their own choice; personally I could often imagine doing so. But if it bothers you, no one's forcing you to. The fact that "first" and "first mention" are autolinking is a fair point, though, so I might support banning it from infoboxes for consistency's sake. Maybe. (The flipside is that it allows us to sort series data and such that are visible in new-style, tabular lists of appearances, so there's consistency in another respect there…) But I don't at all see the problem in using it in BTS plaintext. Sure, you could also include some details in the prose itself, but that just forces you to make the text wordier, instead of the data being automatically there if you want it, but hidden if you don't. I don't think it should be universalised in BTS text the way we hope to make it for ordinary citations, of course, but the option should very much exist. Scrooge MacDuck ⊕ 16:07, 26 August 2023 (UTC)


 * It would be possible to add to "first" and "first mention" fields while retaining the autolinking ability and any SMW data collection.  Bongo50   ☎  17:27, 26 August 2023 (UTC)


 * Well, as I said above, the infobox is so narrow the sentence of text is forced to have several line breaks, all while extending the length of the infobox. I feel it is a unnecessary, especially as one a lot of pages we have subpages for appearances. 18:01, 26 August 2023 (UTC)
 * …What's wrong with line-breaks? Especially in these mobile-phone days, people are very used to there being line-breaks in text. As for making the infobox taller, again, that's only when you expand the collapsible. Presumably you'd click it to read the contents of the collapsible, then close it again before you resumed browsing the page, so design issues caused by the infobox being taller would never actually bother you while you were actually reading the rest of the page. Scrooge MacDuck ⊕ 18:19, 26 August 2023 (UTC)


 * I'll just see about presenting an image to better illustrate what I mean.
 * It's downright messy. It's an ocean of information with borders and jarring line breaks between forenames, surnames, other names, etc etc etc.
 * I understand your reasoning about using in images, but I still think it looks messy.  19:01, 26 August 2023 (UTC)
 * *shrugs* This looks completely normal and unobtrusive to me. Though even then, I'd also note that you've opened all the collapsibles at once, which probably makes things worse. The expected user experience is to open one collapsible at a time (like checking one footnote at a time in a physical book). Scrooge MacDuck ⊕ 19:22, 26 August 2023 (UTC)
 * I agree with the point on Out of Universe stuff, but beyond that, I'm ambivalent. Time God Eon ☎  23:59, 26 August 2023 (UTC)
 * I don't like the OOU stuff, but this is a larger problem I have with people treating those sections as too similar to IU ones. (So when people say stuff like "PROSE: Lungbarrow" in a BTS section that's annoying.) I don't know if this should be disqualifying, and I'm even leaning towards not. But fundamentally I don't see an issue with the usage in, at the very least, image captions. Najawin ☎  00:15, 27 August 2023 (UTC)
 * If you'll allow me to turn that on its head, @Najawin, I actually think the somewhat-unseemly use of prefixes in BTS section is actually something that might help us remedy. I think it comes about from a wish to quickly contextualise a source the reader might not have heard of — "Lungbarrow, being one of the spin-off novels, not a TV story you've forgotten or a BF audio you haven't bought" — without having to spend half the sentence itself spelling it out in a way that might give more emphasis to that context than is warranted. Being able to simply talk about "", without the prefix, in the course of a BTS sentence, would be a very elegant solution. The collapsible contextualisation is there for a curious, but there's no longer an all-caps medium descriptor breaking the flow of the prose. Thoughts? Scrooge MacDuck ⊕ 01:10, 27 August 2023 (UTC)


 * No, you're ascribing far too much thought to this editing habit. It's people confusing citing something for an IU claim with mentioning something in an OOU section. I've had to quote T:PREFIX to explain the difference and it's still something that's not obvious to many people. But, again, I'm a reasonable pluralist wrt editing styles. I'm not in any way convinced that we should forbid cite source in BTS sections. Just slightly wary given this context. Najawin ☎  05:10, 27 August 2023 (UTC)


 * I agree with everything Scrooge has said so far, and would like to note that they are correct about some editors using prefixes in OOU sections to try to give context, and this being fixed by - that is, I've done such things with such reasoning, so it's true in at the very least one case. Cousin Ettolrahc  ☎  07:25, 27 August 2023 (UTC)

Since Forum:Temporary forums/Lists of Appearances, on separate "list of appearances" pages we display information regarding medium, author, series, and release date. For characters who haven't had enough appearances to merit a separate page, it would be nice if we could include this information in their "list of appearances" sections as well. And seems like the perfect way to do that. I particularly appreciate Bongo's offer to autoify the "first" and "only" variables, since I've always thought it odd that we don't include prefixes for those – isn't medium of first appearance as or more important than those of the second and so on?

I agree that with User:Najawin that I often cringe when I see "PROSE: Lungbarrow" in the middle of a sentence in an out-of-universe section. I never know whether to attribute it to muscle memory or a desire to present one atom of context! In cases where the latter makes sense, I often find myself rewriting it as "Marc Platt's 1997 Virgin New Adventures novel Lungbarrow", however cringe-inducing that formulation may be to the strictest grammarians among us. "" is a more than welcome alternative for conveying all the same information in a more compact and consistent format, and I've already found myself putting it to good use in a few BtS sections. So here's how I would rewrite Epsilon's example, now that we have : Omitting the in-text explanations that Rose was in series one and that The Christmas Invasion was the 2005 Christmas Special detracts nothing from the sentence's point; in fact, it streamlines the prose for readers familiar with those facts. But for less familiar readers, the template still provides the intended context and more: for instance, that both stories using the establishing shot were written by Russell T Davies. It's the best of both worlds. – n8 (☎) 16:30, 30 August 2023 (UTC)
 * First, the establishing shots of the camera zooming from space onto Rose's alarm clock at 48 Bucknall House after the opening titles in (reused in the pre-titles scene of, this time transitioning to a bauble Jackie picks up at home) shows the geography of Kennington, including the Brandon Estate, the Oval and Kennington Park.