[00:04:26] https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q108412226 <- I think, an actual legitimate use of "of" [00:14:25] Specifically, I mean, as qualifiers to cause/effect type statements [04:46:33] !admin@wikidata please protect [[Q64005700]]. it is getting hijacked again [04:46:34] 10[1] 10https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q64005700 [05:17:40] {{done}} for a month. ~~~~ [05:17:40] You rule, Lozenge! [06:11:52] if only there was a tool... lol (to set the relationships between items for 'a topic', it's category, and it's list [06:14:13] yes, I think, there is one, it's sitting cross-legged on my couch cushion [06:14:21] er, I mean I know [13:39:54] Hello, on the german wikipedia-Page, searching for the item "Stroop" results in two entries as a family name for "John Ridley Stroop" and "Jürgen Stroop". The wikidata query SELECT * WHERE { ?PersonA wdt:P734 wd:Q21508811. } however gave only the finding of "Jürgen Stroop". What might explain this difference? - Thanks in advance. [14:01:06] John Ridley Stroop has no family name set [14:46:55] Ok, thanks for the prompt answer! [22:03:47] (sigh) Hopefully I'm not the only person who burns 'official website' 'imported from' 'whatever wikipedia' down.... I mean, actually click on it, add whatever language it's in, doesn't generally need a source (usually self-evident) [22:04:40] 'imported from' on something like that just tells me no actual brain has looked at it [22:06:21] Actually setting P4656 (Wikimedia import URL) also makes people's life a lot easier, "it's somewhere on Wikipedia" is pretty vague. [22:08:27] (I'm not insulting people by saying 'no actual brain', I'm referring to a bot) [22:45:00] https://www.alberta.ca/adult-learning-system.aspx <- something like this is nice to find (for messing with them)... better than "random" actual names for figuring out who gives what level of degree (and who is publically funded) [22:45:09] (there is a list) [22:45:57] Be nice if those classes are copied in other provinces. [22:47:34] https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q108415443 (derived statements) [23:11:55] FWIW, if you look at the website of an organization that is a part of another organization (like, randomly, some institute at a university), and you look at the copyright statement, and it's in the organization's own name, that means the organization is a 'legal person' (a corporation), so it's not "part of (P361)" it is "subsidiary (P355)" [23:13:40] (does not prove the inverse, not a corporation, tho)