[04:30:46] Hi all, I face issue on Dark Mode on Wikipedia Mobile App specifically on Wikipedia Indonesia, what should I do? [04:32:46] you could write a bug report. and drop the link here when done. https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/How_to_report_a_bug (re @affandymurad: Hi all, I face issue on Dark Mode on Wikipedia Mobile App specifically on Wikipedia Indonesia, what should I do?) [04:33:52] Thanks @jeremy_b (re @jeremy_b: you could write a bug report. and drop the link here when done. https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/How_to_report_a_bug) [05:52:14] Hi all, here is my report https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T408313 (https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T408313). Thanks a lot [18:11:04] When working with interlanguage links in Wikidata, is there anything indicating if a subject has a "home" article? [18:11:04] Like: "Angela Merkel" would be on de.wiki and "London" would be on en.wiki. [18:11:23] No. (re @Danny: When working with interlanguage links in Wikidata, is there anything indicating if a subject has a "home" article? [18:11:24] Like: "Angela...) [18:13:33] (Also, Wikipedias are not national.) (re @Danny: When working with interlanguage links in Wikidata, is there anything indicating if a subject has a "home" article? [18:13:34] Like: "Angela...) [18:15:07] That is correct. Some subjects will still have a stronger ties to a given language. [18:15:22] Anyone has ideas on how to find the best article between all the different language versions? [18:27:18] What is your criteria for "best article"? (re @Danny: Anyone has ideas on how to find the best article between all the different language versions?) [18:35:45] It would be a deterministic way of selecting one article from the different language versions as the one that is likely to be of the highest quality. [18:35:46] If there was a concept of a "home" wiki, that would be simple with the assumption that e.g. Polish would be more invested in "Warsaw" and therefore have a high-quality article on the subject. [18:35:48] So I am looking for alternate ideas in lieu of this. [18:43:15] You could check length as a proxy of the quality but obviously it's not perfect [18:45:05] I don't think such a way truly exist (quality isn't exactly objective). For example, which of the articles about Greta Thunberg is best? Your theory about home article would give Swedish, and it might be correct, but I think you need to sit down and look really closely to see if the English one is better or not. (re @Danny: It would be a deterministic way of [18:45:05] selecting one article [18:45:06] from the different language versions as the one that is likely to be of...) [18:47:20] Right, and potentially look at edit history size if there are multiple contenders, that is one way 🙂 (re @Ladsgroup: You could check length of the page as a proxy of the quality but obviously it's not perfect) [18:48:17] I am not trying to find perfect, but with e.g. "Greta Thunberg" Swedish would be a good guess. And one that would satisfy what I am looking for. (re @Jan_ainali: I don't think such a way truly exist (quality isn't exactly objective). For example, which of the articles about Greta Thunberg ...) [18:48:25] Yeah. That could be a "guess" but in many cases it can be even quite controversial to pick one (re @Danny: Right, and potentially look at edit history size if there are multiple contenders, that is one way 🙂) [18:49:19] But if I understand your use case based on what you described to me in CEE, I think page length and edit history would be good enough [18:52:55] I think I have the answers that I need to think more on this, seems like it will be hard to make deterministic. [19:04:48] also, on Wikidata it's possible to tag the quality of an article (see the interwiki links on Q90, "funnily" it's not a good article in French but it is in some other languages) (re @Danny: I think I have the answers that I need to think more on this, seems like it will be hard to make deterministic.) [19:16:18] Hmm, is this the binary ribbon vs. no ribbon next to the individual languages? [20:10:22] you can see it that way, but there is a actually 13 badges, see list here : https://w.wiki/FpHz (most don't apply to Wikipedia articles tho) (re @Danny: Hmm, is this the binary ribbon vs. no ribbon next to the individual languages?) [20:21:13] Thanks, I will keep this in mind 👌