[08:19:29] preach (re @mahir256: since ideally all "demonym" values should go on lexemes instead) [12:11:15] Very nice! (re @mahir256: ) [16:05:36] Is anyone actually interested in trying out Ninai/Udiron for themselves? (There's a real possibility that things I change/improve later won't interest anyone, so I'd like to avoid that as much as possible by instead targeting what others might like to do with it.) (re @DennisPriskorn: Very nice!) [16:07:34] (Related: it apparently is also still the case that discussions of abstract articles are largely hypothetical rather than concrete, and my attempts at reducing this hypothetical nature since WikidataCon are currently failing.) [16:09:44] (Showing নিকোলা how I write renderers for Breton in a video chat is one thing; my watching him write code using Ninai and identifying shortcomings for later improvement is of an entirely different sort of activity which has not happened yet.) [16:12:18] It would be interesting to start creating different lead sentences for articles, very similar to your last example. "First name Last name ({P569} - {P570}) was a {citizenship} {occupation}." And try that for perhaps cities, taxons and others as well. [17:09:45] I have begun modularizing person lead sentences a bit (haven't yet decided how to add birth/death date to the returned constructor) : https://tools-static.wmflabs.org/bridgebot/c9265ab1/screenshot_2022_02_04_11_07_44_469160187.png [17:10:51] Note also that "C.country_of_citizenship" and "C.occupation" are just the strings "P27" and "P106", so the "Setf" lines in the screenshot are now basically pseudo-QuickStatements syntax [17:16:05] (I would have attempted to describe Jan, but again we lack "schwedisch" and "Lektor", and I haven't added support for demonyms in Swedish yet)