Feminist SF Wiki talk:Categorization: Difference between revisions

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--[[User:Liz Henry|Liz Henry]] 16:44, 25 April 2007 (PDT)
--[[User:Liz Henry|Liz Henry]] 16:44, 25 April 2007 (PDT)
Okay, more succinctly:
"that the category system works best when there are a fairly small number of categories on each article (<10 for sure)."
Why?
--[[User:Liz Henry|Liz Henry]] 16:45, 25 April 2007 (PDT)

Revision as of 15:45, 25 April 2007

I propose Category:Folk & Popular Works for deletion because I created and relinked the relevant pages to Category:Folk and popular works. I've also added this proposal to an active admin's talk page in case no admins are watching this article. Contributor 18:18, 4 March 2007 (PST)

General categorization discussion

For myself (and until just lately User:Ide Cyan and I have been the main ones hanging out here for a while, so it's been a bit of an echo chamber for the two of us and our opinions), I've been puzzling over problems with category system and other ways of organizing, and what is the most useful way to use the mediawiki category system and other types of organizing. I started some categorization guidelines and discussion questions at FSFwiki:Categorization and FSFwiki talk:Categorization/Defaults to figure out how & when to use things as keywords versus hierarchical schema; how to handle questions of what are "defaults" and assumed (like on this wiki the default maybe should be women, but then is it weird to not have categories for "women writers"?)

... I think after a lot of experimentation I am leaning towards largely only using categories for either (a) hierarchical organization schemes that are obvious & discrete (like "year of birth") or (b) (still thinking through how this might work) limited numbers of discrete tags (like "Earthsea"). After following a lot of discussions on wikipedia, I've been figuring out that the category system works best when there are a fairly small number of categories on each article (<10 for sure). So if categories are used as tags, i *think* it will work best with a pretty discrete system of important keyword tags. These I have started putting at Category:Tags -- we could have many more, but I think a free-for-all in the classic tagging/folksonomy style won't work. (But even there have developed a bit of a subhierarchy, because set up "language tags" to tag things as written in whatever language.) The fact is, that the category system is not actually tags, so it can't generate weighted tag clouds or anything like that. It's sole built-in functionality is the creation of alphabetized lists and the ability to embed hierarchy. So, I think it's just limited in its usefulness. Think of it more as a controlled keyword list than a tagging system.

... In other words I'm thinking of categories as principally useful not for descriptive purposes but just for sorting ... I've been trying descriptive stuff, but I think it rapidly builds up into a big set of works, and the grey areas cause problems. For instance on Category:Works featuring female-only worlds, what about works in which men are introduced? or societies that are all-woman like amazons but there are men in the "world"? tags work fine for this sort of thing because if it's non-intuitive then most people won't apply it and the tagging software will incorporate that into the ranking. but categories are a binary, on or off -- there's no relevancy ranking or weighting. ... similarly, we can create Category:Writers for young adults, but if the writer is also a writer for adults and for children then boom we have three age-related audience categories, and that doesn't include any of the numerous other potential categories for that person (her three different ethnic heritages; her languages written in; her gender; her genres; her awards received; etc.). So you might think so what, let a million flowers bloom, but then it turns out that actually to use those categories from the author's page itself, they're useless when more than about 10 -- because they're not tags that weight by size or some other fashion if they are applied in many ways. ... And as an index of those individual features, the categories are less useful than lists because they can't explain nuances, or offer any way of sorting other than strictly alphabetical, etc.

For large swaths of intercategory stuff (books with X feature written by X kind of writer; X genre written by X writer; etc.) and for questions of tricky defaults (all female characters; all characters of color; no male writers; etc.) I think I'm coming to the conclusion that the category system isn't the best way to go -- it just lacks flexibility. So I'm using lists instead and also infoboxes -- these I think end up being much much more flexible. So a list of "Women SF writers of color" I think will be much more useful than the various categories that are starting to pop up (see Category:Writers by ethnicity, Category:Writers by nationality, etc. ... I just copied of List of female SF writers of color from the fsf.org website; it's woefully out of date & unlinked but it's a start. (Was your idea of Category:Women of color supposed to just be real women? also characters? what? I'd say, make a list of what you envision. redundant and overlapping lists are easy to deal with over time as we figure out what the scope should be.)

The other thing I've realized is that it is a PAIN IN THE ASS to unreconstruct categories if we decide that we went down a wrong direction. I had thought "oh why bother with wikipedia's capitalization rules" but then over time realized that i should have taken advantage of the years of experience with mediawiki software that wikipedians have accumulated and just fucking followed their example on that matter. once i figured it out there were over >1000 instances of one type of category and many, many more -- i'm still fixing them. so going slow on categories is GOOD because they seem so easy & trivial that people just start using them. they're easy to do, but a PITA to undo. whereas lists can be moved, split up, redone, retitled, edited, etc., very easily. ... and by using lists & infoboxes to start with, we can then ultimately figure out which kinds of labeling/tagging/sorting would be really essential and useful as categories. It's not about deprecating the value of the information embedded in potential categories/tags, but about realizing the limitations of the category system and figuring out other ways to embed the vital information. Categories work well for some kinds of information, and we have to figure out other ways (lists and infoboxes, and the search feature, what links here, and related changes, for now).

Hmm almost none of this was about race. which is fine, because these questions aren't really limited to any one label or identity but are important for figuring out how the technology works and is best suited for our labeling & identifying needs. --LQ 07:23, 25 April 2007 (PDT)

Hmmm okay - I know you are way more experienced in Mediawiki than I am. I tend to think in terms of tags. And the Category structure still confuses the hell out of me. I tend to want to make entries, tag them, and then construct lists from the resulting lists of pages that come up when I look for the stuff tagged with what I want to find.

For me it's also about how I search and how and where I make new pages. So I went to search for women of color etc. and could not find nearly anything and therefore started a list and a category, thinking that the category would develop out. Even after your explanation I don't understand why no category of women of color, but yes a category fo "african american writers" which I did end up finding? Would it be so bad to have that category? for example I would not mind having people tagged with multiple identifiers... So what if there ends up being a page of 300 "white writers" when you look at them as a category? Would that be so bad? I was trying to think in terms of being a person of color and just as I go to books and look up "women" I wanted there to be multiple pathways to finding that information.

I wish we had free tagging *and* your hierarchy in place simultaneously.

--Liz Henry 16:44, 25 April 2007 (PDT)

Okay, more succinctly: "that the category system works best when there are a fairly small number of categories on each article (<10 for sure)."

Why?

--Liz Henry 16:45, 25 April 2007 (PDT)