User talk:Tommy Kronkvist/Archive 2007

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is an archive of a Wikipedia user's talk page. It is customary on Wikipedia to periodically archive old discussions on a talk page when it becomes too large. Bulky talk pages may be difficult to navigate and may contain obsolete discussion. Archiving one's own user talk page is optional – however preferred over deletion, so that past discussions can be easily searched. It is customary not to change any old posts in an archive. For new posts, please use the user's current Talk page instead. Thanks.

Regional variants of English[edit]

Please don't "correct" English spellings to American spellings, as you did here. Thanks. Guettarda 21:50, 5 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Regarding Robert John Lechmere Guppy, I only made the change to avoid a redirect, not primarily to "Americanise" the text. I guess a better way would have been to change [[palaeontology]] into [[Paleontology|palaeontology]] instead, thus fixing the redirect while maintaining the original spelling. My mistake, and I’m sorry: it will not happen again.
Tommy Kronkvist (talk)|(contribs)

Moving pages.[edit]

Please don't do copy/paste moves as you did with Chronology of world oil market events (1970-2005) as this is a violation of the GFD license - use the "move" function (between "history" and "watch") instead. Please undo any other copy/paste moves you've done, and get violation pages speedy deleted.

Please also refrain from using characters in article titles that aren't on keyboards when another is acceptable. -- Jeandré, 2007-10-07t13:15z

Sorry about the license issue – I didn't know that a copy&paste within the site would violate the GFDL. I do now, so it will not happen again: also, I haven't done any other than that single one, so there aren't any more to undo.
As for en dashes in titles, I follow Wikipedia's Manual of Style regarding en dashes in page names, which discourages the use of hyphens as a disjunction between years, and states that an "en dash may be used in a page name". ~ Tommy Kronkvist (talk|contribs) 05:43, 26 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]