On Sat, 29 May 2004 15:56:52 +0200, Ronny Raschkowan
<wiki(a)kopfrechnung.de> wrote:
Why all this: Most of latin languages have most words
with lowercase
letters (ex.: german, french, english, ....). In the Wikipedia, it is
not a big problem to have only uppercase letters. But in a dictionary,
it's very important to have and to see a / the difference between upper-
and lowercase words.
In the en:Wiktionary, the casing of a word is shown inline in the page, on
a line above the definitions that also shows grammatical information on a
word, such as its gender or principal parts:
http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Malaysia
http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Harangue
http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Magicus
I think also that having separately-cased forms of words on different
pages might overemphasize the difference between some senses of a word,
where some may be capitalized and some not:
http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Cynosure
Basically I disagree with case-sensitivity in page titles because I think
it is better for the title of an article to be in title case. On the
en:Wiktionary we go out of our way to capitalize page titles, and use
redirects for languages the wiki software isn't smart enough to capitalize
automatically... if this case-sensitivity is enabled it will be a lot more
work.
The only exception I could see is words like "isiZulu" where the proper
title casing is not the initial character of the word.
--Muke Tever, [[en:User:Muke]]
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