Hi Fabian,
I can honestly say I had never seen an article like "Timeline of architectural styles 1000–present" But even with that one and removing everything I could interpret as hidden or code generated I wound up with a lot more than 95 bytes:
6000BC–1000AD • 1000–1750 • 1750–1900 1900–Present Architectural style Architecture timeline Julian calendar Gregorian calendar Neoclassical Georgian Sicilian Baroque English Baroque Rococo Palladianism Jacobean Baroque Elizabethan Mannerism Spanish Colonial Manueline Tudor High Renaissance Renaissance Perpendicular Period Brick Gothic Decorated Period Early English Period Gothic Norman Romanesque Byzantine Roman Ancient Greek Ancient Egyptian Sumerian Neolithic
So my suspicion is that part of the reason that you and Aaron are getting different results is because your methods of extracting display bytes are different. To get just 95 bytes from this article I think that the program you used you would have had to strip out at least some of the linked words.
Regards
Jonathan
On 6 August 2013 14:55, Floeck, Fabian (AIFB) [email protected] wrote:
@Jonathan: Good point, but I'm actually not stripping the content of tables, just the mark-up of the tables. (Also I leave the whitespaces in and count them, just remove line breaks, as the cleaning leaves a lot of empty lines) I checked the results manually in over 50 cases and what my script outputs is almost exactly what you get when you take the article text of a page and copy and paste it into a text editor or Word from the browser by hand, including tables and infoboxes. So it finds exactly what I wanted, the readable, displayed text portion of an article. Remember that I said I also remove "Disambiguation" articles (indicated by "disambiguation" in the article name or category name. Reason being that I wanted articles with running text). They probably have a higher correlation as they don't use templates very much I think. As for the remaining difference in the corr coefficients, it could also be caused by the manner of cleaning. The shortest I got was "Timeline of architectural styles 1000–present" with 95 chars, but this example reveals that sometimes, you would have to include characters inside pictures (can you tell me by chance how frequent these types of code-generated pictures are?). But there are also these examples like the "Veer Teja Vidhya Mandir School" I mentioned (chars= 404) were the template is simply highly underused and bloats the syntax.
@Federico: You are completely right, size in bytes is a good indicator for many things; you could for example argue it accurately measures the work put into an article by the editors, as constructing the Wikisyntax can be a big part of a good article.
@Aaron: "You've severely limited the range of your regressor and therefor invalidated a set of assumptions for the correlation." You seem to be very confused about some statistical concepts:
- You mix up the concept of inference statistics with a descriptive
statistical analysis when you tell me that reporting the result of an experiment on a sample (and as nothing more was this declared) is a "mistake". All I said was that in this sample, with my (ad-hoc!) method, this is the result. No inference about the rest of the articles beyond that sample. Turns out that I was correct, no mistake whatsoever. For me it was interesting enough to post to the list that there is no correlation between the two variables in *this* sample. Which is still a very interesting result as obviously, for at least in this byte size range (maybe others?), there is no or just a tiny correlation to the display char size. I'm happy that you took the time to investigate articles outside this sample, that's the kind of input for which I turned to the research list. 2. I didn't "invalidate" anything, I ran a completely appropriate Pearson correlation over a sample I chose, however unrepresentative that sample may be (again: inference vs descriptive statistics). FYI: A correlation doesn't have a *regressor*, as you don't have to decide what is the independent and the dependent variable. That's regression; which adds no substantial information here imho (you can draw a fitted R^2 line on a scatterplot just fine without doing a regression). Moreover, you repeatedly ignored the fact in your replication that I also filtered out "Disambiguation" articles. Of course, then you wont get the exact same results as me.
As soon as I find the time, I will run my stuff also over a sample outside the limited 5800-6000 byte range to see what comes out.
Best,
Fabian On 06.08.2013, at 10:53, Federico Leva (Nemo) [email protected] wrote:
Ziko van Dijk, 06/08/2013 02:12:
Hello, When in 2008 I made some observations on language versions, it struck me that in some cases the wikisyntax and the "meta article information" was more KB than the whole encyclopedic content of an article. For example, the wikicode of the article "Berlin" in Upper Sorabian consisted of more than 50 % characters for categories, interwiki links etc. This made me largely disregarding the cooncerning features of the Wikimedia statistics.
You'd better not disregard it completely, as it is used as a key metric for evaluating e.g. the WMF university programs (whether a good or a bad thing). ;-) I don't know how sophisticated a variant of the metric they use; probably whatever the new metrics.wmflabs.org uses.
Personally, I often find the database size on WikiStats tables a useful one to check the evolution of a single wiki, as it's less fluctuating and harder to cheat than other metrics, short of huge bot imports. It requires greater care in cross-wiki comparisons, of course.
Nemo
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