User talk:Ftiercel

Welcome!
Welcome to Wikibooks, Ftiercel!  First steps tutorial Wikibooks is for freely-licensed collaboratively-developed textbooks. You don't need technical skills in order to contribute here. Be bold contributing and assume good faith about the intentions of others. Remember, this is a wiki, so you're allowed to change just about anything, and changes can be made easily. Come introduce yourself to everyone, and let us know what interests you.

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Request for transwiki
I noticed your request in Mike.lifeguard talkpage, if he available to perform it or if the content is in risk of being lost, you can try to expedite the process on Reading room/Administrative Assistance as a request for transwiki (remember to point to your post in mike's talkpage so to avoid duplication of efforts and confusion). --Panic (talk) 10:52, 30 December 2009 (UTC)
 * Hello Ftiercel, I've imported File Transfer Protocol to Wikibooks into the Transwiki namespace. You can find it here: Transwiki:File Transfer Protocol. QU TalkQu 11:37, 30 December 2009 (UTC)

Import Requests
If you put these requests on WB:RFI they have a better chance of being done that if you put them on individual user pages. The one you request is available at Transwiki:Origami techniques. If you've any questions, please let me know QU TalkQu 18:38, 21 September 2011 (UTC)

Complete? really?
Hey I was looking at the origami wikibook (which I've been neglecting, sadly) and noticed that you've marked the project as fully complete. Any reason for that? 'Cause it doesn't look complete to me... Glad to have help working on it though! Origamidesigner (discuss • contribs) 04:18, 23 July 2012 (UTC)
 * I have set the status to complete because all the content already added was complete, I mean, all the diagram pages contain everything you need to create your origami. But I admit that the wikibooks is very poor and there are empty sections. I think at least one origami should be present in each section. Ftiercel (discuss • contribs) 18:44, 23 July 2012 (UTC)

Please note...
When doing merges its good practice to first place a tag on the works (source and destination) for at least 7 days to detect oppositions to the changes and permit discussion of the proposal. There are templated tags to do that...

I've noticed a problem with the recent merges since it ignored previous/pending merges requests and to a point (maybe you haven't got to it yet) amputated good content from the source project (in the OOP project to complete the removal you should have provided a list of the patterns and a reference and link to the other Wikibook that covered it in depth). I also note that the book that received the merge has a pending request to merge into yet another book and acting on that request would signify a reversal or removal of the content you moves (most C++ and the pending proposal destination is the Java book). --Panic (discuss • contribs) 04:14, 22 May 2013 (UTC)
 * OK so if I understand you well, I should have added a merge tag on the Design pattern section of the OOP book a week ago, shouldn't I? I didn't know it. The next merges I have planned to do are already tagged (Design pattern, Java design pattern...). Ftiercel (discuss • contribs) 05:52, 22 May 2013 (UTC)
 * Yes (Template:Mergeto Template:MergeFrom) tagging the pages should preclude by 7+ days any merge action. There shouldn't be a problem with the action as on the first book there hasn't been any active contributor but I advise you to post something into the Java book's talkpage. Merges should be done without any (valid and useful) content loss.
 * I'm still concerned in regard to how you will salvage the C++ source from the OOP Book on all that shuffle. So far I'm not objecting to anything. So far I only see a need to preserve the mention of the design patterns that OOP enables (other patters go beyond OOP) and reference the new location. I'm more concerned with the next step, if at all, the merge should be in reverse (the generalities, from the Java book to the Design Patterns book). --Panic (discuss • contribs) 08:52, 22 May 2013 (UTC)

SQL
Please read my comments at: Talk:Structured_Query_Language. --Kelti (discuss • contribs) 19:59, 16 December 2013 (UTC)