User:This, that and the other/inflection table standardisation/top100

Hello, you have come here looking for the meaning of the word User:This, that and the other/inflection table standardisation/top100. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word User:This, that and the other/inflection table standardisation/top100, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say User:This, that and the other/inflection table standardisation/top100 in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word User:This, that and the other/inflection table standardisation/top100 you have here. The definition of the word User:This, that and the other/inflection table standardisation/top100 will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition ofUser:This, that and the other/inflection table standardisation/top100, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.

See also: top150

In progress

Stalled

Not legible in dark mode - scary big tables

  • Basque - Done Done except: some pronoun tables yet to do
  • Bulgarian - adjective, noun Done Done, verb yet to do (Template:bg-conj)
  • Macedonian - Done Done except verb yet to do
  • Norman - Done Done except verb - base table is done but individual conjugations yet to do - need to be wrapped around this or another skeleton table template (note that pronoun rows vary between dialects)
  • Northern Kurdish - noun Done Done, verb yet to do - these are massive tables, need some effort
  • Slovak - Done Done except verb yet to do (Template:sk-conj)
  • Indic

Not legible in dark mode - needs view-switcher

Not legible in dark mode - consult on further improvements

Legible in dark mode - consult on further improvements

  • Estonian - all support dark mode (so Done Done) but they have fixed/%-based width and don't use view-switcher - prime candidates for migration. Some done already: Category:Estonian inflection-table templates some changes reverted

Not done

Big langs with lots of editors

Slavic

For any curious people coming across this user page... why haven't I converted these languages' templates (yet)?

Some of the highest-profile Slavic templates (ru noun/adj, pl noun) have been converted by other users using a different class="inflection" style. Aesthetically it's not necessarily better or worse than {{inflection-table-top}}, but the significant use of negative space rather than lines to guide the eye makes it unsuitable for large tables. There are also display issues on mobile. Moreover, being CSS only, it lacks the adaptive width behaviour of {{inflection-table-top}}.

It would be preferable to have inter-language consistency, so that all inflection tables of a given language use either class="inflection" or {{inflection-table-top}}. But I'm somewhat reluctant to carry out conversions to class="inflection" because of the issues mentioned above. (Currently Czech is split between the two - nouns use class="inflection" while adjectives and verbs use {{inflection-table-top}}.)

Other

Done, or effectively done

  1. Adyghe - Done Done
  2. Afrikaans - Done Done
  3. Arabic - Done Done although the layout of Template:ar-conj could be improved slightly
  4. Armenian - Done Done except for Template:hy-հուսալ and Template:hy-յուսալ-TAO (one-off verb tables)
  5. Assyrian Neo-Aramaic - Done Done by F
  6. Asturian - Done Done (Romance verb table done by Benwing)
  7. Azerbaijani - Done Done except two verb tables (Template:az-conj-*imək and Template:az-conj-pred-*imək) used on 3 entries - though note the spacing issue at e.g. ədəbiyyat which was already present before my changes to that template
  8. Bengali - Done Done except the demonstrative templates (with Bengali-script names) in Category:Bengali templates
  9. Bikol Central - nothing to do
  10. Burmese - nothing to do
  11. Catalan - Done Done Romance-style verb box by Benwing, Template:ca-conj-anar-pp-aux by me
  12. Cebuano - Done Done
  13. Chinese - nothing to do
  14. Czech - Done Done (noun by TKW, others by me)
  15. Danish - Done Done
  16. Dutch - Done Done by Stujul
  17. English - Done Done
  18. Esperanto - Done Done
  19. Faroese - Done Done except for four straggler verb templates (dative, gangast , mediopassive, siggjast) used on 2 entries total
  20. Finnish - appears Done Done by Surjection
  21. French - Done Done by others (Romance verb table)
  22. Galician - Done Done by others
  23. Georgian - Done Done (team effort)
  24. Gothic - Done Done except Template:got-conj-briggan used at 𐌱𐍂𐌹𐌲𐌲𐌰𐌽 only (uses userspace copy of verb module)
  25. Greek - Done Done, except verb, which has had class="notheme" applied (all agree it needs overhaul)
  26. Hebrew - Done Done
  27. Hungarian - Done Done
  28. Icelandic - Done Done except for single-use verb tables{{is-conj-munu}}, {{is-conj-skulu}} and {{Icelandic conjugation að valda}}
  29. Ido - Done Done
  30. Indonesian - Done Done
  31. Ingrian - Done Done by Surjection
  32. Irish - Done Done (a couple of misc tables not migrated but still legible in dark mode)
  33. Italian - Done Done by others
  34. Japanese - Done Done
  35. Kazakh - Done Done
  36. Khmer - nothing to do
  37. Korean - Done Done apart from legacy templates {{ko-conj-adj}} (only used in 2 entries) and {{ko-conj-verb}} (only used in 1 entry)
  38. Ladin - Done Done
  39. Latin - Done Done
  40. Latvian - Done Done
  41. Lithuanian - Done Done
  42. Luxembourgish - Done Done
  43. Malay - nothing to do
  44. Malayalam - Done Done
  45. Maltese - Done Done by Fenakhay
  46. Manx - Done Done
  47. Mongolian - Done Done
  48. Middle English - Done Done
  49. Navajo - Done Done
  50. Norwegian Bokmål - Done Done (although pronoun table could use a spruce up)
  51. Norwegian Nynorsk - Done Done except for the pieces of the common Norwegian templates
  52. Occitan - Done Done
  53. Old Armenian - Done Done (...but maybe should use a different palette from Armenian?
  54. Old French - Done Done
  55. Old Irish - Done Done in the sense that it is all dark mode compliant, but some wikitable-based tables (various nominal, one verb) remain
  56. Old Norse - Done Done
  57. Ottoman Turkish - Done Done
  58. Persian - Done Done except for 10 verb tables (~50 uses) that use one of two obsolete hard-coded formats
  59. Portuguese - pronoun and adjective Done Done by me, verb Done Done by others
  60. Romanian - Done Done except Template:ro-adj-1 (up for deletion)
  61. Russian - Done Done by TKW but there are some serious width issues in mobile (left column too wide)
  62. Scots - Done Done
  63. Scottish Gaelic - Done Done but some entries have a hardcoded, much smaller verb table. Need to discuss this ultimately
  64. Serbo-Croatian - Done Done (the non-Lua noun templates use class="inflection" but Lua noun and adjective use inflection-table-top)
  65. Spanish - Done Done Romance verb table by others
  66. Swahili - Done Done (the verb table is a monster of a template. I just applied class="notheme" for now)
  67. Swedish - Done Done
  68. Tagalog - Done Done
  69. Thai - Done Done
  70. Translingual - no inflection tables per se, but Category:Translingual templates Done Done
  71. Turkish - Done Done (verb rewritten and done by someone else)
  72. Ukrainian - Done Done
  73. Urdu - Done Done except for Template:ur-conj-1 (only in 1 entry) - the normal verb template has an excessive number of collapsible boxes...
  74. Venetan - Done Done except for legacy {{vec-conj}} (only in 1 entry, listed at RFDO)
  75. Vietnamese - Done Done
  76. Welsh - Done Done except for some of the single-use verb templates in Category:Welsh verb inflection-table templates
  77. Yiddish - Done Done
  78. Yoruba - no inflection tables - there are dialectal personal pronoun boxes that are dark mode compliant but need tidying