[22:56:57] Yes, interesting example. I think there are ways this could be dealt with other than trying to hold full article context. One might simply be that the AW convention might not be too link the first ever occurrence of "book", but instead the first time it is specifically requested in abstract. Another could be to link every occurrence, then post-process the page html to [22:56:58] remove subs [22:56:59] equent duplicate links. (re @dvd_ccc27919: For example: consider that you want to insert a Wikilink to "book". A language A (like English) could be rendered as: [22:57:00] Douglas Ad...) [23:36:47] Although I agree that theoretically it would be lovely to know the full context of every fragment, I fear that waiting for or requiring this will slow our practical progress to providing informative but imperfect articles. [23:38:09] I'm stoked to see references in play, that's a game-changer. Thanks David . (re @vrandecic: Abstract Wikipedia Newsletter 247 [23:38:11] * References from Wikidata now available [23:38:12] * Recording of Toby Hudson’s talk at WikiCon Australi...) [23:39:48] One issue with post-processing is that the whole article would then have to go into one function call, which is definitely not something we can do right now. (re @u99of9: Yes, interesting example. I think there are ways this could be dealt with other than trying to hold full article context. One mi...) [23:40:46] Correct. Sorry, to be clearer, I imagined it as a front-end system component rather than done with WF functions. (re @Feeglgeef: One issue with post-processing is that the whole article would then have to go into one function call, which is definitely not s...) [23:42:07] Speaking of which, writing a Manual of Style for abstract content is likely something we'll want to do sooner rather than later, as we'll want to base how we build the content on how we want it to look. [23:44:57] We also might want a "main"/"universal" manual of style, and then an individual manual of style for each individual language. [23:46:47] For individual languages, as far as it's possible we'll probably want to imitate/follow the appropriate Wikipedia MOS where available.