User talk:Proton
Hello Proton! Welcome to UESPWiki.
It looks like you know your way around wikimarkup, but here's the standard greeting anyway. Thanks for your contribution to the Smithing formula.
We are glad to have you as a new member of the community here at UESP. Here are some links that may help you get started: Policies and Guidelines: UESPWiki standards and expectations Help Contents: a list of in-depth Help pages Quick Editing Guide: a quick guide to wiki markup Getting Started: ideas on how you can contribute If you would like to spice up your userpage, take a look at the Userboxes page: a near complete list of userboxes, including a guide to making your own. When you're editing, it's always a good idea to leave edit summaries to explain the changes you have made to a particular page, and remember to sign your talk page posts with four tildes JR (talk) 01:18, 29 December 2012 (GMT) (do not sign edits to articles). Also, the "show preview" button is a great way to proofread changes you make before saving (publishing) the page on the wiki. This reduces the total number of changes and helps our (patrollers check changes more efficiently). While we have policies and guidelines to maintain the high standards of the wiki, we also encourage editors to jump right in and start adding to the wiki before learning them. It takes time to learn how things are done, and people will be happy to correct things for you if you do something that doesn't follow a standard. Except for deliberate rudeness, vandalism, spam, etc., we encourage you to "be bold" when adding to or revising our pages. In fact, that's our official policy. Feel free to practice editing in the sandbox or discuss the games or the wiki in the forums or in our IRC chatroom. If you need any help, don't hesitate to contact me or one of our mentors. Have fun! --JR (talk)
Damage Reduction from ArmorEdit
In regards to this change, the reason I put it at 12% is that the way it reads now is ambiguous, and the intuitive way of reading it would look like this, using maximum armor values as an example: (567 + 100) * (0.12%). This produces a value of 0.8 which could be read as 80%, but because it's listed as "Damage Reduction Percentage" rather than "Damage Reduction Multiplier", I take that to be 0.8%, which is incorrect.
The other way of reading it is (567 + 100) * (0.12) as a percent, in which case you do indeed get 80%, but then why say "Damage Reduction Percentage" and add a rather confusing % sign at the end.
See why I changed it? I think something needs to change there one way or another so that it's clear that the above calculation means the damage reduction is 80%, not 0.8%. (See the "Other uses" section of the Wikipedia article if you want a second opinion that calling it a percentage should return 80, not 0.8.) – Robin Hood (talk) 09:07, 26 March 2013 (GMT)
- Off-topic, normally when you reply to someone, you should do it on the same page the original subject gets brought up on. People usually add those pages to their watchlist so that they can see any replies, and it keeps the conversation all in one place. Also, templates as signatures aren't allowed directly—instead, you should substitute them. That's done by changing your signature in your preferences to
{{subst:User:Proton/Signature}}
and then checking the "Treat the above as wiki markup" box.
- The thing with the % sign is that, you're right, if you just wrote something like "Damage Reduction Percentage = 5%", that would be correct. As I said above, though, the intuitive reading is that the 0.12% is an entity of its own, which makes the math work out not so well. The other alternative would be to write it as "((displayed armor rating + hidden armor rating) × 0.12)%" but...well...blech! ;) – Robin Hood (talk) 17:11, 26 March 2013 (GMT)
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- I didn't mean talk pages in general, I was just referring to your own talk page. In other words, you can reply to my message here, since I'm watching your page, and it's easier for everyone to keep track of. You don't need to reply on my own page. (And in fact, as I'm writing this, I notice that Jak has replied on my page, which illustrates the problem: different people are replying in different places, making it a really confusing conversation. Not transcluding signatures is site policy both here and on Wikipedia. The reasons are explained on Wikipedia's page. – Robin Hood (talk) 19:55, 26 March 2013 (GMT)