[01:53:09] [telegram] Hello, is there a guide for good design practices regarding use of icons within templates? My particular need is that I would like to simply add an "info" icon. [01:53:09] [telegram] Pages I found on the topic and comments: [01:53:11] [telegram] - https://doc.wikimedia.org/oojs-ui/master/demos/#icons-mediawiki-ltr-desktop -> doesn't provide a link toward how to make a simple use of these icons [01:53:12] [telegram] - https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Icon_standardisation -> states "Flow uses a local copy of WikiFont for most of its icons. " and and link to a page stating "WikiFont is no longer officially supported." [01:53:14] [telegram] - https://design.wikimedia.org/style-guide/visual-style_icons.html [01:53:15] [telegram] seems to be what I should use. But that seems a bit long for something that I could basically repalce with ℹ️ I guess, if I wouldn't mind to restpect the guidle. [01:53:44] [telegram] Hello, is there a guide for good design practices regarding use of icons within templates? My particular need is that I would like to simply add an "info" icon. [01:53:45] [telegram] Pages I found on the topic and comments: [01:53:47] [telegram] - https://doc.wikimedia.org/oojs-ui/master/demos/#icons-mediawiki-ltr-desktop -> doesn't provide a link toward how to make a simple use of these icons [01:53:48] [telegram] - https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Icon_standardisation -> states "Flow uses a local copy of WikiFont for most of its icons. " and and link to a page stating "WikiFont is no longer officially supported." [01:53:50] [telegram] - https://design.wikimedia.org/style-guide/visual-style_icons.html [01:53:51] [telegram] seems to be what I should use. But that seems a bit long for something that I could basically repalce with ℹ️ I guess, if I wouldn't mind to respect the up-to-date design [01:55:19] [telegram] Hello, is there a guide for good design practices regarding use of icons within templates? My particular need is that I would like to simply add an "info" icon. [01:55:20] [telegram] Pages I found on the topic and comments: [01:55:21] [telegram] - https://design.wikimedia.org/style-guide/visual-style_icons.html -> an interesting reading, but more focus on the "how you should design new icons" than "how you should use existing icons". There is a link to the following address however. [01:55:23] [telegram] - https://doc.wikimedia.org/oojs-ui/master/demos/#icons-mediawiki-ltr-desktop -> doesn't provide a link toward how to make a simple use of these icons [01:55:24] [telegram] - https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Icon_standardisation -> states "Flow uses a local copy of WikiFont for most of its icons. " and and link to a page stating "WikiFont is no longer officially supported." [01:55:26] [telegram] - https://design.wikimedia.org/style-guide/visual-style_icons.html [01:55:27] [telegram] seems to be what I should use. But that seems a bit long for something that I could basically repalce with ℹ️ I guess, if I wouldn't mind to respect the up-to-date design [02:04:06] [telegram] Additionally, I would like it to be replaced by a text la "information", only when aria is enabled. And since I intend to use it into an enclosing span which already has a title attribute, I am looking for a solution that preserve the title information of the parent element. [02:04:24] [telegram] Additionally, I would like it to be replaced by a text like "information", only when aria is enabled. And since I intend to use it into an enclosing span which already has a title attribute, I am looking for a solution that preserve the title information of the parent element. [12:16:11] [telegram] Question: Anyone here worked with pywikibot and Wikidata qualifiers? Running into an error when it thinks I'm adding a duplicate claim. In case anyone knows what's up: [12:16:11] [telegram] https://public.paws.wmcloud.org/User:Fuzheado/Testing%20adding%20P459.ipynb [12:45:13] [telegram] Thanks to @edoderoo for the fix - TL;DR - you need to create a new qualifier within the loop for each claim you want to add it to. You can't make a qualifier outside the loop and keep using it. The pywikibot tutorial code is wrong, so I'll re-contribute back the fix to that too 🙂