Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

User:Uwappa

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21:34 CST [refresh] 22:34 EST [refresh] 03:34 UTC [refresh] 04:34 CET [refresh] 05:34, 13 January 2025 SAST [refresh] 14:34, 13 January 2025 AEDT [refresh]

Other stuff

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Climate Readability graphs edit Wikipedia Body Roundness

03:34, 13 January 2025 UTC [refresh] Today's motto...

A self-guided tutorial

For guidance about the style and content of Wikipedia articles, see this tutorial. It also teaches about the Wikipedia community and important Wikipedia policies and conventions.

To add this auto-updating template to your user page, use {{totd}}

Today's featured picture

Fork-tailed flycatcher

The fork-tailed flycatcher (Tyrannus savana) is a bird in the family Tyrannidae, the tyrant flycatchers. Named after their distinguishably long, forked tails, particularly in males, fork-tailed flycatchers are seen in shrubland, savanna, lightly forested and grassland areas, from southern Mexico south to Argentina. They tend to build their cup nests in similar habitats to their hunting grounds (riparian forests and grasslands). Males perform aerial courtship displays to impress females involving swirling somersaults, twists, and flips, all partnered with their buzzing calls. These courtship displays utilise the long tail feathers. This male fork-tailed flycatcher of the subspecies T. s. monachus was photographed in Cayo District, Belize, demonstrating its characteristic forked tail while in flight.

Photograph credit: Charles J. Sharp

About

Uwappa creates a web to save Banjora from the mundurras in an Ngarrindjeri dreaming story.
This user has experienced guidance from Yurluggur.
This user is not yet dead.
Please check back later...
This user loves the Kurangk.
This user has enjoyed the hospitality of the Ngarrindjeri.
wgu-0This user has learnt a few words of Wirangu.
This user felt at home in Nantawarrina, Adnyamathanha land.
This user respects the power of Uluṟu, Aṉangu land.
This user thanks the Yolŋu for sharing basic Aboriginal culture.
This user loves dragon dreaming.

Toolbox

Climate

The core of
the human eye

can read
several lines
in parallel
when text is in
small columns.
It speeds up
reading.

Colours

Graphs

Edit

Wikipedia

  • 6 degrees of Wikipedia
  • Acronyms
  • c:COM:OW
  • WP:3RR – Wikipedia policy on editor conduct
  • WP:ABBREV
  • WP:AN/EW – Noticeboard for edit warring
  • WP:BRD – Wikipedia supplemental page
  • WP:CANVASS – Wikipedia guideline
  • WP:HARASS – English Wikipedia conduct policy
  • WP:KING
  • WP:NOTOR
  • WP:NPA – Wikipedia policy
  • WP:OI – Wikimedia policy page
  • WP:OR – Wikimedia policy page
  • WP:OTHERSCOMMENTS – Wikipedia user behavioral guideline
  • WP:PLAINENGLISH
  • WP:Top25 – Weekly report of the most popular Wikipedia articles
  • WP:TPO – Wikipedia user behavioral guideline
  • WP:USEPRIMARY

Body Roundness

Body Roundness Calculator

Development Tools

General Calculator stuff

Wikitext

Body Roundness

Graphs

I love it how Aboriginal paintings depict a whole story.

Good graphs can also tell a story, as Edward Tufte describes in his books on data visualization.

Global warming

This Copernicus graph is a jewel. It is a graph that tells a whole story in an instant.

The blue, white, red lines are like waves of an ocean. The colours seem to show increasing temperature, yet actually show time, decades of data. Time and temperature coincide.

2023 jumps out of the waves, is out of bandwidth. Oceans are warming.

Climate change graphs

Climate tipping point +1.5 °C

Polls

10
20
30
40
PVV
GL–PvdA
VVD
CDA
D66
BBB
NSC
SP
PvdD
FvD
CU
DENK
SGP
Volt
JA21

This chart tells the story of an election or poll. What are the changes since the previous election?

 
new party.
  
party that gained seats.
 
party maintained seats, did not win, did not lose.
  
Party lost seats. The top of   is the result in the previous election.
 
party lost all seats.

Collatz conjecture

A Collatz sequence ‘nibbling’ on trailing binary ones and zeroes.

:( Graph module down

right aligned graph