Talk:Pennsylvania Route 134
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Organization
Related edit summaries:
15:01, 12 July 2011 Target for Today: ==History== added, relisted north-to-south to match direction of top-to-bottom order on maps
15:37, 12 July 2011 Dough4872: jct list is supposed to be south-to-north
02:21, 14 July 2011 Target for Today: map needed added, 2 separate sections describing the route needed combined, "Usage" at Template:Jct does not appear to have any requirement to have south-to-north order
05:01, 14 July 2011 Dough4872: fix major intersections table
Per
I'm confident you'll agree that the table describes route intersctions, so to claim it is not part of "Route description" and is improper to be organized in the section named "Route description" is nonsensical. Moreover,
- Looking at the majority of road articles, including several FAs, the standard article structure for a road article is route description, history, and major intersections, all with second-level headers. Usually its in that order, but sometimes the history appears before the route description, such as with WP:USRD/STDS that states that. However, this may be an approriate time to describe how the ordering of the sections should be for road articles. Dough4872 04:31, 30 July 2011 (UTC)]
- MOS:LAYOUTwhich specifies, Wikipedia-wide that "See also", "References", "External links" appear as separate sections at the end of the article.
- {{WP:USRD's standards over article layout, which specifies south-to-north or west-to-order for both prose and the junction/exit lists to follow the dominant direction of mileposting in this country.
- {{
- As for my opinion, leave the RD, H, MI section order alone. This is how over three dozen Featured Articles have been done, and the critics at WP:FAC have never asked for the table to be moved elsewhere in the article. (The RD first, H second order is not set in stone though, and based on the needs of a specific article, they can be flipped.) Imzadi 1979 → 05:21, 30 July 2011 (UTC)]
- As for my opinion, leave the RD, H, MI section order alone. This is how over three dozen Featured Articles have been done, and the critics at
Let me be clear: Looking at [1], this is a clear violation of the spirit, if not the letter, of
- Yes, Dough quotes the Wikiproject U.S. Roads Standards page which explicitly states it is a guideline that "should" be followed--"WP:USRD/STDSalso states "Articles should include a set of standard sections that cover various aspects of the route. This ensures more complete coverage and provides a standardized look-and-feel..." Under that, third level headings mention each of the typical section headings used on USRD road articles; note that "Route description" and "Major intersections/Exit list" are listed separately. Critics at FAC have had no problems with the section order as is, so I don't understand why it's suddenly an issue and nonsensical...
- Although not explicitly stated in the USRD standards, I believe one of the reasons the route description is separate from the major intersections table is that, while the two are related, they present information differently. The route description is more about describing the road or highway in prose form, elaborating on feel of the highway, towns traversed and areas served by the highway, etc. The major intersections section is a non-prose listing of junctions, most often presented in tabular form. The junction list can also be quite long on some articles (see Interstate 5 in California for an extreme example). The standard layout results in all the article prose about the main route comes before the list/table of intersections--combining the sections as suggested breaks up the prose and, in my opinion, would make article flow much more awkward. -- LJ ↗ 05:32, 30 July 2011 (UTC)
History section lacking
Since this article is titled "Pennsylvania Route 134", it would be nice if some history of the road as a state highway would be added. According to the PA Highways link I added, the highway was signed in 1928 and paved in 1930. That link can't be used as a citation (it's a [[WP:SPS|self-published source) but if some period highway maps can be located that show these two changes, that would round out the highway's history nicely (assuming nothing but routine maintenance has been performed since 1930).
I've cleaned up all of the references to make them consistent. A court record was being cited, although the actual source (a reprint of a book section or chapter) does not explicitly identify the actual name of the record. To attempt to attribute the information to something other than the book is
Reversion of edits
- I removed the lowest and highest points from the junction list. These are not standard additions to a junction list unless the locations are notable for some reason, and in this case, they do not appear to be notable. Additionally, these are the sorts of details that are best worked into the RD prose, like an inline mention of the highest and lowest average annual daily traffic (AADT) counts. (See M-28for what I mean; in that article, the highest and lowest AADT figures are mentioned during the west-to-east progression of the highway's route description rather than separated into a separate paragraph.)
- A self-published sourcewas used to cite the county location in the infobox. Such a detail is normally not cited anyway, but a SPS should not be used per policy.
- I moved the map back to the history section since it is better connected to the historical facts in that section. After all, this is a topographic from July 1863.
- I removed the "not in source" tag from the 1930 map. That map does show the highway along the route it currently takes (minus any minor changes that are below the level of precision of the maps) and it does show the section described as "under construction".
The net effect is that this edit from