Module:Syrian Civil War detailed map/sandbox/doc

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{{anchor|Rules for editing the map}}{{tmbox

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| text = Rules for Editing the Map

1- A reliable source for that specific edit should be provided.


a) A well-known source that has a reputation for neutral (not biased) territorial control coverage, can be used (is deemed reliable) for all edits.


b) A well-known source that does not have a reputation for neutral (not biased) territorial control coverage, can be used (is deemed reliable) only for edits that are unfavorable to the side it prefers (favorable to the side it opposes).


c) A source that is not well-known (or that has proven inaccurate for all edits) cannot be used (is deemed unreliable) for any edit. This includes all maps (see item 2- next).

2- Copying from maps is strictly prohibited. Maps from mainstream media are approximate and therefore unreliable for any edit. Maps from amateur sources are below the standards of Wikipedia for any edit. They violate WP:RS and WP:CIRCULAR.


WP:RS: “Anyone can create a personal web page or publish their own book, and also claim to be an expert in a certain field. For that reason, self-published media, such as books, patents, newsletters, personal websites, open wikis, personal or group blogs, Internet forum postings, and tweets, are largely not acceptable as sources.” Source: Wikipedia:Verifiability#Self-published_sources


WP:CIRCULAR: “Do not use websites that mirror Wikipedia content or publications that rely on material from Wikipedia as sources.”
See also: Wikipedia:Top 10 reasons why copying from maps is strictly prohibited on the Wikipedia Syria war map.

3- WP:POV pushing and intentional misinterpretation of sources will not be tolerated. If you are not sure about what the source is saying (or its reliability), post it on the talk page first so that it would be discussed.
See also: Wikipedia:Top 10 myths about the Wikipedia Syria war map.

}}

For quick reference, this module is transcluded on the following:

Module:Syrian Civil War overview map

Towns and strategic places must be placed in the Module:Syrian Civil War overview map. Then they will also be included in larger map modules.

Icons available for use on the map

Control :  11px Syrian Arab Army (SAA) and Syrian Government ; 11px Syrian Interim Government (SNA) and Turkish Armed Forces ; 11px Rojava (SDF) ; 11px Syrian Salvation Government (HTS) ; 11px Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) ; 11px Revolutionary Commando Army (RCA) and United States Armed Forces ; 11px Government & Opposition stable mixed control (truce)

Stable mixed control (same colours) : 11px 11px 11px 11px 11px 11px 11px

  11px 11px

  11px

  11px 11px 11px

Contested : 11px Gov't/Opposition ; 11px Gov't/SDF ; 11px Gov't/TaS ; 11px Gov't/ISIL ; 11px Opposition/TaS ; 11px Opposition/ISIL ; 11px SDF/TaS ; 11px SDF/ISIL; 11px TaS/ISIL

Besieged one side : 11px 11px 11px 11px 11px

  11px 11px 11px 11px 11px

  11px 11px 11px 11px 11px

  11px 11px 11px 11px

  11px 11px 11px 11px 11px

  11px 11px 11px 11px 11px

  11px 11px 11px 11px 11px 11px

  11px 11px 11px 11px 11px

Besieged : 2 nested circles: inner controls, outer sieges (or indicates strong enemy pressure) : 12px 12px 12px 12px 12px  

Military base : 13px 13px 13px 13px 13px

  Strategic hill : 13px 13px 13px 13px 13px   Oil/gas : 13px 13px 13px 13px 13px

Airport/Air base (plane) : 13px 13px 13px 13px 13px  

Heliport/Helicopter base : 13px 13px 13px 13px 13px

12px Major port or naval base ; 20px Border Post ; 16px Dam ; 12px Industrial complex

Small icon within a larger icon: the situation in individual neighbourhood/district

Contested icon

=Definition=

The purpose of the contested icon (11px) is to show 2 groups of soldiers fighting over control of a town, and that there is a significant number of troops inside the city actively holding territory. We generally turn a town contested based on widespread clashes reports. Contested means we cannot say one specific side controls the town. There should be evidence that the enemy is inside the town, which is a necessary (but not sufficient) condition for making a town contested. Contested status is appropriate if the town in question is controlled partly by one party, and partly by another. For example, it could be that one party controls the outer neighborhoods, while the other party holds the city center.

=Examples of cases where the contested icon should ''not'' be used=

  • A case where there was no chance of the enemy taking the town over, and only, small clashes were going on in the town. We don't put towns contested if there are only sporadic clashes. So reports of clashes are not always enough to mark a town as contested.
  • A case where there were clashes in a town with a handful of enemy fighters and the clashes were over after some hours. For example if source says: "… at least six insurgents were killed during the clashes … while the rest of militants escaped on Saturday evening”
  • A case where there was just one source about clashes in a major town and what occurred was essentially a small firefight. Sleeper cells infiltrated the town and shot at some soldiers, and the soldiers shot back and killed some of them. The source then reports the rest of the fighters as having fled the battlefield. So this was a one-off, hit-and-run attack, not a serious attempt to grab and hold parts of the town.
  • A case where there were many separate reports of rebel ambushes on army checkpoints so this was not a seizure of territory inside of the town. The rebels do not control any part of the town, so a contested icon is unwarranted.
  • A case where the enemy reached city limits. Well, they still haven't entered the city proper (which is the prerequisite for marking the city as "contested") When the city really becomes contested, a bunch of news outlets will be reporting on it. Just because there is enemy at gates does not mean it is contested. The enemy needs to be making progress in the city.
  • The evidence should be especially strong to turn a “stronghold” contested. A few clashes, especially on the periphery are not enough. There should be evidence that the enemy can do more than just hit & run attacks. In these cases, a semi-circle is often enough.

=Cities=

File:Largecitycontested.pngThe larger the size of the town, the more evidence is needed to make it contested. This is even more so the case for cities. Large cities (such as province capitals) are almost never marked as contested. Instead we make image mini-maps for them or put small icons on them to represent neighborhoods that are contested or controlled by a specific party. In contrast, a simple clash report of a small unknown village can turn it contested.

For example, we would not mark as contested a city where a party still controls 95% of the city. Instead we mark specific enemy positions on the outskirts of the city until fighting in the city becomes widespread. As nobody claims there is any fighting inside of the city, it should be marked as colored dot within a siege circle (see Figure 1). Then, advanced points in the city should be marked as small dots in the color of the enemy (or small contested icons). In this specific case, a "contested" icon was added to represent the "west side of the city" that is contested (see Figure 2). This is more informative to our viewers. Since the code puts icons on the map in the order of code lines (starting with first line of code and ending with last line of code), the small "contested" icon should come in the line after that of the (large) city icon. Otherwise, the small icon will be hidden by the large icon and will therefore be invisible.

After the fights become more widespread in the city (& enemy controls a larger part of the city), we can remove the "west side of the city" icon and turn the whole city contested (see Figure 3). After this, if we learn that the enemy has taken over the whole city except for a small pocket (in south east) that is still resisting, then we change the contested icon into the color of the enemy and put a small dot representing the small pocket that is still resisting (see Figure 4).

Siege and pressure from one side icons

=Definition=

The siege icon (12px) should be used for towns that are under siege or strong enemy pressure. The “pressure from one side” icon (11px) should be used for towns that are under enemy pressure from one side.

===How to place these icons===

The easiest way to place these icons is to copy/paste the line code of the object you want to have a circle (or semi-circle) around it and then:

  1. Replace the mark = parameter with 12px or 11px
  2. Increase marksize = parameter by 4. So for example, if the town dot has a size of 10, then the circle (or semi-circle) should have a size of 14.

Always put line of code circle (or semi-circle) before line of code of town (or other object). This is because the code puts icons on the map in the order of code lines starting with first line of code and ending with last line of code. If you put the line of code that draws the circle (or semi-circle) icon after the line of code that draws the town icon then the computer puts the town icon first and then put the circle (or semi-circle) icon on top of it. The town icon still appears because the circle (or semi-circle) is drawn on a transparent background. However, even a transparent background does obstruct the name of the town icon from appearing. So, the name of the town will not appear when you hold cursor over it.

Example:

  • Correct: { lat = "33.972", long = "36.897", mark = "map-arcNE-black.svg", marksize = "12" },

{ lat = "33.972", long = "36.897", mark = "Abm-red+icon.png", marksize = "8", label = "Brigade 128", label_size = "0" },

  • Wrong: { lat = "33.972", long = "36.897", mark = "Abm-red+icon.png", marksize = "8", label = "Brigade 128", label_size = "0" },

{ lat = "33.972", long = "36.897", mark = "map-arcNE-black.svg", marksize = "8" },

Truce (purple) icon

The purple icon (11px) should be used for towns where the party in question has lost a significant amount of sovereignty, such as giving up heavy weapons, allowing regular enemy patrols inside of it, etc… If all that the “truce” means is that there is no fighting or shooting from both parties, then there is no need for a purple icon. In summary, the purple icon means loss of sovereignty, not lack of fighting.

Dot size guide for cities & towns

Dot size for cities & towns (that are not provincial capitals) is based on the 2004 census (last available census):

  • Under 3,500 is size 6
  • 5000 to 19,999 is size 8
  • 20,000 to 49,999 is size 10
  • 50,000 to 99,999 is size 12
  • Above 100,000 is size 14

Labels

Only towns & border posts can have blue visible wikilink labels. Whether a town has a blue visible wikilink label or not will depend on its size, importance and available space around it for the label to appear without obstructing other towns. The wikilink labels can have sizes that range from a minimum of 65 to a maximum of 120 (reserved for province capitals).

How to preview map before saving edit

Before saving your changes (by clicking "Save changes"), you should preview your edit (changes). This allows you to view the map to make sure it is what you want to do before saving and making the changes appear on Wikipedia. To do this, type in the box under "Preview page with this module" the name of the template: "Template:Syrian Civil War detailed map". Then hit "Show preview".

How war map module work with other parts of Wikipedia

File:How war map templates and modules work.png

{{#invoke:Location map/multi|load|Module:Syrian Civil War detailed map/sandbox}}