Talk:Anatolia/Maps

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Some maps in response to the Rfc listed at Talk:Anatolia#RfC_about_infobox_map.

These are created with Kartographer, and are dynamic, interactive maps. Of particular interest is the last one, which interacts with some work somebody did at OpenStreetMap to create a border for "Central Anatolia". That open-source OSM page is here. The last map is created by a <mapframe> just like the first three, except this one is linked through Wikidata item d:Q155526, which means the Kartographer extension interprets the mapframe and picks up the lat/long identifier and any border or shading from OSM, and displays it. We could do the same thing for Anatolia, by creating something on OSM. There is already a Wikidata item for Anatolia, d:Q51614, so if someone creates an OSM map for Anatolia, using whatever border the consensus decides on, then we can the wikidata id to the OSM map, and then map it at the article showing our desired border. I haven't created one of these OSM maps yet, so not sure how much work is involved, but obviously everybody is doing it over there, so there must be a way.

Hmm... There's some sort of weird issue with the fourth map; it looks fine in Preview, at least some of the time anyway, but then when you Save the page, it jumps to a map centered on Algeria. Weird. I've opened a discussion about this at the mediawiki Kartographer discussion page (Permalink).

Map
One (350x225) Anatolia, also known as Asia Minor, makes up the westernmost part of Asia and the majority of modern-day Turkey. The eastern extension has varied throughout history, and is now considered to be the Asian part of Turkey.
Map
Two 275x150) Anatolia, also known as Asia Minor, makes up the westernmost part of Asia and the majority of modern-day Turkey. The eastern extension has varied throughout history, and is now considered to be the Asian part of Turkey.
Map
Three Q12824780 Anatolia, also known as Asia Minor, makes up the westernmost part of Asia and the majority of modern-day Turkey. The eastern extension has varied throughout history, and is now considered to be the Asian part of Turkey.


Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Suspendisse pulvinar ultricies lobortis. Vivamus molestie vel odio sit amet efficitur. Pellentesque faucibus sem sapien, a sollicitudin leo aliquam eget. Duis tincidunt facilisis purus, ac sollicitudin ipsum egestas ut. Donec cursus pretium mi, quis ullamcorper lorem luctus eu. Praesent pharetra fermentum metus, id faucibus massa vehicula non. Aliquam sed mi justo. Proin nibh enim, hendrerit eu justo tincidunt, vehicula lobortis est. Quisque metus dui, lobortis at efficitur vitae, dignissim quis dui. Vivamus at venenatis lectus. Nullam scelerisque urna sed placerat interdum. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Morbi luctus nunc sed orci tempus, ut aliquam nisi maximus. Vestibulum est neque, convallis quis iaculis et, aliquet sed metus. Cras nec odio sodales, mollis quam et, posuere dolor.

Nullam nec nulla semper velit sagittis rutrum non eget sapien. Maecenas dui libero, tempor et bibendum vitae, varius eu velit. Vivamus placerat nunc at turpis bibendum ultrices. Phasellus id justo nunc. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Etiam in vehicula urna. Fusce vulputate sem risus. Vivamus ex turpis, malesuada a gravida quis, dapibus vel nunc. Curabitur arcu mauris, blandit et porta et, pretium eu orci. Nam suscipit, massa non iaculis elementum, tortor lectus facilisis purus, ac suscipit tortor sapien convallis tellus. Praesent et metus eu tortor accumsan consequat sit amet vehicula mauris.

Nunc id posuere est. Morbi eu dapibus magna. Mauris et tortor eu dolor molestie ultricies et ac erat. Donec gravida, urna a suscipit ornare, leo libero rhoncus risus, et venenatis arcu turpis vitae risus. Pellentesque habitant morbi tristique senectus et netus et malesuada fames ac turpis egestas. Phasellus tempus nisl ex, sit amet finibus justo sagittis eget. Interdum et malesuada fames ac ante ipsum primis in faucibus. Maecenas venenatis non enim eget congue. Vivamus dictum vulputate odio, sit amet volutpat erat semper quis. Maecenas tempor viverra convallis. Mauris consectetur, magna in consequat ultrices, erat sapien pretium arcu, non efficitur arcu elit eleifend erat. Pellentesque eu egestas lacus. Sed ullamcorper est sed metus sagittis semper.

Aliquam arcu justo, suscipit in purus sed, efficitur luctus ligula. Sed maximus semper dui. Pellentesque ornare, ligula eu ornare consequat, velit nunc sodales mauris, id efficitur odio diam vel felis. Integer quis euismod nisi. Integer commodo, felis quis mollis tempus, urna ex cursus enim, ut facilisis sapien enim eu mi. Interdum et malesuada fames ac ante ipsum primis in faucibus. Aenean ut velit in metus dictum pretium. Fusce mollis justo ac ipsum venenatis, at commodo lectus euismod. Proin finibus ultrices orci, eu consequat orci vestibulum non. Duis aliquet libero eu lectus tristique, et mollis ligula laoreet. Phasellus mattis rutrum porta. Proin pharetra dui sapien, sit amet accumsan lorem facilisis id.

Maecenas convallis sem sed nisl scelerisque, a elementum dolor accumsan. Mauris vulputate arcu velit, at tincidunt nisl mattis sed. Nullam feugiat mauris eget urna sagittis ullamcorper. Vestibulum at congue leo. Phasellus nec nisl id dolor vehicula ornare et non velit. Cras venenatis ligula leo, ut posuere ipsum ornare eu. Nullam sodales, arcu vel sollicitudin condimentum, ex lacus commodo est, in pretium felis sapien lobortis mauris. Praesent ac ex nisi. Vivamus laoreet ipsum dolor, at eleifend orci suscipit et. Vivamus pellentesque massa eu velit gravida tempor. Mauris lectus est, posuere a lacinia in, facilisis et erat. Vestibulum pellentesque, lacus at fermentum lobortis, sapien urna faucibus tellus, nec pellentesque mauris purus in massa.

Map
Four: This only highlights central Anatolia, but you can create a trace at OpenStreetMap for Anatolia, and then link it through wikidata item d:Q51614 and display it here

Phasellus dui eros, volutpat ut vehicula pharetra, elementum at purus. Donec id purus nec tellus condimentum sagittis sit amet et tellus. In hac habitasse platea dictumst. Praesent iaculis metus sed sagittis dictum. Aliquam luctus ante at justo facilisis eleifend. Maecenas nibh elit, malesuada nec eros et, suscipit feugiat lacus. Vivamus dui nunc, venenatis ac nibh sed, volutpat rutrum metus.

Fusce sed rhoncus nisi. Nullam eget turpis efficitur, condimentum arcu pharetra, hendrerit nunc. Morbi non neque quis felis iaculis tincidunt in quis turpis. Sed diam nulla, molestie at ornare eget, posuere nec turpis. Donec lorem nunc, accumsan ac turpis vel, bibendum cursus quam. Aliquam rutrum blandit odio, ac aliquam ex dapibus at. In bibendum, nisl facilisis bibendum hendrerit, mauris nulla fermentum metus, id sagittis lorem urna vel mi.

BUG??

The last map is not working, although it sometimes does, if you edit and hit "Preview" a bunch of times. See discussion at Mediawiki mw:Help talk:Extension:Kartographer (Permalink). This is working now, thanks to suggestion by Evad37 (talk · contribs) at Mediawiki mw:Help talk:Extension:Kartographer. This was bug T193455.

To clarify for Anatolia RFC folks: for the Rfc, I realize we aren't interested in and don't want a map of "Central Anatolia" but that's not the point. I just used Central Anatolia as an illustration, because somebody already created one for that on OSM, so it kind of points the way. The point is (assuming we fix the bug, here) is that if we can show a map of Turkey with Central Anatolia shaded based on an OSM map, then we can do that showing any shading pattern that we want. We create our own Anatolia map on OSM, shade what we want, then link that to the Wikidata item for Anatolia, and display it at the article using a <mapframe>. But first things, first: let's see why this last map doesn't show a shaded map of Turkey with just Central Anatolia shaded.