Last modified: 2003-04-26 by rob raeside
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Introduction
This document provides guidelines for editors of FLAGS OF THE WORLD (FOTW) web site in order to standardize the appearance of the web pages and reduce the effort of maintainance. Send suggestions and corrections to raeside@acadiau.ca.
If you want some advice on HTML editors, here is a compilation of comments from some of our editors.
The Editorial Staff
The web pages are maintained by the FOTW editorial staff, that is the director plus the editors. Once a month, the director:
For each subject received, the editor:
Each message is composed of:
- the email address of the contributor;
- the date of posting;
- some lines of text.
Images are replaced by a filename. e.g. "ru-chech.gif"
Take the Existing Related Pages from the Web
Look at the web site (using your usual web browser) and search for the page(s) about the same subject. Download the sources of those pages (every web browser has such a "save" function). Be sure to use an up-to-date site, as some mirrors may be a few weeks out of date. The
Vexillum mirror is always up-to-date.
Divide et Impera
New messages can be added to the existing pages or can be filed into new pages. You can also decide to split an existing page into two or more (new) pages before adding new messages. A good rule of thumb is a page should be no longer than about six "screen pages" (at 800x600 resolution), and
should not contain more than about ten images. Very long digressions should be filed into secondary pages pointed by short sentences in the main page, e.g.
See the <A HREF="blabla.html">interesting opinion of Giuseppe Bottasini about angels' sex</A>.
You are an editor, not a tape recorder, therefore you can shorten long messages and/or group them into sentences like:
Giuseppe Bottasini and Ptolemy say that Sun goes around the Earth, while most people believe the opposite.
Editors are encouraged to use text as provided to the extent it makes sense on the web page (and outside of the mailing list environment), and to remove side comments which are judgmental, irrelevant, or inappropriate in the more public web-page setting. Of course, if you detect grammatical or spelling errors, these should be corrected too.
Since the FOTW website is derived from discussion on the FOTW mailing list, it is common for aspects of the discussion to be captured on the web pages. However, beware of including discussions that are of little relevance to the conclusion. For example, this would be a bad example (composed by António Martins):
The flag of Ytytyt is red and blue. (António, 28 Feb 2002)
No, it's not. (Someone Else, 29 Feb 2002)
Are you sure? (António, 30 Feb 2002)
Yes I am. (Someone Else, 31 Feb 2002)
What color is it, then? (António, 32 Feb 2002)
It's yellow and green. (Someone Else, 33 Feb 2002)
What's your source? (António, 34 Feb 2002)
[aaa99]: 55-58, and [bbb88], appendix, (Someone Else, 35 Feb 2002)
Oh, I see. Silly me! (António, 36 Feb 2002)
Good editing would be something like:
According to [aaa99]: 55-58, and [bbb88], appendix, the flag of Ytytyt is yellow and green. Someone Else, 33,35 Feb 2002
Information taken from Other Internet Sites
Most flags are not specifically copyrighted, however someone's rendition of one may be. In some messages you will find text and images taken from other Internet sites. They have often been plucked without any explicit permission of the author - before adding them to FOTW, you need to assess if we have permission to use them. If it is a single image from a web page, for example the flag of a city taken from that city's page, you should provide a hyperlink to the original web page in the form:
from <A HREF="http://my.hometown/flag.gif">http://my.hometown/flag.gif</A>
If the image(s) is(are) part of a series of images especially devoted to the flags, then you should obtain permission from the author (if known) or the web manager of the page the text or image was plucked from. If you receive no answer or a negative answer, replace the text and image by a link to the source Web page, something like:
See <A HREF="http://i.do.not.want.to/give/you/this.gif"> a good image of the Tibet flag</A>.
It is good practice to include a note saying that permission to reuse the image or material was obtained.
Copyright issues on commercial or company flags
Flags are usually made to represent a group and are not specifically copyrighted (although someone's rendition of one may be). Some flags, however, are copyrighted, even as flags, and specific permission must be sought for them. Examples include the "Earth flags", and some company flags. The best thing to do in this situation is have the image and the ® symbol (<®>) or TM-sign accompanied with an acknowledgement like "The widget-logo is a [registered] trademark of Silly
Widget Limited". This text should be placed directly below the flag image in question.
Dealing with Controversial Issues
Sometimes as editor you will be called upon to make judgment on whether
to include some material. Sometimes this will concern an issue that
reflects a dispute between states, and contributions from correspondents
demanding you remove this or that illegal flag. In this situation, you are
advised to include a statement like that on the Turkish
Republic of Northern Cyprus page, which states:
"FOTW is fully aware of the political situation of Northern Cyprus. We know of the fact that the situation is far from being unanimously accepted, and we know of the UNO rejection of the Turkish occupation. Nevertheless, our site is non-political and concentrates only on vexillological issues. The display of the TRNC flag is merely an acknowledgement of an averred fact: this flag exists."
Another situation might be where you are called to decide if material is worth including.
We quite commonly get requests from all sorts of organizations asking (or
demanding) that we include their flag (usually only seen on web pages) on our
web pages. In many cases this is an attempt to gain credibility. Our
policy is not to include such flags unless they become especially well
known. At a minimum we would require independent corroboration of the flag
by another web page, and preferably with a demonstration of the flag flying .
Crediting Images
Provide as much information as you can about the source of the images. For example, indicate 'Originally drawn by Rob Raeside, modified by Jorge Candeias, adapted to FOTW standard by Mark Sensen' for a situation where Rob drew a lousy lion, Jorge made it look like a lion, and Mark did a substantial remake to turn it to face the right way and put it on the right place on the flag. If you as editor have to remove a couple of black smudges from the lion's face, you don't need to credit such changes. If in doubt how to reference the flag, ask advice from the director.
Naming New Pages
If you are creating new pages, you have to choose new filenames. They must comply to the MSDOS "eight dot three" rule. The extension must be "html" or "htm" - it doesn't matter which. All filenames (both html files and gifs) must be lowercase. Do not use letters with diacriticals (accents) on them.
If your new page is about a country its filename should be the ISO3166 digraph of that country, e.g., for a page about Switzerland the filename should be "ch.html" because "ch" is the ISO3166 digraph for "Switzerland". See:
http://fotw.vexillum.com/flags/iso3166.html (or your local copy) for a complete list of digraphs according to ISO3166. If you are naming a filename containing a subpage (see below) of "xy.html" page, name it "xy-zzzzz.html" where "zzzzz" is a string explaining the contents of the subpage, e.g.:
zm.html: main page about Zambia
zm-eagle.html: subpage about Zambian eagles.
Any other usage of two-letters filename should be avoided. Three-letters filenames are reserved for important subjects with many subpages:
eur.html European institutions
eur-weu.html WEU (Western European Union)
eur-eeec.html EEEC
eco.html ecology
eco-grnp.html Greenpeace
The connectors can be used by themselves or with further letters to give meaning too:
xy-zzzzz.html | subpage about the state (or any other sub-national division of Zzzzz in Xy. | |
xy-.html | subpage giving a listing of the subdivisions of Xy | |
xy~.html | subpage about flags used at sea | |
xy~hf.html | houseflags from Xy | |
xy~nav.html | naval flags from Xy | |
xy^.html | subpage about military flags in Xy. | |
xy!.html | subpage about flag proposals (not adopted) or erroneous flags in Xy. | |
xy}.html | subpage about political flags in Xy (do NOT use a left brace '{' in filenames - they don't transfer by ftp | |
xy}xdr.html | subpage about the XDR political party in Xy. | |
xy).html | subpage about the coat of arms of Xy. | |
xy)zzz.html | subpage about the coat of arms of Zzz in Xy. | |
xy(.html | subpage containing a clickable map of Xy. | |
xy@fsc.html | subpage about sports teams flags in Xy. | |
xy'.html | subpage showing construction sheet for Xy. |
xy)!zzz.html | subpage about proposed coat of arms for Zzz in Xy. | |
xy^@.html | subpage about the military sports teams in Xy. |
Images of flags that are known to be in error should be included on (or directly linked from) the page that displays the correct flag of the place or period. If a visitor were looking for information about the (erroneous) flag of Xx, s/he would not realise of course that it was erroneous, so would look under xx.html. It goes without saying that the image on FOTW should be clearly labelled (above and repeated in the source below, perhaps) as erroneous, and the source(s) clearly stated.
This is the part that you as editor will build. Start immediately after the <!--CUT ABOVE--> line. It takes the general form:
<BODY>
<!--CUT ABOVE-->
The main picture: include the name of the person who made the image. If known, include here the date of adoption of the flag and any of the FIAV flag information symbols.
The list of contents (items on this page)
The list of related subjects (items on other pages)
One or more subpages
</BODY>
The Main Picture
Usually a page has a main picture (e.g. the national flag). Put it immediately under the <!--CUT ABOVE--> line, as follows:
<P>
<A HREF="../images/i/it.gif">
<IMG SRC="../images/i/it.gif" ALT="[Italian flag]" BORDER=0 HEIGHT=216 WIDTH=324> </A> by <EM>Giuseppe Bottasini</EM>
</P>
<HR>
Notes about the image formatting
What goes in the MISC folder?
<A HREF="../images/h/ht.gif">
<IMG SRC="../images/h/ht.gif" BORDER=0 ALT="[Civil flag of Haiti]"></A> by Mark Sensen
<BR>
<a href="flagdate.html">Flag adopted</a> 25 February 1986, coat of arms also adopted 25 February 1986.
<HR>
If the adoption date (here listed as only the last date of change of the flag) is more complex, follow the example:
<A HREF="../images/c/cg.gif">
<IMG SRC="../images/c/cg.gif" BORDER=0 ALT="[Civil flag of Congo]"></A> by Mark Sensen
<BR>
Flag originally adopted 18 August 1958,<BR>
<a href="flagdate.html">re-adopted</a> 10 June 1991, coat of arms adopted 10 June 1991.
Under the main picture, write the list of contents which embody the subject of the page and its related subpages:
<P>
<UL>
<li><A HREF="#exp">Explanation of the flag</A>
<li><A HREF="#his">History of the flag</A>
<li><A HREF="au-abo.html">Aboriginal flag</A>
<li><A HREF="au-new.html">Proposals for a new flag</A>
<li><A HREF="au-rep.html">Australia Republic</A>
</UL>
</P>
<HR>
This will result in:
Under the list of contents, make a list of other pages treating subjects related to the subject of the page:
<P>
<EM>See also</EM>:
<UL>
<LI>
<A HREF="nz.html">New Zealand</A> page for the meaning of the Southern Cross in Oceanian flags
<LI>
<A HREF="http://www.mpce.mq.edu.au/~brendan/flags.html">"Flags of Australia"</A> that provides images, information and brief histories of all current Australian national, state, territory and indigenous flags.
</UL>
</P>
<HR>
This will result in:
See also:
In the example, the first item is a link to another page of our site, the other ones point outside the FOTW. If the subject of the page is a region (e.g., Queensland) put here a link to the country which the region belongs to (e.g., Australia). Put here links to specialized WWW flags pages (e.g. Ausflag) and/or links to general information about the country. Be conservative in the number of links outside of FOTW - external links are liable to change without warning.
A fairly simple set of pages for many countries (especially post-colonial countries) might be:
current flags
political flags
province flags
military flags
precolonial flags
colonial flags
postcolonial flags
<P>A great long story about the history of the flag of Rodinia.
<BR>
<I>Rob Raeside</EM>, 20 May 1999
(It is acceptable to use <I>...</I> too.)
For artists' credits, see the section on crediting images above. As a general rule, try to indicate who drew any significant part of it. For simple situations (one artist), use the format:
<A HREF="../images/h/ht-jack.gif"> <IMG SRC="../images/h/ht-jack.gif" BORDER=0 ALT="[Jack]"></A> by <EM>Paige Herring</EM> </P>
Note that the artist's name is on the same line as the flag, and is referred to exactly the same way as text contributors, with the addition of the word "by". If more than one person was involved in drawing the flag, give similar reference to all significant artists. See section above on "Crediting Images" for more details.
Index Maps
António Martins has responsibility for adding and updating the clickable maps to FOTW. If a country has a clickable map on another page, a link on the front page is required. Generally these pages are listed as geo-zz.html or zz(.html (clickable map of Zzz). Full details about map pages are available on the maps instructions page.
Many links to the bibliography are in the form of [zna00] - the link to Znamierowski (2000). Some editors use a system like that used in scientific journals where the reference is directly linked: Znamierowski (2000). For more details on the bibliography and links to it, see the page maintained by António Martins.