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User talk:Mark in tx

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
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talk page

talk page started. --Predator20 04:08, 22 November 2010 (UTC)

Lone Wolf McQuade

A reminder when adding descriptions to guns, please use the established format in writing them down (adding the picture of the gun, the name of the gun and hyperlinking it). Take a look at such pages as Full Metal Jacket or NCIS for properly formatted examples. Also, if you are unsure what the particular gun is in your screencap, please post these in the discussion page instead of on the actual page. Thanks. --Ben41 04:54, 22 November 2010 (UTC)

Thank you. I am new to using the wiki protocols. I hope to get better. And thanks to Predator for making this talk page for me. Also I'm just starting to figure a few things out. such as proper tags, and formatting and thumbnails. I'll get it, just give me a bit to get my head wrapped around it. --Mark_in_tx


Ruckus (1981)

Just finished watching Ruckus. I'm going to grab screen shots after I convert it to an easier format. The movie stars Dirk Benedict and Linda Blair, with Richard Farnsworth as the Sheriff. The movie is also known as Ruckus in Madoc County. --Mark_in_tx

Wrong formatting

Please correct the formatting on Ruckus (1981), especially the picture files. These need to be thumbnailed, in orders the "thumb|none|300px" needs to be added to the edit code (because of the low quality, 300px-400px is preferable). The correct way to format a picture should look like this: [[File:Ruckus 1.jpg|thumb|none|300px|Deputy Dave ([[John Van Ness]]) appears to carry a Remington 870 with a 28" barrel and the 3 round magazine.]] >

I've done the first one for you, but please change the rest (including on the discussion page). You may want to separate the pump action shotguns categories more specifically as well. --Ben41 19:01, 7 May 2011 (CDT)

Ruckus

If you think you know what a weapon in a screencap is, try comparing it to the stock images on the site to make a positive ID instead of jsut putting that "it might be a such-and-such". That is essentially telling the reader that they have to figure it out on their own, which kind of defeats the purpose of this site. Also, look at how weapon sections on pages such as Heat are laid out; the specific weapon name, a general description ("Joe uses a gun X during scene Y") with a link to the proper weapon page, then a stock image listing the weapon's name and caliber/gauge, then the screencaps.--PistolJunkie 19:21, 7 May 2011 (CDT)