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Merger proposal
This is a proposal to merge this article into
Philippine general election, 2010.
Both articles refer to the same event, even if the event will have two results of different nature. Moreover, the texts, as they are (April 2009) do not differ significantly. --
AVM (
talk) 21:07, 20 April 2009 (UTC)reply
Colors
Can we use subtly different hues of green for BPM and the other one? We can use lime for BPM since their colors are yellow and green. –HowardtheDuck 02:23, 4 December 2009 (UTC)reply
The cell is colored to the person that "won" the survey.
Only names that are included in at least one survey will be included. Those who aren't will be lumped together with the "others".
This is important -- in surveys, a number rounded off to the nearest whole number is not equal to the whole number. For example, if it states simply as "25%", it is not automatically equal to "25.0%". We should be wary of this. –HowardtheDuck 05:41, 29 January 2010 (UTC)reply
Take for this as an example: Let's say I have a survey on 9 kids on what they want on birthday parties: 4 chose spaghetti, 3 chose ice cream and 2 chose cake. Now, on my study rounded them off to the nearest whole number, so it'll be 44% for spaghetti, 33% for ice cream and 22% for cake. Now if they'll be added here with a decimal place, and I didn't release their exact numbers, it'll be displayed as 44.0%, 33.0% and 22.0% respectively, making it wrong, since the correct numbers are when rounded to the nearest tenths should've been 44.4%, 33.3% and 22.2% respectively. Those fractions are crucial when you take into account the margin of error. –HowardtheDuck 05:51, 29 January 2010 (UTC)reply
In addition, in the event Acosta and Perlas are included in future surveys, I'd prefer on using "—" rather than "0.0%" or "0%" in surveys that didn't include them. It means that they were not included, not nobody chose them (which could mean that they were included but no one chose them).
Thanks for making these tables Howard, great job! (And yes, I agree with your stand on the Acosta case.) Mark 21:46, 29 January 2010 (UTC)
Acosta is now in (I told you guys to be patient), but after inauguration, I'm planning to lump the candidates who failed to break past the margin of error at least once to "Others" so we can focus on the major ones. –HowardtheDuck 09:12, 1 February 2010 (UTC)reply
Interesting NPOV problem with the photos
I think it's interesting that the need to use free images has favoured some candidates while disadvantaging others. Here's how I would vote based purely on the photographic evidence available on Wikipedia:
Manny Villa. He's outside--a man of the people! He has a genuine smile on his face.
Gilberto Teodoro. Looks a bit nervous, but on the other hand dynamic, energetic and enthusiastic.
Richard Gordon. Good posture, clear photo.
Noynoy Aquino. Terrible photo, colours clash, looks straight out of the 1970s.
Joseph Estrada. Not smiling. Grainy. Looks like the obituary photo of an assassinated dictator.
Eddie Villanueva. No photo. Could be an alien or a banana for all I know.
Needless to say this is not how I'd actually vote, but appearances do have a big influence on voting decisions. --
Specrat (
talk) 01:48, 17 February 2010 (UTC)reply
We need portrait pics, the ones they use on Senate portraits. But I think those are copyrighted. –HowardtheDuck 11:31, 17 February 2010 (UTC)reply
Actually, it would be nice if we could use their campaign posters. –HowardtheDuck 15:49, 17 February 2010 (UTC)reply
infobox
The way it's going, it seems that only Erap and Noynoy will be left. Noynoy's margin of victory is ~15% and 3rd place Villar is ~14%. –HowardtheDuck 17:03, 10 May 2010 (UTC)reply
The basis for Villar being there (and the others not being there) is that his number of votes is near the margin between Aquino and Estrada, and he won two rather big provinces. The boldfaced vice-president will be depend on who wins. –HowardtheDuck 17:44, 2 June 2010 (UTC)reply
Revising the Background section
Right now, the background of the election is written in the form of a timeline. I suggest that we soon transform this into a more formal background output, similar to the one written for
Philippine presidential election, 2004.
The Mask (
talk) 06:26, 20 September 2011 (UTC)reply
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