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Parsing chinese names, example Gong (Family name) Li (given name)
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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantTheFly
Registered: March 18, 2007
United Kingdom Posts: 103
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Quoting skipnet50:
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They are proposing that in such a cast list, that special RULES should apply to Chow Yun Fat, even though the name appears in identical format to the the Anglican names. And they set up all sorts of straw men to support their argument.Their suggestion, however, does not apply to ALL oriental names, Bruce Li would not be Li//Bruce. The answer as I have stated is for them to deal with the issue locally in ANY way they wish, but for the Online simply follow the Rules. What is this about? They are making a big fuss about the APPEARRANCE of the name, however the Online database cannot be sorted by Actors at this time and I don't see any real need t ever be able to do that. They simply wnat it to appear culturally correct and the place for that is LOCALLY.

No, the issue as I understand it is not to fuss over the appearance of the name, but to try to standardise the online database so that each actor has one and only one entry (with "Credited As" used whenever they are credited differently, per the rules).

The only way to standardise the different naming orders is to drop the use of First/Middle/Last and rename to Given/Family. Both Western and Asian people have given and family names and it is easy to work out which is which. If the field names were changed then hopefully there could be no argument as to what goes in which field. As I've said before, an additional tickbox could then be used to indicate whether the name should be displayed as Given/Family or Family/Given.

For any profiles where the on-screen credit does not match the usual form (whether it be a different name order or a misspelling or whatever) then "Credited As" is used, as stated in the rules.
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorAddicted2DVD
Registered: March 13, 2007
Reputation: Highest Rating
United States Posts: 17,310
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Except for Ken himself has stated that the common name is not necessarily the real name... it is the most commonly credited name.

Quoting Ken Cole:
Quote:
The lookup tool is not to be blindly trusted, however it does outweigh other sources, including autographs.  The common name is not intended to always reflect the "real name", but the most commonly credited name.

However, if a user documents errors in the database where the credit is not entered properly, that can and should be considered.  Better yet, correct the entries, assuming you own the discs in question, thereby correcting the lookup results.


bold by me..
So I read that to mean it don't matter how the real name is... it matters how the person is credited the most.

the rules also says that we are to use the credit look-up tool to determine if we use the credited as field.

What do I personally believe?... What I would like to see myself is to replace all 3 fields with one field and leave it at that. Then go by the most credited form of the name as per the rules/Ken's wishes.
Pete
DVD Profiler Unlimited Registrantnuoyaxin
prev. known as ya_shin
Registered: March 13, 2007
Reputation: High Rating
Taiwan, Province of China Posts: 3,432
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Quoting skipnet50:
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Enry:

I have also explained this before.

You make no cultural interpretation you enter Smith//John. or Doe//John.

If the credits are entirely "backwards", which I understand was being referred to, then of course we would enter John//Smith credited as Smith John. Anything else would be against the intended function.

The second paragraph posted is a tricky issue and therefore unfortunately can indeed only be handled locally at this time.

Quoting Addicted2DVD:
Quote:
Except for Ken himself has stated that the common name is not necessarily the real name... it is the most commonly credited name.

Quoting Ken Cole:
Quote:
The lookup tool is not to be blindly trusted, however it does outweigh other sources, including autographs.  The common name is not intended to always reflect the "real name", but the most commonly credited name.

However, if a user documents errors in the database where the credit is not entered properly, that can and should be considered.  Better yet, correct the entries, assuming you own the discs in question, thereby correcting the lookup results.


bold by me..
So I read that to mean it don't matter how the real name is... it matters how the person is credited the most.

Of course. This is a very important statement in regards to stage names and other aliases!
Achim [諾亞信; Ya-Shin//Nuo], a German in Taiwan.
Registered: May 29, 2000 (at InterVocative)
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorWinston Smith
Don't be discommodious
Registered: March 13, 2007
United States Posts: 21,610
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Fly:

We don't standardize names, there are databases that seem to standardize that their data and are also grossly inaccurate relative to ACTUAL film credits. And that is our source data and our standard. Regardless of whether you are talking about Russian, German, French, Chineses or what have you the argument is ALWAYS the same. We don't do names like that here and my answer is always the same...I don't care...Hollywood DOES and it is On the screen like this, so to do it like that is WRONG. Its why I say I am culturally blind relative to the data, or my culture is the film credits and what they say...it is all that is relevant.

I understand all of the cultural issues. Some people almost seem to take it as a personal affront. But as I said Chow Yun Fat or whomever the actor is understand the ramifications of having their name shown on screen in a particular fashion so that his name would appear in a way that is more consistent with the culture of the film he is starring in, yet he is content with Chow Yun  Fat instead of the culturally consistent Yun Fat Chow, if it doesn't upset him why should it upset me.

Should I get myself all worked up and go on and on because Chow Yun Fat stars in films with many English actors such as Seann William Scott yet allows his name to handled culturally backwards to everyone else in the film. After all it is a wholly Hollywood Production and yet his name is backwards to everyone else in the film. I think not, there may be those that would...but not me.

Skip
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Billy Video
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile Registrantlmoelleb
Beer Profiler now!
Registered: March 14, 2007
Denmark Posts: 630
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Quoting skipnet50:
Quote:
Fly:

Its why I say I am culturally blind relative to the data, or my culture is the film credits and what they say...it is all that is relevant.
Skip

It doesn't really help you are "culturally blind" when the database you enter the data in isn't.
Regards
Lars
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorWinston Smith
Don't be discommodious
Registered: March 13, 2007
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It certainly is, Lars.

Skip
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Billy Video
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile Registrantlmoelleb
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Registered: March 14, 2007
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Quoting skipnet50:
Quote:
It certainly is, Lars.

Skip


Sorry, it isn't. But that's just my opinion - and after all, I was only responsible for software localization and internationalization close to 8 years in a pretty large software company, so what would I know about that?
Regards
Lars
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorWinston Smith
Don't be discommodious
Registered: March 13, 2007
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Your experience has nothing to do with the way in which the film industry does its credits. That is our DATASOURCE, we don't control what they do or how they do it, Lars, with all due respect.

Liike i said I recently had the occassion to have one of my foreign films come up audit and I copi4ed the credits as i saw them, I did not try to translate what i saw, nor whine about the way the filmmaker handled the names, I simply entered what I saw, diacriticals that were used and all. That is all that needs to be done..,.nothing more or less. It is a very simple procedure unless you want to make it difficult.

Skip
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Billy Video
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorRHo
Registered: March 13, 2007
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Quoting skipnet50:
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We don't standardize names, (...)

Yes, we do to some extent. E.g. we do standardise capitalisation of names in all caps and we do leave out affiliations.
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile Registrantlmoelleb
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Registered: March 14, 2007
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Quoting skipnet50:
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Your experience has nothing to do with the way in which the film industry does its credits.

I was not talking about the movie industry. I was talking about the database. I am extremely surprised the movie industry which spans basically every culture on this planet agree on how to do credits though - but I am indeed not an expert so while I find it extremely unlikely it might be true.
Quote:

That is our DATASOURCE, we don't control what they do or how they do it, Lars, with all due respect.

The datasource contains a name. It does not in any way try to say what is first or last name. It does not say what is the upper or lower case representation of the name. The database does.
Quote:

Liike i said I recently had the occassion to have one of my foreign films come up audit and I copi4ed the credits as i saw them, I did not try to translate what i saw, nor whine about the way the filmmaker handled the names, I simply entered what I saw, diacriticals that were used and all.

I have no doubt you did this. But what you saw is based on your own cultural experience. You call them neutral but they are no more neutral than for example French rules. You find the data accurate because it represents the way you interprete the data based on your cultural preferences. People with another cultural background might find another representation of the data accurate and neutral.
Quote:


That is all that needs to be done..,.nothing more or less. It is a very simple procedure unless you want to make it difficult.

Skip

Sorry, I  I took the red pill when I went into software localization. I would like it to be simple - but then I would also like the Earth to be flat so we didn't have to deal with time zones, but it just isn't going to happen so we have to accept the fact that it is not simple. 
Regards
Lars
 Last edited: by lmoelleb
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantTheFly
Registered: March 18, 2007
United Kingdom Posts: 103
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Quoting skipnet50:
Quote:
Liike i said I recently had the occassion to have one of my foreign films come up audit and I copi4ed the credits as i saw them, I did not try to translate what i saw, nor whine about the way the filmmaker handled the names, I simply entered what I saw, diacriticals that were used and all. That is all that needs to be done..,.nothing more or less. It is a very simple procedure unless you want to make it difficult.

Except, of course, that due to the lack of support for extended character sets entering exactly what you see is impossible when the credits are in a language which doesn't use the roman alphabet, e.g. Japanese, Korean, Arabic, many of the eastern-European languages or any of the Chinese languages.
 Last edited: by TheFly
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorWinston Smith
Don't be discommodious
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THAT is indeed an issue,that hopefully one day ken will address, Fly.

Skip
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Billy Video
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantWhite Pongo, Jr.
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Registered: August 22, 2007
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Quoting ya_shin:
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If the credits are entirely "backwards", which I understand was being referred to, then of course we would enter John//Smith credited as Smith John. Anything else would be against the intended function.



I would only enter John//Smith, id est the name on screen entered in the appropriate name fields ("Smith" in the Last name field, and so on),

not John//Smith credited as Smith John.
EDIT: The latter, by the way, would be conflicting with the CLT system.
-- Enry
 Last edited: by White Pongo, Jr.
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantWhite Pongo, Jr.
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-
-- Enry
 Last edited: by White Pongo, Jr.
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile Registrantjgilligan
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Registered: March 14, 2007
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This has got to be one of the most troubling issues we have.  It comes up time and time again, and we can never come to a common consensus on how we think it should be handled.

Getting rid of the multiple fields and going to a single field would eliminate some of the arguing we are seeing, but would generate a whole new set of arguments.  There are many reasons to have the names available in separate fields, the biggest reason for having "Last Name" separate is for sorting.  The fact that the program specifically allows for changing the displayed sequence of the names seems to support this.

One solution for this would be to add one additional field to store the actor (or crew) name in a single field exactly as displayed on the screen.  This would allow the data to be entered into that field exactly as seen on the screen with not interpretation and no parsing making it very easy to create and enforce rules.  We would still need the multiple fields so that users of the program can sort by last name.

We would still have the same challenges on how to parse the names into First, Middle and Last name fields.  But, that would only affect those users who want to make use of these fields.  If a user only cares about what is on screen, the multiple fields of the name do not have to be used or displayed.  They could also lock these fields and not worry about any ping-pong that might occur.


As I see it, we will never come to a consensus on how to parse the names and the rules are not as straightforward as some say they are.  So, this might be a reasonable compromise that wouldn't be TOO difficult for Ken to develop for us.
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile Registrantnoodleboy
Registered: January 7, 2008
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Quoting jgilligan:
Quote:
One solution for this would be to add one additional field to store the actor (or crew) name in a single field exactly as displayed on the screen.


Isn't that exactly what the "Credited As" is for?  Are you proposing that we have First Name, Middle Name, Last Name, Full Name, and Credited As?  That seems like it's getting really redundant at that point.
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