Danbooru

Tag Alias: contracted_pupils

Posted under General

Aliasing shrunk_pupilscontracted_pupils.

Reason: shrunk pupils is the pre-existing tag, but I like "contracted" more.

PS. jxh2154: how exactly does the alias creation system work, and do I break it by not actually going through the alias creation form? It's much faster for me to do it by hand than to click 5 times to reach it, thus my preference for going directly to the forum.

Updated by jxh2154

jxh2154 gets the "create" link if you use the form or if you write in the same syntax. I know because I created forum #56720 manually (by copying the text from another thread). In other words, the title probably needs a "shrunk_pupils -> " and → and "alias" without capital letter might not work.

S1eth said:
jxh2154 gets the "create" link if you use the form or if you write in the same syntax. I know because I created forum #56720 manually (by copying the text from another thread). In other words, the title probably needs a "shrunk_pupils -> " and → and "alias" without capital letter might not work.

Ah, right, I usually capitalise it properly. It'd be nice if → was also recognised though.

Cyberia-Mix said:
Do we want to merge this with shrunk_eyes or keep them separate (I personally don't think the distinction is THAT useful)?

None of the posts there have shrunk eyes, they're all pupils that shrank. So it should be very much aliased to contracted_pupils.

My ideal situation would be that any tag1 -> tag2 string in a post had a create line next to it, although I guess it wouldn't know if implication or alias was meant.

Anyway, constricted or contracted? Constricted is more familiar to me, but it could be a British/American English thing again.

Aliased to contracted for now though.

jxh2154 said:
Anyway, constricted or contracted? Constricted is more familiar to me, but it could be a British/American English thing again.

Not that I know of. It was just the first thing that came to my mind, but I can't say I have any familiarity with how the average Brit would phrase it. And I'm not a native speaker, no matter my preferences for the variant of English I use.

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