Hi there - I noticed you updating a handful of color values on pages. While I admittedly don't know much about color science, I imagine there is an authoritative source which defines these hex values. Where are you getting these values from within your edits. I feel that defining this somewhere would avoid users undoing your edits. Thanks! - Skipple☎20:38, 26 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
What actually happened: this was done on accident. I recognize adding the "A perfect month cannot occur in 2004 or 2020 because February has 29 days in these years" but I do not recognize removing sources and adding random sources. That might have happened without me knowing about it while I was doing the edit. (I had a captcha to do and it might have happened whilst doing the captcha) 108.44.231.102 (talk) 19:10, 29 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
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Yes it is. Your supposed source does not verify the claim, and you have been asked multiple times to discuss this on the talk page. Meters (talk) 23:50, 22 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I was about to make an edit on Perfect month, but I cancelled the edit when I saw your talk page message.
Would this edit be approved of? I can assure you that it verifies the claim that a perfect month can happen on any common year depending on when the day of the week starts (this edit isn't published)
Long article section
A perfect month or a rectangular month designates a month whose number of days is divisible by the number of days in a week and whose first day corresponds to the first day of the week.[1][2] This causes the arrangement of the days of the month to resemble a rectangle. In the Gregorian calendar, this arrangement can only occur for the month of February.
== Constraints ==
To satisfy such an arrangement in the Gregorian calendar, the number of days in the month must be divisible by seven. Only the month of February of a common year can meet this constraint as the month has 28 days, a multiple of 7.[3]
For a February to be a perfect month, the month must start on the first day of the week (usually considered to be Sunday or Monday). For Sunday-first calendars, this means that the year must start on a Thursday, and for Monday-first calendars, the year must start on a Friday. It must also occur in a common year, as the phenomenon does not occur when February has 29 days.
== Occurrence ==
In the Gregorian calendar, the phenomenon occurs every six years or eleven years following a 6-11-11, 11-6-11, or an 11-11-6 sequence until the end of the 21st century. The most recent perfect months were February 2015 (Sunday-first) and February 2021 (Monday-first).[4] Due to calculation rules, the years 1700, 1800, and 1900 are not leap years, causing a shift in the sequence with a spacing of twelve years. For example, in Sunday-first calendars, there are spacings between 1795 and 1807; however 2094, 2100 and 2106 will all feature perfect months with spacings of six years on Monday-first calendars.
== Attributes ==
The calendar arrangement brings together notions of harmony and organization.[5][6]
I have no idea what you are changing in this article. Do you really expect me to go through every line of the article and your post looking for the differences? Anyways, it sounds like you are off chasing your calendar WP:OR/trivia again. Why would we want to discuss perfect months in hypothetical calendars starting on days that are not used to start weeks in the real world? Meters (talk) 00:05, 23 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Do not remove the redirect on Talk:Leap year starting on Friday. It's there for a reason. The talk page threads on this and the other calendar pages typically apply to all of those pages, so the talk pages have been consolidated in one place. That's why there's a big message box saying "This is a redirect from a talk page in any talk namespace to a corresponding centralized talk page that is more heavily watched, and thus more likely to be answered or acted on. Please start discussions there." Don't ignore it, and don't delete it.