Help:Contents
Ack help.
Well for most people you just need to be able to browse the site. Not too hard ;)
If you're editing pages, you'll want to head over to the MEdiawiki people until i get their support/help pages onto this site. Otherwise send me an email with your problem and I'll try and get you taken care of.
Here is the Old FAQ we had on the site. It contains mostly RPG related info.
Lastly, the help page is used for linking site-like documents such as Templates.
Editing Pages Help
There are two parts to editing Pages. Luckily, Editing pages is largely simple as typing in text like you would a word processor. Formatting however, is done in two ways.
The first is by use of the Wiki Syntax. A good example is the above line that says "Editing Pages Help". To accomplish the title likeness and the underline, two == were placed, one before and one after the block of text. The full syntax looked like this
==Editing Pages Help==
Which gave us our desired result.
Links are generated by the site by the use of double brackets. [[ ]] are containers for links.
Example
[[RPG:Old_Faq|Old FAQ]]
A | is used to seperate a potentially non-formatted text to replace with your own. Otherwise the link itself will show the underscore.
Why an underscore ? The link you create uses the link as its page title. So if you create a link called [[thisoldhouse]] you end up with a page title as thisoldhouse. Doesn't look very nice. However, underscores in links are converted to spaces in the page titles. So you end up with [[This_Old_House]] being This Old House as your title.
Templates are a great thing. In function it allows any page to act like any type of database simply by referencing the template to be used, and telling it which variables to fill in for you.
Take a look at this template (open in new window) This is the faction template used on factions. You will see that by itself its pretty self explanitory. The {{{Text}}} are used as variables for definition when we use a template. When we use the template, we dont' paste that code in on the page of use. We do this instead.
{{
Template:Factions
|Image=
|Name=
|Location=
|Military=
|Government=
|TechLevel=
|AssocSpecies=
|About=
|Diplomatic=
|History=
|Other=
|Category=
}}
</code>
and we then simply fill in the blanks as if it was a normal database on the old site. The order isn't important, but its little syntax is (though it could all be on a single line if you wanted it to be.) I break it down for each section per line to make editing easier in the future. The link below is our current templates in use.
More Formatting
You can format your text using wiki markup. This consists of normal characters like asterisks, single quotes or equation marks which have a special function in the wiki, sometimes depending on their position. For example, to format a word in italic, you include it in two single quotes like ''this''
Text formatting markup
Description
You type
You get
applies anywhere
Italic text
''italic''
italic
Bold text
'''bold'''
bold
Bold and italic
'''''bold & italic'''''
bold & italic
Escape wiki markup
<nowiki>no ''markup''</nowiki>
no ''markup''
only at the beginning of the line
Headings of
different sizes
==level 1==
===level 2===
====level 3====
=====level 4=====
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Level 4
Horizontal rule
----
Bullet list
* one
* two
* three
** three and one-third
** three and two-thirds
- one
- two
- three
- three and one-third
- three and two-thirds
Numbered list
# one
# two<br>spanning several lines<br>without breaking the numbering
# three
## three point one
## three point two
- one
- two
spanning several lines
without breaking the numbering
- three
- three point one
- three point two
Mixture of bulleted
and numbered lists
# one
# two
#* two point one
#* two point two
- one
- two
- two point one
- two point two
Definition list
;Definition
:item 1
:item 2
- Definition
- item 1
- item 2
Preformatted text
preformatted text is done with
a space at the
beginning of the line
preformatted text is done with
a space at the
beginning of the line
Paragraphs
Mediawiki ignores normal line breaks. To start a new paragraph, leave an empty line. You can also start a newline with the HTML tag <br />.
HTML
Some HTML-Tags are allowed in MediaWiki, for example <code>, <div>, <span> and <font>.
More advanced formatting
Beyond the basic text formatting markup shown above, there are some more advanced formatting tricks:
There are four sorts of links in MediaWiki:
- internal links to other pages in the wiki
- external links to websites
- inter-wiki links (links to other wikis)
- inter-language links to other language versions of the same wiki
To add an internal link, enclose the name of the page you want to link to in double square brackets. When you save the page, you'll see the new link pointing to your page. If the page exists already, it is displayed in blue, empty pages are displayed in red. Selflinks to the current page are not transformed in URLs but displayed in bold.
The first letter of the target page is automatically capitalized and spaces are represented as underscores (typing an underscore in the link will have a similar effect as typing a space, but is not recommended, since the underscore will also be shown in the text).
How to link
Description
You type
You get
Internal link
[[Main Page]]
Main Page
Category link
[[:Category:Help]]
Category:Help
Piped link
[[Main Page|different text]]
different text
Anchor link
[[#External links|Anchor link]]
Anchor link
External link
http://mediawiki.org
http://mediawiki.org
External link,
different title
[http://mediawiki.org MediaWiki]
MediaWiki
External link,
unnamed
[http://mediawiki.org]
[1]
External link,
same host unnamed
[http://{{SERVERNAME}}/pagename]
[2]
Interwiki link
[[Wikipedia:MediaWiki]]
Wikipedia:MediaWiki
mailto
mailto:[email protected]
mailto:[email protected]
mailto unnamed
[mailto:[email protected]]
[3]
mailto named
[mailto:[email protected] info]
info
redirect
#REDIRECT [[Main Page]]
→ Main Page
Contents
- 1 Editing Pages Help
- 2 More Formatting
- 3 Text formatting markup
- 4 Level 1
- 5 Paragraphs
- 6 HTML
- 7 More advanced formatting
- 8 How to link
- 9 Uploaded files
- 10 Other files
- 11 Administration of images/files
- 12 External Links
- 13 Wiki table markup summary
- 14 Simple table
- 15 Table with TH headings
- 16 Caption
- 17 Table with H1, H2, H3 etc. headings
Description
You type
You get
Embed image
(with alt text)
[[Image:Example.jpg|Sunflowers]]
Link to description page
[[:Image:Example.jpg]]
[[:Image:Example.jpg|Sunflowers]]
Link directly to file
[[Media:Example.jpg]]
[[Media:Example.jpg|Sunflowers]]
Thumbnail
(centered, 100 pixels
wide, with caption)
[[Image:Example.jpg|center|thumb|100px|Sunflowers]]
Uploaded files
To use an image or other file which has been uploaded to the wiki, use:
[[Image:Example.jpg]]
If you add a pipe (|) and some text after the filename, the text will be used as alternative text for text-only browsers:
[[Image:Example.jpg|alternative text]]
If you don't want to display the image, you can link to the file's description page, by adding a colon:
[[:Image:Example.jpg]]
To bypass the description page and link directly to a file , use the "Media" pseudo-namespace:
[[Media:Example.jpg]]
You can also make piped links if you want some other text to be used:
[[:Image:Example.jpg|link text]]
[[Media:Example.jpg|link text]]
Advanced options
The full syntax for displaying an image is:
[[Image:{name}|{options}]]
Where options can be zero or more of the following, separated by pipes:
thumb
, thumbnail
, or frame
: Controls how the image is formatted
left
, right
, center
, none
: Controls the alignment of the image on the page
{width}px
: Resizes the image to the given width in pixels
{caption text}
The options can be given in any order. If a given option does not match any of the other possibilities, it is assumed to be the caption text. Caption text can contain wiki links or other formatting.
Gallery of images
It's easy to make a gallery of thumbnails with the <gallery>
tag. The syntax is:
<gallery>
Image:{filename}|{caption}
Image:{filename}|{caption}
{...}
</gallery>
Captions are optional, and may contain wiki links or other formatting.
for example:
<gallery>
Image:Example.jpg|Item 1
Image:Example.jpg|a link to [[Help:Contents]]
Image:Example.jpg
Image:Example.jpg
Image:Example.jpg|''italic caption''
</gallery>
is formatted as:
-
a link to Help:Contents
Other files
You can link to an external file using the same syntax used for linking to an external web page.
[http://url.for/some/image.png]
Or with different text:
[http://url.for/some/image.png link text here]
If it is enabled on your wiki (see Manual:$wgAllowExternalImages), you can also embed external images. To do that, simply insert the image's url:
http://url.for/some/image.png
Administration of images/files
See here: Manual:Image Administration
External Links
Template:Click
MetaWiki: Help:Images and other uploaded files
Template:Languages
Tables may be authored in wiki pages using either HTML table elements directly, or using wikicode formatting to define the table. HTML table elements and their use are well described on various web pages and will not be discussed here. The benefit of wikicode is that the table is constructed of character symbols which tend to make it easier to perceive the table structure in the article editing view compared to HTML table elements.
A good general rule of thumb is to avoid using a table unless you need to. Table markup often complicates page editing.
Wiki table markup summary
{|
start table
|+
table caption, optional; only one per table and between table start and first row
|-
table row, optional on first row -- wiki engine assumes the first row
!
table header cell, optional. Consecutive table headers may be added on same line separated by double marks (!!) or start on new lines, each with its own single mark (!).
|
table data cell, required! Consecutive table data cells may be added on same line separated by double marks (||) or start on new lines, each with its own single mark (|).
|}
end table
- The above marks must start on a new line except the double || and !! for optionally adding consecutive cells to a line.
- XHTML attributes. Each mark, except table end, optionally accepts one or more XHTML attributes. Attributes must be on the same line as the mark. Separate attributes from each other with a single space.
- Cells and caption (| or ||, ! or !!, and |+) hold content. So separate any attributes from content with a single pipe (|). Cell content may follow on same line or on following lines.
- Table and row marks ({| and |-) do not directly hold content. Do not add pipe (|) after their optional attributes. If you erroneously add a pipe after attributes for the table mark or row mark the parser will delete it and your final attribute if it was touching the erroneous pipe!
- Content may (a) follow its cell mark on the same line after any optional XHTML attributes or (b) on lines below the cell mark. Content that uses wiki markup that itself needs to start on a new line, such as lists, headers, or nested tables, must of course be on its own new line.
Simple table
Plain
The following table lacks borders and good spacing but shows the simplest wiki markup table structure
Orange
Apple
Bread
Pie
Butter
Ice cream
{|
|Orange
|Apple
|-
|Bread
|Pie
|-
|Butter
|Ice cream
|}
Alternative
For more table-ish looking wiki markup cells can be listed on one line separated by ||. This does not scale well for longer cell content such as paragraphs. It works well for short bits of content however, such as our example table.
Extra spaces within cells in the wiki markup can be added, as I have done in the wiki markup below, to make the wiki markup itself look better but they do not effect the actual table rendering.
HTML attributes can be added to this table following the examples in other tables on this page but have been left out of the following example for simplicity.
Orange
Apple
more
Bread
Pie
more
Butter
Ice cream
and more
{|
| Orange || Apple || more
|-
| Bread || Pie || more
|-
| Butter || Ice cream || and more
|}
With HTML attributes
You can add HTML attributes to make your table look better
border="1"
Orange
Apple
Bread
Pie
Butter
Ice cream
{| border="1"
|Orange
|Apple
|-
|Bread
|Pie
|-
|Butter
|Ice cream
|}
align="center" border="1"
Orange
Apple
Bread
Pie
Butter
Ice cream
{| align="center" border="1"
|Orange
|Apple
|-
|Bread
|Pie
|-
|Butter
|Ice cream
|}
align="right" border="1"
You can put attributes on individual cells. Numbers for example may look better aligned right
Orange
Apple
12,333.00
Bread
Pie
500.00
Butter
Ice cream
1.00
{| border="1"
|Orange
|Apple
|align="right"|12,333.00
|-
|Bread
|Pie
|align="right"|500.00
|-
|Butter
|Ice cream
|align="right"|1.00
|}
You can put attributes on individual rows, too.
Orange
Apple
12,333.00
Bread
Pie
500.00
Butter
Ice cream
1.00
{| border="1"
|Orange
|Apple
|align="right"|12,333.00
|-
|Bread
|Pie
|align="right"|500.00
|- style="font-style:italic;color:green;"
|Butter
|Ice cream
|align="right"|1.00
|}
cellspacing="0" border="1"
Orange
Apple
Bread
Pie
Butter
Ice cream
{| cellspacing="0" border="1"
|Orange
|Apple
|-
|Bread
|Pie
|-
|Butter
|Ice cream
|}
cellpadding="20" cellspacing="0" border="1"
Orange
Apple
Bread
Pie
Butter
Ice cream
{| cellpadding="20" cellspacing="0" border="1"
|Orange
|Apple
|-
|Bread
|Pie
|-
|Butter
|Ice cream
|}
With HTML attributes and CSS styles
CSS style attributes can be added with or without other HTML attributes
style="color:green;background-color:#ffffcc;" cellpadding="20" cellspacing="0" border="1"
Orange
Apple
Bread
Pie
Butter
Ice cream
{| style="color:green;background-color:#ffffcc;" cellpadding="20" cellspacing="0" border="1"
|Orange
|Apple
|-
|Bread
|Pie
|-
|Butter
|Ice cream
|}
Table with TH headings
TH (HTML table headings) can be created by using ! instead of |. Headings usually show up bold and centered by default.
Top headings
Each column
Yummy
Yummier
Orange
Apple
Bread
Pie
Butter
Ice cream
{| border="1" cellpadding="20" cellspacing="0"
!Yummy
!Yummier
|-
|Orange
|Apple
|-
|Bread
|Pie
|-
|Butter
|Ice cream
|}
Colspan="2"
Yummies
Orange
Apple
Bread
Pie
Butter
Ice cream
{| border="1" cellpadding="20" cellspacing="0"
! colspan="2"|Yummies
|-
|Orange
|Apple
|-
|Bread
|Pie
|-
|Butter
|Ice cream
|}
Side headings
Default
Fruit
Orange
Apple
Dish
Bread
Pie
Complement
Butter
Ice cream
{| border="1" cellpadding="20" cellspacing="0"
!Fruit
|Orange
|Apple
|-
!Dish
|Bread
|Pie
|-
!Complement
|Butter
|Ice cream
|}
Right justify
Right justified side headings can be done as follows
Fruit
Orange
Apple
Dish
Bread
Pie
Complement
Butter
Ice cream
{| border="1" cellpadding="20" cellspacing="0"
!align="right" |Fruit
|Orange
|Apple
|-
!align="right" |Dish
|Bread
|Pie
|-
!align="right" |Complement
|Butter
|Ice cream
|}
Caption
A table caption can be added to the top of any table as follows
Food complements
Orange
Apple
Bread
Pie
Butter
Ice cream
{| border="1" cellpadding="20" cellspacing="0"
|+Food complements
|-
|Orange
|Apple
|-
|Bread
|Pie
|-
|Butter
|Ice cream
|}
Attributes can be added to the caption as follows
Food complements
Orange
Apple
Bread
Pie
Butter
Ice cream
{| border="1" cellpadding="20" cellspacing="0"
|+align="bottom" style="color:#e76700;"|''Food complements''
|-
|Orange
|Apple
|-
|Bread
|Pie
|-
|Butter
|Ice cream
|}
Table with H1, H2, H3 etc. headings
HTML H1, H2, H3, H4 etc. headings can be created the standard wiki markup way with ==equal== signs and must be on a line all by themselves to work.
Preview the whole table. If you click on an edit tab for a heading within a table, edit, and preview, the parent table will display erroneously broken because part of it will be missing.
Keep the heading hierarchy consistent with the rest of the page so that the table of contents at page top works correctly.
Yummiest
Orange
Apple
Bread
Pie
Butter
Ice cream
{| border="1" cellpadding="20" cellspacing="0"
|colspan="2"|
===Yummiest===
|-
|Orange
|Apple
|-
|Bread
|Pie
|-
|Butter
|Ice cream
|}