Difference between revisions of "Powerbase:Quick Guide to Editing (cheatsheet)"

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This page provides basic instructions for editing on '''[[SpinProfiles]]''' . For the full set of guidelines, policies and help, see the main [[SpinProfiles:Help]] page and [[SpinProfiles:policy and guideline pages].  
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This page provides basic instructions for editing on '''[[SpinProfiles]]''' . For the full set of guidelines, policies and help, see the main [[SpinProfiles:Help|Help]] page and [[SpinProfiles:policy and guideline pages|policy and guideline pages]].  
  
 
Before you can edit, you'll need to quickly [[SpinProfiles:Register|register] with a valid email address, which is done to deter spammers and vandals. Once you've registered, editing a page is as easy as clicking the "edit this page" tab at the top of the window."
 
Before you can edit, you'll need to quickly [[SpinProfiles:Register|register] with a valid email address, which is done to deter spammers and vandals. Once you've registered, editing a page is as easy as clicking the "edit this page" tab at the top of the window."
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==Sourcing an article==
 
==Sourcing an article==
''See [[SpinProfiles:References|references]] for more detailed explanations and tips on sourcing.''
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''See Spinprofiles [[SpinProfiles:A Guide to Referencing|Guide to referencing]] for more detailed explanations and tips on sourcing.''
  
Every assertion made on SpinProfiles should have an outside source. In most cases this should be a webpage or online document that can be linked to (see [[SpinProfiles:References references]] for help on referencing offline sources). The easiest way to cite a source is to put a link between two square brackets after the sentence or paragraph that draws from it, which automatically turns it into an auto-numbered footnote (see the first "external link" example in the chart above). You should then add a citation to the source in the "Articles and resources" section at the bottom of the article, which serves as a bibliography in SpinProfiles articles. To add the citation you will generally need this information:
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Every assertion made on SpinProfiles should have an outside source. In most cases this should be a webpage or online document that can be linked to (see [[SpinProfiles:A Guide to Referencing|references]] for help on referencing offline sources). The easiest way to cite a source is to put a link between two square brackets after the sentence or paragraph that draws from it, which automatically turns it into an auto-numbered footnote (see the first "external link" example in the chart above). You should then add a citation to the source in the "Articles and resources" section at the bottom of the article, which serves as a bibliography in SpinProfiles articles. To add the citation you will generally need this information:
  
 
* Name of the author (or organization that produced the source)
 
* Name of the author (or organization that produced the source)

Revision as of 14:35, 3 October 2007

This page provides basic instructions for editing on SpinProfiles . For the full set of guidelines, policies and help, see the main Help page and policy and guideline pages.

Before you can edit, you'll need to quickly [[SpinProfiles:Register|register] with a valid email address, which is done to deter spammers and vandals. Once you've registered, editing a page is as easy as clicking the "edit this page" tab at the top of the window."

Editing cheatsheet

See How to edit a page for more detailed explanations and advanced syntax.

Description What you type What you get
Applies anywhere
Italicise text

''italic''

italic

Bold text

'''bold'''

bold

Bold and italic

'''''bold & italic'''''

bold & italic

Internal link

(within SpinProfiles)

[[name of page]]
[[name of page|display text]]

name of page
display text

Redirect to another page

#redirect [[Target page]]

1. redirect Target page

External link

(to other websites)

[http://www.example.org]
[http://www.example.org display text]
http://www.example.org

[1]
display text
http://www.example.org

Sign your posts
on talk pages

~~~~

Username 18:16,
18 April 2024 (UTC)

Applies only at the beginning of the line
Headings

of different sizes

== Level 1 ==
=== Level 2 ===
==== Level 3 ====
===== Level 4 =====
====== Level 5 ======

Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Level 4
Level 5
Bullet list

* one
* two
** two point one
* three

  • one
  • two
    • two point one
  • three
Numbered list

# one
# two
## two point one
# three

  1. one
  2. two
    1. two point one
  3. three
 
Thumbnail image

[[Image:Sourcewatch.png|thumb|Caption text]]

Sourcing an article

See Spinprofiles Guide to referencing for more detailed explanations and tips on sourcing.

Every assertion made on SpinProfiles should have an outside source. In most cases this should be a webpage or online document that can be linked to (see references for help on referencing offline sources). The easiest way to cite a source is to put a link between two square brackets after the sentence or paragraph that draws from it, which automatically turns it into an auto-numbered footnote (see the first "external link" example in the chart above). You should then add a citation to the source in the "Articles and resources" section at the bottom of the article, which serves as a bibliography in SpinProfiles articles. To add the citation you will generally need this information:

  • Name of the author (or organization that produced the source)
  • URL of the site where the information was taken
  • Name of the source
  • Name of the publication
  • Date the information was published

You generally want to put the citation in a bullet and format it like this:

To get this format, you enter

What you type
* Jonathan Weisman, [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/05/17/AR2006051701779.html "Ethics Panel Starts 3 Probes,"] ''Washington Post,'' May 18, 2006.
What you get

If editing someone else's writing, leave a note

If you are editing or deleting someone else's writing, it's a common courtesy to leave a note on an article's discussion page (found by clicking the "discussion" tab at the top of the article) explaining your reasons why. It would probably then be a good idea to check back a little later to see if other editors responded. Remember: be cool, be collaborative and talk things out. "Edit wars" are never fun and rarely productive.

Creating a new page

See How to start a page. Remember to follow the naming conventions in titling the page.

Acknowledgment: The first chart on this page was originally copied from Wikipedia's [Wikipedia:Cheatsheet].