Log In
Or create an account -> 
Imperial Library
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Upload
  • Forum
  • Help
  • Login/SignUp

Index
How Wikipedia Works
Acknowledgments Introduction
Inside This Book What You Should Know Going In Using This Book Our Approach to Understanding Wikipedia It's Everyone's Encyclopedia: Be Bold!
I. Content
1. What's in Wikipedia?
Types of Articles Article and Content Inclusion Policies
Core Policies: V, NOR, and NPOV Understanding the Policies Other Guidelines
Notability Copyrighted Material Non-encyclopedic Content
What Wikipedia Is Not
Non-article Content
Types of Non-article Pages Namespaces
List of Namespaces
Summary and What to Read Next
2. The World Gets a Free Encyclopedia
Wikipedia's Mission Wikipedia's Roots
Ancient Greece to Today: Encyclopedias Late 17th Century: The Modern Encyclopedia Wikipedia as an Encyclopedia The 1960s and 1970s: Unix, Networks, and Personal Computers The 1980s: The Free Software Movement
Wikipedia and the Free Perspective
1995: Ward's Wiki 1997: Open Source Communities 2000: Online Community Dynamics
Wikipedia as a Wiki Community
2001: Wikipedia Goes Live Wikipedia Today Unfinished Business
The Wikipedia Model Debated
Misinformation: The Seigenthaler Scandal Amateur Contributors, Authority, and Academia
Wikipedia and Academic Authority Wikipedia and Experts Case Studies in Academic Authority Pseudonyms and Claimed Expertise The Crowd of Amateurs
Summary
3. Finding Wikipedia's Content
Searching Wikipedia
Basic Searching
Varying the Search Search Operators Searching Other Namespaces Some Special Searches Search Problems and Some Alternatives
External Search Engines
When to Use External Search Engines When Not to Use External Search Engines
Ways into Wikipedia
Welcome to the Main Page
Navigating the Main Page Portals into the Encyclopedia Daily Content Constructing the Main Page Disclaimers, License, and Privacy
The Omnipresent Sidebar
Navigation Interaction Recent Changes The Search Box Toolbox Languages
Joys of Hypertext
A Hypertext Primer Three Types of Links Browsing by Topic
Lists of Articles Traditional Classification Schemes Date-Related Articles
Browsing by Categories
Structure of a Category Page Navigating Categories A Longer Journey Using Categories
Browsing by Page Type
Finding Excellent or Poor Content Finding Images Finding Media Files
Summary
4. Understanding and Evaluating an Article
Anatomy of an Article
The Article Text Backlinks Article History
Reading a Page History Analyzing a Page History Edit Summaries and Minor Edits
Talk Pages
Reading and Contributing to Talk Pages Making Good Use of Talk Pages
Evaluating Articles
Misinformation, Missing Information, and Mistakes D-R-E-W-S
Discussion on the Talk Page Ratings Edit History Writing and Formatting Sources
Summary Final Thoughts for Part I
II. Editing
5. Basic Editing
Editing a Page
Understanding the Edit Window
Reading Article Wikitext Using the Edit Window Tools
Major vs. Minor Edits Handling Major Editing Tasks Fixing Mistakes and Other Reasons to Revert Who Can Edit What?
Syntax
Fundamentals of Text Markup
Bold and Italic Indentation, Line, and Paragraph Breaks Numbered and Bulleted Lists
Internal and External Links
Internal Links
Redlinks Tricks with Internal Links Internal Linking Policy
External Links
External Linking Policy
Sections and Headings
Linking into and out of Sections
Removing Formatting and Hiding Comments
Summary
6. Good Writing and Research
Starting New Articles
Deciding What to Write About Before Starting a New Article Avoiding Treacherous Topics Starting the Article
Click a Redlink Two More Ways to Start an Article Titles Are Tricky
Drafting the Article Don't Forget
Writing Well
Consulting the Manual of Style Introduction and Topic Sentence Comprehensiveness and Appropriate Length Structure Readability Audience Use of Language Graphics Applying Basic Content Policies Reviews Quality and the Good Stub
Researching Articles
Good Wikipedia Research Doing Research Reliable Sources Referencing Styles
Using Footnotes Referencing Templates
Editing Alongside Others
Changing What Others Write Will Your Own Edits Be Kept? Edit Summaries No Ownership
Summary
7. Cleanup, Projects, and Processes
Cleanup
Flagging Articles Cleanup Categories
Cleanup Tasks
Rewriting Expanding Stubs Wikification Fact-Checking and Referencing
Help, an Article About Me Is Incorrect! Copyright Violations
Vandalism Patrolling Cleanup Editing Tools
Projects: Working to Improve Content
WikiProjects Wikiportals Writing Collaborations
Processes
What Processes Cover Deleting Articles
Deletion Processes Help, My Article's Being Deleted! A Deletion Case Study
Featured Articles
Summary
8. Make and Mend Wikipedia's Web
Redirect and Disambiguate
Redirects
Creating and Editing Redirects Limitations on Redirecting
Disambiguation Pages
Disambiguating Articles About People Disambiguation Templates
Merge, Split, and Move
Merging Articles
How to Merge Articles
Splitting Articles Moving Pages
Limits on Moving Pages Undoing a Move Contentious Title Changes
Categorize
Categorizing Basics Categories and Content Policy Creating New Categories Subcategories Categorization Projects
Housekeeping
When a Page Move Is Blocked Default Meanings Avoiding Disambiguation Pages Controlling Category Sorting Categories and Templates for Redirects Process-Style Resolutions
Summary
9. Images, Templates, and Special Characters
Images and Media Files
Finding and Adding Images
Searching for Images to Use Image Licenses and Fair Use Uploading Your Own Images
Using Images Using Multimedia Files
Templates
Using Templates Using Parameters How Templates Work Varieties of Templates How to Build Templates
Laying Out Articles
Tables Formatting Columns
Special Syntax
HTML and CSS Mathematical Formulas Variables and Magic Words
Summary
10. The Life Cycle of an Article
Birth of an Article Deletion Maintenance Tagging Editing Improvements Potential Merge Discussion and Content Tags Categories Bots Arrive Incoming Wikilinks Artie Is Moved In Good Times In Bad Times Bad Times, and a True Story Search Engines Find the Article New Relatives Getting the Picture Good Article Summary Conclusion to Part II
III. Community
11. Becoming a Wikipedian
On Arrival
Registering an Account
Privacy "Anonymous" Edits Usernames and Real Names Deleting, Renaming, and Having Multiple Accounts Is a Username Taken? Creating the Account
Setting Your Preferences
Setting Your Signature Customizing Skins and Installing Extensions
User Pages, Watchlists, and Edit Count
User Page Content
Guidelines User Talk Pages
Watchlists RSS Notification Contribution History and Counting Edits
Users and Administrators
User Levels Administrators Requesting Help from an Administrator Becoming an Administrator
Summary
12. Community and Communication
Wikipedia's Culture
Assumptions on Arrival Random Acts of Kindness The Open Door Soft Security Communicating with Other Editors
Talk Page Guidelines Voting and Discussing On-Wiki Forums Asking Questions and Resolving Problems Getting News Mailing Lists and Internet Relay Chat Meetups and Conferences
Wikiphilosophies Funny Business
Who Writes This Thing Anyway?
Demographics Systemic Bias Wikipedians on Wikipedia Operational Analysis: Raul's Laws Practical Values, Process, and Policy More Research Required
Summary
13. Policy and Your Input
The Spirit of Wikipedia
The Five Pillars Ignore All Rules and Be Bold Assume Good Faith
What Is Policy?
Official Policy Policies and Guidelines How Policies Are Created and Developed How Policies Evolve How to Interpret Policies and Guidelines
Letter of the Law
List of Policies
Content Policies Social Policies Enabling Policies General Policies
List of Guidelines Seven Policies to Study
Summary
14. Disputes, Blocks, and Bans
Content Disputes and Edit Wars
Coming to Consensus Resolving a Dispute: Discussion More Steps for Resolving a Content Dispute Ineffective Solutions Causes of Content Disputes Case Study: GdaƄsk
Resolving Disputes Between Editors
Dispute Resolution Processes The Nature of Formal Evidence Arbitration Committee
Blocks and Bans
Short Blocks Longer Blocks Bans
Summary Conclusion to Part III
IV. Other Projects
15. 200 Languages and Counting
Languages and Scripts
The Long Tail of Languages Getting Involved in Other Languages Script Support
Links Between Languages English in Global Focus Summary
16. Wikimedia Commons and Other Sister Projects
Wikimedia Commons
Searching and Browsing Commons Using Commons Material in Wikipedia Participating in Commons
Inclusion Guidelines Uploading Images Categorizing
Other Sister Projects
Wiktionary Wikinews Wikibooks Wikiquote Wikisource Wikispecies Wikiversity
Linking Between Projects and Copying Content
How to Link Moving Content Between Projects
Other Wikis
Starting Your Own Wiki Wiki Software
Summary
17. The Foundation and Project Coordination
The Foundation: Mission and Structure
Infrastructure and the Board Foundation-Level Policy Fundraisers and Donations Wikimedia Chapters and Outreach MediaWiki
The Meta-Wiki
Project Coordination Translation New Projects Communication
Looking Back and Going Forward
Early Days Continued Values
Summary Conclusion to Part IV
A. Reusing Wikimedia Content
Guidelines for Reuse Examples of Reuse
B. Wikipedia for Teachers
Wikipedia as a Classroom Reference Resource Guiding Student Use of Wikipedia Assigning Wikipedia Editing
C. Edit Summaries Jargon
Common Edit Summaries Deletion and Maintenance Summaries Automatically Added Edit Summaries
D. Glossary E. History
Part I Part II Part III Part IV
F. GNU Free Documentation License
PREAMBLE APPLICABILITY AND DEFINITIONS VERBATIM COPYING COPYING IN QUANTITY MODIFICATIONS COMBINING DOCUMENTS COLLECTIONS OF DOCUMENTS AGGREGATION WITH INDEPENDENT WORKS TRANSLATION TERMINATION FUTURE REVISIONS OF THIS LICENSE
Colophon
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →

Chief Librarian: Las Zenow <zenow@riseup.net>
Fork the source code from gitlab
.

This is a mirror of the Tor onion service:
http://kx5thpx2olielkihfyo4jgjqfb7zx7wxr3sd4xzt26ochei4m6f7tayd.onion