InuYasha Wiki:How to edit a wiki

Fitting into the community
A wiki is set around the idea of contributing information and cooperating with the community, thus getting along with the community is an important thing.

The basics
'''If you find the following tutorial confusing or not understandable, then please visit Help:Editing, Help:Wiki markup, or possibly Wikia University on Community Central for video instructions. And please also notice that this page only lists essential scripts in order to edit on InuYasha Wiki. There are still other things that are not mentioned.'''

In a wiki, the script text we use is called "Wikitext", also as "Wiki markup". Wikitext is a common language for editing a wiki. You can either create a page or edit one. Here will be the basic essentials to edit in a wiki.

To practice the things you have learned here, go to the Sandbox page. Header= {|class="wikitable" width="100%" Level 2 Level 3 Level 4 Level 5 Level 6
 * style="background-color:#F2F2F2"|

Level 6
Text= Links= Files= Templates= Categorization= Referencing= {|class="wikitable" width="100%" !colspan="3"|Reference Tags and !colspan="3"|Displaying references
 * }
 * style="width:30%; background-color:#F2F2F2"| General references
 * style="width:30%; background-color:#F2F2F2"| General references
 * style="width:40%; background-color:#F2F2F2"| Grouped references
 * style="width:30%; background-color:#F2F2F2"| Note references
 * and
 * and
 * and
 * colspan="2" style="background-color:#F2F2F2"|
 * colspan="2" style="background-color:#F2F2F2"|

Text formation
Here are several ways to format your text:
 * To Bold text, put 3 quotes around the text  Text here 
 * To Italicize text, put 2 quotes around the text  Text here 
 * To create text bullets, place an asterisk in front of the text at the start of the line. You can add multiple asterisks which will result in bulleted sub-levels.
 * Like so.
 * For numbered lists, put a # in front of the text.
 * Use a colon at the beginning for indenting text, and multiple colons will add more spaces, for example:
 * First level
 * Second level

Lorem ipsum will bring
 * The semicolon is used in the "Relationships" section of the character pages. For example:
 * Inuyasha

. It works exactly the same as Inuyasha

Lorem ipsum but makes the page neater, as it doesn't require the bold script and typing two line feeds to break the sentence.

Links
To create a link to a page in the InuYasha wiki database (an internal link), place double square braces around the keyword: text here

If the link is red, then that means the page for it has not yet been created. If it is blue that means a page exists.

And to create a link that is outside of the wiki, just add a single brace on each side of the site's url.

[URL here]

Files
Another thing you will learn is how to add files to wiki page. But before you can insert an image into a wiki page you must upload it to the wiki. On the "On the Wiki" section of the navigation bar of the wiki there are links that say "Photos" (for images and audio files) and "Videos". When you upload a file to the wiki you must license the file. To see what copyright you should attach to the file, see InuYasha Wiki:Image policy.

After uploading a file (including images, audio files, and video files), put



The "thumb" part means the file is a thumbnail and it will automatically align to the right when you insert it. To have the image align to the left, just add "|left".

Templates
If you want to put a "stub" tag on an article that is too short simply put two brackets on name of the template (case sensitive excluded the first letter)

If you want to put a template onto the article page, put brackets around the template's name and put it in the edit box (usually at the end of a page). Here is an example of what to type for a specific template. In this case, Template:Fair use:

The template also has a second parameter, for instance:

Please note that parameters are case sensitive, make sure it matches the template documentation in the template page.

Categorization
Another important step is adding a category to your article. When you add a category it makes it easier to find the articles. By default, you're able to add categories to article by clicking on the "Add category" at the bottom of the page. And in Classic Editor as well as Source Editor, it is located on the right side. Adding a category with the tool is the same as you type into the page:

Category:category name

check out what categories already exist and use them - try and put your article in a relevant and highly populated (and hence highly connected) category, and more people are likely to stumble across it.

Furthermore, to add your article to a category but order it differently (e.g. to file your article on "Joe Bloggs" as "Bloggs, Joe" - which would be handy, for the People category in particular) then use this formatting:

Bloggs, Joe

Referencing
Referencing is also an important technique when it comes to proving canonical content. Although the easiest way is to make use of the edit tools (Source editor and Help:Classic editor in source mode only), as showing here: The common script looks like this:

Any text for citation is placed within the tag, such as Reference
 * References

In addition, if the source needs to be reference more than twice, then simply add name="groupname" after "

For displaying, simply add on the bottom of the page. Be sure to add ==References== before the template.

If the information is not about a source, but something essential to let readers know. Please add group="Note" after "
 * Notes

For displaying, simply add on the bottom of the page. Be sure to add ==Notes== before the template.

Signing
To sign your username to a discussion page, click the button on the editing bar with the swirly text (second to last). Or you can type four tildes:

~

Miscellaneous
To add a horizontal line (use sparingly) to page, type four dashes:

For prefromatted boxes, start each line with a space.

zh:犬夜叉維基:新手指南