User:Elysia (Wiki Ed)/resources
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Here are some resources I've compiled for our WikiScholars, WikiScientists, and participants in our Advanced Course.
Talk page tips and tricks
Signing posts
Communication on article talk pages and user talk pages is accompanied by signatures. This provides context to a discussion by adding a time/date stamp, as well as your username. Signing is accomplished by typing four tildes:
Example: Elysia (Wiki Ed) (talk) 07:09, 28 February 2019 (UTC)
Achieved by: ~~~~
Creating a new section on a talk page
For creating a new section, there's a button next to the "edit source" button that will create a new section for you. You'll type in what the section title should be, and then type in the body. To do this manually, type two equal signs before and after your section title, then start your text on the next line.
Achieved by: ==Question for you about your recent edits==
Threading
- Talk page discussion are usually threaded on Wikipedia, meaning that each additional entry or comment is indented. Incremental indentation is achieved by use of colons. The first post of a discussion is not indented (no colon). The first reply is indented once (one colon), the second is twice (two colons), and so on.
Example:
First post
- Reply one
- Reply two
Achieved by:
First post
:Reply one
::Reply two
Pinging other users (sending them a notification)
It can be nice to alert other users that you replying to their question, continuing their discussion point, disagreeing with them, and many other examples. You can generate a notification to that user by use of a ping.
Example: @Elysia (Wiki Ed):
Achieved by: {{ping|Elysia (Wiki Ed)}}
important: usernames must be typed exactly for the ping to work
important: a ping will not be produced if you don't sign your post!!
If you don't want the @ symbol and the colon, you can use the user link template (still sends a notification)
Example: Elysia (Wiki Ed)
Achieved by: {{u|Elysia (Wiki Ed)}}
Linking to a page on Wikipedia
On a user talk page or article talk page, it is sometimes useful to link to other pages, including other articles or Wikipedia policies. This is achieved by the use of a double bracket.
Example: I think that you did a great job of improving Ida B. Wells!
Achieved by:I think that you did a great job of improving [[Ida B. Wells]]!
Piping a link (making the displayed text link to a word/phrase that is not the exact same)
You can pipe a link to make the displayed text something other than what the article title is
Example: Make sure you write in a neutral point of view
Achieved by: Make sure you write in a [[WP:NPOV|neutral point of view]]
linking to a page not on Wikipedia (an external link)
In your talk page post, you may need to link to something that isn't on Wikipedia, such as a source that supports your position when discussing with another editor. Instead of a double bracket, which is used for Wikipedia articles, you use a single bracket.
Example: The Florida bonneted bat is not a critically endangered species, see?
Achieved by: The Florida bonneted bat is not a critically endangered species, see? [https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/136433/21984011]
Similar to how you can make a Wikipedia article link title display alternate text, you can make an external link display text as well (rather than the default of a number in brackets). Type your beginning single bracket, paste the URL, type a single space, and then add the text you want to display before your closing bracket.
Example: The Florida bonneted bat is not a critically endangered species, see?
Achieved by: The Florida bonneted bat [https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/136433/21984011 is not a critically endangered species], see?
Bulleting and numbering
Sometimes it is helpful to add bulleted or numbered points to your talk page post. This is achieved with the asterisk (*) for bullets and the pound sign (#) for numbered lists.
Bulleting
Example:
- this sentence is missing a citation
- you did a good job with neutrality here
- you could split this part into two sections
Achieved by:
*this sentence is missing a citation
*you did a good job with neutrality here
*you could split this part into two sections
With bulleting, it is also possible to structure your bulleted lists by using more than one asterisk.
Example:
- Overall, I'm seeing some tone issues
- for example, it should be this, not that
- also tone issues with this part
- this sentence is also a comma splice
Achieved by:
*Overall, I'm seeing some tone issues
**for example, it should be this, not that
**also tone issues with this part
***this sentence is also a comma splice
Numbering
Example:
- this sentence is missing a citation
- you did a good job with neutrality here
- you could split this part into two sections
Achieved by:
#this sentence is missing a citation
#you did a good job with neutrality here
#you could split this part into two sections
Bold, italicize, underline, and strikethrough
It is sometimes useful to employ text effects. Here's a brief overview of some of the more common ones:
- italics are achieved with two apostrophes before the word/phrase and two after
Example: Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote Uncle Tom's Cabin.
Achieved by: Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote ''Uncle Tom's Cabin''.
- bold is achieved with three apostrophes before the word/phrase and three after
Example: What I meant to say was this:
Achieved by: What I '''meant''' to say was this:
- You can make a word/phrase both bolded and italicized by using five apostrophes before and after the phrase
Example: The lead should be formatted to say Sturnira koopmanhilli is a species of bat per the Manual of Style
Achieved by: The lead should be formatted to say '''''Sturnira koopmanhilli''''' is a species of bat per the Manual of Style
- Strikethrough and underline are achieved like this:
Example: The source said she ran for president once ran for president twice.
Achieved by: The source said she <s>ran for president once</s> ran for president <u>twice</u>.
- note: these effects can be combined. You can have a phrase that is simultaneously
bolded, italicized, striked through, and underlinedif you want (please don't ever do that in real life)
Using correct pronouns
Many users have gender-neutral usernames (and sometimes guessing gender from an obvious-seeming username can lead to the wrong guess). Users can tell Wikipedia which pronouns should be used to refer to the user (the default is they). You can change your pronouns in your preferences. If referring to another editor and you want to use a pronoun, there's a template for automatically inserting the pronouns they have selected in their preferences.
Example: If you ask Elysia (Wiki Ed), she may be able to help.
Achieved by: If you ask [[User:Elysia (Wiki Ed)|Elysia (Wiki Ed)]], {{pronoun|Elysia (Wiki Ed)}} may be able to help.
The above example uses the template default (just using pronoun and the username), which gives you he, she, or they. This template can also be modified if you are looking for other pronouns such as "him/her/them", "his/her/their", or "his/hers/theirs"
Example: I know Elysia (Wiki Ed) and I already asked her for help.
Achieved by: I know [[User:Elysia (Wiki Ed)|Elysia (Wiki Ed)]] and I already asked {{pronoun|Elysia (Wiki Ed)|obj}} for help.
These instances are relatively rare and I often default to referring to people as they or them. For more information about the pronoun template, there's a documentation page here.
Personalizing your userpage
Creating a new redirect

Redirects are used to take readers from the term they searched to the Wikipedia article the reader is looking for. Searching for heart attack takes a reader to myocardial infarction because heart attack is a redirect. To create a redirect:
- Search for the term you think should be a redirect. It should not exist. At the top of the search result should say You may create the page "Asdflkj;lkj". with a redlink.
- Click the redlink
- Make sure you're in "create" and not "create source"
- Click the three horizontal line "options" button to the left of the pencil icon
- Click the gear icon "advanced settings" then "page settings" in the menu
- Check the box "Redirect this page to" and then type the page name of the article where the reader should end up after searching this term
- Apply changes and then publish the page!
Easy categorization via HotCat
HotCat makes it really easy to add categories to an article. You enable HotCat in your preferences.
- From preferences, click the "gadgets" tab.
- Scroll to the section on "editing" and then check the box next to HotCat
- Scroll to the bottom of the page and click "save"

Once HotCat is enabled, the bottom of an article looks like this. + to add categories; - to delete categories
Requesting deletion of a sandbox
If you created a sandbox that you would like to be deleted, all you need to do is click "edit source" and paste {{Db-u1}} to the top of the sandbox.
Comparing different versions of an article more easily

Legend (in order): deleted text, inserted text, ▶ block move mark, moved block, single character changes, highlighted moved block and ◀ block mark, and ambiguous insertion aligned to line.
When you want to view how an article differs between versions, you want to look at the diff. Diffs can be confusing to understand, though, and some people find them easier to view using a gadget called wikEdDiff. To enable:
- Click "Preferences"
- Click the "gadgets" tab
- Scroll to the "Editing" section
- Check the box next to "wikEdDiff"
- Click the "Save" button at the bottom of the page
When viewing a diff now, you will see a small green triangle/delta symbol. Clicking this will show an alternate view of the diff that many find easier to understand.
Quickly viewing metadata at the top of each article (page views, creation date, quality score)
Enabling Xtools adds metadata to the top of each Wikipedia article like this:

We see how many times an article has been edited, how many "watchers" it has, how much it is viewed, and other useful data. We enable Xtools like this:
- From preferences (linked at very top of screen), click the "gadgets" tab
- Scroll to the section on "Appearance" and then check the box next to Xtools (last option)
- Scroll to the bottom of the page and click "save"

