CSC/ECE 517 Fall 2011/WIKI Features: Difference between revisions

From Expertiza_Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
Line 93: Line 93:


<p>While editing your article, a tool bar will be displayed at the top of the screen.  You can use the world icon to create the hyperlink stub.</p>
<p>While editing your article, a tool bar will be displayed at the top of the screen.  You can use the world icon to create the hyperlink stub.</p>
= References =
<p>When writing an article for this WIKI, it is important to reference, or cite, quoted material you've used for creation of your article.  Inline citations are supported by using the <b>&lt;ref&gt; &lt;/ref&gt;</b> WIKI tags.  For example, here's an inline citation<ref>This is an inline citation, or reference</ref>.  References or inline citations are automatically numbered for you<ref>This is another inline citation.</ref>.
<p></p>
<p>After using inline citation, you can use this WIKI tag to automatically create your formatted references list within your article:</p>
<blockquote>
<b><nowiki><references /></nowiki></b>
</blockquote>


= Separator Line =
= Separator Line =
Line 101: Line 111:
= Table Of Contents =
= Table Of Contents =
<p>A table of contents can be created for you automatically by using headings and sub-headings as described in the [http://expertiza.csc.ncsu.edu/wiki/index.php?title=CSC/ECE_517_Fall_2011/WIKI_Features&action=submit#Indentation_Levels Indentation Levels] section of this article.</p>
<p>A table of contents can be created for you automatically by using headings and sub-headings as described in the [http://expertiza.csc.ncsu.edu/wiki/index.php?title=CSC/ECE_517_Fall_2011/WIKI_Features&action=submit#Indentation_Levels Indentation Levels] section of this article.</p>
----
= Example References =
<references />

Revision as of 17:47, 4 December 2011

Indentation Levels

Indentation levels, 1 and 2, demonstrated below, automatically put a separator line below the heading. When you create Headings, a table of contents is automatically created and placed at the top of your WIKI article.

Level 1

To create a Level 1 heading, you enclose your heading in between a single pair of text equal signs, like this:

= Level 1 =

Level 2

To create a Level 2 heading, you enclose your heading in between a single pair of text double equal signs, like this:

== Level 2 ==

For subsequent levels you increase the indentation by increasing the number of equal signs that surround the heading text.

Level 3

Level 4

Level 5
Level 6

Formatting Text

Bold Text

To mark text as bold, you enclose the text in a set of triple apostrophe characters: '''your bold text goes here'''

While editing your article, a tool bar will be displayed at the top of the screen. You can use the B icon to create the bold stub.

Escaping Wiki Formatting

You may find it necessary to escape WIKI formatting so that you can use it literally in your article. Like this article does. To do this you use the <nowiki> and </nowiki> formatting tags.

For example: <nowiki>=== Level 3 ===</nowiki> disables rendering the text as a Level 3 heading and prevents it from showing up in the table of contents.

HTML

Occasionally you may need to mark up text using traditional HTML. This wiki does support use of HTML, but may not support every feature.

For example, if you need to created a bold italicized word or set of words, you can accomplish this using:

<b><i>text you want bold and italicized</i></b>

Additional HTML formatting tags that works are <p> </p> for paragraph formatting, <blockquote> </blockquote> for block quoting, and <pre> </pre> for showing formatted text. Formatted text is shown next.

1
  2
    3

Formatted text gets shown in an enclosing box.

Additionally formatting such as ordered, <ol> </ol>, and unordered,<ul> </ul>, lists are supported:

  1. Line 1
  2. Line 2
  3. etc.

  • Line 1
  • Line 2
  • Line 3

Tables are also supported:

Column 1Column 2Column 3
Data 1Data 2Data 3

This is not an exhaustive list of HTML that can be used here. If you need other HTML formatting that isn't described here you should try it.

Italicized Text

To italicize text, include the text in a double set of apostrophes: ''your italicized text goes here''. Please note this isn't the use of the quote (") character but the double use of the apostrophe (') character.

A stub for italicized text can be created using the I icon button on the toolbar while editing your article.

Creating Hyperlinks

Perhaps you need to refer the reader to the definition of a word or an acronym. You can do this using a hyperlink to the definition. For example, suppose you want to define the term IDE, you can do that using this construct:

[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integrated_development_environment IDE]

While editing your article, a tool bar will be displayed at the top of the screen. You can use the world icon to create the hyperlink stub.

References

When writing an article for this WIKI, it is important to reference, or cite, quoted material you've used for creation of your article. Inline citations are supported by using the <ref> </ref> WIKI tags. For example, here's an inline citation<ref>This is an inline citation, or reference</ref>. References or inline citations are automatically numbered for you<ref>This is another inline citation.</ref>.

After using inline citation, you can use this WIKI tag to automatically create your formatted references list within your article:

<references />

Separator Line

To create a separator line, you place ---- (four dashes) at the beginning of line, and on a line by itself.


Table Of Contents

A table of contents can be created for you automatically by using headings and sub-headings as described in the Indentation Levels section of this article.


Example References

<references />