User:TEB728
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Articles to which I have contributed usefully include:
- Albert Einstein
- History of the English language
- The Mystery of Edwin Drood
- English verbs
- Germanic strong verb
- Indo-European ablaut
- Laryngeal theory
- Old English morphology
- Old English phonology
- Proto-Indo-European language
- Template:IAST
- Template:PIE
My contributions in Interiot's 'Wannabe Kate' Tool
Notes to myself: my sandbox, all my personal pages, editing help, WikiBlame, vandals
All my Wikimedia accounts:
- w:User:TEB728
- wiktionary:User:TEB728
- wikisource:User:TEB728
- commons:User:TEB728
- wikibooks:User:TEB728
- meta:User:TEB728
[edit] Advanced details
Basically read the entire MediaWiki Handbook, which has four large sections:
- for readers
- for editors (this section tells the most about wikitext markup, naturally)
- for moderators
- for administrators
Also melt your brain on the Editor's index, which gives a pretty full description of what is possible on Wikipedia.
A solid introduction to Wikipedia editing could easily fill up a year of college-level work. And that would be a fun course to teach. But on Wikipedia, everything you see is built by and for people who self-educate. I suggest that you take some notes on a user sub-page with links to the manuals you are reading. Also see the {{Google custom}} template, which has a table of examples which link to a list of places I have found handy for answering questions that come up in the course of Wikipedia editing (I wrote the table of examples, so I put in the links I use routinely when looking up answers to questions on the Help desk). This info by Teratornis