Difference between revisions of "Help:Editing"

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{{Admin tip|tip=If you trust your users you can allow full HTML by setting <code>[[Manual:$wgRawHtml|$wgRawHtml]] = true;</code> in [[Manual:LocalSettings.php|LocalSettings.php]].}}
 
{{Admin tip|tip=If you trust your users you can allow full HTML by setting <code>[[Manual:$wgRawHtml|$wgRawHtml]] = true;</code> in [[Manual:LocalSettings.php|LocalSettings.php]].}}
  
== Other formatting ==
+
I would like to comment that your webiste design lacks the savageness and poverty themes that we gringos commonly associate with Mexico. Without these stereotypic elements I refuse believe that you’re actually in Mexico. I suggest a picture of a shack or two, some wild chickens, some old car being pushed by a kid (preferably a brown kid) and the ever so famous and beloved “brown lady on the street holding a child in one hand and begging for money with the other.” Once you add these vital “Mexican elements” to your webiste it will go from being a simple “chingadera” to more elaborate “chingonada” in which case celebration will be in order. Farewell and remember to do the country of Mexico justice and represent all of its imperfections. Be “Fair and Balance”
Beyond the text formatting markup shown above, here are some other formatting references:
 
*[[Help:Links|Links]]
 
*[[Help:Images|Images]]
 
*[[Help:Tables|Tables]]
 
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_User_Page_Help/Do-It-Yourself/Formatting_Text#Underlining More Formatting from Wikipedia]
 

Revision as of 13:08, 1 December 2012

Template:TOCright You can format your text using wiki markup. This consists of normal characters like asterisks, single quotes or equation marks which have a special function in the wiki, sometimes depending on their position. For example, to format a word in italic, you include it in two single quotes like ''this''

Text formatting markup

Template:Hl2 |Description Template:Hl2 |You type Template:Hl2 |You get
applies anywhere
Italic text ''italic'' italic
Bold text '''bold''' bold
Bold and italic '''''bold & italic''''' bold & italic
Escape wiki markup <nowiki>no ''markup''</nowiki> no ''markup''
only at the beginning of the line
Headings of

different sizes <ref>Use of a heading created by single equal signs is discouraged as it appears with the same formatting and size as the page title, which can be confusing.</ref><ref>An article with four or more headings will automatically create a table of contents.</ref>

==level 1==
===level 2===
====level 3====
=====level 4=====

Level 1

Level 2

Level 3

Level 4
Horizontal rule

----


Bullet list

* one
* two
* three
** three and one-third
** three and two-thirds

  • one
  • two
  • three
    • three and one-third
    • three and two-thirds
Numbered list

# one
# two<br>spanning several lines<br>without breaking the numbering
# three
## three point one
## three point two

  1. one
  2. two
    spanning several lines
    without breaking the numbering
  3. three
    1. three point one
    2. three point two
Mixture of bulleted
and numbered lists

# one
# two
#* two point one
#* two point two

  1. one
  2. two
    • two point one
    • two point two
Definition list

;Definition
:item 1
:item 2

Definition
item 1
item 2
Preformatted text

  preformatted text is done with
  a space at the
  beginning of the line

preformatted text is done with
a space at the 
beginning of the line

Notes: <references/>

Paragraphs

MediaWiki ignores normal line breaks. To start a new paragraph, leave an empty line. You can also start a new line with the HTML tags <br> or <br/>.

HTML

Some HTML tags are allowed in MediaWiki, for example <code>, <div>, <span> and <font>.

Template:Admin tip

I would like to comment that your webiste design lacks the savageness and poverty themes that we gringos commonly associate with Mexico. Without these stereotypic elements I refuse believe that you’re actually in Mexico. I suggest a picture of a shack or two, some wild chickens, some old car being pushed by a kid (preferably a brown kid) and the ever so famous and beloved “brown lady on the street holding a child in one hand and begging for money with the other.” Once you add these vital “Mexican elements” to your webiste it will go from being a simple “chingadera” to more elaborate “chingonada” in which case celebration will be in order. Farewell and remember to do the country of Mexico justice and represent all of its imperfections. Be “Fair and Balance”