User:Sunray/Useful links and stuff
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Here are some useful things:
Contents |
[edit] New to Wikipedia?
[edit] Wikipedia goings-on
[edit] Wikipedia Policy
[edit] Categories
[edit] Frequently refered to policies/guidelines
[edit] Editing
[edit] How to edit
- Wikipedia:How to edit a page
- Wikipedia:Guide to layout
- Guide to writing better articles
- Wikipedia:Avoiding common mistakes
- Wikipedia:Make only links relevant to the context
- Wikipedia:What is a good article?
[edit] Article standards
[edit] Working with others
[edit] Good articles/featured articles
- Wikipedia:What is a good article?, Wikipedia:Good articles
- Wikipedia:What is a featured article?, Wikipedia:Featured articles
[edit] Tools
- Wikipedia:Glossary
- Edit count (Kate's tool)
- [1] (Interiot's wannabe_kate)
- Geoff's Google Duel Takes two search terms and shows which is the more popular according to Google.
[edit] Templates
- Wikipedia:Template messages
- Wikipedia:WikiProject Stub sorting/Stub types
- {{stubsection}} Section stub
- {{inuse}} For articles undergoing a major edit
- {{deletebecause}} speedy delete
- {{afd-newbies}} who gets to vote
- {{Fact}} citation needed
- {{Unreferencedsect}} citations needed for section
- {{talkheaderlong}} talk page guidelines (w/ "create an account;" "be bold")
- {{talkheader}} basic talk page guidelines
- {{unsigned}} note for unsigned comments (adjust date for UTC)
- Wikipedia:Cleanup resources
[edit] Reading
- The Book Stops Here Wired 13.03 (March 2005)
- Special Report "Internet encyclopaedias go head to head" by Jim Giles Nature, December 14, 2005. Jimmy Wales' Wikipedia comes close to Britannica in terms of the accuracy of its science entries, a Nature investigation finds.
- "Encyclopedia Wars Heat Up", CBS News, March 28, 2006
- "Working through Wikipedia's vanity fair" Globe and Mail, May 6, 2006.
- Motivations for contributing to online communities
- Wikipedia:Administrators' reading list
- "Why the Internet is good"
- "The Charms of Wikipedia." Nicholson Baker. New York Review of Books, March 20, 2008.
[edit] Last word
-- Please don't feed the trolls!

