The Introduction to the Ryzom Forge Wiki is almost a integral copy of the guide de rédaction of Zo'ro-Argh on theFrench Encyclopatys.
It is copied and translated here to be accessible to the whole community.
It is a "mini-guide for Dummies" was written with a tinge gamer, that is to say, made for an encyclopedia written by and for Ryzom "avatars".
I would write something. What a great idea! But it may have already been written, so the wisest thing to do is to look if someone got ahead before you. And then, oh! wonder! the wiki tells you that the article exists, or it displays:
Search results
...
There were no results matching the query.
Create the page "Trucobolite" on this wiki!
Do no search Trucobolite in any dictionary! It's a word built by Zo'ro-Argh, something like thingumajic.
If you mouse over the page written in dark red (not here, because I did not deliberately set this link) you will see the name of the page is underscored and displaying: "Trucobolite (page does not exist)". Now you have to click on that link to open a blank page and start the adventure.
It's that simple ?! Hmm, almost. Just before you get started follow this simple tip for choosing a title: avoid as much as possible the articles the plural ... be very close to a dictionary entry. It is better to write about "Corsair" than "The Corsairs" even if ultimately it is about the tribe we want to write.
Finally, if you feel that the article should be written, but perhaps with a neighboring spelling, you can improve the research and use the Google search engine by typing the instruction:
trucobolite site:https://en.wiki.ryzom.com/wiki/Portal:Forge?from=
And what happen if the page is already written? Ah! that's another adventure. Later, we can see...!
Before you write your first word on the blank page, you have to start making a small step due to the fact that we are a multilingual site. To do this, you will need to copy / paste these lines without asking too many questions right now (but you can always find the explanations later in the How to do what? page)
{{TabLang|EN|DE|{{FULLPAGENAME}}|ES|FR|RU}} Here your text... {{TPInWikiRyzom}} [[Category:FR]]
Your text would start where I wrote "Here your text".
Later, when you will consider that your text is ready to be delivered to the Ryzom people waiting for you impatiently, you should replace:
{{WIP}}
by:
{{ToTrad}}
which indicate to translators that your text is stable and can be translated for other linguistic communities.
Your page is no longer completely white since you inserted the language selection tabs. Now, you have to write between:
{{WIP}}
and:
{{TPInWikiRyzom}}
To write in a wiki, the simplest way is to write, write, write ...
And so you start ... After several hundreds of characters entered with enthusiasm on your keyboard you'll take a look at your work. As everyone has advised you, you're choosing the Preview button instead of Save . And, oh, surprise! your text is only an inelegant pile of endless consecutive words.
As long as you are not familiar with MediaWiki, you may get results somewhat surprising at first. But with very few rules, you can quickly write a good and beautiful text.
Indeed, MediaWiki was designed at a time when the wysiwyg was not yet a common occurence. Nevertheless it wanted to be easily accessible to non-computer scientists, those working without a mouse, the visually impaired... It was therefore evident to work as efficiently as possible and so he had to play on the little and few gestures like repeating the same key to get a certain result. But above all, let us try to see clearly.
In MediaWiki, a "carriage return" is not a "new line" and even less a paragraph break. In the mind this wiki is very similar to HTML. In this latter, the new line has no meaning other than to make sources more readable. So to make a new paragraph, you have to do two "carriage return" (or one blank line ). Here's an example to illustrate those "carriage return":
This is an example of
written text on
three lines.
And this is a new paragraph.
But be careful not to let a "space" in front of the line,
which would provide a special effect, useful, but perhaps unexpected in context.
This will be displayed:
This is an example of written text on three lines.
And this is a new paragraph.
But be careful not to let a "space" in front of the line,
which would provide a special effect, useful, but perhaps unexpected in context.
Your text is already more readable, but lacks probably to be more arranged. For this you will want to add titles. Here again, the way is simple, just to frame the title with "=" as shown in the following examples from this own paragraph:
==First words...==
===Basic formatting===
====Titles====
And you might say, there is no =level 1 Title= ? No, this one is reserved for MediaWiki which is used to make the title of the HTML page.
Well, no, we do not underline, neither highlight! :)
But I will not dwell on this subject, the rules are complex and different to each languages. Many word processors give the illusion that the writer knows how to play as expert typographers but... So keep it simple at our atysien simple level and if you are perfectionists, have a look on those simple rules.
Now, when something is important, we tend to raise our voices or to change the tone. You could say it is the same in writing: we use bold characters. Needless to say, it's not worth constantly raising your voice ... it tired.
An agreement (but not an obligation) is to always write before the first title, an abstract in which appears as soon as possible the name of the article. This habit has to confirm to the reader that is actually on the right page, which is useful when some pages are redirected. have a look on the abstract of this page.
And italics? Basically, you could say that these are quotes and phrases that pop out of the current language (honorary titles, deviant senses, foreign or specific word...) and that could have been put in quotes.
Here is how to produce the two types:
'''Bold''', ''italics'' and '''''both'''''.
Ce qui donne:
Bold, italics and both.
When I told you that you typed thirty-six times on the same key!
Well, now that you know how to write in the wiki, you'll want surely to lists, to make recipes... and you want to do it in a certain order. It's easy in MediWiki . This:
is simply obtained by this:
*a member of a list containing inside an ordered sequence
*#itself including an unordered list
*#*A
*#*B
*#etc.
*etc. ....
For now, we were writing about the text. But there are nothing better like a picture to clarify some description (try to describe flora and fauna without image!), or simply to enhance the text.
Before putting an image in your Ryzom wiki page, it must be previously uploaded.
We strongly advise, before going further, to read the Terms of Use and the About Commons
I want a picture to illustrate an article.
Images are available from:
I found or made a picture I want to insert in an article. (Caution: the image must be under a free license such as the GFDL.)
To import the image, choose in the top menu Toolbox the Upload file and follow the instructions.
And now, we can continue with the next steps.
To insert an image, just write: [[ file: Image Name | thumbnail | where on the line | horizontal size | alt = Alternative text | Caption ]]. For example, to display 2 images in this paragraph, you write:
[[file:Dummy.png|thumb|right|alt=a strange sphere|N'ASA emblem]]
[[file:Dummy.png|64px|alt=a strange sphere|N'ASA emblem]]
Where Image Name is prefixed with "file:". The other parameters are optional.
The options are:
'thumb'
. left
(to the left of visual block, the default), center
(centered in the visual block) and right
(to the right of visual block). To put the finishing touch, you can learn from Wikipedia.
There are several kinds of possible links in a MediaWiki document. Here's the list:
Here are the wings of how it was done:
*Internal link like [[ARCC Guide EN]].
**Note that the letters contiguous to such links make a single word: [[EN Level Design]]ing.
**We can of course rename the lonk to fit the context: ... realization of [[Level-Design | game levels]]...
*The link to a part of a document such as ''[[Support_DE#F.C3.BCr_Linux|Support Für Linux]]'' or ''[[#Titles|somewhere in this article]]''.
*External link like this is very simple as: ''http://ryzom.silenda.de'' , But if we prefer a more elegant presentation,we can have: [http://ballisticmystix.net le site ballistic mistix].
*And the reference which is a link to a note <ref>exemple of note</ref> put in the end of the page, as shown on this line.
And if you see the following message at the bottom of your page, do not worry, we will see it right away ...
Now, you feel ready to give your work to the public. So you want to quickly save. But, have you all done? Do not forget the final score.
They are not essential, and you can skip them, but to take in account the Principle of least astonishment it's nice that all the pages of a website have the same structures. Therefore, think always about the footnotes as shown here in the same presentation that you can add at the end of your page.
==References==
===see also===
*[Somewhere on the Web...]
*[[Here in that Wiki...]]
===Comments===
*...
===Sources===
*...
===Notes===
<references />
Those lines could be display as:
References
See also
Comments
Sources
Notes
↑ A note
And in the bottom of the page you can also find such informations as the already seen <references/> telling us from where will be displayed the notes ans cites you put in your text with <ref>...</ref>.
Beyond the encyclopedic and weaving of the web that recommends to cite sources, there is also the elegance of the recognition of the work of an author.
Preview is also a form of courtesy. It allows not only to check that everything is correct before submitting, but also to avoid to fill the historical with unnecessary changes. Of course, Jena is not going to throw you in the hands of the Kamis, or these laster are not going to throw you into the goo if after validate your save you find that you have missed some errors.
Before saving, you also have to check the button minor modification if the change is minor, i.e. corrections, intermediate changes, etc. With this, you can hide minor edits when you do a search for changes.
Finally, this is not where you need it actually, but as it is the last word of this paragraph and that is very important when you are writing to someone or in a discussion page, do not forget to type always as a final point: ~~~~. This serves as your signature and date, and has a links to your profile and talk page.
A wiki is a collaborative work made by several hands, and everyone knows that there are as many idea as Homins. Also, you should write as much as possible according to the Principle of least astonishment, that is to say that the reader finds the same patterns from one page to the other despite the fact that it was written by different homins.
MediaWiki provides several tools and default behaviors. For example, when you have four titles, a summary is automatically generated above the second page title (the title of the page itself, level 1 being the first).
If we take reference on Wikipedia, you can propose to follow here the same overall skeleton article submission.
At the top of the article as the page, you can find messages boxes. These messages boxes warn the reader of this status of the current page: encours de rédaction, à traduire, obsolète, à détruire, etc... By default, no box at the top indicates that the page is normal.
Next is the summary of the article required when there are at least two subtitles. The name of the article is by convention always included in this summary. It must be quickly seen therefore as much as possible in the first words of the first sentence. In addition it is carried bold font, as shown in the introduction of this article it.
Sometimes it is useful to add an infobox in the same area, always between the name of the page (title level 1) and your first title (title level 2). The infobox are small boxes of brief information at a glance.
Here you have an example of possible beginning:
Introduction to the Ryzom Forge Wiki
| ||
The Introduction to the Ryzom Forge Wiki is a "mini-guide for Dummies" to allow the new contributor unaccustomed with the tool to quickly take control of writing articles in our wiki.
1 Title one Blah... |
WIP
in Arbeit -
work in progress -
trabajo en curso -
travaux en cours -
незавершенное
Il ne vous restera plus qu'à bien terminer votre article en bas de page.
Déjà, nous avions parlé des références. Voici quelque détails en plus à ajouter en dessous. Tous servent plus à faciliter la navigation arrière ou thématique, comme:
===Notes===
<references />
'''[[ Tutoriels |←Tutoriels]]'''
{{TPInWikiRyzom}}
{{Portail|...}}
[[Category:Tutorials]]
[[Category:FR]]
Voici ce qui s'affichera, et ne me dites pas que vous avez deviné le résultat, car là, nous avons utilisé un nouvel objet: le modèle. Nous en parlerons juste après.
Notes
↑ Une note
Portail ... |
Category : Tutorials | FR |
Si tous ces objets, bandeaux, palettes, etc. sont facultatifs, il est néanmoins fortement conseillé de toujours mettre la catégorie qui permet de ranger les articles par thème.
La règle habituelle pour les catégories est de choisir les derniers sous-niveaux. Par exemple, la page doigt peut appartenir aux catégories main et pied, mais il est inutile voire inadéquat de la mettre dans la catégorie membres si ce dernier contient main et pied.
Comment trouver la bonne catégorie? Il faut aller fouiller soit dans la liste générale, soit quand on connait un point de départ, dans les arborescences.
Les modèles, template en anglais, ont été créés pour permettre de reproduire la même chose sur plusieurs pages. Pour les utiliser, il faut les inclure dans une page en utilisant cette notation : {{Nom du modèle}}
On rencontre fréquemment des modèles s'écrivant de cette manière simple : {{WIP}}, {{CategoryTab}}, {{TPInWikiRyzom}}.
Cependant, il existe des modèles utilisant des paramètres qui sont de deux types:
Les modèles de ce site sont regroupés sous la catégorie Category:Template. Il vaut mieux se reporter à la documentation du modèle pour connaître les paramètres, les valeurs autorisées et leurs représentations finales dans les pages.
Les portails contiennent des rubriques et souvent des onglets. Sous RyzomForge ces derniers servent uniquement à basculer d'une langue à l'autre.
En général, le portail et les rubriques (sous-pages) sont verrouillés de prime accès pour éviter des modifications accidentelles (voire malveillantes). Le source du portail présente alors souvent deux parties, assez petites puisque tout se trouve à l’extérieur du portail et souvent masqué sous forme de templates.
Plus pour des raisons d'élégance que de protection (pour cela il suffit de changer les droits d'écriture), les rubriques ne sont pas éditables à partir du lien qui accompagne chaque titre.
Ceci est un titre dont le contenu est éditable en cliquant sur le lien associé... [modifier]
Pour que le lien "[modifier]
" n'aparaisse pas, on ajoute dans la page le mot magique "__NOEDITSECTION__
".
Souvent, pour les mêmes raisons, on ne souhaite pas voir de tables de matière s'incruster dans la page. On ajoute dans ce cas un "__NOTOC__
".
Mais si l'on veux changer le contenus de ces pages, comment faire alors puisqu'il n'y a plus de lien?
Voici mon truc: cliquez sur l'onglet pour éditer le portail, puis allez tout en bas de la page. Vous y verrez des «Template:Portal/FR ... (edit)». Vous pouvez alors éditer toutes ces rubriques que je notes ici:
Avant tout, que faire alors si vous tombez sur le cas ou une page existe avec un autre titre. Par exemple, vous vouliez écrire Corsaire mais Les corsaires existe déjà. Et bien cela a été prévu dans le MediaWiki: vous pouvez rediriger une page sur une autre: il vous suffit pour cela d'écrire dans la page Corsaire que vous aviez l'intention de créer:
#REDIRECTION [[Les corsaires]]
Sinon, vous êtes maintenant prêt non seulement pour rédiger, mais aussi pour éditer ce qui existe. Et ça, ce n'est pas toujours facile non plus. Vous pouvez en général ajouter les fioriture qui vous ont été enseignées plus haut surtout au moins une catégorie (la bonne), les liens, les références... Ils sont souvent oubliés par les rédacteurs de passage.
Mais changer le fond requiert plus. Il est très important d'avoir du tact et de toujours de respecter l'auteur. Faire des petits corrections est toujours bienvenu mais parfois si le contenu vous semble erroné il vaut mieux commencer à discuter quand c’est possible avec l'auteur ou dans la page de discussion de l'article. Sinon, il peut arriver que la rédaction de l'article se transforme en PvP