Meta:Guidelines
This is a sample page for the tsgdoc Wiki and can be used as reference for creating new pages. Note that this introduction is conventionally placed above the Table Of Contents (TOC), so visitors can immediately see what this page is about, instead of having to scroll passed the TOC.
For more general wiki conventions and formatting help , visit the MediaWiki Formatting Guide.
Page Names
Page names should be descriptive and unique. Use singular nouns instead of plurals when possible (e.g. "Keyboard" instead of "Keyboards"). This makes linking from singular words easier, as you can just use:
One [[Keyboard]], Two [[Keyboard]]s.
instead of
One [[Keyboards|Keyboard]], Two [[Keyboards]].
Categories
Always try to group and categorize your information in a logical and user-friendly way. Prevent redundancies: only create subcategories if there are more of them at the same level (levels are indicated by number of = signs before and after the header), otherwise just collapse to the parent.
You can add many levels of subheaders as you like, but after level 3 they become quite hard to distinguish and will clutter the TOC. If a subject requires many sub-subcategories, consider giving the subcategory its own page. Alternatively, if the sub-subcategories are only small in content, you could make non-TOC headers with simple bold text.
Images
To optimize screen space, images should be placed in a floating window, aligned to the right side of the screen. Larger images can be automatically resized to thumbnails, by specifying the thumbnail width. 300px is the preferred thumbnail size. Adding a description underneath the image is appreciated. For more image formatting guidelines, visit the MediaWiki Images Guide.
Inline Images
Images that are used, for instance, as part of a step-by-step tutorial can be placed inline, with larger size to make them more readable. The exact size is up to you, but the width should not exceed 720px.[1]
You can prevent text that is placed after the image from flowing next to the image by placing an HTML break behind it.
Tables
For tables, use the Wikitable markup. It is more readable and easy on the eye than the default one. There are multiple ways to create rows and columns, some used in the example below, but for more information, consult the MediaWiki Table Formatting Guide.
By default, table columns will scale to fit the contents of the cell, but this usually results in a messy-looking table. Set fixed column-widths to keep the table nice and tight.
For binary entries (e.g. Yes/No), a background color can be used to make it easier to recognize.
| Item 1 | Item 2 | Item 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Category | |||
| Colors | Yes | No | Wildcard |
| CSS Code | #9F9 | #F99 | #FFB |
Code
If you want to add code, the syntax might interfere with the Mediawiki syntax. To prevent this from happening, place your code in one of the following preferred ways:
Fixed format text for short, single-line code.
Long code, spans entire width of the page.
Supports syntax highlighting of certain languages, like Python and HTML.
Change the lang="" attribute to the correct language, e.g. lang="python" or lang="html5"
Use lang="text" for non-supported languages.
1You can also add line numbering.
2
3If your code is longer than, say, 50 lines, you can add a style attribute to introduce a scrollbar, as sampled here. For a 50-line cutoff, use style="height:50em; overflow:auto;".
4Note that this method will cause the print version of the page to cut off the code at the line limit mark and not print the rest of the code.
5I might fix that, but if it's really crucial to have an entire page full of code, you should probably give it a separate page.
6
7<!-- Start Pirate Ipsum-->
8Prow scuttle parrel provost Sail ho shrouds spirits boom mizzenmast yardarm. Pinnace holystone mizzenmast quarter crow's nest nipperkin grog yardarm hempen halter furl. Swab barque interloper chantey doubloon starboard grog black jack gangway rutters.
9
10Deadlights jack lad schooner scallywag dance the hempen jig carouser broadside cable strike colors. Bring a spring upon her cable holystone blow the man down spanker Shiver me timbers to go on account lookout wherry doubloon chase. Belay yo-ho-ho keelhaul squiffy black spot yardarm spyglass sheet transom heave to.
11
12Sail ho Corsair red ensign hulk smartly boom jib rum gangway. Case shot Shiver me timbers gangplank crack Jennys tea cup ballast Blimey lee snow crow's nest rutters. Fluke jib scourge of the seven seas boatswain schooner gaff booty Jack Tar transom spirits.
13<!-- End Pirate Ipsum-->
For command-line code, you can also style it like this for clarity:
ping 127.0.0.1 -n 50 -l 1024
You could also use the <tt> <pre> and nowiki tags if better suited for your needs, whatever works best to present the code as clear and readable as possible.
Emoji
It is encouraged to use unicode emojis (which you can just copy-paste as text) in places where they can draw extra attention, help illustrate your point, or break up the monotony of a long text.
Be aware that emojis may be rendered differently in different browsers or operating systems, so try to pick ones that are common and unambiguous, and also recognizable at the scale they get reduced to when placed in-line on our Wiki. Also, Windows doesn't natively support flag emojis like 🇳🇱, for some reason.
Lastly, don't overdo the emojis, as that could make it seem like our wiki was written by AI.
Examples
ℹ️ This is a piece of (extra) information.
⚠️ This is a warning!
❌ This is a no-go!
✅ This is good.
✨ This is something new!
🚧 This is under construction.
🐽 Oink.
These are just examples; feel free to come up with your own conventions so we can later compare and discuss what works best.
Shields and Badges
Github-style shields or badges are useful for providing software details like programming language and licensing at a glance. There's a case to be made for our Wiki and Gitlab READMEs to use similar layouts and features for more uniformity in our documentation, and so badges could help with that too. Unfortunately, it is currently a bit of a faff to implement badges on our wiki, as hotlinking dynamic content from external sources is disabled for security reasons. The workaround:
- Generate a badge at https://shields.io
- Create a new CSS rule in MediaWiki:Common.css (see examples at bottom)
- On the page you want to edit, add a custom span with class="shield" and the id as named in the CSS, e.g.:
<span class="shield" id="shield-python310")></span> - Add to the list of shields below.
Available Shields
-
<span class="shield" id="shield-python310")></span>
Downloads
Download links are presented as list items and are descriptive. This means you don't waste space by pasting the entire url or writing something like "Click here to download the documentation". Examples:
References
- ↑ Thumbnails 720px wide still fit comfortably within a browser window on half a 1920px desktop monitor.
