Consumerium:Guidelines

Revision as of 19:49, 11 March 2004 by Jukeboksi (talk | contribs) (formatting)

Guidelines

  • Please write descriptive Summaries. If content is strongly changed indicate that in the Summary. A good idea is to first preview your edit and copy essential points from the preview text, not the wiki source for better readability
  • When starting a new article include a summary of contents or copy parts of the first paragraph and insert ... three dots to indicate that this is a sniplet of the actual article.
  • Mark changes this is a minor edit if semantical content is not changed by the edit ie. it is minor rewording without any change in meaning or formatting or naturally typo corrections
  • Please use the "Show Preview"-button extensively.
  • If you are creating a #REDIRECT, please copy the whole redirect directive to the Summary
  • If a redirect is replaced, please ensure the link is retained in the first paragraph or an intro phrase, the redirects are there for a reason
  • If you have general information you might want to contribute it to Wikipedia and post a reference to Wikipedia if it's a "closed" case or Research if it's still "open".
  • When editing pages please pay attention to the desired order of additions if it is stated on the top of the page (Chronological, Reverse Chronological, Alphabetical, By Category)
  • Use the SI-system for measurements (it's cheaper for computers to process kilograms and meters and so forth)
  • Use the UK way for types of companies, Americans use Inc for all types of Incorporated bodies.
  • Use w:ISO 639 language codes for identifying languages, e.g. "en" is "english".
  • USE ISO 3166-1 (remember CAPITALISED, so we can tell even in Wiki what refers to language and what to a COUNTRY) for COUNTRY CODES since, it's freely available and several other standards use these for prefix, so it'll make the code run faster if we don't have to lookup w:ISO 3166-1 codes from tables all the time.
  • On spelling: International English uses mostly British spellings which are taught in most of the world. Also concepts like "honour" (British, Australian, Canadian, India, etc.) probably mean something different than "honor" (American) if you judge by actual behavior, so, perhaps both words now have meaning.
  • It could be a good idea to set up a scratchpad (like: User:Juxo/Scratchpad for yourself, it's easier to produce high quality texts if you start them somewhere, where they aren't supposed or required to make sense in the begining. This also supports finding better article names since you can see what your scribbling turns to in a few edits.