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- It makes Wiki hyperlinks instantly recognizable
- It leads to interesting Wiki topics
- It avoids the need to fiddle with HTML tags
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- It avoids over-general topics, because at least two words are required
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- It avoids over-general topics because at least two words are required
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Syntax of a WikiWord |
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Bad examples for WikiWords: |
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- Insert WikiWords wherever you can. Rich linking helps to make a Wiki successful.
- To stop a WikiWord from being turned into a hyperlink, insert the text
<nop> immediately before the WikiWord.
- A topic is usually presented in the singular. Plural WikiWords are automatically linked to the singular topic, i.e. the link WikiWords links to the topic WikiWord.
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- Sometimes you have to be creative to find a good WikiName. For example, if you want to create a topic about the year 2000 problem, you could go for FixY2K or YearTwoK or YearTwoThousand , but not Year2K or Y2K or Y2000.
- Turn acronyms into WikiWords, i.e. take FaqIndex for a "FAQ index" topic.
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- Sometimes you have to be creative to find a good WikiName. Examples:
- To create a topic about the the Bread Slicer 1.2 product, use
BreadSlicer1dot2 or BreadSlicer1pt2 , but not BreadSlicer1.2 .
- To create a topic about year 2000, you could go for
YearTwoK or YearTwoThousand , but not Year2K or Y2K or Y2000 .
- Turn acronyms into WikiWords, i.e. take
FaqIndex for a "FAQ index" topic.
- You can create nicer looking links by using double square brackets, i.e. write
[[TWiki access control]] to get a link to TWikiAccessControl that looks like TWiki access control.
Related Topics: WikiSyntax, TextFormattingRules |