diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'wikitext.html.markdown')
-rw-r--r-- | wikitext.html.markdown | 260 |
1 files changed, 260 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/wikitext.html.markdown b/wikitext.html.markdown new file mode 100644 index 00000000..65a85a1e --- /dev/null +++ b/wikitext.html.markdown @@ -0,0 +1,260 @@ +--- +language: wikitext +contributors: + - ["Yuxi Liu", "https://github.com/yuxiliu1995/"] +filename: wikitext.md +--- + +A wiki is an online collaboratively edited hypertext publication, the most famous of which is Wikipedia. Wikitext is the markup language used by wikis. Its syntax is similar to a mix of Markdown and HTML. + +## Syntax + +`<!--- comments are hidden when reading, but visible when editing --->` + +| wikitext | equivalent Markdown | effect | +| ---- | ---- | ---- | +| `''italics''` | `*italics*` | *italics* | +| `'''bold'''` | `**bold**` | **bold** | +| `'''''both'''''` | `***both***` | ***both*** | +| `<u>underlined</u>` | `<u>underlined</u>` | <u>underlined</u> | +| `<nowiki>do not render</nowiki>` | N/A | `do not render` | +| `<code>inline code snippet</code>` | \`inline code snippet\` | `inline code snippet` | +| `----` | `----` | horizontal linebreak | +| `<s>strikethrough</s>` | `~~strikethrough~~` | ~~strikethrough~~ | + +Section headings are bracketed by `=`. They go from `= One equal sign =` to `====== Six equal signs ======`. They are equivalent to Markdown's hashtag headings, from `# One hashtag` to `###### Six hashtags`. Why six in both? I believe it's because HTML has six levels of headings, from `<h1>` to `<h6>`. + +Note that the `= One equal sign =` heading actually corresponds to the title of the page, and so cannot actually be used within a page. Consequently, the least number of equal signs is `== Two equal signs ==`. + +Subscripts and superscripts can be written as `x<sub>1</sub>` and `x<sup>1</sup>`. Alternatively they can be written by the `<math>` tag (see below). `<small>Small</small>` and `<big>big</big>` texts are rarely used. + +``` +Colons allow indentation + :Each colon creates an indentation three characters wide. + ::and they can be nested. +``` + +`*` Unnumbered lists start with `*`, and numbered lists start with `#`. <br> +  `**` Lists can be nested <br> +    `***` for arbitrarily many levels. + +The syntax for tables is [very complicated](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Table). The simplest of the [simple tables](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Basic_table_markup) is as follows: + +```wikitext +{| class="wikitable" +|+ +! column title A +! column title B +|- +| cell A1 +| cell B1 +|- +| cell A2 +| cell B2 +|- +| ... +| ... +|} +``` +which renders to +| **column title A** | **column title B** | +|---|---| +| cell A1 | cell B1 | +| cell A2 | cell B2 | + +Be warned that the newlines in a wikitext table are meaningful. Deleting a single newline above would completely change the shape of the rendered table. + +You can insert images, audios, videos, or other forms of media by `[[File:Image.png|thumb|right|Image caption]]`. All media files must be hosted on [Wikimedia Commons](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Main_Page). + +You can insert quotations either by HTML-like tag +```wikitext +<blockquote> +<p>Quotation text.</p> +<p>Name, source, reference</p> +</blockquote> +``` +or [template](#templates) +```wikitext +{{Quote|text=Quotation text.|title=Title|author=Author|source=Location in the publication}} +``` + +A "[non-breaking space](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-breaking_space)" is a whitespace that should not be separated by linebreaks, such as the whitespace in "400 km/h". This is written as `400&nbsp;km/h`. + +Extra whitespaces can be specified by `pad` tag. For example, `{{pad|4.0em}}` is a white space with length 4.0 [em-dashes](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dash#Em_dash). + +Longer code blocks can be done by +```wikitext +<syntaxhighlight lang="cpp"> +#include <iostream> +int m2 (int ax, char *p_ax) { + std::cout <<"Hello World!"; + return 0; +}</syntaxhighlight> +``` +which renders to +```cpp +#include <iostream> +int m2 (int ax, char *p_ax) { + std::cout <<"Hello World!"; + return 0; +} +``` + +## Linking + +Basic `[[linking]]` is done by double brackets. + +The `|` symbol allows displaying a `[[Actual page title|different text]]`. + +The `#` symbol allows linking to sections within a text, like `[[Frog#Locomotion]]` or `[[Frog#Locomotion|locomotion in frogs]]`. + +If a word is interrupted by a link, it is "blended" into the link. For example, `[[copy edit]]ors` renders to [copy editors](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/copy_edit). + +To suppress this behavior, use `<nowiki>`. For example, `[[micro-]]<nowiki />second` renders to [micro-](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/micro-)second. + +There are three kinds of external linking. The third kind is preferred: +| wikitext | renders to | +|----|----| +| `https://www.wikipedia.org` | [https://www.wikipedia.org](https://www.wikipedia.org) | +| `[https://www.wikipedia.org]` | [[1]](https://www.wikipedia.org) | +| `[https://www.wikipedia.org Wikipedia]` | [Wikipedia](https://www.wikipedia.org) | + +## Templates + +Templates are macros for wikitext, and they look like `{{template name|attribute=value|...}}`. There are thousands of templates, but only a few are in common use. + +The most (in)famous one is the \[citation needed\]`{{cn}}` template. Note that `{{cn}}` is synonymous with `{{citation needed}}`, as one template can have many names. + +`{{reflist}}` is usually put at the ends of pages, to generate a list of references used in the page. + +An `infobox` template is, as it says, a template for a box containing information. Usually, each page contains at most two infoboxes, one on top and one on bottom. For particularly detailed pages, there can be more than two. + +The infobox on the top is usually used to compactly display tabular information. They are common for biographies, geographical locations, and such. For example, the top infobox for [Euler](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonhard_Euler) is: +```wikitext +{{Infobox scientist +| name = Leonhard Euler +| image = Leonhard Euler.jpg +| caption = Portrait by [[Jakob Emanuel Handmann]], 1753 +| birth_date = {{birth date|df=y|1707|4|15}} +| birth_place = [[Basel]], [[Swiss Confederacy]] +| death_date = {{nowrap|{{death date and age|df=y|1783|9|18|1707|4|15}}}} {{awrap|{{bracket|[[Adoption of the Gregorian calendar#Adoption in Eastern Europe|OS]]: 7 September 1783}}}} +... +}} +``` + +The infobox at the bottom is usually used to display a curated table of related links. For example, the bottom infobox for [Euler–Lagrange equation](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euler%E2%80%93Lagrange_equation) is just `{{Leonhard Euler}}`, which displays a box containing links to many of the things named after Euler. + + +`~~~~` is used to sign on talk pages, and expands to something like `Username (talk) 10:50, 12 June 2023 (UTC)`. + +### Mathematics + +`<math>` tag renders $\LaTeX$ inline like `$`, while `<math display=block>` renders it on a separate line like `$$`. + +`<math>E = mc^2</math>` renders to $E = mc^2$. + +`<math display=block></math>` renders to $$E = mc^2$$. + +One can also include math using [HTML renders](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Manual_of_Style/Mathematics#Using_HTML) or even by [plain Unicode](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathematical_operators_and_symbols_in_Unicode). These are less flexible but more compatible with older browsers. Further, parts of Wikipedia syntax themselves are incompatible with `<math>`, such as in section titles or some templates, forcing the use of HTML or Unicode in such cases. + +Theorems and proofs can be boxed and named: + +``` +{{Math theorem +|name=Pythagorean theorem +|note=Pythagoras, 500s BC +|math_statement=Let <math>a, b, c</math> be the three side lengths of a right triangle, then +<math display=block>a^2 + b^2 = c^2</math> +}} + +{{Math proof +|title=Proof by similar triangles +|proof=Drop a perpendicular from point C to side AB. Now argue by proportionality. <math>\blacksquare</math> +}} + +``` + +## References + +References are the backbone of Wikipedia `{{citation needed}}`. There are in general two ways to do citations. + +| type | inline citation | expanded citation | +| ---- | ---- | ---- | +| purpose | Support specific claims. | Provide general reference work for the entire page. | +| location | Immediately after the supported claim. | In the `== References ==` section. | +| appearance | analytic continuation of of _f_.<sup>[\[6\]](#6)</sup> | Abramowitz, Milton; Stegun, Irene A., eds. (1972). ["Chapter 6"](http://www.math.sfu.ca/~cbm/aands/page_253.htm)... | +| syntax | `<ref>{{cite book\|...}}</ref>` | `{{cite book\|...}}` | + +As expanded citations are just inline citations without the `<ref>` tag, we will describe just inline citations. + +The most basic form is a plaintext citation, like `<ref>Author, Title, date, [url](https://example.com/), etc</ref>`. + +One should generally use a templated citation, like `<ref>{{cite web|url=https://example.com/|title=Example|date=2001|access-date=2023}}</ref>`. There are three forms of citation templates: [`cite web`](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Cite_web), [`cite journal`](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Cite_journal), [`cite book`](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Cite_book). + + +A citation can be named as `<ref name="X">...</ref>`. It can then be invoked as `<ref name="X" />`. The instance `<ref name="X">...</ref>` can go before or after `<ref name="X" />`. Any ordering would render to the same page. + +## Typical Wikipedia page + +```wikitext +{{Short description|One sentence summary of page}} + +{{Infox box at the top +|infobox_data_1=... +|... +}} + +[[File:Image of X.png|thumb|right|Image caption]] + +The concept '''X''' is usually bolded. Now define the concept X. For non-specialist pages, this section should be written in plain language, with jargons defined in-line. Some [[link]]s would help. + + +== Introduction == + +Here one usually sets up the notation, overviews the history, and such. Details follow in the next sections. + +Footnotes are numbered separately from inline references.{{NoteTag|note=Footnote text.}} + +== Relation to Y == +{{Main|Y}} +{{See also|Another page}} + +Something about the relation between X and Y. + +== See also == +* [[Very relevant link]] +* [[Less relevant link]] + +== External links == +* [https://example.com/ External link one]: Summary of what is in the external link. + +== Footnotes == + +<references group="note" />{{Notelist}} + +== References == +<!-- generates list of references from inline reference tags, with columns with a minimum width of 30 em-dashes. --> +{{Reflist|30em}} + +<!-- extra, non-inlined references below --> +{{Refbegin|30em}} +* {{cite book|title=Book Title|date=2001|chapter=Chapter 1|...}} +* ... + +== Further reading == +* ... +* ... + +{{Infox box at the bottom}} + +[[Category:First category that the article belongs to]] +[[Category:First category that the article belongs to]] +[[Category:There is no limit to the number of categories allowed]] +``` + +## Further reading + +* [Wikipedia's manual of style](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Manual_of_Style) +* [Wikitext cheatsheet](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Cheatsheet) +* [Wikitext, full reference](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Wikitext). +* [Tables, full reference](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Table#Simple_straightforward_tables) |