sona pona:Guide: Difference between revisions
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* Expanding lists of [[media]] |
* Expanding lists of [[media]] |
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* Writing [[:Category:Essays|essays]] |
* Writing [[:Category:Essays|essays]] |
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* Adding missing information, especially to [[:Category: |
* Adding missing information, especially to [[:Category:Articles needing work|articles marked as needing work]] |
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* [[#Source what you can|Adding sources to articles]], especially in [[:Category:Articles with unsourced statements|articles with the <code><nowiki>{{citation needed}}</nowiki></code> template]] |
* [[#Source what you can|Adding sources to articles]], especially in [[:Category:Articles with unsourced statements|articles with the <code><nowiki>{{citation needed}}</nowiki></code> template]] |
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* Fixing [[#Formatting|formatting]], especially in [[:Category:Unadapted imported pages|unadapted imported pages]] |
* Fixing [[#Formatting|formatting]], especially in [[:Category:Unadapted imported pages|unadapted imported pages]] |
Revision as of 03:31, 6 March 2024
Welcome, aspiring editor! This work-in-progress guide will hopefully help you get your bearings on the wiki.
What do I do here?
Any help is welcome—you can even just fix typos—but there are many larger projects you may like to participate in:
- Creating requested pages, or articles for other things that you know about
- Writing and expanding word articles
- Expanding lists of media
- Writing essays
- Adding missing information, especially to articles marked as needing work
- Adding sources to articles, especially in articles with the
{{citation needed}}
template - Fixing formatting, especially in unadapted imported pages
- And many more projects tracked in the
#pali
forum thread on the Discord server
Technical
Moderation
Your first edit won't appear immediately and will instead be sent to the moderators for approval. This is to prevent trolls from making new accounts purely to grief the wiki.[a]
Policy
Be bold
If you have an idea for an edit or page, but you're not sure whether others will like it, just do it! Everyone can easily bring a page back to a previous version, so it's impossible to permanently "ruin" anything. Patrolling ensures that every edit will be inspected by at least one other person.
Be messy
An unfinished or messy page is infinitely better than no page at all. Even if you never come back to it, someone else surely will.[b] Slap a {{Needs work}}
template on top and let others work their magic.
Source what you can
Unlike topics covered by Wikipedia, there aren't many public reliable sources for Toki Pona. (In fact, this very wiki was made to fill that gap!) As such, it's fine if an article doesn't have any citations, though they're always appreciated (and encouraged for lipu pona status). Primary sources are fine, and are even preferable in many cases, such as when tracking the history of a subject.
Potential resources include:
- The Official Toki Pona books (pu, ku, and su), if you have them
- Freely available sections, such as the pu dictionary, or ku's "Notes on lipu pu" section
- Other materials by jan Sonja, e.g. the tokiponization guidelines
- Other source texts on the wiki
- Anything listed on the Recommended learning resources article
- The Toki Pona census
- Linku if necessary; it does not cite its own sources, so more direct citations are preferred. (Some other dictionaries like nimi.li are forks of Linku, and still lack sources regardless.)
When using a proficient speaker's thoughts as a source, remember to note whether they reflect consensus or are rather their personal nasin. This includes what you may consider "official" material:
This is the way I use Toki Pona.
—pu, p. 7
Resources with open submissions, such as Tatoeba and Glosbe, often attract overconfident beginners and so should be treated with care.
See also § Formatting § Citations.
Red links are not bad
Red links point to wanted pages that don't exist yet. This is good:
- It shows gaps in our knowledge base.
- It helps us keep track of pages to create. (See Special:WantedPages.)
- It prevents pages from starting out orphaned.
Don't remove red links just for being red links. Only remove one if it wouldn't be reasonable to create a page at that title. (And remember that a page can be a redirect or a disambiguation page.)
Trans rights
Formatting
In addition to standard MediaWiki formatting, note the following.
Italics
Mark emphasized text with <em>emphasized text</em>
.
Mark Toki Pona text with Template:tp. For other languages, see the next section.
{{tp|mu}}
outputs mu.Mark variables with <var>variable name</var>
.
For other uses, you can use ''italic text''
.
Language
Mark the language of non-English text with Template:lang.
{{lang|fr|''je parle bien''}}
outputs je parle bien. Hover to see the language name.Mark unitalicized Toki Pona text with Template:tok.
{{tok|mu}}
outputs mu.Mark text in the International Phonetic Alphabet with Template:IPA.
Titles
Mark a page title as italic or Toki Pona text using Template:Italic title, Template:tp title, or Template:tok
title according to the guidance above.
sitelen pona
Display sitelen Lasina or UCSUR codepoints as sitelen pona with Template:sp.
{{sp|mu}}
outputs mu. Hover or press to see the sitelen Lasina input.Links
Use Template:w to link to a Wikipedia article, and Template:wikt to link to a Wiktionary entry.
Indentation
Indent with Template:Indent.
:
(description detail) syntax without a preceding ;
(description term) produces invalid HTML, which is not accessible.For a hatnote, use Template:Hatnote or a template derived from it.
Examples
Use Template:Example for all example sentences. Highlight the part of the sentence that is relevant to the article or section with <mark>highlighted text</mark>
.
Citations
Citations are wrapped in <ref>…</ref>
tags. Any page with citations should have a references section at the end:
There are many citation templates for different media, sites, and even specific sources that are frequently cited. Most sources will probably be cited with Template:cite web and derivatives, Template:cite pu, and Template:cite ku.
Miraheze currently doesn't support Citoid, which automatically handles citation formatting on sites like Wikipedia. Instead, you can use an external tool, such as:
- Citer (simplest to use)
- reFill NG (good for mass conversion; add a dummy title, click "Use custom wikicode", paste links within
<ref>…</ref>
tags) - See more at wikipedia:Help:Citation tools
To prevent link rot, please consider archiving a source with the Wayback Machine or archive.is. This is especially necessary for Discord uploads; unarchived links will start to expire so that the files can only be accessed through Discord, which requires knowing where it was originally uploaded.
You can add a JavaScript bookmarklet to quickly archive a webpage to the Wayback Machine. Create a bookmark and set this as the "URL":
javascript:void(location.href='https://web.archive.org/save/'+location.href);
Then, whenever you press the bookmarklet, a snapshot of the currently viewed webpage will be saved.
Notice templates
There are several notice templates that should be used to tell the reader about the nature of an article's topic, such as if it pertains to an unusual style of Toki Pona. We don't want to mispresent nonstandard features as common if they aren't widely understood or accepted.
Maintenance templates
If you find an issue with an article and can't fix it yourself, or not immediately, add a maintenance template. These include:
Remove a maintenance template once the issue is resolved. There may also be cases where you should change one maintenance template to another, such as Template:Stub or Template:Empty to Template:Needs work.
If you're looking for something to do, you can check Category:Maintenance for issues to fix!