Help talk:Contents/Archive 1

Project:Support desk

Redirect link to support desk forum.

Toolbar help
The skin installed on my site, tarheelwiki for some reason doesnt display a toolbar in the edit tab. Does anyone know where to even start troubleshooting this at?

Download Help

 * How can I download all the Help pages so that I can install them on a intranet wiki? --Magick 12:11, 23 October 2006 (UTC)


 * This feature is not yet available, but we are working on it. --HappyDog 12:47, 23 October 2006 (UTC)


 * I see this post is over 2 years old. Is there any status update on this? I have already copied most of it to my install, but for future sites, this would be nice -- JoshuaB86 21:15, 15 July 2008 (UTC)
 * It can be done with a bot; I've used a python bot to do it. There's still no other way to transfer images. -Steve Sanbeg 22:59, 22 October 2008 (UTC)

Quick Introduction
What about having a quick introduction page that explains what a wiki is, how to edit, and has a description that explains the purpose of the wiki instance. First time users of a wiki may have trouble getting started, or understanding the purpose of the wiki, this could help answer both those questions.

Coffeyman11 18:07, 26 August 2006 (UTC)


 * I agree - I've been meaning to do this for a while. I won't get round to it for a little while, so if someone wants to step up to the bat then go ahead! --HappyDog 03:27, 4 September 2006 (UTC)

Monobook.css
I want help editing monobook.css. Where can I get? I searched for monobook.css, and I didn't find nothing. Smiddle 15:04, 24 September 2006 (UTC)


 * 'MediaWiki skin tweaks' on wikidev.net looks like a good explanation.
 * From a user perspective, on some wikis you can create your own 'User Style' by creating a page "User:Username/monobook.css". That's explained on meta: User styles
 * As for where this information should be found... It should probably be built from the Manual:Skins page. ...which needs some work -- Harry Wood 13:42, 2 May 2007 (UTC)

Linking out of help
Shouldn't we try to avoid linking to pages that are outside of the help namespace? Or are namespaces like Manual: planned to be in the final export as well?


 * Our current plan for the export process is that any links outside of the Help: namespace (whether on-wiki or interwiki) will be replaced with full URLs to the content at MediaWiki.org. For example, when we automate the export, the link   would be replaced with  .  Therefore any links out of the Help: namespace will continue to work as expected.
 * That said, you should consider whether it would be better to add the information to the Help: namespace (being careful to adhere to the PD license) and if not, whether it is actually useful to link to it at all.
 * So I guess the short answer is: external links are discouraged but not disallowed. Please see Automating help page export for more details. --HappyDog 15:40, 27 October 2006 (UTC)

FCKEditor installed...
Has anyone been able to import pages with wiki text into a Wiki with the FCKEditor extension installed? It fails to format the wiki text and won't allow for any transclusions.--CWPPWiki 22:25, 22 January 2007 (UTC)
 * You might want to ask at the Support desk, or is this question related to Help:Contents? -- :Bdk: 13:30, 23 January 2007 (UTC)

We need THE administrator's guide.
While there is a lot of documentation on installing and customizing MediaWiki, I think we can all agree that finding exactly what you need, especially for a newbie, is quite difficult. Compounding the problem is that documentation is spread across numerous sites (here, wikimedia, wikipedia, etc.). Is anyone else interested in working with me to create THE administrator's guide? I would like to see a complete walk-through of the entire installation, configuration, and customization process, organized in a reasonably chronological order. This page would be a portal for all of the administrator's help documentation.


 * Installing Wikimedia
 * one
 * two
 * 1) three


 * Customizing and configuring Wikimedia
 * one
 * two
 * 1) three

I think this is sorely needed. Jonathan Kovaciny 20:04, 16 April 2007 (UTC)


 * A noble idea. The problem is that things are not quite as neat as all that, and you're more likely to end up with the following:


 * Installing Wikimedia
 * one
 * two, except in certain situations three.
 * four on linux, five on windows
 * six, or if you don't have command line-access, seven, or alternatively eight which is easier but a bit slower.


 * However, you're right our docs are teh suck. Please feel free to get stuck in and fix them up!
 * For your information, this page (Help:Contents) is for user-directed help. See Manual:Contents for administrator help (and you may particularly be interested in Manual:Contents/To_do).  Note that references to 'administration' on this page are about wiki administration from within the interface (i.e. as a user) not system administration. --HappyDog 01:25, 2 May 2007 (UTC)


 * That really is the point of MediaWiki.org, and we're trying to do that gradually. Half of the codes on Meta are old, and the other half suck... so it really requires a rewrite of almost everything. We do need better instructions, no one will disagree on that. Titoxd (?!?) 01:45, 3 May 2007 (UTC)
 * The installation part should be more or less done. See Manual:Installation. Titoxd (?!?) 04:23, 4 May 2007 (UTC)

"Server Administration" pages don't belong in PD Help
The section "Server Administration" doesn't belong in Project:PD help because...

"The idea [ofProject:PD help] is to provide a set of pages which can be copied into a fresh wiki installation, or included in the mediawiki distribution. This will include basic user information and other Meta information, in a reasonably concise form. The basic concept is to create a compressed user guide"

While we might talk about things like 'Interwiki linking', 'Namespaces' and 'User rights' from a user perspective, the current contents of Help:Interwiki linking, Help:Namespaces, and Help:User rights ...are clearly talking about server admin config settings, and as such they clearly belong in the Technical Manual.

This would make more sense in terms of basic organisation, but also because there is no nead to copy that kind of information into lots of other wiki installations, therefore no need to release as public domain.

The relationship between the user help pages and the rest of the documentation can be tricky in places, but basically I would advocate making zero reference to config settings within any of these user help pages.

-- Harry Wood 16:48, 22 October 2007 (UTC)


 * I agree - I've noticed this before but have not had time to do anything about it. Feel free to fix this up (move inappropriate content to the Manual: namespace - don't just delete it... though I think you now that. :0 ) --HappyDog 01:32, 6 November 2007 (UTC)

command & conquer wiki
What kind of place is this? Also if this place made the Wikipedia can someone make a Command and Conquer Wiki that is separate from Wikia?(76.247.222.101 06:24, 21 January 2008 (UTC))


 * Erm... Well somebody could install mediawiki somewhere, and try to attract a community of wiki contributors to build another command & conquer wiki, but that would be duplicating a lot of the effort which has gone into building Command & Conquer wiki on wikia. Installing mediawiki is pretty easy, but attracting a community, and fighting wiki spam is not a massively easy thing to undertake. Why bother, when wikia does that for you?
 * Anyway this area is for discussion of the help pages, so not really the right place to discuss it
 * -- Harry Wood 08:24, 20 April 2008 (UTC)

I need help I was reading a something on religion. And it spelled. Angelican. Like this. Anglican. Now how do I get a. Credit. For this. Manuelholguinholguin (talk) 05:58, 1 March 2016 (UTC)

Account rename
Hello. Please, it is possible to rename my account from WizzardSK to Wizzard in order to complete my global account? Sorry, I could not find a page dedicated to this, so I write it here. Please help me. Thank you very much. --WizzardSK 10:24, 18 April 2008 (UTC)
 * That name is already taken by a user here. Aaron 16:06, 18 April 2008 (UTC)
 * Yes, but that user has 0 contributions and it is registered here almost 2 years. At English Wikipedia, it is possible to usurp 0 contribution users and to free the name for another user. --WizzardSK 09:00, 19 April 2008 (UTC)
 * I've moved the old account out of the way. I cannot move yours to your global one due to an SUL restriction. Eventually, that restriction will be removed, hopefully soon. Aaron 15:32, 22 April 2008 (UTC)
 * Thank you very much! Please lock my old account WizzardSK, it is no longer necessary. --Wizzard 07:44, 23 April 2008 (UTC)

A plea - please avoid RED LINKS, links to other namespaces except MANUAL, and non-default interwiki links
After importing the Help namespace into a fresh Mediawiki installation I get over 50 wanted pages (i.e. red links). Please:


 * Don't put information about being a wiki webmaster into the PD Help namespace. That belongs in the Manual:
 * Don't link to Manual: pages from Help. If at all possible, don't link to anywhere except Help: from within Help: pages!
 * If links to mediawiki.org pages outside Help: are absolutely necessary use an interwiki link, and make sure that interwiki prefix is supplied in the default interwiki table of Mediawiki installs. Addendum: Or use Mediawiki.
 * Don't link to meta:. Mediawiki content from meta belongs on this site, and help content from meta needs to be rewritten. and improved on here. Linking every help page to meta: is just downright sloppy. Certainly don't use meta which contains the copyrighted logo of the Wikimedia Foundation.
 * Don't use other interwiki links unless they are first added to the default interwiki table created at Mediawiki install time.

The bottom line is: before adding content, ask yourself if it benefits the end user. Before adding a link, ask yourself if it will be a valid link on every standard installation of Mediawiki. --kingboyk 17:31, 15 June 2008 (UTC)

Help
I've copied this as suggested, but I would also like to add the blue border... how can I do this?

Cheers,

Bluegoblin7 09:09, 17 July 2008 (UTC)
 * NVM figured it out! Bluegoblin7 09:26, 17 July 2008 (UTC)

"Watchlist": link to "Manual:Watchlist"
I suggest adding to Watchlist a link to Manual:Watchlist -? 4 September 2008
 * Please do not do so, see Project:PD help for reasons. -- :bdk: 20:04, 4 September 2008 (UTC)

enlarging the font of gileki wikipedia
hi, i am Amin Sanaei, gileki wikipedia adminstorator. in gileki wikipedia, font of pages is very small and people can not read it!. if anbody can change it, please do that. the larges of font of farsi wikipedia is good for our gileki wikipedia. i try to do that but can not do that!.AminSanaei 10:38, 19 September 2008 (UTC)

Different skin for specific pages
I am trying to include pages with a dramatically different theme into my main wiki. (My main wiki has a fantasy skin and the pages I want to include are futuristic.) I'd like a different skin specific to those pages and which will load only for those pages. I don't want to simply install a new wiki for the futuristic-themed pages because there will only be a few of them. 24.6.244.4 11:46, 22 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Is there a way to set a specific skin on any individual page?

Is this not a help page? Is there a better place for me to pose my question? 24.6.244.4 22:09, 29 November 2008 (UTC)

dynamic Categories


Hi, I've tried to create a template which defines the category of an article.

But the only thing that happens, is that the wiki-tag is shown in plain text.

Please help --213.214.18.64 07:28, 9 June 2009 (UTC)


 * done with

--213.214.18.64 11:35, 9 June 2009 (UTC)

Issue in Date used in My SQL
HI,

My date is saved in 25-Sep-2010 format in MySQl, now have given order by date desc, however order by is not working fine 01-Oct-2010 this comese at last howevr it should come before 25-Sep-2010.It seems on month order by is not working. please suggest what to do?

Thanks Vibs

How to have Enhanced editing toolbar (Wikimedia Usability Initiative) ?
Hi i am new here. i just a have setup MediaWiki and want to have Enhanced editing toolbar (Wikimedia Usability Initiative) like on wikipedia on my wiki... how can i have that?? please help me..thanks in advance
 * Yes, not so clear: mw 17 and mw 16 look different. Usability features from Preferences => Editing on English wikipedia is Beta features on this mediawiki.org site. --Nbrouard 10:58, 25 October 2011 (UTC)
 * When using mw 17, just install the standalone WikiEditor.php extension:

require_once( "$IP/extensions/WikiEditor/WikiEditor.php" );
 * and you will get 'Beta features' in your Preferences => Editing and will be able to select one or both:
 * Enable enhanced editing toolbar
 * Enable dialogs for inserting links, tables and more --Nbrouard 11:22, 25 October 2011 (UTC)
 * Where does one enter the require_once command?--Rolfedh (talk) 02:14, 26 February 2012 (UTC)

Missing info
Here's some missing info that might need to be copied:

http://www.mediawiki.org/w/index.php?title=Help:Contents&diff=0&oldid=515243

In particular, the collapsible elements info is an important feature that has no mention in the current help.

Badon (talk) 19:35, 27 March 2012 (UTC)

ask of help
how can i create a new groups of Editors and Reviewers ? --كريم كنان (talk) 03:35, 2 March 2013 (UTC)

Mark for translation
Can someone (prepare and) mark (and import) this page for translation? We should include all the pages currently in the "Help pages" aggregate group of translatable pages, I suppose (almost 50). --Nemo 14:56, 10 April 2014 (UTC)

Needs intro
Please add to the top:
 * This is the MediaWiki Handbook. It is for end users of MediaWiki software. If you are looking for a technical manual for the MediaWiki software, containing information for developers and system administrators on installing, managing and developing for the MediaWiki software then read the Technical manual.

Rob Kam (talk) 19:54, 3 November 2014 (UTC)

Hood Hack Education
Haha! This project was started way back around 1999 when I first got into Linux....

I'm gonna fast forward to the current past where I coined this idea as "Compton University" as a joke mocking both the "Elite 1%" who believe in the 'monopolistic' idea of hiding information and reserving it for their own 'exclusive' society. Yes, the ones who are already ahead financially and wish to remain 'on-top' on all other domains including the domination of information. They are the ones who put a price tag on teaching complex topics to their young and keeping the children of the poorer class out of the circle of intellect.

The Internet has changed this. No, I am not a 100% liberal preaching that 'everyone' should be the same, nor that the rich should share their wealth, but "Information" is a God given right to all who desire to learn and only those who 'desire to learn' are the true 'exclusive few' who are entitled to learn. Those who wish to remain ignorant, so let them pursue their ignorance. However, people should be left ignorant because this 'Information' was 'hidden' behind expensive colleges or high income neighborhoods.

We now have a new vehicle, a new world of information called the Internet and those of us who desire to learn what was not in our schools now have this information on hour hands. Many of us felt that we failed, school where in our cases it was the other way around.

Call this what you want, Compton University, Oakland Tech, East L.A Academics, it doesn't matter --what matters is that you want to learn and my job is to point you to that direction. I'm not your teacher, I am my own Professor and my own Student.

Sounds funny? It actually is, but it's also just as serious. Here, our knowledge is not valued by a GPA -- No, here it's about how we apply what we learned... Which means, we do more than just study. We make our 'Craft' (like a college major) our way of life.

Here the only person we cheat is our self. Is this still funny? Amusing? Yeah, now things begin to sound more serious don't they? You are your own professor, your own student and no one is responsible for you but yourself.

Now, what this is about. My own personal school is about Computers, Internet, and Programming, including some electronics. I am writing this page (manifesto if you call it) on my own RaspberryPI here at Starbucks. Proud, that after hours of configurations and complations, Apache, PHP, and MySQL work... Also installed here I have DNS (BIND9) and OpenLDAP installed. Along with many many Perl Modules as I am currently learning Perl to it's core.. (or at least almost)...

How I learn is by reading every book on Perl, do every exercise,practice and practice and practice as I watch YouTube videos and read blogs and websites such as stackoverflow or stackexchange....

Now, your interest (major) may be different, this concept (educational revolution) can apply other fields but I don't recommend that you try to learn dangerous fields where life and limb can be in danger--- There is a place for College Institutions to learn things like Medicine, Chemistry, or other fields that won't put you, your family, or neighbors in danger...

However, Computer Science does not require an academic authority to regulate it. Software and hardware configuration can be practiced safely at home in almost all cases... Just follow the safety rules when working with any electronics and you should be fine...

Anyways, I posted this because I am very excited to have gotten LAMP to work on this unit...

Stop FileZilla from automatically launching when starting computer
How do I stop FileZilla from automatically launching when I start my computer?

vtk Lib
vtk how to Arbitrary shape cutting,how to use the vtkMaskFields

Move protect
This should probably be move-protected, since there's not really any good reason to need to move it :P -Xbony2 (talk) 15:17, 7 November 2015 (UTC)

SEED: Solutions for Economy, Environment and Democracy - A short Proposal
SEED: Solutions for Economics, Environment and Democracy

Problem statement: Democratic failures, economic stagnation, inequity and ecological collapse Quality of life for growing numbers of people on the planet is threatened by a set of systemic problems. We are dependent on an unsustainable and polluting fossil fuel economy. Wealth and income is inequitably distributed. People lack control over their own working conditions, wellbeing, and governing institutions. Our governments and jobs rely on unrealistic expectations about economic growth driven by over-consumption. Most parties and politicians continue to promote failed economic models based on growth at any cost, while externalizing social and environmental burdens. Much of what passes for growth is unproductive speculation, leading to extravagant consumption by a wealthy few at the expense of a healthy life for majorities in the global south and increasing numbers in the north. Due to the costs of this model, many societies now face the prospect of long-term economic insecurity, natural resource deterioration, and political turbulence. Vision: New economic models for people and planet We need to ask and answer tough questions, such as: what levels of economic production and consumption are realistic, and how should productivity be distributed? Building social, cultural and economic systems that put people, communities, and the planet first requires reimagining the simple elements of the good life. Economic governance, investment, and production focused on speculation and growth-at-all costs must be replaced with economic models aimed at equity and quality of life, and levels of production and consumption that our planet can sustain. Challenges: Monopolized debate, incremental, isolated alternatives Neoliberal market solutions dominate political conversations about economics, environment and democracy. New ideas are often haunted by warnings from officials and business elites about economic stagnation and loss of jobs, creating fears that cloud the prospects for change. These failed ideas and repeatedly aired fears stem from well-developed political networks across the globe that fill media spaces and advance bad policies that create economic and political turmoil. Austerity for the many is the solution when elites must cover the costs of their risky gambles. The economic thinking taught in top universities still produces experts who discount environmental costs and offer failed formulas for prosperity based on unrealistic growth, whether from the remnants of the Keynesian left or the still reigning neoliberal right. Meanwhile, democratic reform movements face resistance from established parties and interests, and fail to mobilize broader engagement among publics caught up in more immediate issues and economic crises. Despite incremental victories, the environmental movement continues to lose the fight for a more sustainable planet. The activists calling for changes in these areas of environment, economy or democracy too often operate in separate spheres, promoting reforms that fall short of systemic change. Opportunity: Connective Action Several decades of large-scale protests against this world economic, environmental, and political order suggest that many people understand various aspects of these related problems and seek to do something about them. It is time to move beyond the fragmented politics of resistance and develop a politics of positive, aligned action. To address these integrated, systemic issues and overcome barriers to making change, we need to build cross-boundary communities of knowledge prepared to interface more effectively with democratic institutions. Today, cutting edge progressive movements and parties are experimenting with the logic of connective action, using technology to flatten hierarchies and engage citizens in dialogue. These large action networks often emerge as technology equipped crowds that occupy public spaces, but they tend to be chaotic and short lived. Many NGOs are developing broad coalitions that engage large publics in various issue sectors. Connective communication networks are helping to organize the hybrid movement-parties that are emerging in nations as different as Denmark, Spain and Portugal. While these action spaces are filled with good ideas, they need to be better coordinated and scaled up.

Proposal: Systems Thinking Meets Smart Political Organization A key element currently missing from this political picture is a widely accessible information + action network for generating and sharing ideas across issue sectors and diverse, geographically dispersed publics. SEED will be a think-do network for economics, environment and democracy that uses information technologies to improve the scale and coordination of communication, public engagement, strategic action, and learning. This smart platform will connect an international network of thought leaders, advocates, and practitioners to share and assess ideas and action experiments operating in local, national and international arenas. The aim is to build creative visions, develop practices, assess successes and failures, and spread organizational models that interface effectively with democratic institutions.

The SEED platform will be simple, inclusive and inviting. This custom technology network will operate through dispersed hubs of activity that address local problems and spread creative solutions. Intelligent, semi-automated content tagging and curation will help user communities identify and bridge intellectual differences, and share promising political practices. Machine learning will alert network managers to areas of needed conflict resolution and idea alignment in order to develop deep engagement.

Project Phasing:

Impact SEED will help integrate and spread ideas created by actors working for economic, environmental and democratic systems that are fair, representative and sustainable. Our intent is to develop a thought network that engages democratic institutions and challenges the dominance of neoliberal, elitist, grow-at-all costs economics and politics. The goal is to reshape political institutions and policies with democratic approaches that work for people and the planet.

Resources Required The Center for Communication and Civic engagement at The University of Washington is currently seeking SEED funding to scope this project in greater depth and pursue large grants as part of the Rethinking Prosperity project. To learn more contact: Lance Bennett: lbennett@uw.edu or Deric Gruen: deric@uw.edu.