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Metaweb:Guide to Layout

From the Quicksilver Metaweb.

The Metaweb Guide to Layout is an annotated, working example of some of the basics of laying out an article.

For page markup; see metaweb:How does one edit a page. For style guidelines; see metaweb:Manual of Style.

This little article is just a summary of what some fairly clean, simple Metaweb articles look like. For more complicated articles, you may want to copy the markup of some existing article you like the looks of.

In particular, see the metaweb:intermediate page template for intermediate pages that link together several entries on a topic.

Introductory material

The subject of the article should be mentioned in '''strongly emphasised''' text at a natural place in the article. The name of the subject may appear slightly different from the title of the page, or may include variations, but normally it is identical to the page title.

If the article is long enough to contain several paragraphs, then the first paragraph should be short and to the point, with a clear explanation of what subject of the page is. If further introductory material is needed before the first header, then this can be given in additional paragraphs.

Lists

Indented lists are: * good for organizing + neatly + efficiently * self-formatting

Lists start with a blank line, so put your first list item directly under the introductory phrase.

Unindented lists are good for alphabetic listing of personalities: Anne John Mark Sophie

Numbered lists: 1. number automatically 2. make it easy to move items around in a list 3. let you add items between other items

Structure of the article

Paragraphs should be relatively short, as the eye gets tired of following solid text for too many lines.

Headers also help make an article clearer and determine the table of contents. Since headers are hierarchical, and some people set their user preferences to number them, you should start with ==Header== and follow it with ===Subheader===, ====Subsubheader====, and so forth. Yes, the ==Header== is awfully big in some browsers, but that can be fixed in the future with a style sheet more easily than a nonhierarchical article structure can be fixed.

Certain optional standardized sections go at the bottom of the article, as you see below.

Quotations

Under this header, list any memorable quotations that are appropriate to the subject. * "Misquotations are the only quotations that are never misquoted." -- Hesketh Pearson, Common Misquotations (1934)

Other articles in the Metaweb that are related to this one. * Metaweb:Manual of Style * Metaweb:Talk page layout

References

Put under this header, in list form, any books that you have used or recommend for readers of the article. If you can, include the ISBN for the most recent edition. The ISBN will automatically link to a page assisting readers in finding the book. * John Grossman (editor); The Chicago Manual of Style; University of Chicago Press; ISBN 0-22-610389-7 (14th edition, hardcover, 1993) * H.W. Fowler and Robert Burchfield (editor); The New Fowler's Modern English Usage; Clarendon Press; ISBN 0-19-860263-4 (revised 3rd edition, hardcover, 2000)

Put here, in list form, any web sites that you have used or recommend for readers of the article.


This page originally from the Wikipedia.