Toolbar Button | What it does | The code it makes | Short description | What it looks like | Notes |
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Bold text |
'''Bold text''' |
Three apostrophes (') on either side of the bold text |
Bold text |
The title of an article is always in bold the first time you see it. |
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Italic text |
''Italic text'' |
Two apostrophes (') on either side of the italic text |
Italic text |
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Internal, or "Wiki" link |
[[Link Title]] |
Two square brackets on either side of the link |
Link Title OR Wikipedia OR User:Roux/AdoptionProgram |
Pages that do not exist appear in red (Hence the name "red link"), blue if they do exist, and in bold if they link to the page they are on. |
| Internal link, but this time with a twist |
[[Link Title|displayed text]] |
An internal link, with a pipe (usually found under the backspace) separating the title and the text to be displayed |
The free encyclopedia |
By inserting a pipe, you can make different text appear. Clicking on the link to the left will bring you to Wikipedia. |
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External link |
[http://www.example.org link title] |
A single square bracket on either side of the URL and title. The URL and link title are separated by a space. |
link title |
The arrow you see indicates an external link. Other symbols represent other types of pages: A lock for an https:// or "secure" site, an Adobe PDF logo for .pdf extensions, a smiley-face speech bubble for irc:// channels, among others. |
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Level 2 section heading |
== Headline text == |
Two equals signs on either side of the headline. |
To avoid breaking the Table of Contents, I will not demonstrate this here. The heading with your username is a level 2 header, and the heading above this table (Wikimarkup 101) is a level 3 (=== level 3 ===) |
Lower-level headers can be created with more equals signs. Only one equals sign on either side makes a level 1, usually only found in the title of the page. Level 2 headers are most common, and levels 3 and lower allow more specific divisions. |
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Insert image |
[[File:Bad Title Example.png]] |
Exactly the same as an internal link, however the pipe works differently. The Image: prefix and .jpg (or whatever) extension MUST be present. |
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The image size, framing, location, and captioning can all be controlled using the pipe character mentioned before. The most common application is [[File:Bad Title Example.png|thumb|caption here]], which produces a captioned thumbnail as you see in the picture of the toolbar above. Further settings are described in Wikipedia:Extended image syntax. |
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Insert media |
[[Media:Example.ogg]] OR [[Image:Example.ogg]] |
Exactly the same as an internal link, however pipes should not be used. The "Media:" OR "Image:" prefix and ".ogg" extension MUST be present. |
Media:Example.ogg OR |
Sound files are always in .ogg format, for reasons we'll get to later on. Don't worry if you've never heard of it before, the MediaWiki software features a built-in player, which you can get to appear by using the "Image:" prefix instead of "Media:". It doesn't make any sense to me, but that's how it works. |
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Mathematical formula |
<math>Insert formula here</math> |
Two math "tags", a technical term (not really) for two angle brackets surrounding the word "math". A closing tag is indicated with a slash. |

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This gets super-complicated and math formulas are only used on a limited number of articles anyway, so I won't go into too much detail. If you really want to play with it, there's an index of character codes at Help:Math. If these formulas do not display properly, please let me know. |
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Ignore wiki formatting |
<nowiki>[[Insert]] '''non-formatted''' ''text'' here</nowiki> |
Two "nowiki" tags. |
[[Insert]] '''non-formatted''' ''text'' here |
This code I've been using throughout the table to show you the code. Any wikimarkup inside a nowiki tag is ignored and displayed as written. |
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Signature with time stamp |
~~~~ |
The operative bit of the code is four tildes (that squiggly bit next to the 1 key). The two dashes don't do anything. |
[ roux ] [x] [ roux ] [x] 23:09, 20 October 2008 (UTC) 23:09, 20 October 2008 (UTC) |
Three tildes (top) only display your signature. Four tildes (middle) show your signature with a timestamp, and are most commonly used. Five tildes (bottom) give only the timestamp. |
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Horizontal line |
---- |
Four dashes. |
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Please use sparingly. |
| Buttons shown below this line are only used on Wikipedia. While the code will do the same thing on other wikis, you may not see a button for it on your toolbar. |
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Create a redirect |
#REDIRECT [[Insert title]] |
The phrase "#REDIRECT" followed by a wikilink to the target page. |
Preview "Acidic", a redirect page |
Redirects are intended to correct spelling and capitalization mistakes in searches (since the search sucks) and reduce confusion over related terms. Any link to a redirect page will send you instead to the target - for example, click on Acidic and see where it takes you. WARNINGS: The code must be on the first line of a page to operate. Also, NEVER redirect to a redirect. This creates a "double redirect", which can screw up the server, your browser, and your brain, if you're the one trying to search for something. |
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Strike-through text |
<s>Strike-through text</s> |
This is one of the few active HTML tags. It's two "s" tags around the text. |
Strike-through text |
This is usually used when someone is retracting a comment they made in a discussion or talk page, but wishes to leave the comment visible as a matter of record. Note that even if something is removed on Wikipedia, you can still find it in the history. |
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Line break |
Before<br />After |
Again, an HTML tag. A single tag with two variations: <br> or <br />. I haven't been able to find any difference between the two. |
Before After |
Useful on Wikipedia because simply hitting "Enter" doesn't work. You have to hit enter twice to make a new paragraph, or use this to knock it down a line. |
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Superscript |
x<sup>3</sup> |
HTML "sup" tags |
x3 |
Not much to say here. This is NOT what you use to make footnotes, though. That button comes later. This also doesn't work in math formulas, so don't try it. |
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Subscript |
H<sub>2</sub>O |
HTML "sub" tags |
H2O |
See above. |
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Smaller text |
<small>Small Text</small> Big text |
HTML "small" tags |
Small Text Big text |
Nothing to say here either. |
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Comment |
<!-- Comment --> |
Same as the HTML code for comments. Angle bracket, exclamation point, two dashes, your comment, two dashes, closing angle bracket. |
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Note how nothing appeared in that box. There is something there, it just didn't print. These are usually used to leave unobtrusive messages to editors about articles. For a funny example of a comment in action, go to Madness and click the edit button. |
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Picture gallery |
<gallery>
Image:Example.png|Caption1
Image:Example.png|Caption2
</gallery>
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Two "gallery" tags, which enclose a list of images to be included in the gallery. Captions can be added by inserting a pipe after the image name, followed by the caption. |
Demonstration not possible here. Click the link to the left to see an example. |
Galleries are a way to show several pictures in an article without cluttering them up, but they have been criticized for being "tacky," and really should be used sparingly. |
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Quoted text (appears indented) |
other text<blockquote>
abc
</blockquote>other text |
Two "blockquote" tags around the quote |
other text
abc
other text |
Should be used for extended quotes. If you use this, make sure to provide a source for the quote, and to use direct quotes as little as possible to avoid copyright infringement. |
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Insert table |
{| class="wikitable"
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abc
|} |
Table syntax is complicated, and we'll cover that later on. |
This is a table. |
Like I said, we can cover this in a separate lesson if you want. It's not something I'm going to require. |
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Add a reference (footnote) |
blah blah<ref>Reference</ref> |
Two "ref" tags around the reference text. |
blah blah[1] |
References are displayed using the code <references />. There's a fancy bit of coding you can do to make the same reference appear multiple times, demonstrated in the second line. By adding a name="blah" parameter to the first instance of a reference, you can make the same reference appear more than once. I have these footnotes displayed below the table so you can see how they appear. |
| Add a duplicate reference |
blah blah<ref name="copy">Duplicate</ref> blah blah<ref name="copy"/> |
The duplicate reference has a slash at the end of the tag. |
blah blah[2] blah blah[2] |