Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Drafts are pages in the Draft namespace (draftspace) where new articles [note 1] can be created and developed, for a limited period of time. [note 2] They allow editors to develop new articles and to receive feedback before being moved to Wikipedia's article namespace (mainspace). If you are logged in, creating a Draft version first is optional.
to the end of the template code, making sure it starts on the same line as the code's last character. Note : This category is for templates that are used in the "Draft:" namespace. For templates that label things as drafts, see Category:Under-construction templates .
This page will collect various techniques for achieving common tasks needed in writing user scripts. Discussion about limitations, relative portability, and speed of the various alternatives is strongly encouraged.
Produces a series of links for a specified page. Template parameters [Edit template data] Parameter Description Type Status 1 1 Name of the target page. Page name required The above documentation is transcluded from Template:Ln/doc. (edit | history) Editors can experiment in this template's sandbox (create | mirror) and testcases (create) pages. Subpages of this template.
A Wikipedia namespace is a set of Wikipedia pages whose names begin with a particular reserved word recognized by the MediaWiki software (followed by a colon). For example, in the user namespace all titles begin with the prefix User:. In the case of the article (or main) namespace, in which encyclopedia articles appear, the reserved word and ...
Other namespaces are forthcoming, so it can be used in {{Userspace draft}}, for example, or by placing {{Draft article}} in other namespaces, like Talk: or Wikipedia: {{Draft article check}} will give different results depending on which namespace it is used, and which corresponding article exist in mainspace/draft space
For example, maybe you have a bot that publishes certain data to a Wiki page regularly, and you want your script to read that data. Careful with ctype . Set it to raw for normal Wiki pages, and application/json for pages where a template editor or admin has set the Content Model to JSON.
The programming language C# version 3.0 was released on 19 November 2007 as part of .NET Framework 3.5. It includes new features inspired by functional programming languages such as Haskell and ML, and is driven largely by the introduction of the Language Integrated Query (LINQ) pattern to the Common Language Runtime. [1]