Synopsis
Text Formatting Rules
Emphasis: '' for italics, __ for bold, ''__ for both
Lists: * for bullet lists, # for numbered lists, "; term : definition" for definition lists
References: JoinCapitalizedWords or use square brackets for a [page link] or URL [http://cool.wiki.int/].
Footnotes: Use [1],[2],[3],...
Preventing linking Prefix with "!": !DoNotHyperlink, name links like [text | URL] (double up on the "[")
Misc "!" = heading , "!!"=sub-heading, "!!!"=sub-sub-heading, "!!!!"=sub-sub-sub-heading, ";;" makes a linebreak, "----" makes a horizontal rule
Paragraphs
-
Don't indent paragraphs
-
Words wrap and fill as needed
-
Use blank lines as separators
-
Four or more minus signs make a horizontal rule
-
;; or %%% makes a linebreak (in headings and lists too).
Lists
-
asterisk for first level
-
asterisk-asterisk for second level, etc.
-
Use * for bullet lists, # for numbered lists (mix at will)
-
semicolon-term-colon-definition for definition lists:
- term here
-
definition here, as in the <DL><DT><DD> list
-
One line for each item
-
Other leading whitespace signals preformatted text, changes font.
Headings
-
'!' at the start of a line makes a heading
-
'!!' at the start of a line makes a sub-heading
-
'!!!' at the start of a line makes a sub-sub-heading
-
'!!!!' at the start of a line makes a sub-sub-sub-heading
NB Yes, it did used to be the other way round. But this ties up with the bullet list system, ie more = deeper
Fonts
-
Indent with one or more spaces to use a monospace font:
This is in monospace
This is not
Indented Paragraphs
-
semicolon-colon -- works like <BLOCKQUOTE>
-
this is an indented block of text
Emphasis
-
Use doubled single-quotes ('') for emphasis (usually italics)
-
Use doubled underscores (__) for strong emphasis (usually bold)
-
Mix them at will: bold italics
-
Emphasis can be used multiple times within a line, but cannot cross line boundaries:
''this
will not work''
References
-
Hyperlinks to other pages within the Wiki are made by placing the page name in square brackets: this is a page link+ or Using Wiki Words+ (preferred)
-
Hyperlinks to external pages are done like this: http://www.wcsb.org/
-
You can name the links by providing a name, a bar (|) and then the hyperlink or pagename: PhpWiki home page - the front page+
-
You can suppress linking to old-style references and URIs by preceding the word with a '!', e.g. NotLinkedAsWikiName, http://not.linked.to/
-
You can create footnotes by using [1], [2], [3], ... like this here . See footnote for counterpart. (If the [ is in the first column, it is a footnote definition rather than a footnote reference .)
-
Also, the old way of linking URL's is still supported: precede URLs with "http:", "ftp:" or "mailto:" to create links automatically as in: http://c2.com/
-
URLs ending with .png, .gif, or .jpg are inlined if in square brackets, by themselves:
Tables
-
Simple tables are available. A table row is introduced by a | in the first column. It is best described by example:
|| __Name__ |v __Cost__ |v __Notes__
| __First__ | __Last__
|> Jeff |< Dairiki |^ Cheap |< Not worth it
|> Marco |< Polo | Cheaper |< Not available
-
will generate
| Name | Cost | Notes |
| First | Last |
| Jeff | Dairiki | Cheap | Not worth it |
| Marco | Polo | Cheaper | Not available |
-
Note that multiple |'s lead to spanned columns, and v's can be used to span rows. A > generates a right justified column, < a left justified column and ^ a centered column (which is the default.)
HTML Mark-Up Language
-
Don't bother
-
< and > are themselves
-
The & characters will not work
-
If you really must use HTML, your system administrator can enable this feature. Start each line with a bar (|). Note that this feature is disabled by default.
More detail than you want to know
See Magic Php Wiki UR Ls+ for gory details on how to write
various kind of wiki maintainance links.
Footnotes:
By using [1] a second time (in the first column) the footnote itself is defined. You may refer to a footnote as many times as you want, but you may only define it once on the page. Note the the [1] in the footnote links back to the first reference, if there are multiple references there will be +'s after the [1] which will link to the other references. (References which come after the footnote definition will not be linked to.)
See also: Help