Difference between revisions of "What Wiki Categories Are"

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:At [[CNM Wiki]], a [[wiki category]] is the [[user feature]] that allows [[end-user]]s to index [[wikipage]]s; using this feature, various pages can be grouped and found at the category page.
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:At [[CNM Wiki]], a [[wiki category]] is the [[metadata]] that can group various [[wikipage]]s; links to all the pages that belong to one category can be found at the category page. The categories are also a [[user feature]] of [[CNM Wikiware]]; this feature allows [[end-user]]s to index [[wikipage]]s.
  
:Category pages belong to special pages.
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:Category pages belong to special pages. For instance, the ''What Wiki Categories Are'' wikipage belongs to the [[:Category:Lectio Contents|Lectio Contents]] ''category''. This metadata can be found at the bottom of the wikipage. If you click on that category, you would see all the pages that belong to that category.  
  
  

Revision as of 22:06, 20 November 2020

What Wiki Category Is (hereinafter, the Lectio) is the lesson part of Wiki Editing Essentials lesson that introduces its participants to wiki edit concepts. This lesson belongs to the CNMCT Entrance section of the CNM Cyber Placement.


Content

The predecessor lectio is Management of Wikipages.

Script

At CNM Wiki, a wiki category is the metadata that can group various wikipages; links to all the pages that belong to one category can be found at the category page. The categories are also a user feature of CNM Wikiware; this feature allows end-users to index wikipages.
Category pages belong to special pages. For instance, the What Wiki Categories Are wikipage belongs to the Lectio Contents category. This metadata can be found at the bottom of the wikipage. If you click on that category, you would see all the pages that belong to that category.


Categories, a software feature of MediaWiki, provide automatic indexes that are useful as tables of contents.

You can categorize pages and files by adding one or more Category tags to the content text. These tags create links at the bottom of the page that take you to the list of all pages in that category, which makes it easy to browse related articles. Contents

   1 Summary
   2 Adding a page to a category
       2.1 Sort key
   3 Creating a category page
   4 Managing the category hierarchy
   5 Hidden categories
   6 Linking to a category
   7 Redirecting a category
   8 Tracking categories
   9 See also

Summary

Each of the pages in the Category namespace represents a so-called category, a grouping of related pages, and contains an index for the pages of its category. For example, this page belongs to "Category:Help". If you open the category page, you will see a link to this page there.

When a page belongs to one or more categories, these categories appear at the bottom of the page (or in the upper-right corner, depending on the skin being used).

The category pages themselves contain 2 parts:

   at their beginning, an optional part may contain text that can be edited, like any other page,
   at their end, an ever present, automatically generated, alphabetical list of all pages in that category, in the form of links. In fact, in the Unicode sort order.

To assign a category to a page, simply add the link "" to the page's wikitext. The usual place to add it is at the bottom of the page.

To link a category page within a page as a normal wiki link (without adding the page to the category), prefix the link name with a colon. For example: Category:Not in this category

A new category can be created before assigning any page to it, in the same way as any other regular page.

Individual wikis may have their own top-level categories, such as Category:Contents in Wikipedia.

For a complete list of all categories which have at least one page, see Special:Categories.

For a complete list of all created/edited categories, including the ones that don't have any pages, see Special:Allpages/Category: (note the colon at the end). Adding a page to a category

To add a page or uploaded file to a category, simply edit the page and add the following text (where Name is the name of the category you want to add it to).

Any number of Category tags may be added to the page and the page will be listed in all of them. Category tags, along with interwiki language links placed in the sidebar, are usually added at the very bottom of the page for the convenience of other editors.

On a categorized page, categories are displayed in the Categories: box strictly in the order they appear in the wikitext.

If $wgUseCategoryBrowser is set to true, under the first list each category is listed again, breadcrumb-style, with all its parent categories, sorted alphabetically. (At least in MediaWiki 1.18.2) if a category is a subcategory of more than one parent, both hierarchies will be listed, but the tagged category will be stripped off all but one of these. This creates the potential for what appear to be duplicate entries if a category with multiple parents and one of its parents are both tagged on a page. For example suppose Maryanne is a subcategory of both Mary and Anne. If a page tags categories Maryanne and Anne then the Category breadcrumbs will show

Anne Anne Mary -> Maryanne

"Anne" appears to be duplicated, but what is meant is

Anne Anne -> Maryanne Mary -> Maryanne

This is a bug, and has been reported in phab:T35614.


Category:Product Epics, Category:Lectio Contents, Category:Lesson Plans, Category:Course Syllabi, Category:Program Curricula, Category:Welcome Session, Category:Career Orientation, Category:CNMC Core Orientation, Category:CNMC Team Entrance, Category:Management, Category:Project Management, Category:Reference Publications, Category:References (to work on)

Key terms

Wiki category, Category:Product Epics, Category:Lectio Contents, Category:Lesson Plans, Category:Course Syllabi, Category:Program Curricula, Category:Welcome Session, Category:Career Orientation, Category:CNMC Core Orientation, Category:CNMC Team Entrance, Category:Management, Category:Project Management, Category:Reference Publications, Category:References (to work on)

Closing

The successor lectio is Discussions at Wiki.

Presentations

Slideshow

Video