User:Evangeline75/Tips and Ideas

Dear Friends

after learning basic editing skills, we may do some experimentation with coloring our pages,

for example, we can use the following codes when you edit your profile or a heading or a sectional text:

your text here

your text here

your text here

your text here

your text here

It is advisable that we see a preview of our work before we save it finally, although it can further be edited, even if you saved it. we can make changes any time, thats the power of this medium.

so, lets make the world more greener....!

ramesh sharma

There are two categories of links, each with a range of options for displaying the hyperlink-text to the reader:

}}
 * 1) Internal page links always use two square brackets ( ... )
 * 2) * The Wiki software will search for the page in the data base and if it exists in WikiEducator, the link will automatically appear as a blue hyperlink in the published view;
 * 3) * If this is a new page, the link will appear in red in the published view, alerting users that content must still be generated for this new page in the wiki
 * 4) * When you want to display a different text to the actual name of the page in the wiki, use the piped " | " divider (SHIFT + BACKSLASH on English-layout and other keyboards), for example: Enter user-display text here . We call this a piped link.
 * 5) External page links always use single square brackets ( [...] ) to distinguish them from internal links.
 * 6) * If you want the external link to appear as a numbered reference, you simply enter the url for the external page like this: which will show the link to the homepage of the Commonwealth of Learning like this.
 * 7) * If you want to display a different text (piped link)rather than a numbered reference, we use a space (instead of the " | " divider), for example Commonwealth of Learning which will appear like this: Commonwealth of Learning

In brief, the full syntax for displaying an image is:



Notes:


 * 1) type refers to whether you want to display your image as a thumbnail of framed image;
 * 2) location allows you to specify where on the page the image should appear, for example: left, right or center
 * 3) size allows you to specify the size at which the picture is displayed on the page;
 * 4) caption is where you can add a description for your image.

Only is actually required. Most images should use (and should not specify a size). The other details are optional and can be placed in any order. The following table outlines the optional attributes and their effects on images:

The syntax you use to include an iDevice template in your content is quite simple. You just surround the name of the template in curly braces like this:

To include the Objectives template in your content, for example, you would write:

Idea for a template is to have a self assessment template that students can select how they are doing. Don't know how this will work.