This example shows how wrapping equal signs around headings and sub-headings structures a wiki article: A wiki on something genericĪfter you structure your headings and sub-headings, just add text, images, and videos under the appropriate sections.
Consider the title of the page as the first "section" of the article. As a note, you can't wrap a section with a single pair of equal signs (like this: =generic heading=), because that heading is reserved for the title of the entire page. The more matching pairs you add to a sub-section, the less significant the sub-section becomes. When you add sub-sections, each pair of matching equal signs makes the heading smaller. You can make any sub-section up to six levels deep-that's six matching pairs of equal signs around a single sub-section. Create headings and sub-sections by wrapping a line of text in two or more equal signs (=). Headings for sections and sub-sections are the structure of a wiki. Just add a comma-separated list of tags after the vertical bar, as in the following examples: Simply insert your own information into the appropriate fields:
Use the example code below to create your own dynamic list. You'll need the following information to create a dynamic list: You can add a title to both wikilists and guidelists by adding |title=Title of List to the tag.
Once all the related guides are tagged with the same identifying tag, you can create dynamic lists of step-by-step guides on any wiki page, like a category page. Type "easy" into the guide field and click add. Simply add a tag on the guide's editing page. It then groups all of the documents together in list form.įor example, let's say you've created guides of varying difficulty levels, but you want to display all the easy guides together on a category page. A dynamic list searches through material on the site looking for tags that are relevant to the list. A dynamic list is essentially an incomplete list and because it's incomplete, you can keep adding items onto it. Usable in: Category Pages, Item Pages, and Wikis.īefore we delve into creating dynamic lists, you must first understand what they are and how they function.