|
The preferences dialog allows you to personalize some aspects of a MediaWiki wiki. They will apply only when you are logged in. The default wiki sysop admin login name is: WikiSysop. Some MediaWiki projects form a family in the sense that one logs in into the family as a whole, and that common preference settings apply. Notably this is the case for the more than 1000 Wikia projects. On Wikimedia projects logging in and setting preferences are currently done separately on each wiki. You may find it convenient to specify the same preferences on each wiki that you use, but this is not necessary. See also Single signon transition.
User dataUser data Your email*: ... o Register email Your nickname (for signatures): ... o Raw signatures (without automatic link) Interface language: English Change password Old password: ... New password: ... Retype new password: ... o Remember password across sessions * Real name (optional): if you choose to provide it this will be used for giving you attribution for your work. * Email (optional): Enables people to contact you through the website without you having to reveal your email address to them, and it can be used to send you a new password if you forget it.
Your nicknameAlthough your username is not necessarily your real name and could therefore be called a nickname, the term "nickname" is used here for a name you may optionally specify, different from your username, for when you enter your signature with ~~~ or ~~~~. (If you use the edit toolbar for signing, remember that it gives two dashes before the four tildes.) Raw signaturesHowever, there is even more versatility. You can use any text as your nickname. From MediaWiki 1.5 the behaviour of signatures has changed. In older versions of MediaWiki, wiki and HTML markup could be entered in signatures, even without "Raw signatures" being checked. So entering "]] | [[User talk:Name|Talk" as your signature would have also included a link to your talk page in your signature, producing an effect similar to: "Name | Talk". This is now no longer the case. If "Raw signatures (without automatic link)" is unchecked, then
If "Raw signatures" is checked, then
Invalid raw signaturesYou may find the following message displayed in your user preferences:
This means you are using invalid HTML markup on your signature. Some possible causes with their corresponding solutions:
Using images and templates in signaturesNote that changes in the images and templates are retroactive, which on one hand may be confusing, but on the other hand, to rectify annoying signatures, may be convenient. To avoid retroactivity, use a new image or template name. Do not create a signature template in the article or template namespace: instead use a subpage of your own userpage such as sig, and link it with "{{User:Name/sig}}". In the case of a common signature on several projects, as in Wikicities, remember that templates are project-specific. Thus, if a signature contains a template call, to make it work in all projects, a template is needed in each (these may be copies, but the content can also be different for each project). Note also that links may lead to a different page, depending on the project in which you put the signature, even if you use interwiki link style. For example, India:User talk:John leads to the page User talk:John on India, except from the India project, where it leads to India:User talk:John in the India namespace. Therefore you may want to use external link style, or make a redirect such that the final target of the link is always the same. Signature contentCheck the rules of your project (for example, for the English Wikipedia see w:Wikipedia:Sign your posts on talk pages) and note that:
PasswordTo change your password, enter your old password, the new password, and the new password a second time. (If you're merely changing the other preferences, you do not need to enter your password.)
If you want to use remember my password you have to change your password if it was generated by Mediawiki and emailed to you. This is a security feature but very often causes trouble for new users. Interface languageOne can specify an interface language. If that is different from the default language of the wiki, it causes the default messages of the specified other language to appear, not those in the MediaWiki namespace. If MediaWiki:Sidebar in a project contains literal labels, these are in effect for all interface languages. Note that some contain internal links, with the name of a page in the interface language project but without the corresponding prefix; therefore these links in general do not work, unless redirects are made. Note that using English as interface language in RTL projects shows "This is a minor edit" and "Watch this page" on the edit page with tick boxes reversed: the tick boxes do not belong to the nearest but to the other text. Note that using Spanish as interface language in version up than 1.4.0 shows no Edit toolbar when editing articles (Mozilla browser, firefox as well). QuickBar settingsThis selection only works in the Classic and Cologne Blue skins (see below). In Monobook there is a left panel anyway; in Nostalgia there is none. This is the list of links to the various special pages. You may optionally have it appear at the right or left side of each page. There's no option yet to have it appear at the top or bottom of the page. The "fixed" quickbar will appear at the top corner of the page, while the "floating" quickbar will appear at the top corner of the browser window instead of scrolling with the article text. Floating quickbars may not float correctly on old or mobile browsers. The QuickBar must be enabled to allow you access to some features such as moving (renaming) a page, and in the case of Classic, also to arrive at the Special Pages, unless you type the URL. From MediaWiki 1.5 This has been removed in 1.5 SkinSkin O Classic A MediaWiki skin is a style of page display. There are differences in the HTML code the system produces (but probably not in the page body), and also different style sheets are used. The default is the MonoBook skin; what was called Standard is here in the preferences called Classic (not to be confused with the even older Nostalgia), but the system uses "wikistandard" in the naming of css files. Links at the edges of the page are in different positions. Some links are not present in every skin. In Nostalgia some links are in a drop-down menu instead of directly visible. Cologne Blue has a fixed font size unless one specifies in the browser "ignore font sizes specified in the webpage"; even then the line height is fixed; therefore this skin is hardly suitable for a large font. In MonoBook the width of the panel on the left is dependent on the font size. Therefore, with a large font, the width of the main part of the page is smaller than with other skins. For Classic with a quickbar and a large font a CSS setting to reduce the size of the quickbar text may be necessary. This depends on the project, specifically on the length of the longest word in the quickbar. If that does not fit in the designated width, there are complications depending on the browser. In Internet Explorer the quickbar overlaps the main text and a vertical line which is intended to separate the two, crosses the main text. In some other browsers the problem does not arise if the quickbar is on the right. Since there is word wrapping but no wrapping within a word, the longest word and not the longest full label is the criterion:
To use the full width of the screen for the main text, use Classic without quickbar or Nostalgia. The drawback is that links are missing to the special pages and your user page, respectively. Screenshots: See also Help:User style, and for developments and discussions, Skins. Rendering mathRendering math o Always render PNG o HTML if very simple or else PNG o HTML if possible or else PNG o Leave it as TeX (for text browsers) o Recommended for modern browsers o MathML if possible (experimental) MediaWiki allows you to enter mathematical equations as TeX code. These options let you control how that code is rendered into PNG images.
Files
Limit images on image description pages to: 320x240
640x480
800x600
1024x768
1280x1024
10000x10000
(Prior to version 1.5, this is under "Recent changes and stub display".) One can specify a limit on the size of images on image description pages. The large limit 10000x10000 means that one gets the full image. With a slow connection it is not practical to have to load a large image just to read image info. Also, it may be practical if a large image at first is made to fit on the screen, in the case that the browser does not do that itself. If the image has been reduced there is a link to the full image. From MediaWiki 1.5 the default thumbnail width can be set in the preferences; this can be overridden by an image width specified in the image tag; the latter is typically not advisable, in order to respect the users' preferences. Date formatThe following is rendered depending on preferences: [[2001-01-15]] (or [[2001]]-[[01-15]]) [[2001]] [[January 15]] [[January 15]], [[2001]] [[15 January]] [[2001]] [[January 15]] [[15 January]] With your current preference setting on this project the seven are rendered as follows: By default the rendering is as usual for links, except that in the first case the syntax for a single link gives two links. However, one can specify as preference that all full date formats are rendered the same, in the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, or 4th way. (Note that format [[YYYY-MM-DD]] is the shortest of these five.) If the 1st or 2nd way is selected, the 5th and 6th line are not affected. If the 3rd or 4th way is selected, the 5th and 6th line are rendered accordingly, without the year. For years in the range 1-1000, in the two cases on the first line the year has to be padded with zeros: [[0011-01-15]] ([[0011]]-[[01-15]]) [[11]] [[January 15]] [[January 15]], [[11]] [[15 January]] [[11]] gives: For years B.C.: [[-0011-01-15]] ([[-0011]]-[[01-15]]) [[12 BC]] [[January 15]] [[January 15]], [[12 BC]] [[15 January]] [[12 BC]] gives: The setting also affects what wikitext the signature of the user produces. Since dates in signatures are not linked, this determines how the date is rendered for everybody, and this can not be changed retroactively, except by editing the pages with the signature. Note that using this date formatting feature in section headers complicates section linking: a link to a section with a variable date format has to be set in a fixed date format, which works only for users for whom the formats match. Thus, if you want to be able to use links like w:November_2004#November_1.2C_2004, in the calendar at the upper right of the month pages on Wikipedia, or links elsewhere to the section about a particular day (if they also use the default format), you cannot use the date formatting feature. For chronological table sorting the format [[YYYY-MM-DD]] is required. Another special property of this format is that it also gives seconds, in Recent Changes, User Contributions, etc.: "HH:mm:SS", or with the date: "YYYY-MM-DDTHH:mm:SS". See also m:Dynamic dates and w:en:Wikipedia:Manual of Style (dates and numbers)#Dates. ScreenshotsTime zoneTime zone Server time is now: 06:34 Local time display: 08:34 Offset*: * Enter number of hours your local time differs from server time (UTC).
The time is displayed in local time, according to the set preferences, in:
The UTC time is applicable:
Keep this in mind when copying an excerpt from Recent Changes, a revision history listing, etc. to a Talk page. Convert manually to UTC or temporarily set the preferences to a zero offset before producing the revision history etc. to be copied. EditingEditing Rows: Columns: o Enable section editing via [edit] links o Enable section editing by right-clicking on section titles (JavaScript) o Edit pages on double click (JavaScript) o Edit box has full width o Show edit toolbar o Show preview on first edit o Show preview before edit box o Add pages I create to my watchlist o Add pages you edit to your watchlist o Mark all edits minor by default o Use external editor by default o Use external diff by default o Prompt me when entering a blank edit summary
Recent changes and stub displayNumber of titles in recent changes: o Hide minor edits in recent changes o Enhanced recent changes (not for all browsers) Threshold for stub display:
Search result settingsHits to show per page: Lines to show per hit: Characters of context per line: Search in these namespaces by default:(Main) Talk User User talk Meta Meta talk Image Image talk MediaWiki MediaWiki talk Template Template talk Help Help talk Category Category talk Hilfe Hilfe Diskussion Aide Discussion Aide Hjælp Hjælp diskussion Helpo Helpa diskuto Hjälp Hjälp diskussion Ayuda Ayuda Discusión Aiuto Discussioni aiuto ヘルプ ヘルプ‐ノート NL Help Overleg help Pomoc Dyskusja pomocy Ajuda Aju
Misc settingsShow hoverbox over wiki links Underline links Format broken links like this (alternative: like this?). Justify paragraphs Auto-number headings Edit pages on double click (JavaScript) Enable section editing via [edit] links Enable section editing by right clicking on section titles (JavaScript) Show table of contents (for pages with more than 3 headings) Disable page caching Enable "jump to" accessibility links
NotesIf you want to change your username, it is recommended that you do this retroactively in the sense that your previous user contributions are recorded under the new name. Users and sysops cannot do this, one can ask a bureaucrat to do so. Signatures are not changed and therefore will no longer match page histories of the talk pages concerned. However, you can edit signatures manually. Also other occurrences of your name on talk pages are not retroactively changed. The deletion log and the upload log are not altered. Account deletion is not possible. You cannot indicate personal information (such as your real name) here, but you may do so on a page named after your username in the User: namespace. (That's available as a link on the line which says "You are logged in as user WhatsYourName" above the preferences panel. Feel free to start your own page with anything you want to say about yourself on it.) Browser preferencesBrowsers usually also allow you to specify preferences, e.g. font size and font type. The standard skin is compatible with your browser setting of font size and font type. The Cologne Blue skin has most text in a fixed font size, ignoring your browser setting. Some browsers, e.g. IE, allow you to specify that font size specified in the web page is ignored. In that case the font size in Cologne Blue is as specified in the browser, but with the line height not adjusted accordingly. Therefore a large font gives a messy result. Providing your own CSSCascading Style Sheets are used to configure MediaWiki's visual appearance. You can specify your own CSS definitions and overwrite the default settings. See Help:User style. See also
Wikipedia-specific helpNote on the date format: If a section title contains a link according to the date formatting feature, the section title is user-dependent. This is not very practical for section linking, since it is hard or perhaps even impossible to make a link with the target depending on the date format set in the preferences. Due to a special template Portal:Current events/DateHeader2, the full content about dates from 1 July 2006 is accessed with a link regardless of the preference setting of the user, e.g. March 2007#2007 March 14, even though this content has a header date in user-dependent format. This is achieved by not using a real section but a special-font header in user-dependent format with an explicitly defined anchor in a fixed date format. Such a link accessing the content about a date is e.g. produced by Template:ThisDateInRecentYears (backlinks, edit). In this case the link label needs not contain the full date, but in other cases one would want a user-dependent date format as link label; however, that does not seem possible: the date formatting feature produces a linked date, which cannot be used as link label. Thus we have to dispense with the user-dependent date format, and use e.g.:
Alternatively we can use:
See also Template:ThisDateInRecentYears (backlinks, edit) and Category:Days by year. This page is a copy of the master help page at Meta (for general help information all Wikimedia projects can use), with two Wikipedia-specific templates inserted. To update the main text, edit the master help page for all projects at m:Help:Preferences. For Wikipedia-specific issues, use Template:Ph:Preferences (the extra text at the bottom of this page) or Template:Phh:Preferences for a Wikipedia-specific lead (text appears at the top of this page). You are welcome to replace the full wikitext of this page with that of the master page at Meta at any time. To view this page in other languages see the master page at Meta. |
This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
Mercedes Car
This site monitored by SitePinger.net