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Clicklaw Wikibooks encourages editors to use editing notices to alert readers and other editors to the status of pages. Throughout the editing stages, please change the editing notice to update the status of the page based on changes you have made, or concerns you find.
The following Editing Notices are templates (prebuilt elements that are ready to plug right into pages on the wiki) and are transcluded into a particular page by inserting the code "{{NAMEOFTEMPLATE}}" towards the top of the page (or wherever you want the editing notice to appear).
For example:
This
Will give you this
Inserting {{OKCOPY}} at the very top of the page in edit mode to render a notice stating that the page has passed the copy edit stage.
This page is ready for final edit. Content is up-to-date for the new Family Law Act but may have typos. Rollover definitions, links and formatting should be intact.
Some Editing Notices contain a field that must be customized. For example Template:REVIEWED works to let readers know who reviewed the page last, and when. But you need to provide the who and when details when you place the code into the page:
For example:
This
Will give you this
Inserting {{REVIEWED
| reviewer = Nate, March 31, 2013}}
in order to let readers know who reviewed the page and when.
This information applies to British Columbia, Canada. Last reviewed for legal accuracy by Nate, March 31, 2013.
Alternatively, rather than typing out your username and the date, the wiki platform lets you simply insert four tilde characters ~~~~placed anywhere consecutively in a page, to automatically render a signature and timestamp when the page is saved:
This
Will give you this
{{REVIEWED
| reviewer = ~~~~}}
This information applies to British Columbia, Canada. Last reviewed for legal accuracy by Nate (talk) 16:50, 31 March 2013 (UTC).
A mandatory direction of the court that is binding and enforceable upon the parties to a court proceeding. An "interim order" is a temporary order made following the hearing of an interim application. A "final order" is a permanent order, made following the trial of the court proceeding or the parties' settlement, following which the only recourse open to a dissatisfied party is to appeal. Failing to abide by the terms of an order may constitute contempt of court. See "appeal," "consent order," "contempt of court," "decision" and "declaration."
Pages in category "Editing Notices"
The following 14 pages are in this category, out of 14 total.