Difference between revisions of "Clicklaw Wikibooks Contributor Guide"

Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 287: Line 287:
Account holders, including all editors and contributors, have the option of adding pages to a watchlist so they can follow content that they are responsible for and receive a notification when the pages are altered.  
Account holders, including all editors and contributors, have the option of adding pages to a watchlist so they can follow content that they are responsible for and receive a notification when the pages are altered.  
To add a page to your watchlist you must be logged in, then when you are on the page you wish to add, hover your cursor over the downward arrow beside the "History" tab, then click on "Watch."
To add a page to your watchlist you must be logged in, then when you are on the page you wish to add, hover your cursor over the downward arrow beside the "History" tab, then click on "Watch."
[[File:Adding_a_page_to_the_watchlist.png]]
[[File:Adding_a_page_to_the_watchlist.png |border| 900px | link=]]


You can enable email notifications in your Preferences/User profile//E-mail options. Set the  upon logging in to Clicklaw Wikibooks
You can enable email notifications in your Preferences/User profile//E-mail options. Set the  upon logging in to Clicklaw Wikibooks
==Disabling Glossary/Terminology Popups==
==Disabling Glossary/Terminology Popups==
Terms that appear along with their definitions on the [[Terminology]] page will automatically be detected the first time they appear on any article in the Clicklaw Wiki. In general, this saves work, since no manual coding is required to ensure that a legal term will include a definition. The automatic nature of this process, however, will result in false-positives in cases where a defined term also has a common meaning in addition to a legal one (the terms "hearing", and "order" for example).
Terms that appear along with their definitions on the [[Terminology]] page will automatically be detected the first time they appear on any article in the Clicklaw Wiki. In general, this saves work, since no manual coding is required to ensure that a legal term will include a definition. The automatic nature of this process, however, will result in false-positives in cases where a defined term also has a common meaning in addition to a legal one (the terms "hearing", and "order" for example).

Navigation menu