Wiki
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Wiki wiki is the first Hawai'ian term I learned on my first visit to the islands. The airport counter agent directed me to take the wiki wiki bus between terminals. I said what? He explained that wiki wiki meant quick. I was to find the quick bus. I did pick up a book about the language before my return home. I learned many things from this but wiki wiki is the word that sticks the most. (source)
Many wiki's
MediaWiki is the name of the software that this wiki is running on. But MediaWiki is not the only wiki out there, there are many more wiki software projects: Dokuwiki, Tiddly Wiki, Zim wiki, etc: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_wiki_software
Wiki Wiki Web
Who makes the software we are using?
Ward Cunningham made the Wiki Wiki Web, an early version of wiki software. This wiki hosted the "Portland Pattern Repository" and c2.com.
[http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/31/Ward_Cunningham%2C_Inventor_of_the_Wiki.webm Interview with him about the context of the Wiki Wiki Web)
The wiki was made for speed and easiness of writing and publishing on the Web. And to be moving from read to write mode. Also, the wiki was inspired by HyperCard (and HyperText).
Also important about wiki's was the mode of collaboration it allowed for. According to Ward Cunningham People discovered that they can create something with other people, that they don't even know. But they come to trust and they make something that surprises them in terms of its value.
Software with an attitude
You're browsing a database with a program called Wiki Wiki Web. And the program has an attitude. The program wants everyone to be an author. So, the program slants in favor of authors at some inconvenience to readers.
Posted on the original "wiki", the Portand Pattern Repository; sadly the original seems to no longer be online
Which Wiki Was Which
"WikiWikiWeb" for a while referred to four things: the website hosted on c2.com, the software used to run it (written in Perl), and later any user-editable website (what is now known as a wiki), and any application used to run such a site (now known as wiki software). There was no greate distinction for the first five years or so between the code used to run a wiki and the content on it, partly becuase there was nearly a 1:1 correspondence between the two: many of the original wiki administrators were programmers, and they tended to create their own new, or modified, version of the software to run their own wikis. [1]
Wikipedia
- 2000 Jimmy Wales creates Nupedia, a failed attempt to create a free online encyclopedia
- Wales hires Larry Sanger to edit
- wikipedia.com launched January 15, 2001
- 2001: first subdomains for non-english (deutsche.wikipedia.com)
- August 2002 all content tranferred to wikipedia.org
- Wales and Sanger fall out
Mediawiki
Mediawiki is the software that runs Wikipedia, and the PZI wikis
UseModWiki, like most wiki software at the time, was the work of tinkerers: it was based on AtisWiki, which was based on CvWiki, which in turn was based on WikiWikiWeb, Cunningham's original application. And again, like most wiki software of the time, UseModWiki used flat text files to store all page revisions. ... In late 2001 Wales hired Magnus Manske, a German programmer and active Nupedia contributor, to rewrite the software in PHP, now storing edits in a MySQL database. [2]
Links
Two kinds
- Internal (to other wiki pages)
- External
Internal
This sentence contains a link to [[another page]].
You can customize the displayed text (label) by using a "pipe": At first [[Mediawiki | the software]] used in wikipedia was written in [[PERL]].
External
- Use single square brackets
- No pipe, just a space to specific a label, see Wikipedia
- If no label is given, the link appears in "footnote" style [1]
- Raw URLs (that start with http://) will be made automatically clickable (http://wikipedia.org)
Careful
http://pzwart3.wdka.hro.nl/wiki/IRC
this way of chatting is ...
Redlinks
Significantly, wikis allow links to pages that do not (yet) exist. These are called "redlinks" (typically they appear in red to differentiate from "blue" normal links). In this was editors can write with links without knowing (or caring) if a given page exists. Redlinks can form a "potential page" or "todo" articles that when created in the future, will already be linked. Non-existent (redlink) Pages do display backlinks even before they are given any content (though they will not appear in Special:AllPages, they can be seen via Special:WantedPages)
Citations
Using the extension Cite, the wiki supports making proper academic style footnotes. It works by putting your reference directly into your text surrounded by the "ref" tag, e.g. <ref>Yaron Koren, p. 3</ref>
Page History / diff
- SHOW
Special:RecentChanges
Special:AllPages
Special:AllPages gives an alphabetical listing of all pages. It's a kind of index.
Redirect
Redirects add a bit of the thesaurus to the wiki. Redirects can be used to establish synonyms, and to specify a preferred title or term (the page that actually holds the content). Special pages (like the "index" Special:All pages) and functions like "Backlinks" respect redirects and generally show the preferred title.
#REDIRECT [[Better title]]
Moving pages
Move = (Copy and Paste) + (Redirect or Delete)
Move lets you effectively rename a page. By default, a move shifts content to the new title, and creates a redirect from the old title to the new one; in this way links to the old page will not break and will simply redirect to the correct page. In this way, a move is consistent with the wiki attitude of keeping history visible.
Deleting pages
Deleting a page is also possible. Note however that a delete is simply a way of marking that page as deleted. While the title will no longer appear in search results or in Special:All pages, the page history can still be viewed.
HTML
- Simple tags are allowed by default, all tags when enabled
- HTML comments work too! <!-- this is a comment -->
nowiki
HTML like tag that allows to include stuff that the wiki won't touch
Categories
- [[Category: People]]
- Categories can themselves be tagged with categories to create hierarchies
- Extensions exist to make working with (hierarchical) categories easier
To link to a category page without tagging the current page with that category, add a colon at the start.
- See [[:Category:Fish]] produces Category:Fish.
Transclusion
{{:Name of page}}
Templates
Template = Transclusion + Substitution
- Parameters, Named and positional (demo)
- Parser Functions?
- includeonly, ...
Variables
- {{CURRENTPAGE}}
- {{CURRENTTIME}}
- {{CURRENTUSER}}
- {{NUMBEROFPAGES}} ?
http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Magic_words#Variables
Behavior switches
"Switches"
- __NOTOC__
- __NOINDEX__
- __HIDDENCAT__ : don't show this category
Switches with parameters:
- DISPLAYTITLE: Set the proper title
- DEFAULTSORT: Tell the wiki how to order the page title
{{DISPLAYTITLE:cat}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Wales, Jimmy}}
Widgets
Hacking MediaWiki
http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/File:How_to_hack_on_Wikipedia.pdf
Python: mwclient
mwclient is a python library that gives convenient access to a wiki (via the Mediawiki API)
mwmclient can be installed with pip.
pip install mwclient
site = mwclient.Site("http://pzwart3.wdka.hro.nl", path="/mediawiki")
for page in site.allpages(namespace="Main", limit=500):
print page.page_title, page.exists
imgfile = open(imgpath, "rb")
site.upload(file=imgfile, filename=page.page_title)
imgfile.close()
Wiki Works
Annemieke van der Hoek: Epicpedia
File:Cramer-A-Brechtian-media-design.pdf Cramer, Florian. “A Brechtian Media Design: Annemieke van Der Hoek’s Epicpedia.” In Critical Point of View: A Wikpedia Reader, 221–25. Amsterdam: Institute of Network Cultures, 2011. http://networkcultures.org/blog/publication/critical-point-of-view-a-wikipedia-reader/.
Shahee Ilyas: Framing Leaders
- Framing Leaders, Shahee Ilyas, 2007, [2]
Natasha Berting: Warnet
- Project website: https://hub.xpub.nl/warnet/
- Process documentation: User:Tash/grad_prototyping3
James Bridle: The Iraq War: A History of Wikipedia Changelogs
The Iraq War: A History of Wikipedia Changelogs, James Bridle, collects the history of changes from the Wikipedia's article on The Iraq War between 2004 and 2009.
References
Between The Bracket: A Mediawiki Podcast, by Yaron Koren http://betweenthebrackets.libsyn.com