Power Tags
Power tags are an advanced feature which can add extra functions and layout options to your wiki pages (and sometimes research notes). They are entered like regular tags but follow the format key:value
. After adding a power tag, you must refresh the page.
To add tags, look for this box at the bottom of a wiki page or research note:
List of power tags related to chapter pages:
lat:41.023
andlon:-71.023
latitude and longitude. Together with the simple tag "chapter", the combination of these three tags will create a point for your chapter on the Places mapevents:foo
displays a listing of research notes tagged with "event" and "foo", and a link to post new notes with those tags in the left sidebar. Especially useful where foo = the name of your chapter page.list:foo
displays recent posts from a Google Group with the name "foo" and a subscription input boxtabbed:notes
andtabbed:wikis
display a tabbed header which offers tabs with links of related research note and wiki contentnotes:foo
displays 4 recent "popular" research notes tagged "foo" (in grid view, popular means >20 views) at the top of the page, under the tabs if they exist. For example see [Gulf Coast](/wiki/gulf-coast]parent:foo
adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page, especially useful for places within regions
General power tags
events:foo
displays a listing of research notes tagged with "event" and "foo", and a link to post new notes with those tags in the left sidebar.sidebar:featured
displays "featured" links and images in the sidebar instead of the usual "related content"style:presentation
hides the wiki toolbar (with Edit, Talk, Revisions) for more formal pagesstyle:wide
removes the 800px width limit from wiki pages, and allows them to flow full pageparent:foo
adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page, especially for places within regionswith:foo
where foo is a username adds an authorship co-credit to your research note that links to the user's profile page, however, the note will not show up under that user's profile.lang:es
oriso:es
is the way to indicate language in a research note or event. This case is an example wherees
means Spanish.parent:foo
adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page, good for organizing topic areas