74
|
vaibhavgeek |
April 01, 2017 14:20
| over 7 years ago
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:
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 pages, and makes the lead image of wiki pages full-width
style:minimal just hides the wiki toolbar (but it's accessible via a small caret button)
style:wide removes the 800px width limit from wiki pages, and allows them to flow full page
style:fancy is used to style articles from the GrassrootsMappingForum
style:nobanner
parent:foo adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page
with:username adds a co-author to your research note with a live link to the user's profile page, however, the note itself will not show up under that user's profile.
lang:es or iso:es is the way to indicate language in a research note or event. In this example, es indicates Spanish.
locked -- locks a wiki page from edits except to moderators and admins. An atypical power tag in that it doesn't follow key:value format; documentation here
redirect:____ -- redirects a page to the page with the specified ID -- i.e. redirect:100 would redirect to node 100. Does not affect admins or moderators.
series:____ -- displays a message of "This is part of a series on tagname ." with a link to /tag/tagname
List of power tags useful for chapter pages:
lat:41.023 and lon:-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 map
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. 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 box
tabbed:notes and tabbed:wikis display a tabbed header which offers tabs with links of related research note and wiki content
notes: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
Inline power tags
You can now use "inline" power tags in the middle of a research note or wiki page. The first one is for generating a list of notes for a given tag, and is used in this format:
[notes:<tagname>]
For example, to list all notes tagged with peru , you can use:
[notes:peru]
For a more complex example, you can list all questions on the topic of "infragram" using:
[notes:question:infragram]
More advanced uses like activity grids can be found in this post:
https://publiclab.org/notes/liz/08-30-2016/check-out-these-activity-grids
And in the requesting responses documentation.
There's also this type of "edit here" prompt:
[ edit ] (but without spaces)
Which generates this type of prompt:
[edit]
Prompts
Prompts let us offer a place on a wiki page where a reader can enter text and it's directly inserted into the text of the wiki page just above the prompt.
[prompt :text:Placeholder text] (without space after prompt )
That looks like this when saved:
test
tag
as
[prompt:text:Placeholder text]
We can also ask for longer-form text input with the keyword paragraph -- but be aware that the "placeholder text" can only hold letters, numbers and spaces -- no punctuation (yet):
[prompt :paragraph:Placeholder text] (without space after prompt )
That looks like this when saved:
[prompt:paragraph:Placeholder text]
Two identical prompts on one page can cause trouble, but if you add a unique id, you can get around that:
[prompt :text:Placeholder text:UNIQUE-ID] (without space after prompt )
The prompts are better documented here.
Automated power tags, not for manual adding
You might see some of these being generated automatically, like when checking the box for a Research Note to be an "Event" or a "question" or when awarding Barnstars to someone's Research Note. Don't manually add these:
event:rsvp date:YYYY-MM-DD rsvp:username
barnstar:barnstarname
question:foo response:foo
Tag aliasing
This feature is for admins only -- please contact web@publiclab.org with questions.
We've created a system for aliasing tags, which serves a number of purposes:
A) disambiguation -- we have both spectrometer and spectrometry -- as of recently, we'd prefer spectrometry . So we make each the alias of the other, and the two become somewhat (but not completely) interchangeable on the site.
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/spectrometer, you see content tagged with
spectrometry , and vice versa.
- Email notifications do not yet take advantage of aliasing, but may at some point (see below).
B) subcategories -- multispectral-imaging contains and is broader than infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/multispectral-imaging, you should see content tagged with
infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/infragram, you should NOT see content tagged with
multispectral-imaging -- your query is more specific than that.
Later goals:
Some aliasing features are more complex and not complete yet.
Email subscriptions - when people subscribe to a tag, they should receive emails when content is posted using a tag that is a (more generalized) alias of the subscribed-to tag.
|
Revert |
|
73
|
vaibhavgeek |
April 01, 2017 14:20
| over 7 years ago
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:
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 pages, and makes the lead image of wiki pages full-width
style:minimal just hides the wiki toolbar (but it's accessible via a small caret button)
style:wide removes the 800px width limit from wiki pages, and allows them to flow full page
style:fancy is used to style articles from the GrassrootsMappingForum
style:nobanner
parent:foo adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page
with:username adds a co-author to your research note with a live link to the user's profile page, however, the note itself will not show up under that user's profile.
lang:es or iso:es is the way to indicate language in a research note or event. In this example, es indicates Spanish.
locked -- locks a wiki page from edits except to moderators and admins. An atypical power tag in that it doesn't follow key:value format; documentation here
redirect:____ -- redirects a page to the page with the specified ID -- i.e. redirect:100 would redirect to node 100. Does not affect admins or moderators.
series:____ -- displays a message of "This is part of a series on tagname ." with a link to /tag/tagname
List of power tags useful for chapter pages:
lat:41.023 and lon:-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 map
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. 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 box
tabbed:notes and tabbed:wikis display a tabbed header which offers tabs with links of related research note and wiki content
notes: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
Inline power tags
You can now use "inline" power tags in the middle of a research note or wiki page. The first one is for generating a list of notes for a given tag, and is used in this format:
[notes:<tagname>]
For example, to list all notes tagged with peru , you can use:
[notes:peru]
For a more complex example, you can list all questions on the topic of "infragram" using:
[notes:question:infragram]
More advanced uses like activity grids can be found in this post:
https://publiclab.org/notes/liz/08-30-2016/check-out-these-activity-grids
And in the requesting responses documentation.
There's also this type of "edit here" prompt:
[ edit ] (but without spaces)
Which generates this type of prompt:
[edit]
Prompts
Prompts let us offer a place on a wiki page where a reader can enter text and it's directly inserted into the text of the wiki page just above the prompt.
[prompt :text:Placeholder text] (without space after prompt )
That looks like this when saved:
test
tag
[prompt:text:Placeholder text]
We can also ask for longer-form text input with the keyword paragraph -- but be aware that the "placeholder text" can only hold letters, numbers and spaces -- no punctuation (yet):
[prompt :paragraph:Placeholder text] (without space after prompt )
That looks like this when saved:
[prompt:paragraph:Placeholder text]
Two identical prompts on one page can cause trouble, but if you add a unique id, you can get around that:
[prompt :text:Placeholder text:UNIQUE-ID] (without space after prompt )
The prompts are better documented here.
Automated power tags, not for manual adding
You might see some of these being generated automatically, like when checking the box for a Research Note to be an "Event" or a "question" or when awarding Barnstars to someone's Research Note. Don't manually add these:
event:rsvp date:YYYY-MM-DD rsvp:username
barnstar:barnstarname
question:foo response:foo
Tag aliasing
This feature is for admins only -- please contact web@publiclab.org with questions.
We've created a system for aliasing tags, which serves a number of purposes:
A) disambiguation -- we have both spectrometer and spectrometry -- as of recently, we'd prefer spectrometry . So we make each the alias of the other, and the two become somewhat (but not completely) interchangeable on the site.
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/spectrometer, you see content tagged with
spectrometry , and vice versa.
- Email notifications do not yet take advantage of aliasing, but may at some point (see below).
B) subcategories -- multispectral-imaging contains and is broader than infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/multispectral-imaging, you should see content tagged with
infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/infragram, you should NOT see content tagged with
multispectral-imaging -- your query is more specific than that.
Later goals:
Some aliasing features are more complex and not complete yet.
Email subscriptions - when people subscribe to a tag, they should receive emails when content is posted using a tag that is a (more generalized) alias of the subscribed-to tag.
|
Revert |
|
72
|
Ashan |
February 14, 2017 05:10
| almost 8 years ago
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:
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 pages, and makes the lead image of wiki pages full-width
style:minimal just hides the wiki toolbar (but it's accessible via a small caret button)
style:wide removes the 800px width limit from wiki pages, and allows them to flow full page
style:fancy is used to style articles from the GrassrootsMappingForum
style:nobanner
parent:foo adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page
with:username adds a co-author to your research note with a live link to the user's profile page, however, the note itself will not show up under that user's profile.
lang:es or iso:es is the way to indicate language in a research note or event. In this example, es indicates Spanish.
locked -- locks a wiki page from edits except to moderators and admins. An atypical power tag in that it doesn't follow key:value format; documentation here
redirect:____ -- redirects a page to the page with the specified ID -- i.e. redirect:100 would redirect to node 100. Does not affect admins or moderators.
series:____ -- displays a message of "This is part of a series on tagname ." with a link to /tag/tagname
List of power tags useful for chapter pages:
lat:41.023 and lon:-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 map
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. 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 box
tabbed:notes and tabbed:wikis display a tabbed header which offers tabs with links of related research note and wiki content
notes: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
Inline power tags
You can now use "inline" power tags in the middle of a research note or wiki page. The first one is for generating a list of notes for a given tag, and is used in this format:
[notes:<tagname>]
For example, to list all notes tagged with peru , you can use:
[notes:peru]
For a more complex example, you can list all questions on the topic of "infragram" using:
[notes:question:infragram]
More advanced uses like activity grids can be found in this post:
https://publiclab.org/notes/liz/08-30-2016/check-out-these-activity-grids
And in the requesting responses documentation.
There's also this type of "edit here" prompt:
[ edit ] (but without spaces)
Which generates this type of prompt:
[edit]
Prompts
Prompts let us offer a place on a wiki page where a reader can enter text and it's directly inserted into the text of the wiki page just above the prompt.
[prompt :text:Placeholder text] (without space after prompt )
That looks like this when saved:
test
[prompt:text:Placeholder text]
We can also ask for longer-form text input with the keyword paragraph -- but be aware that the "placeholder text" can only hold letters, numbers and spaces -- no punctuation (yet):
[prompt :paragraph:Placeholder text] (without space after prompt )
That looks like this when saved:
[prompt:paragraph:Placeholder text]
Two identical prompts on one page can cause trouble, but if you add a unique id, you can get around that:
[prompt :text:Placeholder text:UNIQUE-ID] (without space after prompt )
The prompts are better documented here.
Automated power tags, not for manual adding
You might see some of these being generated automatically, like when checking the box for a Research Note to be an "Event" or a "question" or when awarding Barnstars to someone's Research Note. Don't manually add these:
event:rsvp date:YYYY-MM-DD rsvp:username
barnstar:barnstarname
question:foo response:foo
Tag aliasing
This feature is for admins only -- please contact web@publiclab.org with questions.
We've created a system for aliasing tags, which serves a number of purposes:
A) disambiguation -- we have both spectrometer and spectrometry -- as of recently, we'd prefer spectrometry . So we make each the alias of the other, and the two become somewhat (but not completely) interchangeable on the site.
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/spectrometer, you see content tagged with
spectrometry , and vice versa.
- Email notifications do not yet take advantage of aliasing, but may at some point (see below).
B) subcategories -- multispectral-imaging contains and is broader than infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/multispectral-imaging, you should see content tagged with
infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/infragram, you should NOT see content tagged with
multispectral-imaging -- your query is more specific than that.
Later goals:
Some aliasing features are more complex and not complete yet.
Email subscriptions - when people subscribe to a tag, they should receive emails when content is posted using a tag that is a (more generalized) alias of the subscribed-to tag.
|
Revert |
|
71
|
warren |
January 31, 2017 16:01
| almost 8 years ago
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:
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 pages, and makes the lead image of wiki pages full-width
style:minimal just hides the wiki toolbar (but it's accessible via a small caret button)
style:wide removes the 800px width limit from wiki pages, and allows them to flow full page
style:fancy is used to style articles from the GrassrootsMappingForum
style:nobanner
parent:foo adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page
with:username adds a co-author to your research note with a live link to the user's profile page, however, the note itself will not show up under that user's profile.
lang:es or iso:es is the way to indicate language in a research note or event. In this example, es indicates Spanish.
locked -- locks a wiki page from edits except to moderators and admins. An atypical power tag in that it doesn't follow key:value format; documentation here
redirect:____ -- redirects a page to the page with the specified ID -- i.e. redirect:100 would redirect to node 100. Does not affect admins or moderators.
series:____ -- displays a message of "This is part of a series on tagname ." with a link to /tag/tagname
List of power tags useful for chapter pages:
lat:41.023 and lon:-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 map
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. 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 box
tabbed:notes and tabbed:wikis display a tabbed header which offers tabs with links of related research note and wiki content
notes: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
Inline power tags
You can now use "inline" power tags in the middle of a research note or wiki page. The first one is for generating a list of notes for a given tag, and is used in this format:
[notes:<tagname>]
For example, to list all notes tagged with peru , you can use:
[notes:peru]
For a more complex example, you can list all questions on the topic of "infragram" using:
[notes:question:infragram]
More advanced uses like activity grids can be found in this post:
https://publiclab.org/notes/liz/08-30-2016/check-out-these-activity-grids
And in the requesting responses documentation.
There's also this type of "edit here" prompt:
[ edit ] (but without spaces)
Which generates this type of prompt:
[edit]
Prompts
Prompts let us offer a place on a wiki page where a reader can enter text and it's directly inserted into the text of the wiki page just above the prompt.
[prompt :text:Placeholder text] (without space after prompt )
That looks like this when saved:
[prompt:text:Placeholder text]
We can also ask for longer-form text input with the keyword paragraph -- but be aware that the "placeholder text" can only hold letters, numbers and spaces -- no punctuation (yet):
[prompt :paragraph:Placeholder text] (without space after prompt )
That looks like this when saved:
[prompt:paragraph:Placeholder text]
Two identical prompts on one page can cause trouble, but if you add a unique id, you can get around that:
[prompt :text:Placeholder text:UNIQUE-ID] (without space after prompt )
The prompts are better documented here.
Automated power tags, not for manual adding
You might see some of these being generated automatically, like when checking the box for a Research Note to be an "Event" or a "question" or when awarding Barnstars to someone's Research Note. Don't manually add these:
event:rsvp date:YYYY-MM-DD rsvp:username
barnstar:barnstarname
question:foo response:foo
Tag aliasing
This feature is for admins only -- please contact web@publiclab.org with questions.
We've created a system for aliasing tags, which serves a number of purposes:
A) disambiguation -- we have both spectrometer and spectrometry -- as of recently, we'd prefer spectrometry . So we make each the alias of the other, and the two become somewhat (but not completely) interchangeable on the site.
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/spectrometer, you see content tagged with
spectrometry , and vice versa.
- Email notifications do not yet take advantage of aliasing, but may at some point (see below).
B) subcategories -- multispectral-imaging contains and is broader than infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/multispectral-imaging, you should see content tagged with
infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/infragram, you should NOT see content tagged with
multispectral-imaging -- your query is more specific than that.
Later goals:
Some aliasing features are more complex and not complete yet.
Email subscriptions - when people subscribe to a tag, they should receive emails when content is posted using a tag that is a (more generalized) alias of the subscribed-to tag.
|
Revert |
|
70
|
warren |
January 30, 2017 20:01
| almost 8 years ago
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:
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 pages, and makes the lead image of wiki pages full-width
style:minimal just hides the wiki toolbar (but it's accessible via a small caret button)
style:wide removes the 800px width limit from wiki pages, and allows them to flow full page
style:fancy is used to style articles from the GrassrootsMappingForum
style:nobanner
parent:foo adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page
with:username adds a co-author to your research note with a live link to the user's profile page, however, the note itself will not show up under that user's profile.
lang:es or iso:es is the way to indicate language in a research note or event. In this example, es indicates Spanish.
locked -- locks a wiki page from edits except to moderators and admins. An atypical power tag in that it doesn't follow key:value format; documentation here
redirect:____ -- redirects a page to the page with the specified ID -- i.e. redirect:100 would redirect to node 100. Does not affect admins or moderators.
series:____ -- displays a message of "This is part of a series on tagname ." with a link to /tag/tagname
List of power tags useful for chapter pages:
lat:41.023 and lon:-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 map
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. 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 box
tabbed:notes and tabbed:wikis display a tabbed header which offers tabs with links of related research note and wiki content
notes: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
Inline power tags
You can now use "inline" power tags in the middle of a research note or wiki page. The first one is for generating a list of notes for a given tag, and is used in this format:
[notes:<tagname>]
For example, to list all notes tagged with peru , you can use:
[notes:peru]
For a more complex example, you can list all questions on the topic of "infragram" using:
[notes:question:infragram]
More advanced uses like activity grids can be found in this post:
https://publiclab.org/notes/liz/08-30-2016/check-out-these-activity-grids
And in the requesting responses documentation.
There's also this type of "edit here" prompt:
[ edit ] (but without spaces)
Which generates this type of prompt:
[edit]
Prompts
Prompts let us offer a place on a wiki page where a reader can enter text and it's directly inserted into the text of the wiki page just above the prompt.
[prompt :text:Placeholder text] (without space after prompt )
That looks like this when saved:
[prompt:text:Placeholder text]
We can also ask for longer-form text input with the keyword paragraph -- but be aware that the "placeholder text" can only hold letters, numbers and spaces -- no punctuation (yet):
[prompt :paragraph:Placeholder text] (without space after prompt )
That looks like this when saved:
[prompt:paragraph:Placeholder text]
Two identical prompts on one page can cause trouble, but if you add a unique id, you can get around that:
[prompt :text:Placeholder text:UNIQUE-ID] (without space after prompt )
The prompts are better documented here.
Automated power tags, not for manual adding
You might see some of these being generated automatically, like when checking the box for a Research Note to be an "Event" or a "question" or when awarding Barnstars to someone's Research Note. Don't manually add these:
event:rsvp date:YYYY-MM-DD rsvp:username
barnstar:barnstarname
question:foo response:foo
Tag aliasing
This feature is for admins only -- please contact web@publiclab.org with questions.
We've created a system for aliasing tags, which serves a number of purposes:
A) disambiguation -- we have both spectrometer and spectrometry -- as of recently, we'd prefer spectrometry . So we make each the alias of the other, and the two become somewhat (but not completely) interchangeable on the site.
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/spectrometer, you see content tagged with
spectrometry , and vice versa.
- Email notifications do not yet take advantage of aliasing, but may at some point (see below).
B) subcategories -- multispectral-imaging contains and is broader than infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/multispectral-imaging, you should see content tagged with
infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/infragram, you should NOT see content tagged with
multispectral-imaging -- your query is more specific than that.
Later goals:
Some aliasing features are more complex and not complete yet.
Email subscriptions - when people subscribe to a tag, they should receive emails when content is posted using a tag that is a (more generalized) alias of the subscribed-to tag.
|
Revert |
|
69
|
warren |
January 30, 2017 20:00
| almost 8 years ago
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:
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 pages, and makes the lead image of wiki pages full-width
style:minimal just hides the wiki toolbar (but it's accessible via a small caret button)
style:wide removes the 800px width limit from wiki pages, and allows them to flow full page
style:fancy is used to style articles from the GrassrootsMappingForum
style:nobanner
parent:foo adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page
with:username adds a co-author to your research note with a live link to the user's profile page, however, the note itself will not show up under that user's profile.
lang:es or iso:es is the way to indicate language in a research note or event. In this example, es indicates Spanish.
locked -- locks a wiki page from edits except to moderators and admins. An atypical power tag in that it doesn't follow key:value format; documentation here
redirect:____ -- redirects a page to the page with the specified ID -- i.e. redirect:100 would redirect to node 100. Does not affect admins or moderators.
series:____ -- displays a message of "This is part of a series on tagname ." with a link to /tag/tagname
List of power tags useful for chapter pages:
lat:41.023 and lon:-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 map
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. 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 box
tabbed:notes and tabbed:wikis display a tabbed header which offers tabs with links of related research note and wiki content
notes: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
Inline power tags
You can now use "inline" power tags in the middle of a research note or wiki page. The first one is for generating a list of notes for a given tag, and is used in this format:
[notes:<tagname>]
For example, to list all notes tagged with peru , you can use:
[notes:peru]
For a more complex example, you can list all questions on the topic of "infragram" using:
[notes:question:infragram]
More advanced uses like activity grids can be found in this post:
https://publiclab.org/notes/liz/08-30-2016/check-out-these-activity-grids
And in the requesting responses documentation.
There's also this type of "edit here" prompt:
[ edit ] (but without spaces)
Which generates this type of prompt:
[edit]
Prompts
Prompts let us offer a place on a wiki page where a reader can enter text and it's directly inserted into the text of the wiki page just above the prompt.
[prompt :text:Placeholder text] (without space after prompt )
That looks like this:
[prompt:text:Placeholder text]
We can also ask for longer-form text input with the keyword paragraph -- but be aware that the "placeholder text" can only hold letters, numbers and spaces -- no punctuation (yet):
[prompt :paragraph:Placeholder text] (without space after prompt )
That looks like this:
[prompt:paragraph:Placeholder text]
Two identical prompts on one page can cause trouble, but if you add a unique id, you can get around that:
[prompt :text:Placeholder text:UNIQUE-ID]
The prompts are better documented here.
Automated power tags, not for manual adding
You might see some of these being generated automatically, like when checking the box for a Research Note to be an "Event" or a "question" or when awarding Barnstars to someone's Research Note. Don't manually add these:
event:rsvp date:YYYY-MM-DD rsvp:username
barnstar:barnstarname
question:foo response:foo
Tag aliasing
This feature is for admins only -- please contact web@publiclab.org with questions.
We've created a system for aliasing tags, which serves a number of purposes:
A) disambiguation -- we have both spectrometer and spectrometry -- as of recently, we'd prefer spectrometry . So we make each the alias of the other, and the two become somewhat (but not completely) interchangeable on the site.
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/spectrometer, you see content tagged with
spectrometry , and vice versa.
- Email notifications do not yet take advantage of aliasing, but may at some point (see below).
B) subcategories -- multispectral-imaging contains and is broader than infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/multispectral-imaging, you should see content tagged with
infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/infragram, you should NOT see content tagged with
multispectral-imaging -- your query is more specific than that.
Later goals:
Some aliasing features are more complex and not complete yet.
Email subscriptions - when people subscribe to a tag, they should receive emails when content is posted using a tag that is a (more generalized) alias of the subscribed-to tag.
|
Revert |
|
68
|
warren |
January 25, 2017 18:54
| almost 8 years ago
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:
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 pages, and makes the lead image of wiki pages full-width
style:minimal just hides the wiki toolbar (but it's accessible via a small caret button)
style:wide removes the 800px width limit from wiki pages, and allows them to flow full page
style:fancy is used to style articles from the GrassrootsMappingForum
style:nobanner
parent:foo adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page
with:username adds a co-author to your research note with a live link to the user's profile page, however, the note itself will not show up under that user's profile.
lang:es or iso:es is the way to indicate language in a research note or event. In this example, es indicates Spanish.
locked -- locks a wiki page from edits except to moderators and admins. An atypical power tag in that it doesn't follow key:value format; documentation here
redirect:____ -- redirects a page to the page with the specified ID -- i.e. redirect:100 would redirect to node 100. Does not affect admins or moderators.
series:____ -- displays a message of "This is part of a series on tagname ." with a link to /tag/tagname
List of power tags useful for chapter pages:
lat:41.023 and lon:-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 map
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. 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 box
tabbed:notes and tabbed:wikis display a tabbed header which offers tabs with links of related research note and wiki content
notes: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
Inline power tags
You can now use "inline" power tags in the middle of a research note or wiki page. The first one is for generating a list of notes for a given tag, and is used in this format:
[notes:<tagname>]
For example, to list all notes tagged with peru , you can use:
[notes:peru]
For a more complex example, you can list all questions on the topic of "infragram" using:
[notes:question:infragram]
More advanced uses like activity grids can be found in this post:
https://publiclab.org/notes/liz/08-30-2016/check-out-these-activity-grids
And in the requesting responses documentation.
There's also this type of "edit here" prompt:
[ edit ] (but without spaces)
Which generates this type of prompt:
[edit]
Automated power tags, not for manual adding
You might see some of these being generated automatically, like when checking the box for a Research Note to be an "Event" or a "question" or when awarding Barnstars to someone's Research Note. Don't manually add these:
event:rsvp date:YYYY-MM-DD rsvp:username
barnstar:barnstarname
question:foo response:foo
Tag aliasing
This feature is for admins only -- please contact web@publiclab.org with questions.
We've created a system for aliasing tags, which serves a number of purposes:
A) disambiguation -- we have both spectrometer and spectrometry -- as of recently, we'd prefer spectrometry . So we make each the alias of the other, and the two become somewhat (but not completely) interchangeable on the site.
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/spectrometer, you see content tagged with
spectrometry , and vice versa.
- Email notifications do not yet take advantage of aliasing, but may at some point (see below).
B) subcategories -- multispectral-imaging contains and is broader than infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/multispectral-imaging, you should see content tagged with
infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/infragram, you should NOT see content tagged with
multispectral-imaging -- your query is more specific than that.
Later goals:
Some aliasing features are more complex and not complete yet.
Email subscriptions - when people subscribe to a tag, they should receive emails when content is posted using a tag that is a (more generalized) alias of the subscribed-to tag.
|
Revert |
|
67
|
warren |
January 05, 2017 19:43
| almost 8 years ago
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:
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 pages, and makes the lead image of wiki pages full-width
style:minimal just hides the wiki toolbar (but it's accessible via a small caret button)
style:wide removes the 800px width limit from wiki pages, and allows them to flow full page
style:fancy is used to style articles from the GrassrootsMappingForum
style:nobanner
parent:foo adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page
with:username adds a co-author to your research note with a live link to the user's profile page, however, the note itself will not show up under that user's profile.
lang:es or iso:es is the way to indicate language in a research note or event. In this example, es indicates Spanish.
locked -- locks a wiki page from edits except to moderators and admins. An atypical power tag in that it doesn't follow key:value format; documentation here
redirect:____ -- redirects a page to the page with the specified ID -- i.e. redirect:100 would redirect to node 100. Does not affect admins or moderators.
List of power tags useful for chapter pages:
lat:41.023 and lon:-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 map
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. 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 box
tabbed:notes and tabbed:wikis display a tabbed header which offers tabs with links of related research note and wiki content
notes: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
Inline power tags
You can now use "inline" power tags in the middle of a research note or wiki page. The first one is for generating a list of notes for a given tag, and is used in this format:
[notes:<tagname>]
For example, to list all notes tagged with peru , you can use:
[notes:peru]
For a more complex example, you can list all questions on the topic of "infragram" using:
[notes:question:infragram]
More advanced uses like activity grids can be found in this post:
https://publiclab.org/notes/liz/08-30-2016/check-out-these-activity-grids
And in the requesting responses documentation.
There's also this type of "edit here" prompt:
[ edit ] (but without spaces)
Which generates this type of prompt:
[edit]
Automated power tags, not for manual adding
You might see some of these being generated automatically, like when checking the box for a Research Note to be an "Event" or a "question" or when awarding Barnstars to someone's Research Note. Don't manually add these:
event:rsvp date:YYYY-MM-DD rsvp:username
barnstar:barnstarname
question:foo response:foo
Tag aliasing
This feature is for admins only -- please contact web@publiclab.org with questions.
We've created a system for aliasing tags, which serves a number of purposes:
A) disambiguation -- we have both spectrometer and spectrometry -- as of recently, we'd prefer spectrometry . So we make each the alias of the other, and the two become somewhat (but not completely) interchangeable on the site.
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/spectrometer, you see content tagged with
spectrometry , and vice versa.
- Email notifications do not yet take advantage of aliasing, but may at some point (see below).
B) subcategories -- multispectral-imaging contains and is broader than infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/multispectral-imaging, you should see content tagged with
infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/infragram, you should NOT see content tagged with
multispectral-imaging -- your query is more specific than that.
Later goals:
Some aliasing features are more complex and not complete yet.
Email subscriptions - when people subscribe to a tag, they should receive emails when content is posted using a tag that is a (more generalized) alias of the subscribed-to tag.
|
Revert |
|
66
|
warren |
December 07, 2016 23:26
| about 8 years ago
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:
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 pages, and makes the lead image of wiki pages full-width
style:minimal just hides the wiki toolbar (but it's accessible via a small caret button)
style:wide removes the 800px width limit from wiki pages, and allows them to flow full page
style:fancy is used to style articles from the GrassrootsMappingForum
style:nobanner
parent:foo adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page
with:username adds a co-author to your research note with a live link to the user's profile page, however, the note itself will not show up under that user's profile.
lang:es or iso:es is the way to indicate language in a research note or event. In this example, es indicates Spanish.
List of power tags useful for chapter pages:
lat:41.023 and lon:-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 map
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. 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 box
tabbed:notes and tabbed:wikis display a tabbed header which offers tabs with links of related research note and wiki content
notes: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
Inline power tags
You can now use "inline" power tags in the middle of a research note or wiki page. The first one is for generating a list of notes for a given tag, and is used in this format:
[notes:<tagname>]
For example, to list all notes tagged with peru , you can use:
[notes:peru]
For a more complex example, you can list all questions on the topic of "infragram" using:
[notes:question:infragram]
More advanced uses like activity grids can be found in this post:
https://publiclab.org/notes/liz/08-30-2016/check-out-these-activity-grids
And in the requesting responses documentation.
There's also this type of "edit here" prompt:
[ edit ] (but without spaces)
Which generates this type of prompt:
[edit]
Automated power tags, not for manual adding
You might see some of these being generated automatically, like when checking the box for a Research Note to be an "Event" or a "question" or when awarding Barnstars to someone's Research Note. Don't manually add these:
event:rsvp date:YYYY-MM-DD rsvp:username
barnstar:barnstarname
question:foo response:foo
Tag aliasing
This feature is for admins only -- please contact web@publiclab.org with questions.
We've created a system for aliasing tags, which serves a number of purposes:
A) disambiguation -- we have both spectrometer and spectrometry -- as of recently, we'd prefer spectrometry . So we make each the alias of the other, and the two become somewhat (but not completely) interchangeable on the site.
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/spectrometer, you see content tagged with
spectrometry , and vice versa.
- Email notifications do not yet take advantage of aliasing, but may at some point (see below).
B) subcategories -- multispectral-imaging contains and is broader than infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/multispectral-imaging, you should see content tagged with
infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/infragram, you should NOT see content tagged with
multispectral-imaging -- your query is more specific than that.
Later goals:
Some aliasing features are more complex and not complete yet.
Email subscriptions - when people subscribe to a tag, they should receive emails when content is posted using a tag that is a (more generalized) alias of the subscribed-to tag.
|
Revert |
|
65
|
warren |
December 07, 2016 23:23
| about 8 years ago
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:
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 pages, and makes the lead image of wiki pages full-width
style:minimal just hides the wiki toolbar (but it's accessible via a small caret button)
style:wide removes the 800px width limit from wiki pages, and allows them to flow full page
style:fancy is used to style articles from the GrassrootsMappingForum
style:nobanner
parent:foo adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page
with:username adds a co-author to your research note with a live link to the user's profile page, however, the note itself will not show up under that user's profile.
lang:es or iso:es is the way to indicate language in a research note or event. In this example, es indicates Spanish.
List of power tags useful for chapter pages:
lat:41.023 and lon:-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 map
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. 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 box
tabbed:notes and tabbed:wikis display a tabbed header which offers tabs with links of related research note and wiki content
notes: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
Inline power tags
You can now use "inline" power tags in the middle of a research note or wiki page. The first one is for generating a list of notes for a given tag, and is used in this format:
[notes:<tagname>]
For example, to list all notes tagged with peru , you can use:
[notes:peru]
For a more complex example, you can list all questions on the topic of "infragram" using:
[notes:question:infragram]
More advanced uses like activity grids can be found in this post:
https://publiclab.org/notes/liz/08-30-2016/check-out-these-activity-grids
And in the requesting responses documentation.
There's also this type of "edit here" prompt:
[edit]
Which generates this type of prompt:
[edit]
Automated power tags, not for manual adding
You might see some of these being generated automatically, like when checking the box for a Research Note to be an "Event" or a "question" or when awarding Barnstars to someone's Research Note. Don't manually add these:
event:rsvp date:YYYY-MM-DD rsvp:username
barnstar:barnstarname
question:foo response:foo
Tag aliasing
This feature is for admins only -- please contact web@publiclab.org with questions.
We've created a system for aliasing tags, which serves a number of purposes:
A) disambiguation -- we have both spectrometer and spectrometry -- as of recently, we'd prefer spectrometry . So we make each the alias of the other, and the two become somewhat (but not completely) interchangeable on the site.
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/spectrometer, you see content tagged with
spectrometry , and vice versa.
- Email notifications do not yet take advantage of aliasing, but may at some point (see below).
B) subcategories -- multispectral-imaging contains and is broader than infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/multispectral-imaging, you should see content tagged with
infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/infragram, you should NOT see content tagged with
multispectral-imaging -- your query is more specific than that.
Later goals:
Some aliasing features are more complex and not complete yet.
Email subscriptions - when people subscribe to a tag, they should receive emails when content is posted using a tag that is a (more generalized) alias of the subscribed-to tag.
|
Revert |
|
64
|
warren |
November 30, 2016 20:05
| about 8 years ago
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:
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 pages, and makes the lead image of wiki pages full-width
style:minimal just hides the wiki toolbar (but it's accessible via a small caret button)
style:wide removes the 800px width limit from wiki pages, and allows them to flow full page
style:fancy is used to style articles from the GrassrootsMappingForum
style:nobanner
parent:foo adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page
with:username adds a co-author to your research note with a live link to the user's profile page, however, the note itself will not show up under that user's profile.
lang:es or iso:es is the way to indicate language in a research note or event. In this example, es indicates Spanish.
List of power tags useful for chapter pages:
lat:41.023 and lon:-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 map
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. 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 box
tabbed:notes and tabbed:wikis display a tabbed header which offers tabs with links of related research note and wiki content
notes: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
Inline power tags
You can now use "inline" power tags in the middle of a research note or wiki page. The first one is for generating a list of notes for a given tag, and is used in this format:
[notes:<tagname>]
For example, to list all notes tagged with peru , you can use:
[notes:peru]
For a more complex example, you can list all questions on the topic of "infragram" using:
[notes:question:infragram]
More advanced uses like activity grids can be found in this post:
https://publiclab.org/notes/liz/08-30-2016/check-out-these-activity-grids
And in the requesting responses documentation.
Automated power tags, not for manual adding
You might see some of these being generated automatically, like when checking the box for a Research Note to be an "Event" or a "question" or when awarding Barnstars to someone's Research Note. Don't manually add these:
event:rsvp date:YYYY-MM-DD rsvp:username
barnstar:barnstarname
question:foo response:foo
Tag aliasing
This feature is for admins only -- please contact web@publiclab.org with questions.
We've created a system for aliasing tags, which serves a number of purposes:
A) disambiguation -- we have both spectrometer and spectrometry -- as of recently, we'd prefer spectrometry . So we make each the alias of the other, and the two become somewhat (but not completely) interchangeable on the site.
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/spectrometer, you see content tagged with
spectrometry , and vice versa.
- Email notifications do not yet take advantage of aliasing, but may at some point (see below).
B) subcategories -- multispectral-imaging contains and is broader than infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/multispectral-imaging, you should see content tagged with
infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/infragram, you should NOT see content tagged with
multispectral-imaging -- your query is more specific than that.
Later goals:
Some aliasing features are more complex and not complete yet.
Email subscriptions - when people subscribe to a tag, they should receive emails when content is posted using a tag that is a (more generalized) alias of the subscribed-to tag.
|
Revert |
|
63
|
warren |
October 21, 2016 14:35
| about 8 years ago
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:
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 pages, and makes the lead image of wiki pages full-width
style:minimal just hides the wiki toolbar (but it's accessible via a small caret button)
style:wide removes the 800px width limit from wiki pages, and allows them to flow full page
style:fancy is used to style articles from the GrassrootsMappingForum
style:nobanner
parent:foo adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page
with:username adds a co-author to your research note with a live link to the user's profile page, however, the note itself will not show up under that user's profile.
lang:es or iso:es is the way to indicate language in a research note or event. In this example, es indicates Spanish.
List of power tags useful for chapter pages:
lat:41.023 and lon:-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 map
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. 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 box
tabbed:notes and tabbed:wikis display a tabbed header which offers tabs with links of related research note and wiki content
notes: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
Inline power tags
You can now use "inline" power tags in the middle of a research note or wiki page. The first one is for generating a list of notes for a given tag, and is used in this format:
[notes:<tagname>]
For example, to list all notes tagged with peru , you can use:
[notes:peru]
For a more complex example, you can list all questions on the topic of "infragram" using:
[notes:question:infragram]
More advanced uses like activity grids can be found in this post: https://publiclab.org/notes/liz/08-30-2016/check-out-these-activity-grids
Automated power tags, not for manual adding
You might see some of these being generated automatically, like when checking the box for a Research Note to be an "Event" or a "question" or when awarding Barnstars to someone's Research Note. Don't manually add these:
event:rsvp date:YYYY-MM-DD rsvp:username
barnstar:barnstarname
question:foo response:foo
Tag aliasing
This feature is for admins only -- please contact web@publiclab.org with questions.
We've created a system for aliasing tags, which serves a number of purposes:
A) disambiguation -- we have both spectrometer and spectrometry -- as of recently, we'd prefer spectrometry . So we make each the alias of the other, and the two become somewhat (but not completely) interchangeable on the site.
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/spectrometer, you see content tagged with
spectrometry , and vice versa.
- Email notifications do not yet take advantage of aliasing, but may at some point (see below).
B) subcategories -- multispectral-imaging contains and is broader than infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/multispectral-imaging, you should see content tagged with
infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/infragram, you should NOT see content tagged with
multispectral-imaging -- your query is more specific than that.
Later goals:
Some aliasing features are more complex and not complete yet.
Email subscriptions - when people subscribe to a tag, they should receive emails when content is posted using a tag that is a (more generalized) alias of the subscribed-to tag.
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Revert |
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62
|
warren |
October 13, 2016 18:09
| about 8 years ago
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:
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 pages, and makes the lead image of wiki pages full-width
style:minimal just hides the wiki toolbar (but it's accessible via a small caret button)
style:wide removes the 800px width limit from wiki pages, and allows them to flow full page
style:fancy is used to style articles from the GrassrootsMappingForum
style:nobanner
parent:foo adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page
with:username adds a co-author to your research note with a live link to the user's profile page, however, the note itself will not show up under that user's profile.
lang:es or iso:es is the way to indicate language in a research note or event. In this example, es indicates Spanish.
List of power tags useful for chapter pages:
lat:41.023 and lon:-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 map
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. 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 box
tabbed:notes and tabbed:wikis display a tabbed header which offers tabs with links of related research note and wiki content
notes: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
Inline power tags
You can now use "inline" power tags in the middle of a research note or wiki page. The first one is for generating a list of notes for a given tag, and is used in this format:
[notes:<tagname>]
For example, to list all notes tagged with peru , you can use:
[notes:peru]
For a more complex example, you can list all questions on the topic of "infragram" using:
[notes:question:infragram]
More advanced uses like activity grids can be found in this post: https://publiclab.org/notes/liz/08-30-2016/check-out-these-activity-grids
Automated power tags, not for manual adding
You might see some of these being generated automatically, like when checking the box for a Research Note to be an "Event" or a "question" or when awarding Barnstars to someone's Research Note. Don't manually add these:
event:rsvp date:YYYY-MM-DD rsvp:username
barnstar:barnstarname
question:foo response:foo
Tag aliasing
This feature is for admins only -- please contact web@publiclab.org with questions.
We're planning a system for aliasing tags, which serves a number of purposes:
A) disambiguation -- we have both spectrometer and spectrometry -- we'd prefer spectrometry .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/spectrometer, should you see content tagged with
spectrometry ? (I think yes, if they're "parented" to each other mutually.)
B) subcategories -- multispectral-imaging contains and is broader than infragram .
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/multispectral-imaging, should you see content tagged with
infragram ? (I think so -- that's a broader category that includes it.)
- When looking at https://publiclab.org/tag/infragram, should you see content tagged with
multispectral-imaging ? (I think not -- that's a broader category than you're looking for.)
C) extending functions -- note that this requires wildcard parenting -- we want all posts tagged activity:* (where * could be anything) to also get features applied to the seeks:replications tag. But since wildcards are... wild, this functionality is more narrow, and only triggers more specific functions (using the has_tag feature; see this issue if you're interested in how it works).
- A post tagged
activity:spectrometry also gets the "replication request zone" which is triggered by seeks:replications even though it doesn't explicitly have that tag, because seeks:replications tag has the "parent tag" of activity:* (a wildcard).
- However, when you see activities at https://publiclab.org/tag/activity:spectrometry, or all activities using https://publiclab.org/tag/activity:*, you don't also get content tagged with
seeks:replications .
- When you go to https://publiclab.org/tag/seeks:replications, you don't also get content tagged with
activity:* .
Later goals:
Some aliasing features are more complex and not complete yet.
Email subscriptions - when people subscribe to a tag, they should receive emails when content is posted using a tag that has a "parent" of the subscribed-to tag. (Or should it be when content is posted using a tag that is a parent of the subscribed-to tag?) Imagine if the tag infragram had the parent multispectral-imaging in each of the above scenarios.
And -- perhaps children should greedily fetch parent tags, but not vice versa -- say, if we say conductivity is a child of open-water but not everything open-water is conductivity... this could be important for "watching" tags or subscribing to them.
And clarification for usage -- though "balloon-mapping" is a type of "aerial-photography", we don't want one to return content tagged with the other...!
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Revert |
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61
|
warren |
August 30, 2016 20:42
| over 8 years ago
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:
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 pages, and makes the lead image of wiki pages full-width
style:minimal just hides the wiki toolbar (but it's accessible via a small caret button)
style:wide removes the 800px width limit from wiki pages, and allows them to flow full page
style:fancy is used to style articles from the GrassrootsMappingForum
style:nobanner
parent:foo adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page
with:username adds a co-author to your research note with a live link to the user's profile page, however, the note itself will not show up under that user's profile.
lang:es or iso:es is the way to indicate language in a research note or event. In this example, es indicates Spanish.
List of power tags useful for chapter pages:
lat:41.023 and lon:-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 map
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. 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 box
tabbed:notes and tabbed:wikis display a tabbed header which offers tabs with links of related research note and wiki content
notes: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
Inline power tags
You can now use "inline" power tags in the middle of a research note or wiki page. The first one is for generating a list of notes for a given tag, and is used in this format:
[notes:<tagname>]
For example, to list all notes tagged with peru , you can use:
[notes:peru]
For a more complex example, you can list all questions on the topic of "infragram" using:
[notes:question:infragram]
More advanced uses like activity grids can be found in this post: https://publiclab.org/notes/liz/08-30-2016/check-out-these-activity-grids
Automated power tags, not for manual adding
You might see some of these being generated automatically, like when checking the box for a Research Note to be an "Event" or a "question" or when awarding Barnstars to someone's Research Note. Don't manually add these:
event:rsvp date:YYYY-MM-DD rsvp:username
barnstar:barnstarname
question:foo response:foo
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Revert |
|
60
|
warren |
August 26, 2016 16:56
| over 8 years ago
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:
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 pages, and makes the lead image of wiki pages full-width
style:minimal just hides the wiki toolbar (but it's accessible via a small caret button)
style:wide removes the 800px width limit from wiki pages, and allows them to flow full page
style:fancy is used to style articles from the GrassrootsMappingForum
style:nobanner
parent:foo adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page
with:username adds a co-author to your research note with a live link to the user's profile page, however, the note itself will not show up under that user's profile.
lang:es or iso:es is the way to indicate language in a research note or event. In this example, es indicates Spanish.
List of power tags useful for chapter pages:
lat:41.023 and lon:-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 map
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. 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 box
tabbed:notes and tabbed:wikis display a tabbed header which offers tabs with links of related research note and wiki content
notes: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
Inline power tags
You can now use "inline" power tags in the middle of a research note or wiki page. The first one is for generating a list of notes for a given tag, and is used in this format:
(notes:<tagname>) (note that you must use square brackets, but in order not to trigger the feature here, we've exchanged them for parentheses)
For example, to list all notes tagged with peru , you can use:
(notes:peru)
For a more complex example, you can list all questions on the topic of "infragram" using:
(notes:question:infragram)
More advanced uses will be enabled soon.
Automated power tags, not for manual adding
You might see some of these being generated automatically, like when checking the box for a Research Note to be an "Event" or a "question" or when awarding Barnstars to someone's Research Note. Don't manually add these:
event:rsvp date:YYYY-MM-DD rsvp:username
barnstar:barnstarname
question:foo response:foo
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Revert |
|
59
|
warren |
August 19, 2016 20:03
| over 8 years ago
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:
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 pages
style:wide removes the 800px width limit from wiki pages, and allows them to flow full page
style:fancy is used to style articles from the GrassrootsMappingForum
style:nobanner
parent:foo adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page
with:username adds a co-author to your research note with a live link to the user's profile page, however, the note itself will not show up under that user's profile.
lang:es or iso:es is the way to indicate language in a research note or event. In this example, es indicates Spanish.
List of power tags useful for chapter pages:
lat:41.023 and lon:-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 map
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. 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 box
tabbed:notes and tabbed:wikis display a tabbed header which offers tabs with links of related research note and wiki content
notes: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
Inline power tags
You can now use "inline" power tags in the middle of a research note or wiki page. The first one is for generating a list of notes for a given tag, and is used in this format:
(notes:<tagname>) (note that you must use square brackets, but in order not to trigger the feature here, we've exchanged them for parentheses)
For example, to list all notes tagged with peru , you can use:
(notes:peru)
For a more complex example, you can list all questions on the topic of "infragram" using:
(notes:question:infragram)
More advanced uses will be enabled soon.
Automated power tags, not for manual adding
You might see some of these being generated automatically, like when checking the box for a Research Note to be an "Event" or a "question" or when awarding Barnstars to someone's Research Note. Don't manually add these:
event:rsvp date:YYYY-MM-DD rsvp:username
barnstar:barnstarname
question:foo response:foo
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Revert |
|
58
|
warren |
August 19, 2016 20:02
| over 8 years ago
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:
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 pages
style:wide removes the 800px width limit from wiki pages, and allows them to flow full page
style:fancy is used to style articles from the GrassrootsMappingForum
style:nobanner
parent:foo adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page
with:username adds a co-author to your research note with a live link to the user's profile page, however, the note itself will not show up under that user's profile.
lang:es or iso:es is the way to indicate language in a research note or event. In this example, es indicates Spanish.
List of power tags useful for chapter pages:
lat:41.023 and lon:-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 map
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. 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 box
tabbed:notes and tabbed:wikis display a tabbed header which offers tabs with links of related research note and wiki content
notes: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
Inline power tags
You can now use "inline" power tags in the middle of a research note or wiki page. The first one is for generating a list of notes for a given tag, and is used in this format:
[notes:<tagname>]
For example, to list all notes tagged with peru , you can use:
[notes:peru]
For a more complex example, you can list all questions on the topic of "infragram" using:
[notes:question:infragram]
More advanced uses will be enabled soon.
Automated power tags, not for manual adding
You might see some of these being generated automatically, like when checking the box for a Research Note to be an "Event" or a "question" or when awarding Barnstars to someone's Research Note. Don't manually add these:
event:rsvp date:YYYY-MM-DD rsvp:username
barnstar:barnstarname
question:foo response:foo
|
Revert |
|
57
|
warren |
August 19, 2016 20:00
| over 8 years ago
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:
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 pages
style:wide removes the 800px width limit from wiki pages, and allows them to flow full page
style:fancy is used to style articles from the GrassrootsMappingForum
style:nobanner
parent:foo adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page
with:username adds a co-author to your research note with a live link to the user's profile page, however, the note itself will not show up under that user's profile.
lang:es or iso:es is the way to indicate language in a research note or event. In this example, es indicates Spanish.
List of power tags useful for chapter pages:
lat:41.023 and lon:-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 map
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. 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 box
tabbed:notes and tabbed:wikis display a tabbed header which offers tabs with links of related research note and wiki content
notes: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
Inline power tags
You can now use "inline" power tags in the middle of a research note or wiki page. The first one is for generating a list of notes for a given tag, and is used in this format:
\[notes:<tagname>\]
For example, to list all notes tagged with peru , you can use:
\[notes:peru\]
For a more complex example, you can list all questions on the topic of "infragram" using:
\[notes:question:infragram\]
More advanced uses will be enabled soon.
Automated power tags, not for manual adding
You might see some of these being generated automatically, like when checking the box for a Research Note to be an "Event" or a "question" or when awarding Barnstars to someone's Research Note. Don't manually add these:
event:rsvp date:YYYY-MM-DD rsvp:username
barnstar:barnstarname
question:foo response:foo
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Revert |
|
56
|
warren |
August 19, 2016 20:00
| over 8 years ago
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:
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 pages
style:wide removes the 800px width limit from wiki pages, and allows them to flow full page
style:fancy is used to style articles from the GrassrootsMappingForum
style:nobanner
parent:foo adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page
with:username adds a co-author to your research note with a live link to the user's profile page, however, the note itself will not show up under that user's profile.
lang:es or iso:es is the way to indicate language in a research note or event. In this example, es indicates Spanish.
List of power tags useful for chapter pages:
lat:41.023 and lon:-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 map
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. 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 box
tabbed:notes and tabbed:wikis display a tabbed header which offers tabs with links of related research note and wiki content
notes: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
Inline power tags
You can now use "inline" power tags in the middle of a research note or wiki page. The first one is for generating a list of notes for a given tag, and is used in this format:
[notes:<tagname>]
For example, to list all notes tagged with peru , you can use:
[notes:peru]
For a more complex example, you can list all questions on the topic of "infragram" using:
[notes:question:infragram]
More advanced uses will be enabled soon.
Automated power tags, not for manual adding
You might see some of these being generated automatically, like when checking the box for a Research Note to be an "Event" or a "question" or when awarding Barnstars to someone's Research Note. Don't manually add these:
event:rsvp date:YYYY-MM-DD rsvp:username
barnstar:barnstarname
question:foo response:foo
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Revert |
|
55
|
liz |
August 23, 2015 16:27
| over 9 years ago
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:
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 pages
style:wide removes the 800px width limit from wiki pages, and allows them to flow full page
style:fancy is used to style articles from the GrassrootsMappingForum
style:nobanner
parent:foo adds a bar that links back to a parent wiki page
with:username adds a co-author to your research note with a live link to the user's profile page, however, the note itself will not show up under that user's profile.
lang:es or iso:es is the way to indicate language in a research note or event. In this example, es indicates Spanish.
List of power tags useful for chapter pages:
lat:41.023 and lon:-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 map
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. 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 box
tabbed:notes and tabbed:wikis display a tabbed header which offers tabs with links of related research note and wiki content
notes: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
Automated power tags, not for manual adding
You might see some of these being generated automatically, like when checking the box for a Research Note to be an "Event" or a "question" or when awarding Barnstars to someone's Research Note. Don't manually add these:
event:rsvp date:YYYY-MM-DD rsvp:username
barnstar:barnstarname
question:foo response:foo
|
Revert |
|