Writing your article

Here are a few guidelines for writing your article in theinternetisgod.org. Please make sure to read through those, as well as the working with others page.

By submitting your article, you are agreeing to theinternetisgod.org's terms of service.

Newly created articles have to be manually approved by a moderator before they are publicly displayed.

Formatting

theinternetisgod.org uses the FCKEditor for article submissions. More information on the function of each of the buttons is can be found on FCKEditor's quick reference page.

The allowed html tags are listed just below the editor window, and you may wish to also view the page's source code before you save it, for maximum control over how it will look.

It is possible to enter footnotes[1], by writing [-# footnote text-] (without the dashes), where the # will be substituted by a number assigned automatically for the footnotes on each displayed page.

We generally recommend only pasting plain text in the editor and formatting it here, but if you absolutely must paste from word, please do so by using the "paste from word" button on the editor toolbar instead of pasting directly into the page.

Categories and Tags

Categories and Tags are used to provide information about each article's perspective.

When submitting your article, you may choose categories from the category tree. In order to keep things as specific as possible, it might be best to choose from different branches of the tree. You may choose as many as you wish, although we suggest you choose around three.

You may fill in any additional tags you see fit. The tag field will autocomplete what you're starting to write, so you might want to wait and see if your tag already exists.

Your article's state

The status of an article has to do with how open or closed it is to contributions from the community. You can find out more about the different status options in the working with others page.

 

Revision Information

Depending on how many people are collaborating on an article, it may be wise to put a brief summary of the changes you've done on an article in the revision information box. This will allow other authors to identify your changes, as well as make it easier to track down and roll back unwanted changes.

fn1. this is an example footnote