User talk:Rationaledit
Nice Edits to the Third Jihad
[edit]Welcome to wikipedia, you made some nice edits so I thought I would commend you for it. Happy editing!!! Joshuaism (talk) 05:35, 25 March 2011 (UTC)
Welcome!
[edit]Hello, Rationaledit, and welcome to Wikipedia! Thank you for your contributions. I hope you like this place and decide to stay.
- Please sign your name on talk pages, by using four tildes (~~~~). This will automatically produce your username and the date, and helps to identify who put a certain post on a talk page. Please do not sign any edit that is not on a talk page. Some jack-ass copy/pasted this stuff to my talks page so I'm doing the same to you. Even so, the information is useful so I thought I'd share.
- Check out some of these pages:
- If you have a question that is not one of the frequently asked questions below, check out Wikipedia:Questions, ask me on my talk page, or click the button below. Happy editing and again, welcome! —Ute in DC (talk) 18:50, 3 March 2011 (UTC)
- Click 'Edit this page' or 'Edit' on the top of the page that you want to edit.
- Make your changes in the edit window.
- Preview your changes by clicking the 'Show preview' button.
- Click the 'Save page' button.
For inline references:
- Do a search on Ask.com, Google, or your preferred search engine for the subject of the article that you want to put a reference in.
- Click 'Edit this page' or 'Edit' in the Wikipedia article, and insert a claim into that article stating a fact about the subject. Don't click the save button just yet.
- In the search you did in step 1, find a website that supports the claim you made in step 2. Highlight the address in the address bar (where it says http://www.some-website.com/some-page.htm).
- Go to the reference generator, click on the 'An arbitrary website' bubble, and fill out the as many fields as you can. Then click 'Get reference wiki text'.
- Highlight, and then copy (Ctrl+C or Apple+C), the resulting text.
- In the article, after the claim you made in step 2, paste (Ctrl+V or Apple+V) the text you copied in step 5.
- If the article does not have a References, Footnotes, Notes, or Bibliography section, then add this below the See Also section and above the External Links section:
==References==
{{Reflist}}
For references put at the end of an article:
- Do a search on Ask.com, Google, or your preferred search engine for the subject of the article that you want to put a reference in.
- In the search, find a website that supports the claims made in the article. Highlight the address in the address bar (where it says http://www.some-website.com/some-page.htm).
- Go to the reference generator, click on the 'An arbitrary website' bubble, and fill out the as many fields as you can. Then click 'Get reference wiki text'.
- Highlight, and then copy (Ctrl+C or Apple+C), the resulting text.
- Go to the Wikipedia article. If the article does not have a References, Footnotes, Notes, or Bibliography section, then add this below the See Also section and above the External Links section:
==References==
{{Reflist}}
Then, add this after the {{Reflist}}
, in a new line:
{{Refbegin}}
*Press paste (Ctrl+V or Apple+V) after this asterisk, then remove the <ref></ref> tags
{{Refend}}
Donald Trump–Russia dossier
[edit]I have reverted your edit to Donald Trump–Russia dossier, which added an external link to the dossier. I believe you didn't know this, but a year ago the dossier was hosted in Wikipedia Commons, but this discussion concluded that there's no evidence that Buzzfeed had copyright owner's right to publish the document. Hence, per WP:COPYVIOEL we can't even add an external link to document.
Just few weeks ago an administrator revision deleted [1] about 300 revisions from the article history because the article linked to dossier (same link that you used). Politrukki (talk) 11:02, 10 January 2018 (UTC)
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