Heading 0
editTitle 2 apostrophes will give you italics 3 apostrophes will give you bold
bold italics Double Enter for line in between (i.e. a space)
Heading 1
editMore equal signs, smaller font
Sub-heading 1
editI am going to create a link to Happy Cafe.
Link to section Characters in Shiawase Kissa Sanchoume
External links
edit[1] To create a phrase Parliament of Singapore website
Creating lists
edit- This is the first item.
- Second item!
- First indent
- Second indent
- First indent
- Replace bullets with numbers by #!
- Number 2
- Numbered indent
- Being creative
- Ho ho ho
- Ha ha ha
- Moreeee
Create quotation
editTis' the season to be joyful
this is the text of the quotation tralalala lalalala
Creating table: open advanced tab in editing source and click the table on the right
Header text | Header text | Header text |
---|---|---|
Tic | Example | Example |
Example | Tac | Example |
Example | Example | Toe |
If you want to do more advanced stuff, type into the search bar help: table without the space in between
Talk page
editFirst guy
- Second guy
- Helloooo
Starting a new conversation now. Iceblade01 (talk) 08:26, 10 February 2014 (UTC)
Outdent brings it back to the first margin (e.g. to start a new conversation). The 4 tildas are to sign off: they insert username and time.
Back to work
editMain text
editSentence with info for reference. [1] [2] [3]
To combine 2 footnotes. [4] No space between semi-colons.
To use same footnote twice in different places. [5]
Next time I use it. [5]
Citing with a BAILII template, instead of having to type all this out. [6]
Citing a book chapter. [7] Blah Blah Blah.
Can use Wikimedia commons for images that are free for all.
Notes
edit- ^ This is the footnote. Reference should normally appear after footnote.
- ^ Can even put 2 footnotes together, though possible to combine into one.
- ^ And another!
- ^ reference 1;reference 2
- ^ a b Thio,"Some article I have written", p214.
- ^ R. v. North and East Devon Health Authority, ex parte Coughlan [1999] EWCA Civ 1871, [2001] Q.B.213, Court of Appeal (England and Wales).
- ^ Peter Leyland; Gordon Anthony (2009), "Wednesbury Unreasonableness, Proportionality, and Equality", Textbook on Administrative Law (6th ed.), Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 284-312 at 308.