Hello fellow editors, I am questforneutrality, and I am relatively new to Wikipedia editing. I have used Wikipedia in the past as a gateway to other great sources. I noticed along the way that some pages are extremely helpful in providing solid information and referencing while other are not.

This is an extension of two of my hobbies: getting to know the fundamentals of the evolving internet/WorldWideWeb, and researching topics of interest with the aim of objectivity.

User-generated web content, Wikipedia being a prime example, has been a fascination of mine since the beginning. Now, I can finally dedicate some of my time towards experiencing this process first-hand, learning, and contributing to the commons. I am excited.

I have noticed right away that respect on Wikipedia is important, and I like it. I will aim at always being respectful. Please give me the same courtesy.

Tip of the moment...
Transclusion caveat

When you transclude a page (that is, automate the display of a page's content on another page), all its tags (like {{TOCRight}}) go with it, which will be implemented on the host page. Just add the following code if you want to add a right-aligned TOC to a page, but do not want it to be displayed on "derivative" pages:

<noinclude> {{TOCright}} </noinclude>

For a more detailed explanation, see Help:Wiki markup#Templates and transcluding pages.

To add this auto-randomizing template to your user page, use {{totd-random}}