Book Image

MediaWiki 1.1 Beginner's Guide

By : Jeff Orlof, Mizanur Rahman
Book Image

MediaWiki 1.1 Beginner's Guide

By: Jeff Orlof, Mizanur Rahman

Overview of this book

<p>MediaWiki is the free, open-source wiki engine software that powers Wikipedia and many of the other popular wikis across the Web. Written in PHP, it possesses many features that make it the engine of choice for large collaborative wikis: flexible markup, comprehensive user management, multimedia handling, and more. Whether you are creating a public wiki for open contributions, a private wiki for collaborating within your work team or group of friends, or even a wiki for personal use, this book will provide you with all the essential steps you require to achieve this.<br /><br />This book covers how to administer users, back up and restore content safely, migrate your installation to another server or database, and even make hacks to the code. From the installation process to customizing the pages, you will learn what it takes to run a well designed, secure MediaWiki site.<br /><br />Throughout the course of this book, you will see the many different ways that MediaWiki can be used on the Web. This book covers the open source MediaWiki wiki engine from installation and getting started through structuring your collaborative web site, advanced formatting, images, and multimedia to migrating your installation and creating new MediWiki templates. While you will be introduced to the many uses of a wiki, you will also be taken through step-by-step exercises that will help you master the many administrative tasks associated with running and securing your wiki. You will learn how to prevent unauthorized edits being made to content, how to prevent spam, how to back up and restore your wiki, how to configure its look and functionality to suit your needs, and much more.</p>
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
MediaWiki 1.1
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
Preface

Time for action - creating external links


We are not going to use the edit toolbar for this task. Instead, we are going old school by hand coding our links into our new page.

  1. 1. Create a new page in your wiki. It can be whatever you like, just make sure it is something that would contain external links. For demonstration purposes, we will create a list of must have software so there will be multiple links on this page.

  2. 2. When you get to the place where you want to insert a link, type it between single brackets. The code used for my site would look like this:

    [http://www.gimp.com]
    [http://www.firefox.com]
    [http://www.openoffice.org]
    [http://www.videolan.org]
    
  3. 3. Notice the use of double spaces here. This is because we want a vertical list, not a horizontal one.

  4. 4. Once you are done writing, click on Show preview. If you created a list, it should look something like this:

Before you go back over the instructions to see what you did wrong, relax a moment. Everything is fine. When you create an...