As of August 2024, International Journal "Notes on Intuitionistic Fuzzy Sets" is being indexed in Scopus.
Please check our Instructions to Authors and send your manuscripts to nifs.journal@gmail.com. Next issue: September/October 2024.

Open Call for Papers: International Workshop on Intuitionistic Fuzzy Sets • 13 December 2024 • Banska Bystrica, Slovakia/ online (hybrid mode).
Deadline for submissions: 16 November 2024.

Help:Starting a new page

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Starting a new page • Edit mode • Text formatting • Formulas • Tables • Images • Categories • Templates • References • Subpages

New pages in the wiki may be started in several ways. Starting a new page also raises some page naming considerations.

Starting a new page

Follow a red link

Easiest and most intuitive way to start a new page is to follow a red link. Blue links mean existent pages, while red links mean nonexistent ones. Click on a red link and you will open it in edit mode.

If you haven't seen the red link of your liking, but you prefer this way of starting new pages, you may use the Sandbox, open it in edit mode, type the page title, enclose it in [[ ]], show preview or save the edit, and follow the link you just created.

Actually, red links may also indicate typos in the links, which otherwise would have been blue. If you are have detected such a mistake, please correct it in situ.

Following a red link in certain cases is the only way to start a new page: for instance, when diacritical characters or other non-keyboard symbols are to appear in the page title.

Use the search box

Before you start a new page you'd better use the search tool to check if it has been already created. Type the correct (or most plausible) keyphrase. If it doesn't yield the expected results, you may consider another search or start the new page from the red link it will return you:

There is no page titled "example". You can create this page.

Type in the browser address bar

Another easy way to start a new page is to type its title in the address bar of your browser

http://www.ifigenia.org/w/index.php/Your title goes here

Or, if you prefer, though it's all the same

http://www.ifigenia.org/w/index.php/Your_title_goes_here

A new blank page, titled "Your title goes here" will be opened in read mode, telling you

There is currently no text in this page, you can search for this page title in other pages or edit this page.

Just click the create button and you'll open it in edit mode. That's it.

Page naming

The naming conventions presented here may be changed upon community discussion and decision, but initially they are the following:

Diacritics and special characters
  • If needed, page names may contain diacritical characters, especially valid for articles about people whose names contain special symbols. In this case an adequate redirect page should be also provided. For instance, Dogan Coker redirecting to Doğan Çoker.
  • Special characters and sub/superscript indices are also okay as long as a redirect is provided with a meaningful keyboard-only title.
Capital letters
  • Pages should generally be titled in small case, their first letter also being automatically capitalized. For instance, the definition article on IFS should be intuitionistic fuzzy set, while Intuitionistic Fuzzy Set may be only a redirect.
  • If the title represents or contains the name of an institution or a journal, all relevant letters are to be capitalized.
  • The publications in the Issue: namespace should generally be titled in small case.
Technical restrictions
  • There are several Unicode symbols which may not technically appear in a page title, as they take part in various text formatting commands from the wiki markup: # < > [ ] | { } .
  • Symbol / is allowed in page names, but it adds a different sense: it separates pages from their subpages.
Moving pages
  • Don't worry if you make a mistake in the page title, once you have saved the page. Registered users can move pages and thus correct typos, capitalization and diacritical problems.

See also