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At the top of the accounts-enwiki-l interface, click on "Users" --> "Members". Search this list for the user that you're adding or reinstating. If their email address appears in this list, then the user is already subscribed, and you can skip the rest of this procedure. Otherwise, proceed to the next step below.
For Template:Interlanguage link, I'd love to have a script that will check the page for the following two common bad styles of linking: 1) a regular external link to another wik as found for example here, and 2) stuff like pl:Polska (often hidden under a pipe) and covert them to Ills. This shouldn't be that hard to code (I hope), but I am not ...
Click the button in that section; an email will be sent to your email address with a confirmation link. If you see no link, go to Special:ConfirmEmail. If that page starts with "Your email address was confirmed on <date>", then you're already confirmed. When you receive the email, click the link it contains to confirm that you own the email ...
There are many templates that help to add formatted links to specific sites at Category:External link templates. For example, you can link articles about books to the online copies of those books on Project Gutenberg using the template {{ Gutenberg }} .
Confirmation dialog (sometimes called a warning alert box or chicken box) [1] [2] is a dialog box that asks user to approve requested operation. Usually this dialog appears before a potentially dangerous operation is performed (program termination, file deletion, etc.) Typically confirmation dialog boxes have two buttons (e.g.
An example of a potentially fraudulent email spoofing is if an individual creates an email that appears to be an invoice from a major company, and then sends it to one or more recipients. In some cases, these fraudulent emails incorporate the logo of the purported organization and even the email address may appear legitimate.
Procedure words (abbreviated to prowords) are words or phrases limited to radiotelephony procedure used to facilitate communication by conveying information in a condensed standard verbal format. [1] Prowords are voice versions of the much older procedural signs for Morse code which were first developed in the 1860s for Morse telegraphy , and ...