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Your search term(s) (optional.) If this parameter is empty, clicking on the resulting link generates a Google search form with an initially blank input field, ready to search the English Wikipedia. Link text to display on your wiki page (optional). If this parameter is empty, the template displays a link, with the link text:
Open the HTML file in a text editor and copy the HTML source code to the clipboard. Paste the HTML source into the large text box labeled "HTML markup:" on the html to wiki page. Click the blue Convert button at the bottom of the page. Select the text in the "Wiki markup:" text box and copy it to the clipboard. Paste the text to a Wikipedia ...
Copy the wiki code from the text file. You can save any web page as an HTML file, and then open it in LibreOffice Writer. Edit as needed. Remove the parts you don't want. Keep only tables for example. Then export to MediaWiki. Tables can be further edited in LibreOffice Calc. See: Commons:Convert tables and charts to wiki code or image files.
Microsoft Office Word Add-in For MediaWiki: Converts Word documents to wiki formatting. Doesn't do images. This may not work on newer versions of Word. Excel2Wiki tool for converting Excel tables to wiki tables. Transferring a single wiki page in MediaWiki to Word is easy, just save the desired webpage and then open the page in Microsoft Word.
Creates a Google search link for the supplied term. By default, the search link is for the name of the page it is put on, if no term is provided. ... Code of Conduct ...
NOTE: To create an inline link (a clickable link within the text) to any foreign language article, see Help:Interlanguage links#Inline interlanguage links and consider the usage notes. Description What you type
For more information, see Help:Link and please consider taking a tour through the Wikipedia:Tutorial. Template documentation [ view ] [ edit ] [ history ] [ purge ] This template should always be substituted (i.e., use {{ subst:Linking }} ).
Creates a Google custom-search link, which searches one site (and, optionally, pages with URLs containing one directory path in the site). (If you want to search on the entire Web, use {{}} instead.)