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Wikipedia articles may include spoilers and no spoiler warnings. A spoiler is a piece of information about a narrative work (such as a book, film, television series, or a video game) that reveals plot points or twists. Articles on the Internet sometimes feature a spoiler warning to alert readers to spoilers in the text, which they may then ...
Discord is a persistent group chat software, based on an eventually consistent database architecture. [88] Discord was originally built on MongoDB . The infrastructure was migrated to Apache Cassandra when the platform reached a billion messages, then later migrated to ScyllaDB when it reached a trillion messages.
Discord: chat messages [45] Discourse uses the CommonMark flavor of Markdown in the forum post composer. Doxygen: a source code documentation generator which supports Markdown with extra features [46] GitHub Flavored Markdown (GFM) ignores underscores in words, and adds syntax highlighting, task lists, [47] and tables [31]
A place like RottenTomatoes.com would be better suited for those individuals, and I think that -- if the removal of spoiler warnings was to be agreed upon -- a simple change to the spoiler tag template for one month prior to their removal, informing readers that the spoiler tags would soon go the way of the dinosaur, would give readers all the ...
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And yet the guideline states "A spoiler is a piece of information about a narrative work (such as a book, film, television series, or a video game) which reveals plot points or twists and thus may degrade the experience of persons who wish to experience the work themselves." and "When including spoilers, editors should make sure that an ...
That leaves me wondering whether to a) leave the article alone, b) move the end spoiler to follow the second paragraph of "Religious Content," or c) remove the spoiler tags, on the grounds that the only real plot ending detail is who Meg rescues and how, and that's in the plot section and can be avoided by spoiler info-averse readers on general ...
"Using "Plot" as a section heading might be enough to indicate spoilers, but there are times when spoilers are made outside this section, even outside the article about the thing being spoiled. For instance, Mona Lisa contains a minor spoiler of The Da Vinci Code, as does Holy Grail, and I'm sure several others."