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Wikipedia indexes (or indices) are alphabetical list articles, consisting of lists of, in turn, the encyclopedic articles available on Wikipedia for any broad, general topic. Examples include: Index of Buddhism-related articles , Index of fishing articles , and Index of physics articles .
A list of wiki markup – alongside implantation tips. (Also known as wikitext or wikicode, is the syntax and keywords used by Wikipedia to format a page.) Templates An index of templates used within Wikipedia. HTML in wikitext A list of HTML elements, tags and their attributes used in Wikipedia.
A printed index, such as in a book, lists topics along with a page number. In Wikipedia, the page numbers have been replaced by linking the topics directly to articles. Indexes are alphabetical lists, while outlines are hierarchically structured. Outlines go in Category:Wikipedia outlines.
An index (pl.: usually indexes, more rarely indices) is a list of words or phrases ('headings') and associated pointers ('locators') to where useful material relating to that heading can be found in a document or collection of documents. Examples are an index in the back matter of a book and an index that serves as a library catalog.
Wikipedia's contents: A–Z Index The MediaWiki software is case-sensitive; pages under AA will correspond to different pages compared with Aa . On each index page ...
This template is specifically for web sites which are not news sources. See also citation templates for more on templates for citing open-source web content in Wikipedia articles. Here are some convenient examples. Common form for cases where little is known about authorship of the page {{Cite web |url= |title= |access-date= |format= |work= }}
For an alphabetical index of all articles on Wikipedia, see Wikipedia:Contents. General reference Culture and the arts Geography and places Health and fitness History and events Human activities Mathematics and logic Natural and physical sciences People and self Philosophy and thinking Religion and belief systems Society and social sciences ...
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